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Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional

An anonymous reader writes "MSNBC reports that a judge in Atlanta, GA has ruled that a sticker placed on all textbooks in Cobb County stating that 'Evolution is a theory, not a fact,' is unconstitutional, and ordered that all stickers be removed."

3,360 comments

  1. Thank God! by ruhk · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally a bit of sense in the courts. :D

    --



    404 Error: .sig not found.
    1. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      yeah ... wtf? I mean, telling kids to have an open mind and view something critically ... it's almost like we want them to think for themselves. Well, at least you can always trust the government to put an end to that.

    2. Re:Thank God! by Em+Ellel · · Score: 3, Funny

      mod parent troll

      Actually mod it funny due to subject "Thank god!"

      -Em

      --
      RelevantElephants: A Somatic WebComic...
    3. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      telling kids to have an open mind and view something critically

      Thinking critically is the foundation of science. Faith is the realm of mysticism.

    4. Re:Thank God! by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Evolution is a fact. It's been observed.

      There are theories as to its mechanisms. Note I said "theory", not "hypothesis"; in general, a theory is the best you can do when describing a process in science. The common use of 'theory' to mean 'unproven concept' is not the way science uses it.

    5. Re:Thank God! by tuxter · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Unproven theory??? Are you saying creationism is a proven theory? Black holes, the big bang, string theory etc, they are all unproven. It is pretty bloody obvious to anyone with a scientific mind that evolution is the way it is, it really does not need proving does it? Creationism is for narrow minded, short sighted people who need a (unproven) crutch.

    6. Re:Thank God! by Botty · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Evolution is a fact. It's been observed.

      You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution. I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

    7. Re:Thank God! by cartel · · Score: 0

      Then evolutionists should stay out of the classroom. They teach stuff as fact that has never been proven.

    8. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You dumbass.

      As a biochemist, may I say you should just keep your mouth shut and open some basic high school biology textbooks. Once you understand those, you might begin to realise how little you actually know, and might refrain from talking about things beyond your obviously limited education.

    9. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm surprised there's actually a positive story about the government on Slashdot, instead of an invitation to flames!

    10. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting
      It is not clear to me what the sticker has to do with separation of church and state. The sticker made no reference to any religious beliefs, and only cautioned the reader to take the material with a grain of salt. This is *always* good advice: people should never blindly accept any theory as fact.

      Furthermore, evolution does not attempt to explain the origin of life, only the ways in which it has changed since it began. I have never heard a remotely plausible theory regarding the origin of life. People have not yet been able to create anything nearly as complex as a machine which can produce more of itself outside of laboratory conditions, and the idea that such machines just "happened" accidentally is far-fetched at best.

      Don't get me wrong here - the notion that some all-seeing, all-knowing invisible superhero created life so that it could be fawned over is even more absurd. But just because we can't figure out how it started doesn't mean we should accept "it just happened by accident". Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup? A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton...

    11. Re:Thank God! by LucidBeast · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well at least we can test our medicines with monkeys better than let say sea horses. I guess offering fossils as evidence is out of the question?

      Besides it is obvious that humans are close relatives of monkeys. Want proof? Go visit nearest playground. (tired of making sensible arguments)

    12. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The fossil record. DNA.

    13. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that bibles aren't used in every class room. Bibles aren't teaching materials. Books on evolution are and thus rightfully deserve a sticker stating the simple truth: Evolution is a theory, not a fact.

    14. Re:Thank God! by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, I'm not. I said "evolution." So did the sticker.

      In addition, "monkeys turning into humans" is not evolution. For one, the theory is that humans evolved from apes. Apes aren't monkeys.

      Second, the single theory that humans evolved from other primates is not the entirety of macroevolution, much less evolution. Throwing away tons of good science because you don't like the implication of a small portion is bad practice. Instead, try to excise that part in a reasonable fashion.

      I've never read a biology textbook that didn't mention that the specific evolutionary paths mentioned therein were theoretical and subject to change. In the meantime, it's the job of the textbook authors to teach the prevailing scientific ideas.

      By the way, macroevolution (speciation via evolution) has been observed in a number of cases. Those cases don't prove any other cases, but the process does occur.

    15. Re:Thank God! by geekboy642 · · Score: 0

      The greys did.
      Or maybe engineered it themselves. Does that count?

      --
      Just another "DOJ fascist authoritarian totalitarian bootlicker" -- Zeio
    16. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 4, Insightful
      If you throw out evolution, you have to throw out one of these ideas: the theory that an organisms devolopment is an expression of its genetic material, the theory that an organism inherits its genetic material, the theory that the genetic material is mutable.

      Now, all of these are pretty hard to refute, but if they're all true then evolution has to logically follow.

    17. Re:Thank God! by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes. In fact, there are many alive today. You're one of them.

      All models of macroevolution feature gradual change at some point. There's no such thing as an "evolutionary state", and I'd like to ask you where you learned that there was so I can bludgeon your biology teacher.

      Evolution itself has been observed countless times in living organisms. Macroevolution has been observed a number of times in a geologically insignificant period.

    18. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait


      I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      it's stupifying that something with loads of evidence and experimental research such as evolution is questioned but you can believe there's an invisible man controlling every subatomic particle in the universe.

      Religious people should be sterilized.

    19. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      And when my hope is gone and I've been wounded in the battle He is all the strength that I will ever need.

      and when you're lying on your deathbed you'll have the horrible revelation that there are no gods and that christian mythology has used up much of your limited life.

    20. Re:Thank God! by LucidBeast · · Score: 1

      Don't be silly. There are no creatures in between evolutionary states. What ever you mean by that? There are creatures with small differences within every population (just look at you fellow humans). Put bunch of them into different environments wait couple of thousand years and surprise they have evolved into different looking bunches in general. Wait a million years or more and they have evolved into different species.

    21. Re:Thank God! by cartel · · Score: 0

      I should have said "species" rather than "evolutionary states". They have never found the remains of or any living creatures that are inbetween species, or have they? >>Macroevolution has been observed a number of times in a geologically insignificant period. Prove what you say

    22. Re:Thank God! by grub · · Score: 1


      Creationism is for narrow minded, short sighted people who need a (unproven) crutch.

      Right on, brother! Now let me get my book of Nostradamus' quatrains... ;)

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    23. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Pity we've never seen it happen. Evolution is not observable or testable because it happens over a period of time far, far greater than human life. All we can do is inspect the evidence, and construct theories around that evidence. That's closer to the study of history than science. Both science and history are methods of discerning truth, but they use very different mechanics. If you can't test something, or observe if, it's hard to form a scientific theory about it. You may use scientific techniques to find the evidence, but when it comes to interpreting it, all you can do is try and find an explanation that matches most of the facts you know about.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    24. Re:Thank God! by sponge_absorbent · · Score: 1

      Every creature is between evolutionary states.
      Evolution doesnt happen at a constant pace, but it is always happening.

    25. Re:Thank God! by jellomizer · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There is Strong Evidence towards Evolution but it is still a theory. With our current scientific observations Evolution is the most likely way that things happen. But still science in the past have rational theories with strong evidence then in the future there is new evidence that proves them wrong. Science changes over time. Heck humans could have came from mutated bacteria that was strikes with lighting and placed in radiation. And all this random chance created a person, which makes the odds even more slim that our DNA was just really close to the great apes. There is little evidence to support this and my theory is near impossible to occur but not quite there is a 1*10^-(9*10^(9*10^99999999999999999999999999999999 9999999)) chance that this could happen,

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    26. Re:Thank God! by rhsanborn · · Score: 1

      Easy with imflammatory statements like that. A great quote from Stephen Hawkings "A Brief History of Time"

      "there is no physical necessity for a beginning. One can imagine that God created the universe at literally any time in the past. On the other hand, if the universe is expanding, there may be physical reasons why there had to be a beginning. One could still imagine that God created the universe at the instant of the big bang, or even afterwards in just such a way as to make it look as though there had been a big bang"

      Eveolution neither proves, nor disproves creationism, or a belief in a God.

    27. Re:Thank God! by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 3, Informative

      First, here and here is your information about macroevolution (a misnomer in itself).

      Second, there's no such thing as being "between species". An organism is either in a given species or it isn't -- and the change of one species into another can happen instantly, or it can happen gradually. In any case, a change of species is so minor that it isn't easily observed in the fossil record.

      You might want to look up "species". I think you have a misconception about what it means.

    28. Re:Thank God! by grub · · Score: 1


      They have never found the remains of or any living creatures that are inbetween species, or have they

      Every fossil and bone are the remains of a species in the process of changing. Evolution doesn't stop at V1.0

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    29. Re:Thank God! by tonsofpcs · · Score: 1

      I think thats the point. There is no reason to remove the stickers, I could put a sticker there saying that Most scientific laws are just a conglomoration of theories. How many 'Laws' do they change each printing of a school textbook, seriously. Newtonian dynamics doesn't really work anymore, but it was law at one time.

    30. Re:Thank God! by sepluv · · Score: 1

      Go look at some creatures (like bacteria in a petri dish under a microscope) that reproduce quickly for a short while and come back to me on that. You can even see change over time in large animals. Even hypothetically, why would God somehow try and stop things evolving into other things? In fact, most religious texts logically imply that people and other animals evolve.

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    31. Re:Thank God! by cartel · · Score: 0

      But if it ever did happen, we would be diggin up skeletons of fish with legs, and animals that are between species.

    32. Re:Thank God! by Azh+Nazg · · Score: 1

      Atheists should be sterilized. *gets stick, marshmallows*

      --
      Azh nazg durbataluk, azh nazg gimbatul, Azh nazg thrakataluk agh burzum ishi krimpatul! This sig blocked by Slashdot.
    33. Re:Thank God! by sepluv · · Score: 1

      Exactly. In fact, even better, are you different from your parents? If so, you've evolved. (And if you don't count sex as evolution for some reason look at some bacteria under a microscope for a while or sthg and watch them divide and change.)

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    34. Re:Thank God! by cartel · · Score: 0

      People say, "this evolved from that." Where are the inbetweens? They would have to exist... For example, I learned in fourth grade that "wolves evolved from whales."

    35. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

      Why is it that when people discuss this topic they have to resort to these types of statements? So I suppose you have an explanation for what started it all? Can anyone say with any degree of confidence what started the Big Bang? So what precludes that from having been started by God? As someone that has spent 30+ years interested in science, astronomy, and cosmology, I have seen a lot of things change. And as a person who found Christ in the last 3 years, I have had difficulty reconciling the two. I have come to believe that life on this earth is not a random occurence driven by simple statistical probability. Instead, I find it more likely that the universe was created with intelligence. On both sides, you find people that are hard-headed and refuse to accept new ideas. I personally think there's room in the world for both views, since no one can say definitively one way or the other that one view point is right. Personally, I find there to be too many discrepancies in the common theories to say with any certainty that they are "the way it is."

    36. Re:Thank God! by j.bellone · · Score: 0, Troll

      Because The South traditionally has a problem with adhering to the rules of seperation of church and state. This is a blatent knock at this; you may just be too religious to see that.

      If this sticker was allowed to stay on books, I would want to see one similar (right next to it) on all textbooks that said: The Bible is only a book, written by man. That's exactly what it is; and it's talking about nothing religious either. But it's making you think it; just like subliminal messages which are illegal.

      --
      I'm f#$king magic!
    37. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      THERE ARE NO IN BETWEENS Get it? Ok listen... You have a ball of dough. You put it in the oven and you get bread. Wow! The dough changed into bread! Every moment the bread is in the oven it is changing. You don't snap your fingers and voila! get bread. Really, it's not difficult to understand, you just refuse to listen.

    38. Re:Thank God! by sparklehackery · · Score: 1

      Religious people should be sterilized.

      Atheists should be sterilized. *gets stick, marshmallows*

      to continue this to its logical conclusion...

      everyone should be sterilised.

      not that dumb an idea actually.
    39. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      And as a person who found Christ in the last 3 years

      I'm sorry to hear that you're so weak minded as to have to believe in the unbelievable.

      My sincere condolances.

    40. Re:Thank God! by cartel · · Score: 1

      Yes, but where are the fish with legs?

    41. Re:Thank God! by ars · · Score: 1

      People have looked, and looked and looked. And not once has a bacteria ever turning into something else. It's changed - but it's always remained a bacteria.

      You have to remember that quick change in a bacteria is NOT evolution - bacteria genes are programmed for quick change.

      Evolution has never been observed under any scale. The only thing that's been observed is a pre-existing trait in a species becoming more common, or obvious. But actual evolution has never been seen.

      --
      -Ariel
    42. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's some evidence of proto legs on a coelocanth. Where's evidence for your invisible man? Rather than continuing to question the masses, why not present your own facts and evidence for intelligent design, creationism, god(s) or whatever?

    43. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem with the sticker is that it stated that a particular theory was not a fact. If they hadn't mentioned evolution, it wouldn't have been a "religious" issue.

      I do think kids should learn the difference between a theory and a fact. It should be a normal part of the curriculum, when the word is first introduced, it should be properly defined with a good explanation of why scientists rely on some theories so much that they seem to be facts.

      The word "theory" gets used too much as a synonym for hypothesis, fact, and wild speculation that I'm not surprised people get confused. Considering how much this word is used and misused, a proper lesson can be designed without any religous message that clarifies both religous and nonreligous discussions.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    44. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who does a detective trust in a murder case? The physical evidence or the witness?

    45. Re:Thank God! by mike260 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And when my hope is gone and I've been wounded in the battle He is all the strength that I will ever need.

      Best of luck with that mate, I'll be the one screaming "medic!" at the top of my lungs. Modern medicine may just be a theory but I reckon it's statistically a better bet than relying on His strength.

      Now, who wants to start a campaign to sticker bibles? Kids should be aware that the contents of that book are just a theory, and a pretty poorly supported one at that...

    46. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the memories you have, and the experiences you are experiencing right now could also be a random set of figures that are currently metastisicing from a quantum error that will end in a nanosecond.

      Bloody unlikely.

    47. Re:Thank God! by Surazal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And you, sir, have demonstrated the healthy way to view this skeptically.

      It kind of reminds me of my favorite argument about the "Newton was Wrong" folks: No, he wasn't wrong. His equations were accurate to a certain point. If he had the ability to hurl apples to the ground at velocities comparable to light (and be able to measure the consequences), he would have certainly had the wherewithall to at least state "my basic theory breaks down at absurd velocities for some reason".

      Back to the main point: I think it's irresponsible to equate religion and science. The two are literally antitheses of each other. Religion demands adherence without proof. Science demands adherence only with proof.

      If things get somewhat heated I am tempted to say "there is no mention in the scriptures stating the Book of Genesis is a scientific paper." I haven't actually done so yet in conversation. I'm still waiting for the opportune moment. :^)

      --
      --- Journals are boring; Go to my web page instead
    48. Re:Thank God! by lordofthechia · · Score: 1

      "Books on evolution are and thus rightfully deserve a sticker stating the simple truth: Evolution is a theory, not a fact." Hence why Evolution comes with a disclamer that precedes it. You know the *theory* of evolution. Adding that disclaimer at the front of the book is grossly reduntant.

      --
      Georgia Tech, the leader in Chia(tm) technology.
    49. Re:Thank God! by packeteer · · Score: 1

      Just becuase the bible is wrong doesn't mean your religion is wrong. People make mistakes. People, not god, wrote the bible. If religion is the true answer to creation then admitting that somewhere a mistake has been made along the way is not a big deal. Religous interpretation of the past doesn;t need to always be correct for a religous to be worth taking part in.

      --
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    50. Re:Thank God! by shredwurzel · · Score: 1

      I thought Evolution was a mail client...

    51. Re:Thank God! by ars · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about? Are you just making stuff up?

      What does any of that have to do with evolution?

      Evolution is genetic material changing in a way that's beyond what the genes are pre-programmed to do.

      You may not know this, but genes are designed to be mutable. That's not evolution (children of the same parents don't all look alike - genes change, even in such a "simple" case). That's staying within the bounds of the genetic program. To give you an example, take twins, both with the same genes - if both sets of genes change in more of less the same way in response to something, that's by definition not evolution.

      Evolution is totally random, going beyond that to something totally new, and that has never actually been seen.

      --
      -Ariel
    52. Re:Thank God! by elmegil · · Score: 5, Insightful
      to impose a new religion on the kids.

      Anyone with a clue here at all?

      Apparently not you, since you can't distinguish science from religion.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    53. Re:Thank God! by krautcanman · · Score: 1

      I think the point the other posters are getting at is this:
      There are lots of fossils of discovered species, but there seems to be huge, unfilled gaps between these species in the fossil records. In other words, there have been no observed intermediates between what has already been found.

    54. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jesus christ on a pogo sitck.

      you know what - amphibians are fucking "between species" according to your dumbass. hey, those fucking frogs got features of both mammals AND marine-life. god damn, its an ass-jumping FISH WITH LEGS.

      what kindof retard fuck nozzle jesus-crack smoking cock knobbler are you? you effing believe that the earth was created 4 thousand years ago, and like an ezbake oven ... BING! it was done?!?

      but to argue against evolution is as pointless as arguing that the earth is flat. you're wrong, and you are impeding progress to take the other position.

      take your mouth off of your pastors dick and read a fucking book, maybe even two, if you can fucking spell more than WWJD.

    55. Re:Thank God! by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

      When science is being used to keep people from thinking beyond the fashionable theories, it has an awful lot in common with the worst of religion.

    56. Re:Thank God! by MasamuneXGP · · Score: 1

      Not quite accurate. The equivilent would be something along the lines of "The concept of the Bible being God-breathed is a theory. There exists the possibility that it is only a book, written by man." That's what these stickers are about; reminders that both topics revolve around unproven ideas, both of which are likely never to be proven. If you want to believe that evolution took place or that the Bible if the word of God, you should do so by your own faith and not because someone tells you to.

    57. Re:Thank God! by VertigoAce · · Score: 1

      The way I understood the court's opinion was that it was only unconstitutional because the school district went out of their way to put these stickers in books. The judge made sure to point out that he was making a very narrow ruling on this specific situation. His determination was that the school district was representing a particular side of the issue when it decided to put the stickers in the textbooks. The decision wasn't so much about the content of the stickers, but rather the reason why they were put in (they were done in order to satisfy religious parents who didn't want their children to believe the theory of evolution).

    58. Re:Thank God! by khrtt · · Score: 1

      ...logical conclusion...

      You are confused. Atheism is a form of religion, as it is believing that there is no god, which is no better than believing that there is god. Thus, my dear, the logical conclusion is "people who believe in stupid shit should be sterilized", and this includes both atheists and religious people alike, but not agnostics.

    59. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry to hear that you're so weak minded as to have to believe in the unbelievable.

      Wouldn't it take an infinitely strong mind to believe something that is unbelievable?

    60. Re:Thank God! by DreamMaster · · Score: 1

      All fossils can tell is that either evolution *may* have happened, or that God has a sense of humour, and knew there'd need to be something to occupy paleoentologists in future milleniums when he created the world.

      Think Terry Prattchet's book Strata, and you'll get what I mean. :)

    61. Re:Thank God! by plumpy · · Score: 1

      But it's making you think it; just like subliminal messages which are illegal.

      You're correct that they're illegal (at least in the US), but the fact is that they don't work.

    62. Re:Thank God! by TWX · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Furthermore, evolution does not attempt to explain the origin of life, only the ways in which it has changed since it began. I have never heard a remotely plausible theory regarding the origin of life. People have not yet been able to create anything nearly as complex as a machine which can produce more of itself outside of laboratory conditions, and the idea that such machines just "happened" accidentally is far-fetched at best.


      Scientists have, however, managed to zap at contained vats of chemicals that could be similar to the soup that was Earth's conditions before life and managed to get some very basic 'things' that could be the precursors to life as we know it. Unfortunately, they don't have millennia to continue to monitor and experiment on these vats of organic chemicals to see what actually happens to them.

      I think that it's very plausible that amino acids and proteins, combined with a whole slew of other compounds came together and started to have different chemical reactions that built upon themselves leading to "life". Also, small, simple systems are easily mutated chemically at such a stage, so new variants would crop up in the process of dividing or chemically reacting, continuing the diversification. Over time pieces combine or split and grow in complexity, eventually joining into simple multicellular organisms, then further.
      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    63. Re:Thank God! by DShard · · Score: 2, Informative

      There called salamanders.

    64. Re:Thank God! by un1xl0ser · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The main reason is that evolution is being singled out as the only thing that is a theory, which may discredit it without merit.

      All science is is theory. You can't "prove" anything. Why single out evolution or anything involving the origin of species?

      --
      v4sw6PU$hw6ln6pr4F$ck 4/6$ma3+6u7LNS$w2m4l7U$i2e4+7en6a2X h
    65. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How has it been observed. Did someone clone HG Wells have him build his time machine and travel back to watch evolution. In order for something to be a fact the process has to be observed over and over again to prove that it remains constant then it becomes law. You know the law of gravity, the first and second laws of therodynamics. These are laws that were proven after years of study and observation in which the processes were recreated and the results were the same time and time again. You can't say something is a fact when some or all of its processes are nothing more than theories as you admit.

    66. Re:Thank God! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more.. lets put the bible in school or somewere else that a group of people are require to show up by law, and make them read the bible with one of those sticker in it.

      I don't believe you don't see the captive audience here and that the books are require reading for a grade that counts on wether or not they meet state standards and laws. I can see this rulling being struck down on apeal simply because the judge looked at those wanting the sticker and not what the sticker said. This isn't a rulling on seperation of church and state because a sticker questioned a theory, it is because the people wanting the sticker there are religious. He was efectivly shooting down a law/policy based on who suported it. I wonder if that would work if a bank robber supported a law against robbing banks?

      The funny thing is that there is no more evidence supporting evelution as a creation of life and the worlds as we know it then there is any other theory. BTW, creation isn't the only competing theory either. evolution is also one of the newest theories on the block too. I wouldn't want the texted books to claim that thor shit a fireball and it was the sun without a disclaimer just like i wouldn't want it saying "god created everythign in 6 days", just the same as i think it is reasonable to question evolution as the mass creator.

      Even evolution gets stuck at some point of time were it resolves to somethign was just there. And to this day there isn't any real evolution hapening in an observable rate. Sure there is micro evolution but no macro evolution were species jumps are being made. Why did it stop? I guess this is one topic that will probably turn into a flame war or somethign.

    67. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

      There's a reason it's called "faith".

    68. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Much of science is often chalk-full of dogma.

    69. Re:Thank God! by someonehasmyname · · Score: 1

      Most of that would sound good, if Ali G. was reading it. =)

      --
      Common sense is not so common.
    70. Re:Thank God! by malfunct · · Score: 3, Informative

      http://dict.die.net/fact/
      Source: WordNet (r) 1.7

      fact
      n 1: a piece of information about circumstances that exist or
      events that have occurred; "first you must collect all
      the facts of the case"
      2: a statement or assertion of verified information about
      something that is the case or has happened; "he supported
      his argument with an impressive array of facts"
      3: an event known to have happened or something known to have
      existed; "your fears have no basis in fact"; "how much of
      the story is fact and how much fiction is hard to tell"
      4: a concept whose truth can be proved; "scientific hypotheses
      are not facts"

      I thought a definition would be useful here. The sticker is completely correct in stating that theory is not fact by all of the above definitions. I agree that the reason the sticker is on the books is definitely biased but the message itself is fairly neutral and fully accurate so far as I can tell. If they had stated that the theory of evolution was false or had been proven incorrect then they would be inaccurate and the sticker defintely should be removed. As it stands it is just a statement of common sense that should be practiced by any scientist.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    71. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How has it been observed.

      I've watched different strains of plants, progressing down lineages, do better in my particular greenhouse.

      What more do you want unless you can grant me the lifetime of 1000 men?

    72. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... but plausible that the process continued unbroken, mutating more and more complex systems to what we are today ... unlikely, and unsubstantiated IMHO.

    73. Re:Thank God! by cartel · · Score: 0

      I don't have any visual proof. I do know for myself from experience that God is real and He loves me and you too. I really honestly can see a difference between believers and non-believers. Me, I am so much happier - I have hope, I have joy, I have peach - I really do, I have purpose. I don't have to feel guilty for things. Even when I'm all alone and I feel helpless, I can keep going because I have hope - I know I'll be taken care of. He's never let me down. I don't think this hope is false - too many things have happened and too many prayers answered that have just proved that it's not mere coincidence. There's somebody answering those prayers.

    74. Re:Thank God! by 955301 · · Score: 1, Troll

      Actually, it's not positive. It's Cobb's government that endorsed and effected this unbelievably dumb sticker idea in the first place. The fact that it took two years to undo the problem and that it will inevitably be appealled makes it all the more sad.

      I live in Cobb county. And after meeting this many road raged, racist, backwards thinking religious couch potatoes, I hope they get what they ask for. Permission to regress to burning eachother at the stake and ignoring the world of thought outside their precious little six-flag-over-Jesus circle.

      And I'm disgraced by those people I know in this county who actually value outside opinions but don't respond to this type of foolishness.

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    75. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sorry but you only have two choices. If it wasn't by chance. Then you must accept it was of divine origins. The 'third' option: life is alien to this world, is simply pushing back the debate chronologically because that alien life must have come into being somehow.. which brings you back to random or divine. Divine can cirumvent the alien paradox since it could plausibily be beyond time etc etc...

    76. Re:Thank God! by cartel · · Score: 0

      haha, I have "peace" not peach. I have that too in the fridge...

    77. Re:Thank God! by mothlos · · Score: 1

      Observations are not fact. In all actuality, hard "facts" do not exist in science, observations stand for themselves and are inherantly subjective.

      Many theories are 'unproven concepts', particularly when dealing with things which we cannot easily observe, such as string theory. One of the fundamental ideas of science is that nothing can be definitively proven regardless of how well something explains a phenomenae. Newtonian theory was once a dominant theory, and while very useful in its time, and even today on Earth, it was found to be wrong and replaced with relativity theory.

      Evolution is by no means a dead theory either. While natural selection is seen as a very important force in evolution, there is much debate about other evolutionary forces and seeming limits of current evolutionary theory to explain many observations.

      To single out evolution I think was incorrect, but to call it constitutionally forbidden is rediculous. Fact of the matter is, science isn't taught with enough skepticism in many schools and people start to believe it like they would a religion. Just another reason we should re-examine the way we educate our children.

    78. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lets kill off the human race, yay!

    79. Re:Thank God! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      It is not clear to me what the sticker has to do with separation of church and state.

      It was carefully worded that way.
      It's called being "sneaky".

      People have not yet been able to create anything nearly as complex as a machine which can produce more of itself outside of laboratory conditions, and the idea that such machines just "happened" accidentally is far-fetched at best.

      It's far fetched, but here we are. We happened, kinda hard not to accept that.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    80. Re:Thank God! by LucidBeast · · Score: 1

      I'm happy for you. Rest of us can get the same kicks from /.. (sorry, don't mean to mock your beliefs)

    81. Re:Thank God! by sepluv · · Score: 1

      >>not once has a bacteria ever turning into something else<<

      That all depends what `something else' is.

      >>It's changed<< ...which is called evolution...

      >>You have to remember that quick change in a bacteria is NOT evolution<<

      Surely, if it is changing quickly then it is evolving even more than normal.

      >>bacteria genes are programmed for quick change<<

      Programmed in what sense? Are you saying that you agree that genes exist and you think they were programmed by God so that we change over time so that the fittest survive; that's called evolution.

      >>Evolution has never been observed under any scale.<<

      Maybe because underneath a scale is a funny place for someone to look for it?

      >>The only thing that's been observed is a pre-existing trait in a species becoming more common, or obvious.<<

      That is how natural selection or evolution works. Yes.

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    82. Re:Thank God! by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      You really expect evolution between kingdoms within a human period of observation? The postulate in question is that life evolved to its present state over a period of 4 billion years. Asking someone to present a contemporary example of one kingdom sprouting from another is like asking them to lift the Empire State Building. It's patently impossible.

    83. Re:Thank God! by disnet · · Score: 1
      If you throw out evolution, you have to throw out one of these ideas: the theory that an organisms devolopment is an expression of its genetic material

      The fact that an organism is an expression of its genetic material does not mean that evolution is true or false. It has nothing to do with evolution. Evolution describes the change in genetic material from one generation to the next. The validity of genetics does not have anything to do with monkeys changing into men over millions of years.

      the theory that an organism inherits its genetic material

      Gentetic inheritance does not depend on evolution being true.

      the theory that the genetic material is mutable

      Genetic mutations do not depend on evolution being true. Evolution states that bacteria + mutations + time = humans. Evolution depends on mutations not the other way around.

      Regardless of weather or not evolution is true, genetics does not depend on evolution. Gregor Mendel was doing his work on genetics at the same time as Darwin. The only thing that their theorys had in common was that neither was dependant on the other.

    84. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you refuse to believe in something you can't see or test?

      Isn't that why atheists refuse to believe in a god?

    85. Re:Thank God! by DShard · · Score: 1

      If you don't even have an understanding of the theory, how can you criticize it?

      Bacteria do indeed evolve as they become adapted better to the environment due to reproductive pressures. That is the _definition_ of evolution as it was hypothesized. Nothing more, nothing less. The speed of adaption isn't in the definition.

      You can delude yourself into to thinking that "fast" adaption and "slow" adaption are different things according to the hypothesis, but they aren't. No amount of hand waving, indignation or disbelief will change it. Nor will it change the observation of it's truth.

      no amount of criticizing is going to make intelligent design a theory. You can argue all you want about evolution but it will never make intelligent design anything more then religion.

      We have observed evolution and created tools based on it's selective pressure. We have a cornicopia of physical proof. The majority of _all_ scientist, let alone bioligists have been convinced by evidence. No amount of school boards can change the facts.

    86. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Evolution is evolution. The distinction between micro and macro exists for convenience only. Evolution is a change in a species over time and that is all.

    87. Re:Thank God! by 955301 · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Bible being God-breathed is a hypothesis, not a theory. A theory has been tested with facts. Lots of them.

      You would need a few facts to move this puppy along. I'd settle for hearing just one or two. But it's all faith-based. At some point, you have to tell yourself "I believe" instead of collecting details to prove it.

      The hypothesis that an entity other that human beings communicated the information in the Bible has not been tested. Ironically, it would have been nice to have had Science around in a mature state at the time to record enough details to actually do this.

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    88. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution is a fact, examine heredity, drug resistance and breeding for contemporary examples of it. Whats theoretical is WHY evolution happens as it does, to which Darwin proposed is survival of the fittest. Thats not proven and prolly not true as modern people tend reproduce less often as they are more successful. Proposing evolution is a theory connotes a lack of understanding as to what evolution, theories and even science are.

    89. Re:Thank God! by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      But if it ever did happen, we would be diggin up skeletons of fish with legs, and animals that are between species.

      We are.

    90. Re:Thank God! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Evolution operates. What is behind the evolution? Can science deal with that?

      Yes, Mr. Lamarck, it can: It shall be henceforth known as "survival of the fittest".

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    91. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, there has not been evidence of evolution observed nor recorded at any point by man.

      Adaptation is a different matter, and *has* been observed several times.

      Confusion of the two is being used to falsely state that we have observed Evolution, which requires that a new species of life develop, and to be a new species it must typically be unable to interbreed outside of its species.

      For example, creation of a new breed of dog is Not Evolution. It is adaptation, and in fact is an example of intelligent design - by human intelligence. The fact that any breed of dog can be bred with any other breed keeps it in the same species, and without speciation, you cannot demonstrate evolution. The same is true for genetic engineering - this is also an example of intelligent design, again by humans.

      We have been able to show that there appear to be refinements to life forms that track within the fossil record. How these creatures came to be separate species is still a question, that Evolutionary theory attempts to explain, but cannot yet prove. If you ignore the possibility of intelligent design, it appears to be the best explanation.

      We have also seen within the last two decades that previously "extinct" creatures are in fact still alive and well - a population of Coelocanth was recently discovered. This particular fish was supposed to have died off some millenia ago.

      These issues clearly raise questions about evolution, which are not popular to ask inside or outside of the scientific community. Our knowledge of biology is only now starting to be really developed, and we are routinely discarding ideas that were previously set in stone. Now that we have mapped the human genome, we are beginning to question just how many DNA instructions are in fact separating us from other animals. There is some question about the 'empty space' DNA in between the parts we currently identify as functional DNA code.

      Perhaps it is not so crazy to simply keep an open mind about whether or not the current Evolutionary model might deserve some tweaking, or eventually destruction.

    92. Re:Thank God! by jcknox · · Score: 0, Troll

      This is an excellent point. Why are evolutionsts so defensive about their theory? Is there some dark secret that they don't want us to know? Scientists (and other academics, for that matter) have come up with some seemingly ridiculous ideas in other areas and have been allowed to pursue them to the point that they became mainstream. Deconstruction was once considered ridiculous, now it's the standard in literary analysis.

      These kinds of changes have been stifled in biology, geology, etc. for decades because scientists can't pose anything that undermines evolution without being excommunicated from the field. Yes. Excommunicated. Gee, that's a religious term, isn't it?

      If science is going to be this pure study of what's out there, then it needs to be sincerely open to study of many different ideas. Have you ever honestly looked at the evidence for a global flood of immense proportions? It's scary.

    93. Re:Thank God! by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a fact. It's been observed.

      There has never been an observation of one species evolving into another. What has been observed is something completely different: changes *within a species.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    94. Re:Thank God! by randallpowell · · Score: 1
      SO is Thunderbird but Evolution is a theory and not fact. Thunderbird is a fact and it is true. I read it on the internets.

      I am the only Buddhist here that thinks our society is falling apart slowly since Bush got office?

    95. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All creatures on earth are between evolutionary states including humans.

    96. Re:Thank God! by LucidBeast · · Score: 1

      Are there many references in bible for whimsical God or are there other stories of God making pranks for the purpose of them being funny? I have read bible once or twice, but never thought it from that aspect.

    97. Re:Thank God! by zymurgyboy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Funny. I don't ever recall seeing any such stickers on any of my mathematics text books when I majored in it back in college (I had/have a lot of them) and they are almost nothing but theories.

      To pretend the sticker was placed there as some altruistic warning with no religious agenda-pushing pretense is absurd and preposterous.

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    98. Re:Thank God! by KhanAFur · · Score: 1

      I disagree, there is evolution occuring at an observable rate. Probably the best example of this is in antibiotic resistant bacteria. As bacteria reproduces it doesn't reproduce perfectly and as a result small mutations occur. Some of these mutations make the bacteria resistant to antibiotics. The bacteria with the mutations are the ones that survive in an enviroment with antibiotics and reproduce.

    99. Re:Thank God! by DShard · · Score: 2

      4: a concept whose truth can be proved; "scientific hypotheses are not facts"

      That is why evolution is a theory and not a hypothesis. Evolution is supported by facts. There is no rational dispute to these facts. Evolution is not in question. You can't pray that away. You can't put enough stickers in enough books to change it.

    100. Re:Thank God! by 955301 · · Score: 2, Informative


      Would you settle for a few steps? Taken by a Bonobo who decided walking erect was a better idea after injuring her back? Google is your friend. She's in an Israeli zoo...

      We also know that humans were shorter. There's recorded proof.

      But I agree that Evolution isn't a fact. It's a theory supported by a lot of fact checking...

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    101. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and when you're lying on your deathbed you'll have the horrible revelation that there are no gods and that christian mythology has used up much of your limited life.

      And when you're lying on your deathbed you'll have the horrible revelation that there is absolutely nothing past what you are about to experience, and all of your time was a complete waste. In fact, you would have been better off aborted.

      Two way street, my friend. ;)

    102. Re:Thank God! by Atraxen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Strecker Synthesis type reactions, if I recall correctly, are what you're referring to here. Yeah, you can make amino acids with the right mix and a bolt of lightning. But proteins denature pretty easily with changes in pH or temperature - the major advantage complex organisms have over single-cellular life is the ability to create/maintain homeostasis. If we're talking about primordial soup, there's a good chance that anything that gets made then breaks. And even if you get amino acids, what then? That's not life. Amino acids can form proteins - to use the body-as-computer analogy, even if we assume DNA was formed and maintained at stable/favorable conditions, you've got the equivalent of a hard drive with an OS installed - but you have no motherboard to read it with yet... I'm not saying evolution didn't happen - the probabilty of all the conditions lining up like dominoes is unlikely, but no worse than most hypotheses out there - these kids MUST learn that science is acheived by consensus, theories are simply our 'best model' (you didn't learn statistical mechanics in grade school, but you probably learned the Bohr model - a model advances but is still useful within its boundary conditions), and that all theories/hypotheses MUST be critically examined. Right, back to my beer now.

      --
      Be careful of your thoughts; they could become words at any minute...
    103. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      read the bible

    104. Re:Thank God! by StarCat76 · · Score: 1

      He did not say that macroevolution by means of natural selection was fact. All he said is that evolution is a fact. That is a true statement, no?

    105. Re:Thank God! by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2

      The implication was that evolution has no factual backing, which is closer to the definition of a hypothesis. While evolution has not yet reached the level of a law, it still has a great deal of scientific backing behind it. There is still much to be explained, yes, but the abstracts of those aspects make a lot more sense than the ideas forwarded by creationists.

      Einstein's theories are still taught, but no one questions that, because there's a strong base of evidence supporting it. Evolution just makes some people uneasy because it clashes with their faith. It's a matter of placing one's heart or one's head at a higher priority of belief.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    106. Re:Thank God! by deathazre · · Score: 1

      hard evidence cannot lie, be bought, be extorted, etc....

      --
      Karma: Negative (Mostly affected by dorm trolling)
    107. Re:Thank God! by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1
      The sticker is completely correct in stating that theory is not fact by all of the above definitions

      In the sense of whether life somehow evolved over the years to become what is now, evolution is definitely a fact. Way too many fossils have been dug up to demonstrate this. The question of how they evolved can be considered theory, but whether they evolved in indisputable.

      an event known to have happened or something known to have existed;

      Unless different species happened to spawn from thin air, they are all decended from earlier species. The evolution of one species to another is known to have occurred, so evolution is fact.

      --
      No data, no cry
    108. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      How about a fish that can breathe air?

      http://mama.essortment.com/lungfish_rank.htm

    109. Re:Thank God! by qw(name) · · Score: 1
      Every fossil and bone are the remains of a species in the process of changing.
      What's funny is that your statement is only a theory as well with no proof to substantiate the claim.
    110. Re:Thank God! by HybridJeff · · Score: 1

      You know I bet you the textbook even says its a theory. If they'd teach their kids the difference between the two wed ba alot better off.

    111. Re:Thank God! by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 0
      Evolution simply removes the need for one.

      Apparently a lot of people seem to misunderstand that evolution doesn't say anything about the creation of life (much less anything about the creation of the universe) and is only concerned with the change in life through time. Evolution != abiogenesis.

      IANAS, but I've done a lot of personal study on the topic of evolution, as well as evolution vs. "creationism" since all this controversy started up a few months ago. I picked up quite a number of books by Richard Dawkins (One particularly interesting one is "The Selfish Gene" which begins with a great dissertation on abiogenesis and goes through a great story that details how the "chance" of life appearing out the primordial soup is nowhere near as random or billion-to-one as most people believe) and others.

      Also, I encourage anyone who is interested in this topic to visit http://www.talkorigins.org/ and study up on how BS the arguments against evolution are, as well as browse various creationist websites to see just how BS they are in general.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    112. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 1

      I don't think you know what genes are. Generally speaking, the genes in identical twins don't change much if at all from birth to death, but on the other hand... You may not know this, but genes are designed to be mutable. That's not evolution Actually, that's pretty much what evolution is.

    113. Re:Thank God! by ars · · Score: 1

      >>Surely, if it is changing quickly then it is evolving even more than normal.

      Wrong. Bacterias are designed to change - but they never change out of their boundaries.

      >>Programmed in what sense? Are you saying that you agree that genes exist and you think they were programmed by God so that we change over time so that the fittest survive; that's called evolution.

      Yes that's almost what I'm saying - except that's survial of the fittest IS NOT EVOLUTION.

      You are probably the millionth person to think so, but it's simply not the case.

      Survival of the fittest is making one pre-existing species more populous then another one.

      However evolution is changing one species into a different one.

      THEY ARE NOT THE SAME. In survival of the fittest the species must already exist!

      --
      -Ariel
    114. Re:Thank God! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution. I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      Ah, great, you refuse to believe in anything that takes longer than our short human lifespans to happen.

      But aside from that nonsense, here's an interresting point of "macro"evolution: Look at a wolf. Good, good, notice the yellow eyes, the firm, proud buttocks, and the shading of the pelt. Now, look at a chihuahua.

      That's right.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    115. Re:Thank God! by niXcamiC · · Score: 0
      the notion that some all-seeing, all-knowing invisible superhero created life so that it could be fawned over is even more absurd.

      What about a lifeform existing outside of time? Its happened on startrek so it must be possible.

      --
      Chances are any disscution on Slashdot will degrade into a flamewar about ID/Christianity within 14 posts.
    116. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup? A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton..."
      Wow, go back to bio class.

      talkorigins.com:
      "Nor is abiogenesis (the origin of the first life) due purely to chance. Atoms and molecules arrange themselves not purely randomly, but according to their chemical properties. In the case of carbon atoms especially, this means complex molecules are sure to form spontaneously, and these complex molecules can influence each other to create even more complex molecules. Once a molecule forms that is approximately self-replicating, natural selection will guide the formation of ever more efficient replicators. The first self-replicating object didn't need to be as complex as a modern cell or even a strand of DNA. Some self-replicating molecules are not really all that complex (as organic molecules go)."

      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-misconceptio ns .html

    117. Re:Thank God! by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      Isn't that what all worldviews do? Consider USA and it's thinking of communism. Christians with science. And -isms in philosophy.

    118. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm afraid you're the one who is highly confused. Atheism is fundamentally different from any form of faith-based belief because it assumes the existence of only what has been proven to exist, rather than religion, which assumes things wholly unnecessary to anything in the universe other than the believer's own sense of purpose. Theists and agnostics do seem to enjoy rationalizing themselves this way though; perhaps a testament to their lack of comprehension.

    119. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Had a group of parents come to the school or state and said "The books are wrong by stating that evolution is a fact" or "We don't see that the books clearly state what a theory is especially in regards to evolution" then there probably wouldn't have been a problem.

      The problem comes in the intent of the stickers, which you touched on. The intent of the stickers was to diminish evolution as an acceptable concept. The wording was carefully chosen.

      The premise being that if they point out it's basis in theory that people might give less credence to the concept. Since the sticker was put on at the request of creationists and not by a "bi-partisan" group of concerned people then it starts to cross that boundary of church/state interference.

    120. Re:Thank God! by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      The Bible is actually a lot of history as well. If you'd like to label that theoretical, well the same can be said for most history books.

    121. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Wrong. Bacterias are designed to change - but they never change out of their boundaries

      never? cancer? mutation? possibly how some of these "impossible" changes occur?

    122. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 1
      The point is that all three theories taken together imply evolution, each one in particular do not.

      But you do have to throw out at least one of them if you want to throw out evolution.

    123. Re:Thank God! by thelenm · · Score: 1

      Here's what I don't understand: Why does mentioning evolution make this a religious issue? It wouldn't be an issue of church and state if the stickers said, for example, "Einstein's theory of relativity is a theory, not a fact." Our understanding of evolution is in the domain of science. It has nothing to do with religion.

      --
      Use Ctrl-C instead of ESC in Vim!
    124. Re:Thank God! by MrLint · · Score: 1

      actually sexual reproduction is also evoultion. Sadly however this excludes most the the readers of /.

    125. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Isn't there a third option? That this universe was created through a random process by an intelligent designer?

      I don't know about you, but if I was going to create a universe, I wouldn't want to micro-manage it. It would be much more intrigueing to use varrying explosive charges and create universes from a single singularity and just see what shit happens.

    126. Re:Thank God! by jcknox · · Score: 1

      Actually, survival of the fittest has created more problems for evloution that it has solved. How does an intermediate form without the benefits of its fully evolved descendant qualify as fittest? For example: until an intermediate form that's not quite a bird can fly, it's a spindly-legged, slow moving, small boned, flightless animal. Flight is what makes birds survivable species. If it emerges over millions of years, there are millions of years where these animals are not going to be fittest.

      This problem leaves us staring at the idea of punctuated equlibrium - birds came about suddenly as a result of a mutation. OK, so what are the chances that two mutants identical enough to produce offspring were born close enough together (both temporally and geographically) that they could mate? Now, what are the chances that this could happen once for each major group of species?

      Of course, we're assuming that mutations could actually result in additional useful information being added to DNA -- sort of like a glitch in your PC's file system resulting in an extra chapter to your dissertation: a chapter that is contextually relevant, free of spelling errors, and within the guidelines provided by your committee. G

    127. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 1

      nanosecond's gone.

    128. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "genes are designed to be mutable."

      No they aren't. You might EXPRESS different genes than your parents (and you only have half of each parent's set of genes to begin with). NOTHING in that process involves mutation, though. Genes are "designed" (a dangerous word since it's not clear that they were meant to do anything; rather, they simply do what they do) to carry information. Mutations, by defination, destroy that information.
      Now, mutations clearly happen (ask anyone who has had a cancer, for example). Most mutations are bad for the organism. Which is why our bodies act to try to *prevent* mutations when possible.

      Now, you're right, most of the ways in which I am unlike my parents are a not due to mutations. (In fact, I can't think of any mutations from my parents' genes which I express.) So the fact that I'm different from my parents isn't quite what it's cracked up to by the grandparent in terms of proving evolution.

    129. Re:Thank God! by Botty · · Score: 0

      Thats *not* all. Anyone who debates that microevolution doesnt happen is an idiot. Macroevolution, what says that humans slowly evolved over millions of years from who knows what is still under debate.

    130. Re:Thank God! by zymurgyboy · · Score: 1
      What if these were creation science text books? Would it be okay to put stickers on them warning about quaint and fanciful theories regarding the creation of the universe and the origins of life contained therein? Would the creation science crowd not call foul due to some evolutionist agenda pushing?

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    131. Re:Thank God! by joshmccormack · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      It is not clear to me what the sticker has to do with separation of church and state. The sticker made no reference to any religious beliefs...

      The sticker seems to run contrary to the religion imposed in the schools by the courts. This is certainly not freedom of religion. Some might think it's freedom from religion, but that's not the case either. The courts are deciding how children should be indoctrinated.

    132. Re:Thank God! by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 1
      Funny. I don't ever recall seeing any such stickers on any of my mathematics text books when I majored in it back in college (I had/have a lot of them) and they are almost nothing but theories.

      Actually, Math text books would tend to be the books with by far the fewest theories (where they tend to be called conjectures). Mathematics distinguishes itself from science by being a formal system of logic derived from a few basic premises. Where as in science you merely accumlate enough evidence to get most of the people in the field to go along with you, in Math you actually prove things..

      --
      Why?
    133. Re:Thank God! by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1
      Isn't that what all worldviews do? Consider USA and it's thinking of communism. Christians with science. And -isms in philosophy.

      When something becomes a worldview, that does seem to be one of the things that tends to happen. I guess it's part of the nature of humans to look for us vs. them divisions.

    134. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Fun was had by all during the whole Job shenanigan.

    135. Re:Thank God! by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      Personally I don't assume that evolution was the only path to where we are today.

      I just hate that so many religious types sit at "this is the way it is".

      Religion by far is a scam. Good people come in all shapes and sizes and it has nothing todo with God. I personally don't devote much if any time to the matter yet I still hold doors for people, donate my software to the public domain, and give people directions when I can [etc...]. You don't have to do church fundraisers and carry a bible to be a "good person".

      All religion does is fill the gap of the unknown with a nice story that isn't supported by even a modicum of fact.

      Did Jesus exist? Who the fuck knows. It was 2000 years ago. He could have been a she, she could have been a thief who raped hordes of people.

      Anyone play the telephone game? Anyone surprised that after 10 people a simple message gets messed up?

      For all we know, Jesus could have been a notorious murderer who praid on "virgins"...

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    136. Re:Thank God! by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Believing in God, has absolutely nothing to do with evolution. I believe that there is a God, but I still can see the facts quite easily. Yes, evolution of the species throughout time, is a theorey. But, it is also one of the the best theories out there. Argueing that evolution does not now take place is ridiculus. It is right in front of you. Species are disappearing, and new species have shown up. Likewise, there are cross-over species that have charecteristics of species in between.

      You are are doing the same thing that the church did back in the 1500-1800's when they argued that the Earth was the center of the Universe (and executed a large number of scholars who had done a great job of disproving it). Likewise, before that, churchs (religions) pushed that the Earth was flat and that heaven and hell were on the edges. In spite of what their eyes showed them, they executed ppl for disbelief. You speak of believing in God, and having faith, you seem to want to ignore facts that are in front of you.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    137. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Technically I would have to say that Strong Agnosticism is the only logical conclusion. With the number of unknowns in the universe, nobody can ever conclusively find somthing to be true. Assuming infinite universes and infinite time, everything nomatter how improbbable has happened. Seeing as we can't prove how many universes there are, we can't conclude whether or not there is a God called Yahweh/Alah/etc.. somewhere in some universe. Atheism, while I would say isn't a religion, isn't necessarily that rational itself, and it's definetely not very fun. Agnosticism, is dull and bland, non commital and borderline dishonorable. So rationally I would say theism/deism is the best choice. You get the best bang for your buck.

    138. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Historians of that era did not use the soundest of methods.

    139. Re:Thank God! by calculadoru · · Score: 1

      I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      I have. When on 'shrooms. An eye-opening experience if there ever was one. Wouldn't want to try it again though.
      Which is what I bet God is thinking too.

      --
      The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it. -- G.B. Shaw
    140. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans."

      Other monkeys?

    141. Re:Thank God! by biryokumaru · · Score: 1
      im fairly certain that the vast majority of time where "life" existed in any form, it was learning how to reproduce itself and evolve (prolly took a while to stumble upon the whole "dying promotes change" accident). are billions of years and a little luck (in that there are so very many places life might occur, thus its more likely to occur in atleast one place than none, thus "luck" of sorts, wow that explanation of luck took too long) too far fetched?

      and i disagree about the vcr, in that that argument (as well as mine, unfortunately) is biased through the eyes of a very complex biological mechanism. the materials necesary to build a vcr are rare and often not naturally occuring (plastic, diodes, sodered-on components, etc) and thus much more complex in construction than a simple mitochondrial cell.

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    142. Re:Thank God! by neurojab · · Score: 1

      You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution.

      Is it really that big of a stretch to say that if a small change occurs over a small period of time, then if you multiply the time factor by a billion, you would experience larger changes? That seems totally obvious to me. Is there any known mechanism for limiting the extent of the changes? What constitutes a large change vs a small change?

      I really don't see the distinction. The whole macro vs micro classification was desinged to allow people to continue to believe certain things that fly in the face of the facts. Whatever. Believe what you want.

      That said, you're correct that nobody has observed monkeys turning into humans. I don't believe that's how the theory goes, but I digress. Evolution has been observed. We know no reason it would not affect humans, therefore it is logical to conculde that humans have been affected. We have observed several proto-humans in the fossil record, which corroborates that. Human emergence by evolution is a solid theory. It could be proven wrong someday, but that would require observations of the mechanism that prevents evolution in humans, and the debunking of hundreds of years of anthropology and paleontology.

    143. Re:Thank God! by kgutwin · · Score: 1

      Why are evolutionsts so defensive about their theory? Is there some dark secret that they don't want us to know?

      The dark secret is that evolution has become the theory upon which many many other theories and hypotheses have been built. If evolution were to be proved significantly untenable, then a gigantic chunk of biology would have to be rethought and reworked.

      It's an interesting question. Personally there are features about evolution that I have a hard time accepting prima fasciae, although there are elements that do make sense (such as natural selection, microevolution, etc.) However, there is no outlet for me as a scientist to question at all, because to call into question the theory of evolution is essentially a career killer. I tolerate such a thing, but that doesn't mean I wouldn't smirk just a little if I found out there needed to be a drastic rethinking of life's origins.

      --
      [root@kgutwin /dos]# file msdos.sys
      msdos.sys: fsav (linux) virus (17518-87)
    144. Re:Thank God! by mblase · · Score: 1

      The problem with the sticker is that it stated that a particular theory was not a fact. If they hadn't mentioned evolution, it wouldn't have been a "religious" issue.

      That's exactly it: "Six parents and the American Civil Liberties Union then sued, contending the disclaimers violated the separation of church and state and unfairly singled out evolution from thousands of other scientific theories as suspect."

      Nobody would have bothered pointing out that, say the description of how a star is formed or why Germany started World War II or that the speed of light is relative is just a theory, not an absolute fact. Heck, even gravity is "only" a law, not a theorem. Most of what you learn in a worthwhile science textbook is theoretical.

    145. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right - the theory refers to the mechanisms of evolution.

      And, the sort of evolution that has been observed is in the category of micro-evolution, variation within a species or kind. What Darwin said had to be seen was macro-evolution, or the creation of new species or kinds of organisms. There are some questionable examples of speciation, if you accept a fairly limited definition of what a species is.

      So, the fact of evolution refers to micro-evolution. Macro-evolution, on the other hand is not a fact. It has not been observed, and there are no known mechanisms that can create the massive amounts of information required to assemble and maintain complex biological systems.

      Many mainstream biology texts make this distinction. On the other hand, organizations such as the ACLU and NCSE try to mask it by stating that macro-evolution is just micro-evolution extended over long periods of time.

    146. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1, Troll

      Why is it sad? All it's saying is to keep an open mind that it's only an unproven idea (I'd say theory, but that'll start another debate on the word usage). I'd have to say that most "Evolutionists" have as closed a mind as us "Jesus Freaks". It's kind of funny how they treat their theory like a religion. I always thought science was founded on observation. As far as I know, no one has actually observed macroevolution.

    147. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      So what are you sudgesting? Creatures only died in bursts? There are only two logical conclusions based on your complaint. A) There were NO species during these gaps in the fossil record or B) No creatures left fossils during these gaps. A is rediculous so B must be the conclusion. There have been intermediates, we just can't conclude with absolute certainty which are actually intermediates. Just like we can't conclusively track the lineage from wolves to Pit Bulls.

    148. Re:Thank God! by joshmccormack · · Score: 1

      Modern medicine may just be a theory but I reckon it's statistically a better bet than relying on His strength.

      Uh... few would say they are mutually exclusive.

      Now, who wants to start a campaign to sticker bibles?

      When they require kids to read them in public schools as irrefutable fact that might be reasonable. Now try understanding the situation again.

    149. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aye mate cuz it's a lie.

    150. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're tackling the problem all wrong, which is depressingly common. Genetics do not depend on evolution, and yes, evolution does depend on genetics, but evolution follows as a logical consequence of genetics. This was the parent's point. Entire books are dedicated to explaining how this follows, and it is no simple thing to explain or understand, so you may want to take a trip to the library before clicking "Reply to This".

    151. Re:Thank God! by srleffler · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wondered about that too, but after reading some of the other comments on here, it seems that the issue is more a matter of motivation: the wording on the stickers is indeed very carefully chosen to be neutral, but it was a purely religious motivation that caused the school board to put the stickers on the books, so their presence on the books is a violation of separation of church and state regardless of what the stickers actually say.

    152. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

      And I'm so sorry that you have no hope for life after the one on this earth...that you think you're bound to be worm food. Besides, my faith is based on the observed resurrection of Jesus Christ, not by one or two people, but by hundreds. I'll pray for you.

    153. Re:Thank God! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      The demand by creationists for "intermediate species" is something of a joke. Say that creationists claim there is a "gap" between species X and species Z. Lo and behold, species Y is found.

      Rather than admitting the possibility that they're wrong, they'll simply point to the freshly created "gaps" between X and Y, and between Y and Z.

      They also ignore the fact that tiny changes in the genotype can sometimes have profound physical implications. For example, dwarfism in humans. So phenotypic "jumps" are possible.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    154. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      amen

    155. Re:Thank God! by LnxAddct · · Score: 1

      Okay so you believe in microevolution, thats a good start. Afterall your obviously different than your parents and it is easily showable that your DNA is more or less a combination of theirs with some randomness thrown in (in the form of mutations etc...). For the sake of argument we will ignore the genes that were transferred 100% by your parents (we'll focus on the mutations instead) because although it does cause a unique combination and therefore a unique individual, you could argue that it is simply a recombination and reordering of two half-sets of DNA.

      So for the sake of argument we'll focus on those typically few random mutations of which about 90% tend to be neutral, 5% tend to be harmful and in severe cases the individual will die extremely premature or the individual will not reproduce. The other 5% are good mutations. So starting right there, Bad genes, by design of evolution, are weeded out slowly but surely (more or less). This is the premise of evolution on any scale. Now you try to differentiate between Micro and Macro evolution. This is akin to stating that because the atom is so small, and made up of nothing but a few basic particles, that they couldn't obviously combine to form something unique and different on a much larger scale. What I'm getting at is that your correct in stating that microevolution is accurate, but your missing the bigger picture. Micro and Macro evolution are the same thing just as matter is matter on any level you look at it.

      Perhaps numbers will help to better illustrate the point. Lets say that instead of having a perfect 50/50 split of genes from your parents, you instead had nearly a 50/50 split with .0001% variation due to random genetic mutations. That is 1 part in 1 million, a very small amount. Now you go on to reproduce 2 children, one dies from a genetic disease, the other reproduces also with a 50/50 split and .0001% variation. Over the course of 40,000,000 years (more accurately, generations) this comes out to a 4000% difference amongst the initial parents and the newest generation of offspring. That is a huge difference and our genes are not nearly close to being 4000% different than pigs and apes, so clearly although the mathematical model provides an ideal scenario, it shows that with even very minor variations, over the course of time different species will emerge.

      Over the course of speaking with many individuals, it appears that the biggest obstacle to most people believing this is simply that they can't comprehend such a large amount of time. And it is indeed extremely hard to grasp, but none the less, evolution is evolution. I think I should end this by noting that I am a religious and God-fearing man that practices his faith (Roman Catholic to be exact).
      Regards,
      Steve

    156. Re:Thank God! by zymurgyboy · · Score: 1
      Thank you for the clarification, which misses the forest for the trees.

      Very little of what you encounter in math textbooks rises to the level of mathematical law. Furthermore, a conjecture is just that. Someone's conjecture. Please. Split hairs with someone else.

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    157. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 1
      The thing that Darwin did was come up with a better idea, and that's what needs to appear before any David is going to strike down the Goliath of Evolution.

      The deep dark secret of evolution is that it's not a secret and that noone's trying to impose it on anyone, they're just trying to teach it unencumbered in science class because it's science.

    158. Re:Thank God! by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      It is not clear to me what the sticker has to do with separation of church and state. The sticker made no reference to any religious beliefs, and only cautioned the reader to take the material with a grain of salt. This is *always* good advice: people should never blindly accept any theory as fact.

      From a scientific standpoint, it is misleading because it creates a false dichotomy between theory and fact. All scientific explanations and generalizations are theories. The only facts are observations. "I saw an apple fall" is a fact. "Objects fall toward the center of the earth" is a theory. Some theories are more well founded than others. Evolution is one of the strongest, on a par with gravity.

      Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup? A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton

      No, and neither did we. But both are derived indirectly from something that spontaneously arose out of the primordial soup, so it is not surprising that there are some similarities. Indeed, there is reason to believe that human creativity arises out of neural randomization/selection processes that are somewhat similar to evolution. So the resemblance between things that evolved and things that were designed by man probably reflects similar fundamental mechanisms.

    159. Re:Thank God! by Toloc · · Score: 1

      Writing your own dictionary are you? I consider myself an atheist, which means 'disbelief in the existence of God or gods' (Concise Oxford) from the Greek 'atheos' without god. That's a negative principle - a lack of belief. It doesn't imply any positive belief in anything else. By your logic I would be the person with the most religions in the world since everything I don't believe in would count as a religion.

      So I guess that makes me an Anti-PinkFlyingElephanter, a member of the Temple of no Leprechauns, layman of the Church of NoLittleGreenMen, devotee of the Ministry of ThereAreNoIdiotsPostingOnSlashdot, oh wait ...

    160. Re:Thank God! by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      what is an unsound method for writing stuff down?

    161. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could you provide links or further information concerning the cases of observed macroevolution? I would love to read about them... for whatever reason, I haven't heard about them yet...

    162. Re:Thank God! by malfunct · · Score: 1
      Evolution is a theory supported by facts. It is not a fact. That was my main point and you repeated it.

      That said I happen to strongly believe that evolution is the way that our species developed on this planet the same as all other species.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    163. Re:Thank God! by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      The article made it clear: the judge decided that it was an explicit attack on evolution (because it didn't mention any other theories), and had religious motives. Thus, this violated the seperation of church and state by intent.

      A general warning about how the scientific method works, and the difference between a theory, a hypothesis, and a fact, would be different.

      Oh, and for fairness, I would like to see a similar sticker on the Bible. :)

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    164. Re:Thank God! by elmegil · · Score: 1

      Good think it's not "CHOCK" full. In any case, last time I checked, dogma did not equate to religion. There are religions that do not rely on dogma, and there are plenty of dogmatisms that don't have anything to do with God or other metaphysical issues.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    165. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there's a reason it's called "mental retardation."

    166. Re:Thank God! by srleffler · · Score: 1

      No, it's not. The evidence that macroevolution occurs is substantial, and there is no debate among scientists, despite what the proponents of 'creationism' would have you believe.

    167. Re:Thank God! by fafalone · · Score: 1

      You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution. I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      Geneticists observing markers of evolution in gene samples including living and past primates?
      Evolution isn't just the fossil record and direct observation of speciation, there's EXTENSIVE molecular evidence of it. So extensive that the only proper thing to say is that evolution is a fact. Take human chromosome 2; it's clear that a Robertsonian translocation occured between two acrocentric chromosomes visible in the apes, and obviously this is a genetic process with a certain chance of happening that has been observed to actually occur, so therefore the only logical conclusion is that this occured in an ancient ape population, and the two groups (normal and translocated) diverged into modern apes and humans. Don't understand that? Then you're in no position to be asserting the validity of evolution to begin with.

      Now, what started evolution is up for debate. Driving forces of evolution, i.e. natural selection, are theories, that, while on very solid ground, are still classified as theories... but evolution is a fact and saying otherwise can only be construed as supporting religious dogma.

    168. Re:Thank God! by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      Evidence, every time. Eye witnesses are highly overrated, and only liked because of their ability to sway a jury.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    169. Re:Thank God! by elmegil · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It's still NOT religion. And last time I checked one of the very foundations of science is the "scientific method", the whole point of which is to QUESTION "fashionable theories".

      Just because some scientists waste their time in journals being dogmatic assholes to protect their funding doesn't mean science is wrong or bad, any more than it's fair for me to blame all Christianity for Jerry Fallwell and his ilk.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    170. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about a couple of centuries of oral tradition before you write anything down? Or making stuff up, then writing it down?

    171. Re:Thank God! by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1

      Try reading a sensationalized newspaper like the Washington Times or the Jerusalem Post or watching Fox News.

    172. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Theory, schmeory. 2000 people were offended that a theory is being used by textbook writers to impose a new religion on the kids. Seven were offended by the use of a sticker to bring a little balance into the discussion. The court sides with no balance in the discussion.

      The court's job is to enforce and interpret the law, not to side with the majority.

    173. Re:Thank God! by roju · · Score: 1
      You've been pretty debunked by this whole thread, but I feel like chipping in. At the risk of being marginalized by quoting wikipedia;
      Evolution generally refers to any process of change over time; in the context of the life sciences, evolution is a change in the genetic makeup of a group - a population of interbreeding individuals within a species. Since the emergence of modern genetics in the 1940s, evolution has been defined more specifically as a change in the frequency of alleles from one generation to the next.

      Now, there we have it. Bacteries changing = evolution.
    174. Re:Thank God! by Alpha+State · · Score: 1

      If it's a book presenting all of the hard evidence behind creation science it might be too small to put a sticker on.

    175. Re:Thank God! by tgibbs · · Score: 2

      Here's what I don't understand: Why does mentioning evolution make this a religious issue? It wouldn't be an issue of church and state if the stickers said, for example, "Einstein's theory of relativity is a theory, not a fact." Our understanding of evolution is in the domain of science. It has nothing to do with religion.

      It wouldn't be a problem because there is no religious sect that is pressuring schools to teach Aristotle's theory of motion as a reasonable alternative to Einstein's theory of relativity. But for that very reason, there is nobody pressuring schools to put on such a sticker about relativity. So what makes it a violation of separation of church and state is singling out evolution, when in fact most of what is in every science textbook is theory.

    176. Re:Thank God! by Bastian · · Score: 1

      I really don't know what to think about this sticker.

      On one hand, I actually like it. It isn't pushing Creationism or anything like that, it is simply stating that something is a theory, and implying that all theories should be approached with skepticism, no matter how well-established they are. Given that skepticism is basically the foundation of all science (after all, why would we search for new theories if we thought the ones we had were all correct), I would say that this sticker is, in reality, a big win for the promotion of a scientifically-minded population.

      On the other hand, the people who wrote the copy for this sticker are clearly not very knowledgeable about science, and are misinforming the kids because of it. The fact of the matter is, evolution is a fact of nature, a law, and we are surrounded by proof that it exists (I don't look like my parents, animal breeding) just as much as we are by proof that gravity exists. The theory is the model we use for what causes it - natural selection in this case. This is a big loss for science, because no matter how many times the textbook explains law, theory, and hypothesis, the kids are going to see this misuse of the word theory in the front of their books, and it's going to confuse some of them.

      And the fact of the matter is, I don't think that any school board that lacks a basic understanding of the cirriculum should be frobbing the cirriculum.

    177. Re:Thank God! by malfunct · · Score: 1

      You still haven't convinced me that evolution is a fact, there are many facts supporting the theory and I happen to believe it, but it is not a fact. The only thing stated in the comments on this article that could push evolution into fact is observation of the change over time of bacteria and yet nothing has shown that this microevolution leads to evolution on a larger scale sufficient to differentiate species. Evolution is very compelling and I'd say that it is the "right" theory but it is not, by definition, a fact.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    178. Re:Thank God! by Sebastopol · · Score: 1

      Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup? A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton...

      Yeah, but there are instructions on how to build a VCR, and plausible explanations for how it could have been invented. On the other side, we have miracles.

      Don't predicate your belief in a god on the technical limits of humans. When I sleep, I dream of things far more complicated than man, which exist as reality in my dream, therefore I am God. You are God. We are all God.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    179. Re:Thank God! by Pooua · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Thinking critically is the foundation of science. Faith is the realm of mysticism.

      I would love to see some examples of biological textbooks advocating critical thinking of evolution. Instead of that, the textbooks present a history of events involving the theory, and explain evolutionary theory, but do nothing for showing weaknesses in evolutionary theory. The closest we get to critical thinking are short, amusing anectdotes involving Lamarckism.

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
    180. Re:Thank God! by kherrick · · Score: 1

      Just because you say macroevolution has been observed doesn't mean you are right. Please site examples. Thanks.

    181. Re:Thank God! by nomadic · · Score: 1

      My, my, how reasonable you sound.

      It doesn't matter how breezy you try to sound, no matter how subtly you try to use sarcasm, no matter how condescending you are, you still come out looking like a jackass. You don't understand what a theory is, apparently. It doesn't mean "an unproven assertion", you know. Well, you don't know, I guess.

      Facts is all they is!!!! Especially don't look behind the curtain of theory, because it requires being an expert to look behind the theory without going crazy!!!!!!!!

      No, not really, it's actually a pretty simple idea that can be communicated quite easily. What part do you have problems with exactly?

      Theory, schmeory. 2000 people were offended that a theory is being used by textbook writers to impose a new religion on the kids. Seven were offended by the use of a sticker to bring a little balance into the discussion. The court sides with no balance in the discussion.

      Stupidity isn't a point of view. It's just stupidity.

      What it all boils down to is that you're scared. The idea that life arose over billions of years, that you're just an inconsequential speck of carbon lost in unimaginable space and time just frightens the hell out of you. And you know, it IS kind of scary, but unfortunately it's reality. And denying it isn't especially productive. Try to have just a little bit of courage, mmkay? Just a tad?

    182. Re:Thank God! by wheany · · Score: 1

      Do you think you'll be as lucky the next nanosecond?

    183. Re:Thank God! by mattkime · · Score: 1

      so you're saying that evolution accounts for the smaller changes but not the larger changes....even though the larger changes can happen on a larger time scale.

      what is the competing theory? that god placed monkeys on earth and we evolved from them?

      --
      Know what I like about atheists? I've yet to meet one that believes God is on their side.
    184. Re:Thank God! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Genes are "mutable" beyond the sort of mixing that comes from sexual reproduction. Viruses can implant their own genetic material. Radiation and other mutagens can change our genetic code.

      Once you accept this, all that is required is to accept that sometimes these random mutations end up being beneficial to the organism, and are therefore more likely to be copied than the unmutated genes in the surrounding population.

      The fact that "evolution" (in the last few hundred years) hasn't demonstrated itself to the satisfaction of creationists--who frequently show themselves unwilling to accept clear evidence--only drives home the point that these forces work over geological timescales.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    185. Re:Thank God! by rdwald · · Score: 1

      Just because you say macroevolution has been observed doesn't mean you are right. Please site examples. Thanks.

      Here you go.

    186. Re:Thank God! by neurojab · · Score: 1

      So I suppose you have an explanation for what started it all? Can anyone say with any degree of confidence what started the Big Bang? So what precludes that from having been started by God?

      Nothing at all. Of course it's your right to believe whatever you want. I for one believe there is a divine plan. However, we cannot allow religious precepts to enter "science". Imagine how lazy a chemist would become if he described a chemical reaction in terms of divine intervention. That would tell us nothing of the mechanism of the reaction, and we could build no further understanding from it.
      It's the same with evolution.

    187. Re:Thank God! by Ted+Williams'+Frozen · · Score: 5, Informative

      The idea that the Earth travels around the Sun is just part of the theory of Planetary Motion. Electrons are just part of Atomic Theory. If they don't exist, your computer doesn't work. Gravity is just a theory.

      American Heritage Dictionary

      theory n.

      1. A set of statements or principals devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena.

      This is what scientists mean by a theory. Nothing in science is a fact. As more observations are made, theories can change, or new ones are developed.

      Evolution Theory is accepted as the best explaination of what has been observed from any number of discipines. The sticker is incorrect in the usage of the word theory and should not be placed in the textbooks.

      Should physics textbooks carry a sticker that gravity is just a theory also?

    188. Re:Thank God! by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution. I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      The notion that there is a meaningful distinction between "micro" evolution and "macro" evolution has been disproved by genome sequencing projects, which have revealed that all of the difference between species are due to an accumulation "micro" changes of exactly the sort that are produced by mutation--an incredible vindication of a theory that predated knowledge of the gene.

      No, nobody "observed" monkeys turning into humans. And nobody has observed atoms in the distant stars. Nevertheless, we can state with great confidence that the distant stars are made of atoms, and that we and the monkeys had a common ancestor.

    189. Re:Thank God! by malfunct · · Score: 1

      http://dict.die.net/fact/
      Source: WordNet (r) 1.7

      theory
      n 1: a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the
      natural world; an organized system of accepted knowledge
      that applies in a variety of circumstances to explain a
      specific set of phenomena; "theories can incorporate
      facts and laws and tested hypotheses"; "true in fact and
      theory"
      2: a tentative theory about the natural world; a concept that
      is not yet verified but that if true would explain certain
      facts or phenomena; "a scientific hypothesis that survives
      experimental testing becomes a scientific theory"; "he
      proposed a fresh theory of alkalis that later was accepted
      in chemical practices" [syn: hypothesis, possibility]
      3: a belief that can guide behavior; "the architect has a
      theory that more is less"; "they killed him on the theory
      that dead men tell no tales"

      I think the definition of theory is more pertinent to this discussion as many here point out defintion 1 is more appropriate to science and yet the implication of the stickers would lead you toward definition 2. I think it is important that people understand what science really does which is model the world as closely as possible given the facts (observations and empiricle evidence from experimentation). Theories in my less exact definition are hypothesis which have a great deal of facts backing them and have not been disproven by any verifiable test. The stickers are not incorrect and should be a good starting point for a careful discussion of the scientific method.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    190. Re:Thank God! by Eccles · · Score: 1

      There are lots of fossils of discovered species, but there seems to be huge, unfilled gaps between these species in the fossil records.

      It's the law of the excluded middle. Assume you have moderately similar fossils A and B, and you find C which seems to be between them. Now the complaint is that there's a gap between A and C, and between B and C.

      For example, heard of trilobites? Over 15,000 species have been found.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    191. Re:Thank God! by MrCreosote · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Evolution is a fact in that we know it occurs and it has been seen occuring.

      The Theory(ies) of evolution seek to describe the various forms of evolution and how they work.

      It is the same as the fact of gravity (gravity exists and we observe it to exist) and the various theories of gravity (what are the physical mechanisms that cause what we call gravity)

      --
      MrCreosote Meow!Thump!Meow!Thump!Meow!Thump! "You're right! There isn't enough room to swing a cat in here!"
    192. Re:Thank God! by rburgess3 · · Score: 1

      "The funny thing is that there is no more evidence supporting evelution as a creation of life"

      Actually, evolution, as a theory, has about as much to say about the creation of life as the big bang theory has to say about the creation of the universe: not much.

      Once both of these things got their start, THEN do these theories have a bunch of things to say.

      As for this supposed dichotomy between macro- and micro- evolution, the line between separate species is extremely blurry. The most common criteria for speciation is inability for populations to interbreed [1] and it's not hard to accomplish, IIRC, it takes only a few months to speciate fruit flies. You might want to look into some of the more pop-culture oriented books by Stephen J. Gould.

      To 'see' speciation in action, one must remember that truly massive differentiation takes hundreds of thousands of years. It hasn't stop, and as long as life exists on earth, it'll continue to do so.

      [1] Here's the very first link on Google for 'speciation': http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyP ages/S/Speciation.html

    193. Re:Thank God! by 955301 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's sad because the county government legislated this sticker into place. It's sad because this isn't the first or last time this will occur. It's sad that you don't understand that evolution *is* a theory. It's sad that you don't understand that the reaction you see from "Evolutionists" is a response to your adamant endorsement of one of the various creationist hypothesis' without it being tested by the involved fact finding put into the biologies.

      Macroevolution is observed by piecing together snapshots of time, since we were not here to record it's going's on throughout earth's life.

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    194. Re:Thank God! by Laser+Lou · · Score: 2, Informative
      Is there some dark secret that they don't want us to know? Scientists (and other academics, for that matter) have come up with some seemingly ridiculous ideas in other areas and have been allowed to pursue them to the point that they became mainstream.

      The scientific community is not trying to lead the world astray with wild theories. Instead, they want to teach the world a little bit of what they know. There really is nothing to hide.

      Have you ever honestly looked at the evidence for a global flood of immense proportions? It's scary.
      What you saw was a example of the persuasive power of pseudoscience. An impressive case is built for creationism, but its really flimsy, like movie props. Its basically like the UFO stuff. In this case, it exists because of the belief that literal creationism must be true if the Bible is inerrant. I know, I was a creationist too.

      --
      No data, no cry
    195. Re:Thank God! by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 1
      Very little of what you encounter in math textbooks rises to the level of mathematical law. Furthermore, a conjecture is just that. Someone's conjecture. Please. Split hairs with someone else.

      Not sure what textbooks you're using - I've got a Bachelor's in Mathematics and pretty much every book I used featured rigorous proofs of the theorems presented which in turn were the basis of what was taught. This is the fundamental difference between math and science - In science, you follow the scientific method until your results match your theory. In Math things are rigorously proven from a small set of axioms, and so long as the axioms are true then the derived conclusions are as well. Because Math is pure logic sort of endevour you can prove things absolutely and completely. Mistakes are occasionally made, but a correct proof is correct, period. This is a long way from hair splitting.

      --
      Why?
    196. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, but the Bible isn't *required reading* in the public-funded school system.

    197. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Atheism is a form of religion, as it is believing that there is no god...

      Atheism is not a form of religion. Since supernaturalism is at the base of all religious systems atheism, by not believing in the supernatural cannot, by definition, be a religious viewpoint. Saying that atheists are religious because they deal with religion is like saying doctors are sick because they deal with illness.

    198. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think we need a "fair and balanced" version of the Bible. That's one book you'd definitely see being burnt in church parking lots...

    199. Re:Thank God! by BFaucet · · Score: 1

      First off, evolution is an observation, not a theory. We can see it happen and people have been harnessing its power in farming and making better pets for ages. We also see it happening all the time. Hell, it's why you can get the flu every year. The bacteria keep changing.

      Secondly, evolution does not state that bacteria + mutations + time = humans. It's more like death of organisms that failed to pass certain genes + organisms that successfully passed different genes + mutations + time = different species.

      Then you can take it farther with things like "change in environment requiring change in species for survival" and "species competition"

      You mention Mendel... Is Mendel's work not more evidence of evolution? It's clear that if Mendel changes the requirements for an organism to pass its genes and an organism fails to meet those requirements, the organism fails to pass its genes while the ones who successfully met the requirements passed their genes and still have their genetic material in the world. These requirements can be anything from "Having a pleasing flower color so that human that's controling its ability to pass genes" to "being able to outrun that large predator that's going to get in the way of gene passing."

      If Mendel's work is gold, but ignore mutation then you'll end up with genes being kicked out and none being created... meaning life would have died out a very, very long time ago.

      --
      -Derick
    200. Re:Thank God! by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      "I have never heard a remotely plausible theory regarding the origin of life."

      You haven;t looked very far, then. Science has very logical concluysions to the origins of organic life. In fact, there seems to be a lot of evidence to support the primorial components of earth being present abundantly throughout the universe.

      God does not belong in the classroom.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    201. Re:Thank God! by malfunct · · Score: 1

      One further definition though I have no discussion of this:

      http://dict.die.net/law%20of%20nature/
      Source: WordNet (r) 1.7

      law of nature
      n : a generalization that describes recurring facts or events in
      nature: "the laws of thermodynamics" [syn: law]

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    202. Re:Thank God! by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      "What are you talking about? Are you just making stuff up? What does any of that have to do with evolution?"

      He's giving you the parts to evolution and saying that if evolution is false, one of the parts must be false. He's also saying that you can't deny the parts: they're obviously true or have loads of evidence. He said:

      The theory that an organisms devolopment is an expression of its genetic material (i.e. You have two hands, two eyes, one nose because of your genes.) + The theory that an organism inherits its genetic material + The theory that the genetic material is mutable (i.e. Mutations, cutting & pasting, copying, translation, virus DNA insertions all happen.) = Evolution

      I'd add one more: Selection. (If your mutation makes you vomit 24/7, you most likely not spread your genes. If your mutation makes you better at something important than other folks, your genes will likely spread. I.E. Get rid of the bad, keep the good.)

      "Evolution is genetic material changing in a way that's beyond what the genes are pre-programmed to do." and "To give you an example, take twins, both with the same genes - if both sets of genes change in more of less the same way in response to something, that's by definition not evolution."

      This makes me think you don't know what genes are. This is nonsense.

      "Evolution is totally random, going beyond that to something totally new, and that has never actually been seen."

      Evolution does have a big random component (as a generator of new positive, neutral and negative things), but from the beginning--with Darwin--it went beyond that... so, that's not really new.

      Selection is the thing that goes beyond just being random, culling things that don't work and leaving things that work very well to spread; bringing order or information to the thing.

    203. Re:Thank God! by nomadic · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is an excellent point.

      No it's not.

      Why are evolutionsts so defensive about their theory?

      Because they believe strongly in it, and find it puzzling why people would dispute it. If there was a large movement in the US to label the earth as flat in school textbooks the astronomers would just as vehemently react.

      But the basic idea that if someone defends something energetically then they're hiding something is just bizarre. It makes no sense. And it's a pretty open field, you can just pick up a geology textbook and see why they say what they do. As a field it's not especially incomprehensible to the layman.

      Have you ever honestly looked at the evidence for a global flood of immense proportions?

      Yes.

      It's scary.

      Not really.

    204. Re:Thank God! by Londovir · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, evolution is not fact. This is the common misconception. Evolution, as stated in the sticker, is a theory, albeit a very well satisfied theory in terms of being supported by empirical evidence. The reality, though, is that it isn't completely verifiable, and that's why it isn't a fact.

      You want to make a distinction between the why and the how in your statement; evolution is a fact, but how evolution works is a theory. You can't do that in science, it's part and parcel the same thing. Evolution wraps itself into that argument quite neatly, and there's the problem with calling it a fact.

      If evolution is fact, and only the mechanism of its operation is a theory, how do you attribute the ultimate origin of all species? You clearly feel that evolution (the effect) is unassailable and obvious based on fossil records and other data. Thus one must then ask, in the realm of the evolution field, from what did everything evolve? As you said, unless species happened to spawn from thin air, they all descended from earlier species. What did they all come from? It's a recursive definition, and all recursive definitions should have a terminating point. Evolution's inability to satisfy that terminating point is what makes evolution a theory, and not a fact. As a theory is defined, it is an explanation to describe a set of observable natural occurances, which has been tested and approved. The fossil record helps to test and approve evolution, but it doesn't make it a given fact or truth. (It just makes it the far most likeliest of theories out there...)

      Oh, and in case anyone is wondering, I do happen to believe in evolution. But, as in everything in science, I reserve the right to change my mind in case someone comes up with a better test that blows a hole in the theory.

      Londovir
      --
      Londovir
    205. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand how Darwin jumped ahead of Pythagoras. That's the real bias here. I'm still wondering if the Pythagorean Theorem will become fact, if EVER.

      WHERE IS THE JUSTICE? I say declare all geometric theories AND postulates factual BEFORE Darwin! He must wait his turn like all the others!

      Oh, wait. Never mind. It's called the THEORY of evolution, not the FACT of evolution.

      Try to remain scientific about it instead of becoming biased. Oh, and never forget Newton spent more time writing about Revelations than he did about Physics and Calculus combined.

    206. Re:Thank God! by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      And last time I checked one of the very foundations of science is the "scientific method", the whole point of which is to QUESTION "fashionable theories".

      Umm, I remember learning the Scientific method in middle school, and then discarding it in high school for the AP sciences because it was rather useless. I also don't remember there being any part that says anything about fashionable theories.

    207. Re:Thank God! by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "Apparently not you, since you can't distinguish science from religion."

      What's the difference?

      Oh, I don't mean in the strict sense. Science is a method for describing cosmic fact. Religion is a method for expressing cosmic meaning. I mean in the practical sense. All people need something to believe in, and frankly, for many people, science has BECOME their religion, a source of both fact AND meaning. Because of the fallibility of man, science (the religion, not the method) even has it's own dogmas now. Evolution has become one of those dogmas, but it's not the only one. I'm not saying that evolution is false, but it's not held to the same standard as other hard sciences. If cold fusion were held to the same standard, it'd be scientific canon by now.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    208. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all

    209. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you believe that all the peoples and cultures of the earth occurred because god got pissed off at us for constructing a Library. As opposed to those people adapting to climate and food localisation issues, as population pressures forced or general inquisitiveness prompted there migration.

    210. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Because the masses are always right.

      Sorry, charlie. A benevolent God wouldn't have let 150,000 people die in a tsunami. "understanding god's plan" or not, no greater good can come out of that evil. Or was he just punishing the wicked? You know, the thousands and thousands of poor people? Yeah, real merciful. Have fun not being part of the 144k that get brought up to heaven. I mean, you're probably a great christian, but really, are you in the top 144k? You _do_ have to compete with Mother Theresa (who, in all seriousness, did remarkable things in God's name). What? 144k is just a number mistranslated? Then what else might be mistranslated? THE WHOLE BOOK?!

      I think its sad you are spending all your pre-worm food time believing something is waiting for you after you close your eyes that final time. Cheerio!

    211. Re:Thank God! by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1

      The only thing stated in the comments on this article that could push evolution into fact is observation of the change over time of bacteria and yet nothing has shown that this microevolution leads to evolution on a larger scale sufficient to differentiate species
      Evolution is a very slow process; we don't need to observe it to determine that its a fact. That's like sending a rocket to a star to determine whether they are really like the sun and not just tiny points of light.
      To me, the fossil record is quite enough to tell me that some sort of evolution actually occurred.

      --
      No data, no cry
    212. Re:Thank God! by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
      Agnosticism, is dull and bland, non commital and borderline dishonorable. So rationally I would say theism/deism is the best choice. You get the best bang for your buck.

      How is saying "I don't know" more dishonorable than saying "I know" (theism/deism) but then admiting "but not really" (fickly phrasing it as the best bang for your buck).

    213. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All politcal/moral/religious/etc issues aside, I was always taught in college (UMBC, a non-religious public university) that it was widely accepted in the scientific community that theories could never be proved, only denied or be provided with supporting evidence (and support != proof, as I was told). Never made sense to me, but if this is truly the case, you think the stickers would make sense. (though, the stickers should also be on every other theory then)

    214. Re:Thank God! by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      Well, monkies didn't turn into humans and no part of evolution states that. The ancestors of monkies (primates) evolved into many forms of homo and hom erectus and also into monkies. We have a common ANCESTOR.

      This is a common mistake people make when talking about evolution.

      Evolution is fact. The origins of life make a lot of sense when compared to the rules of evolution. To explain them off as being highly coincidental is to ignore most empirical evidence and leave it to a "intelligent design."

      People seem to have a hard time believing that things don't have intelligent design. It's a nonsense term. The patterns of the universe are highly mathematical and clearly correlated.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    215. Re:Thank God! by macdaddy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Take that probability and then combine it with the fact that the Earth is 4.5 billion years old. In all that time don't you think it would be possible for the right series of events to happen that would create life? In that time frame the Earth managed to create a working nuclear fission reactor at Oklo. Isn't it just as probable that life could also be created in that same time frame? The weaker life creations die out and the stronger survive, over and over and over and over again until 4.5billion years later we write about it on Slashdot. It's not that unlikely at all IMHO.

    216. Re:Thank God! by rburgess3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Except that 'God did it,' isn't really an answer. If we accepted that, we'd still be carrying around sharpened sticks. The religious mind-set has a terrible track record with this line of thought. Every time someone crops up with 'God did it,' they turn out to be wrong. 100% of the time.

      'God did it,' by being the answer to, literally, everything is meaningless. What is there to learn when you already know the answers to all the "why's" out there? Unfortunately, one of religion's major faults is basic anti-intellectualism.

    217. Re:Thank God! by zymurgyboy · · Score: 1
      Scientists (and other academics, for that matter) have come up with some seemingly ridiculous ideas in other areas and have been allowed to pursue them to the point that they became mainstream.
      Puuuulease.... The biggest difference I see between scientists and creation scientists is that when real scientists' seemingly ridiculous ideas get shot down, they tend to go away. Eventually they may come back with another idea, or a modification to the original one (punctuated equilibrium anyone?). Their offensive counterparts in creation science la la land tend to keep coming back with the same ideas, over and over again. They're collectively the basic equivalent of kids playing cops and robbers. Creation science proponents being the ones who keep insisting, 'NO YOU DI'INT!' when one of the other kids shoots them fair and square.

      Their ideas more properly belong in a religion or political science text book, if they belong anywhere at all.

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    218. Re:Thank God! by Tarcastil · · Score: 1

      Modern medicine may just be a theory but I reckon it's statistically a better bet than relying on His strength. I dunno. The mind is better at stopping cancer than moderm medicine.

    219. Re:Thank God! by Tarcastil · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I didn't mean for the first sentence to be in there. Attribute it to the post's parent, or if you're an editor, take it out.

    220. Re:Thank God! by mikeg22 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Macroevolution has been observed, if by macroevolution, you mean the evolution of completely new species. These cases of speciation have been observed in the laboratory. Oh, and if you want to observe monkeys(sic) turning into humans, take a look at the fossil record.

    221. Re:Thank God! by Tlosk · · Score: 1

      Lol, you had me rolling there about the unless stuff spawned out of thin air comment. I kind of think that is their point. So when you say, well unless what you say happened actually happened, you're undoubtedly incorrect. Insight of the year there lol.

      I understand it's intellectually convenient to say that an extreme probability is the same as certainty, but in the end it's not. There's all sorts of improbable scenarios that could explain the "facts" in a very different way. Kind of like that Cheppelle skit where the guy walks in on his wife bent down on Chappelle with her head bobbing. Out of all the times that happens in a given year, how many times is the wife faking it as part of a hidden camera gag?

      Over the long run in our personal lives we have to go with the high probabilities, it's the optimal thing to do, but there's no need to stoop to the intellectually dishonest position of decreeing fact and fiction as if we were omniscient.

    222. Re:Thank God! by zuzzabuzz · · Score: 1

      Until it can fly, it hops and glides. If one that hops and glides breeds with a similar one which does not, the offspring may get the hop/glide benefits. It's usually a case of hopping was better than crawling. When the crawlers began to hop, the hoppers began to fly. Very slow process, and lots of dead ends in development. But sometimes, things worked out. tweet tweet.

      --
      -buzz
    223. Re:Thank God! by Frogbert · · Score: 2, Informative

      Every day you can see diseases evolving to resist medications that were designed to kill them. These are diseases such as golden staph and so on.

      Futhermore in Australia we now have rabbits that are almost completely immune to the miximitosis disease, and they are born like it too. That is what evolution is all about people, small changes over a few decades can pile up to make a large change over say a million years.

    224. Re:Thank God! by Miraba · · Score: 1
      You're working from the biological species concept, which states that the definition of a species is a group of organisms that can produce fertile offspring. I suggest you examine the phylogenetic species concept, which states that a species is a group of organisms that descended from a shared ancestor species. The PSC recognizes that the ability to produce fertile offspring is not always directly correlated to the genetic distance between organisms.

      All biologists recognize the concept of species. They just don't always agree on how to define it

      There are a number of indications that many important DNA mutations are not the result of simple base substitutions or insertions/deletions. For instance, the whole duplication of chromosomes, which are then allowed to accumulate mutations without causing damage to the organism. Mitochondria are also an excellent example.

    225. Re:Thank God! by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Sorry but you only have two choices.

      Who the hell are you to say that? That's presenting a false dichotomy.

      Maybe some of us believe that time is infinite, with no beginning and no end, and we just are because we are and accept it and move on.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    226. Re:Thank God! by whopis · · Score: 1

      Actually in some situations it is. In my 10th grade english class (public school) we read sections from the bible. The religious content of the material was not emphasised, instead the lessons centered on the literary value of the material. This is not uncommon in the public school system (despite what some would have you believe)

    227. Re:Thank God! by KaizerWill · · Score: 1

      Actually, the best definition for a theory would be an assertion about that which is unobservable. Evolution as a way to explain the origin of life is quite unobservable due to its place in history, and thus NOT a fact.

    228. Re:Thank God! by lemaymd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Be more specific about where to look. (I don't believe you can) The intermediate creatures or ancient men cited by evolutionists have all turned out to be regular humans suffering from debilitating, deforming diseases. By the way, we are actually devolving through the process of mutation, not evolving. Ancient man is superior.

    229. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Informative

      You're obviously not clear on ANY of the definitions, so I will be helpful and provide some, with examples.

      Fact: Something that you observe to be true.
      fact #1: when you drop a hammer, it falls to the ground
      fact #2: a genetic sequence can change sufficiently to form a new species. Speciation has been observed more than once in the laboratory and in the wild, so this is a fact. Since we call this process 'evolution', that means evolution is a fact. Keep reading for more explanation of this.

      Theory: An explanation of an observation
      Theory #1: The theory of gravity is understood as a curvature in space, which explains why the hammer falls.
      Theory #2: The Theory of Evolution through Natural Selection explains how a population's genome can change over time.

      Law: Not really related to any of the other definitions. It's just a mathematical relationship between two values.
      Law #1: If you double the distance from a source of light, the brightness falls off proportionally to the square of the distance.
      Law #2: (expressed as a formula) F=ma. Force equals mass times acceleration.

      Please note that Evolution is a fact, and the theory is called the Theory of Evolution through Natural Selection. There are other theories of evolution, which have been disproved. A famous one is the theory of evolution through acquired characteristics, also known as Lamarkian evolution. It posited that species evolve by acquiring and retaining useful characteristics through use. Therefore, a giraffe would have longer necks if the previous generations stretched their necks to reach high leaves. This was the main theory that Darwin and others showed to be false.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    230. Re:Thank God! by MmmDee · · Score: 1
      I don't necessarily agree with everything you had to say, but you stated your opinion very well. While I have my own opinion about the Georgia textbook sticker, I can see why the some odd 2000+ parents felt compelled to ask for its inclusion.

      I recently ran into this with my 14 year old daughter who lives with her mom. We were visiting an old waterfall in Canada and one of the exhibits stated something was on the order of several million years old. My daughter, brought up in a private church-affiliated school, had no concept of how that could be since the bible doesn't teach in terms of the earth being that old. I had to take a few moments and a step back to understand her thinking, and I hope she gave dad (much more "scientifically" oriented) at least half that amount to understand my viewpoint.

      --
      No man's an island, unless he's had too much to drink and wets the bed.
    231. Re:Thank God! by endersdouble · · Score: 1

      Well, if you're talking about speciation...we have. Macroevolution is defined (IANAEB (I am not an evolutionary biologist)) as speciation--the point at which one population which has evolved/naturally selected/whatever'd itself to a point where it can no longer breed with whatever it branched from. It's been observed numerous times--creating new species of flies, for example. Also, people tend to knock it, but have you ever heard of the fossil record? It's not nearly as bad as idiots like Jack Chick would you have you believe.

    232. Re:Thank God! by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How many textbooks on evolution have you actually read?

      As to the sticker, it was nothing but a Fundementalist Christian attempt to foist a truly discredited bit of nonsense upon students. It's a victory for reason over religious mumbo-jumbo.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    233. Re:Thank God! by rainman_bc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      As opposed the highly probably theory of Noah's ark being beached and somehow the Kangaroos and Koalas all flew to Australia, and only Australia. Get real.

      Or the even more likely theory of the tower of Babel where man all spoke the same language until they pissed off god by building an architectural improbability to get to a place where god [today] no longer really is? Yeah that makes way more sense than: man speaks different languages because the world is diverse and others have come up with different means to solve the communication issue.

      Yeah, tower of Babel. Right. Good theories you believe in. Next you'll tell us it's an analogy and didn't really happen.

      Grab a brain and think for yourself.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    234. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The court ruled that the stickers be removed because they promoted a religious viewpoint, supposedly. The wording of the stickers was completely non-religious. The court fell for the same false dichotomy that many of us do: "you're either an evolutionist or a creationist". There ARE other viewpoints, and demoting one does NOT demote the other.

      By analogy, compare this with the current two-party Republican/Democrat system we have here in the United States. Many citizens consider these to be the only two parties, and assume that if you're not supporting one, you're supporting the other. We end up with silly concepts like voting "against" a candidate instead of voting FOR him/her, viewing third parties as "vote stealers", and so on.

    235. Re:Thank God! by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
      "Can anyone say with any degree of confidence what started the Big Bang? So what precludes that from having been started by God?"

      And what precludes it from not having been started by God? Nothing! Religious people really piss me off. What makes them think that they're so great that they know what's going on? I've got to say, I don't know how the hell the universe came to exist or what happens to my consciousness after I die. And, based on my experience, my experiences at one sort of thing aren't very good predictors of other sorts of things -- so should I use my little experiences to make grandiose claims about the universe like you do?

      "I have come to believe that life on this earth is not a random occurence driven by simple statistical probability. Instead, I find it more likely that the universe was created with intelligence."

      Can't we just leave the unknown as the unknown, rather than making up stories which, in the end, don't explain anything, but rather introduce more mysteries? If a theory is useful, great, I'll use it. But if it's just a mindfuck, why bother?

    236. Re:Thank God! by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Informative

      > As far as I know, no one has actually observed macroevolution.

      Then I'm afraid, to be blunt, that you are essentially ignorant of a vast area of research.

      Check out http://talkorigins.org. Let's see how open your mind truly is.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    237. Re:Thank God! by Miraba · · Score: 1
      Evolution has been seen. Take a fertile plant seed, double the number of chromosomes, and voila! Instant new species, and one which is possibly hardier than the original. It can breed with itself, but not with its parent(s).

      Is that good enough?

    238. Re:Thank God! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      How does an intermediate form without the benefits of its fully evolved descendant qualify as fittest?

      By having an advantage over it's direct competitors: The other members of it's species that have not had this mutation.

      All sea anemones can bend their bodies, but only a few species can do it energetically enough to "swim". Basic mutation, it's just an extreme for of a behaviour common to all other related species, but this one gives them a great advantage: running away from starfish predators.

      For example: until an intermediate form that's not quite a bird can fly, it's a

      Glider.

      Flight is what makes birds survivable species.

      Ostrich.
      Penguin.
      Kiwi.

      The primary function of feathers was heat insulation. Specialised, alongated feathers allowed for lift.

      punctuated equlibrium - birds came about suddenly as a result of a mutation.

      Mutations. Plural.
      Punctuated equilibrium means over a geologically short period of time, not in one generation. Get your head out of the "spontaneous generation" clouds.

      OK, so what are the chances that two mutants identical enough to produce offspring were born close enough together (both temporally and geographically) that they could mate?

      Close to nil, but that's not at all how evolution works, so that probability is irrelevant.

      Two members of the same species have DIFFERENT mutations that when put together (directly or through their respective descendants) changes the offsprings significantly. Rinse, repeat.

      You clearly have no real understanding of the mechanism of natural selection. Let me guess: Creationists explained it to you?

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    239. Re: Thank God! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Observed??? When? Where have they found such evidence? Have they ever found remains of a creature which is inbetween evolutionary states?

      All creatures are in between evolutionary states. Some of the most obvious are flightless birds (especially penguins, which are substantially adapted to underwater life) and aquatic mammals (which show the whole range of adaptations from landlubber to sea creature).

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    240. Re:Thank God! by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      That's what these stickers are about; reminders that both topics revolve around unproven ideas, both of which are likely never to be proven.

      That's funny, because the issue of Discover Magazine that arrived in my mailbox sometime in the last week says on the cover "Scientists at Michigan State Prove Evolution Works".

      If you want to believe that evolution took place or that the Bible if the word of God, you should do so by your own faith and not because someone tells you to.

      You and the people who designed this sticker have something in common: you don't know the meaning of the word "theory". The first response to your post touched on it, but I think it deserves more attention as it seems to be a common problem.

      What they're trying to say is that evolution is a hypothesis; that is, an idea which has not yet been sufficiently tested. They can't say that, of course, because evolution is in fact a theory: an idea which has been consistently supported through experimentation and observationto the point that it may, for all practical purposes, be treated as a fact.

      Now that you know what the word "theory" actually means, don't those stickers seem kinda stupid?

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    241. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ooo, I can answer that one!

      As humans are not descended from monkeys, the only people observing this are delusional fundamentalists.

    242. Re:Thank God! by bluekanoodle · · Score: 1
      See, this is exactly why those books need the stickers. Because you my friend have been fed lies and mistruths, and you bought it as fact, hook, line and sinker.

      The experiment your are refering to was conducted in 1953 at the University of Chicago, Stanley Miller conducted an experiment designed to create primitive life by simulating the conditions of early Earth. The experiment consisted of chemicals and gasses in a glass tube acted on by electricity to simulate lightning in order to induce life producing chemical reactions. Amino acids, of which proteins consist, were formed. Other experimenters came up with similar results.

      Problems:

      a) In those experiments using ultraviolet light as an energy source, which would be present on primitive Earth, the longer wavelengths which would destroy these same amino acids were artificially filtered out leaving only shorter, non-destructive wavelengths.

      b) The experiments isolated newly formed amino acids so that the same energy source that helped create them wouldn't break them down again as would occur in nature.

      c) Two leading "origin -of-life" researchers confirm that Miller used the wrong gas mixture. "Science" magazine said in 1995 that experts now dismiss Miller's experiment because "the early atmosphere looked nothing like the Miller-Urey simulation."

      The fact that Miller's experiments are still being used in Biology text books shows that the the Evolutionist movement will stop at nothing to prove their point, even if it is bad science.

    243. Re:Thank God! by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unfortunately, you seem to be using multiple definitions of the word "theory", conflating them. This is a common mistake of someone who fundementally doesn't understand how science works.

      The observation is that heritable traits change in populations over time. This is the "ball falls when you let go" of evolution, the indisputable fact. Evolutionary theory attempts to explain the observations of evolution. In turn it makes key predictions as to what we can expect to find both in the fossil record and, with the advent of genetics, within the genes of organisms. These further observations serve to confirm the basic fact that all living organisms fit within a twin-nest hiearchy, and thus share a common ancestor.

      Now we can debate many things about the particular mechanisms that drive evolution, but it remains that it is a fact that evolution occurs.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    244. Re: Thank God! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > There are lots of fossils of discovered species, but there seems to be huge, unfilled gaps between these species in the fossil records.

      And how well sampled is the fossil record? Do people reject creationism because they can't find the bones of everyone's ancestors in an unbroken chain back to Adam?

      And if we have only a very sparse sampling of bones for the past few thousand years, how complete an survey can we expect to have for animals that lived a few hundred million years ago?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    245. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somebody please mod this parent up.

    246. Re:Thank God! by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 0
      Evolution says nothing about the ultimate origin of species, only that life changes through time. If you're interested in the creation of life from non-living matter, Abiogenesis is for you. Evolution only picks up after that. Evolution does not have to include creation to be valid.

      The process that we call evolution does occur, and in that sense evolution is a fact. The mechanics of how this occurs are are what comprise the "theory" of evolution.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    247. Re:Thank God! by kherrick · · Score: 1

      Looks odd...

    248. Re:Thank God! by ddraigcymraeg · · Score: 1

      The notion of 'never blindly accept any theory as fact.' is defintely great advice, but lets not all act like Emmanual Kant here.

      I know enough through critical reading about the evidence of evolution and it's quite clear to me that this is a church and state issue. Evolution is observable, just not trans-species which takes more time than most folks live ;-)
      It's the intent of the church to slander a theory which has much empirical evidence.

      You see science is quite happy to move on and teach a newer theory if the older one is wrong. Like atomic theory, kids learn about quantum theory, at least a shallow version, rather than the Rutherford version which was taught in the early 20's. Can't say that about other institutions.
      There is REAL evidence for evolution just like quantum theory. Like atomic theory, evolution will be refined as we understand genetics better.

      Anyway, the use of the the term species is to help categorize different animals into the mainly anatomical state which they exist in at the present. Though genetics will help define the species much better and pin down the evolutionary links between them more accurately.

      "People have not yet been able to create anything nearly as complex as a machine which can produce more of itself outside of laboratory conditions, and the idea that such machines just "happened" accidentally is far-fetched at best."

      Quantum and Particle Physics keeps astounding us with what is capable (energy-time existance trade offs etc.), but as my girlfriend says,'There is no proof disproving God.'

      Not sure if I got your point, but when you say 'just "happened"', we didnt 'just happen', we are most probably the product of billions of years of evolution in immensly favorable conditions to develop complex life forms based on carbon and water.

      "I have never heard a remotely plausible theory regarding the origin of life. People have not yet been able to create anything nearly as complex as a machine which can produce more of itself outside of laboratory conditions..."

      Many new theories suggest that the building blocks of life came from space, not here on Earth.
      We have just detected complex hydocarbons in space with our meager spectrometers which are representitive of the main building blocks of proteins here on earth. We are only just beginning to appreciate the chemical diversity of our galaxy and universe and the conditions which life might evolve (Mars anyone?)
      You also mention that nobody has been able to create any machine which has been able to produce more of itself outside of lab conditions. Well the mear fact that we can create genetic algorithms with enhance themselves through self productions says a lot no? I mean its far less complex than humans sharing genes to create another human, but we have yet to master that level complexity.
      Technology is increasing as an accelerating rate, and it isnt just christians who are scared...

    249. Re:Thank God! by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup? A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton...

      That's not exactly a valid argument... Stars spontaneously arise and they're even more complex than self-reproducing automata...

      Also your measure of simplicity is rather vague. How can a VCR be far far simpler than a self-reproducing automaton if it's made of far far more atoms of far far more different elements. You seem to be referring to functional complexity and not structural complexity, in which case you're barking up the wrong tree.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    250. Re:Thank God! by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      I pretty much agree with you, but I'm not sure there is an easy solution. The line between education and indoctrination is a thin one, and I don't think the government should be in the business of forcing students to learn (and repeat, if they expect to get a decent grade) things which their parents insist are not true. I'm sure this sticker is a last ditch effort by a group of individuals who have already failed at trying to get religious theories taught in schools.

      That's what I would want for my kids, show them all the different theories and trust them to know which ones make logical sense and which don't (and of course answer their questions while searching for the answers together). But a public school just can't do that, at least not in the US.

      The fact of the matter is, evolution is a fact of nature, a law, and we are surrounded by proof that it exists (I don't look like my parents, animal breeding) just as much as we are by proof that gravity exists. The theory is the model we use for what causes it - natural selection in this case.

      This was my initial belief, but I looked up the definition online and the definition as used in biology was this: "Change in the genetic composition of a population during successive generations, as a result of natural selection acting on the genetic variation among individuals, and resulting in the development of new species." According to this definition, at least, you can't separate the theory of evolution from that of natural selection. Looking up "natural selection" seems to confirm this, "evolution" is just short for "Darwin's theory of evolution", and it seems to me that natural selection, as the sole basis for the origin of human life, is far from scientific fact.

      That humans evolved from other forms of life is pretty hard to dispute. That this happened due to pure random chance, on the other hand, seems to me to be pretty much impossible to prove. Natural selection explains how it's possible, but there is no evidence, let alone proof, that there isn't some other force, either supernatural or natural (and just not yet discovered), which pushed evolution in the right direction.

      I suppose one could make a mathematical/statistical argument. Find out how many changes there are in the DNA between two species, see how long it took for one to evolve from the other, and then figure out what the rate of mutation likely had to be for it to be purely random. Who knows, maybe the book even got into this.

    251. Re:Thank God! by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1

      Hey, I have hope, I have joy, I have peace, and I have a purpose (I have found my primary callings to be logic, art and helping people). I don't feel guilty for things (I don't even know what you're talking about, what am I supposed to feel guilty for?), and even when I'm alone and feel helpless, I know things will get better and feel I can pull through it and people will help me. But do I believe in God? No. Believing in God may make you feel good, but that doesn't make it the objective truth. For me, not believing in God makes me feel good, because it means I'm not compromising my beliefs and morals just to try to feel good. But I don't believe that means God doesn't exist.

    252. Re:Thank God! by mikeg22 · · Score: 1
      Be more specific about where to look. (I don't believe you can)
      Sahelanthropus tchadensis (6 million years).
      Ardipithecus ramidus (4.4 million years)
      Australopithecus anamensis (4 million years)
      Kenyanthropus platyops (3.5 million years)
      Australopithecus afarensis (3.2 million years, known as "Lucy")
      ...shall I continue?
      The intermediate creatures or ancient men cited by evolutionists have all turned out to be regular humans suffering from debilitating, deforming diseases
      Wow. I won't even comment on that but to say you have no knowledge of human palaeontology.
      By the way, we are actually devolving through the process of mutation, not evolving. Ancient man is superior.
      Which ancient man are you talking about? The one with the much smaller brain?
    253. Re:Thank God! by lemaymd · · Score: 1

      There is a very real danger in doubting the literality of the divine account of Creation as set forward in Genesis. Read this article which touches on the infallibility of God's Word as related to Creation: http://www.icr.org/pubs/btg-a/btg-169a.htm God clearly indicates the literality of the Creation account and its associated timescale (the part most often doubted) with the emphasis on "evening...and morning...was the x day" and if you are unable to fully accept that He created every original creature in that 6 day period, you should question the reliability of the rest of the Bible. In fact, the whole basis for the Bible crumbles even if you reject the 6 day time period and substitute millions of years, as many have done. Suddenly, you have death before sin, and God pronouncing everything good, which would then include that death. So then, how does sin change anything? What is there to be saved from if death and the brutal struggle for existence exists even without sin?

      I have purchased but not yet read the book "Refuting Compromise", which speaks directly to this issue. Check it out at www.answersingenesis.org. (They have a lot of other great stuff too, including a blurb about this sticker)

      I know this has been a fairly theological post, but I feel it is very important. Creationism stands on much stronger footing that evolutionism, and anyone who doubts that should be a true objective scientist and read the materials at www.answersingenesis.org or www.ideacenter.org.

      Keep asking those important questions. :-)

    254. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      I think the people who wrote the sticker were actually quite clever. The purpose of the sticker was to pacify a couple hundred parents who complained about this textbook 2 years ago because it presented evolution as a proven fact. If you read the article, the sticker is quite well worded, IMO, but since it does specifically mention evolution, rather than focusing on the definition of theory, it was seen by the judge to be connected with the evolution/intelligent design debate.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    255. Re:Thank God! by Dreadknott · · Score: 1

      Not wanting to flame anyone here, but we are seeing too much of this. I believe recently I have read, within the last three years the US has droped from 18th to 23rd in math and science among developed nations. We have consistently been at the lower end of the rankings for quite some time, also, science is based on theory. Scientific theory is the basis for all of our observations, it states that through controlled observation insights into the working of nature can be discovered and used to postulate a reasonable outcome. Atomic theory is just a theory, yet we have nuclear power and atomic bombs, electro-magnetic theory gives us lights and all these great stories on slashdot. The religious right wing cant compromise on their belief in the literal interpretation of their faith and attack anything considered to be a threat. Many other developed nations have religious beliefs yet do not have the conflict between church and state that we endure here in America. The reason Other countries dont have this problem is because they recognize evolution is a tool that very acurately predicts how a series of observations will result in a reasonably predictable outcome. Evolution does not disprove the existence of God or creationism but is a useful tool for scientists. Evolution is very useful when dealing with oil and mineral deposits, geology, and anthropology. People have a hard time understanding how a cell could evolve, but thats because they cant comprehend the magnitude of geologic time.

    256. Re:Thank God! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      a Bonobo who decided walking erect was a better idea after injuring her back? Google is your friend. She's in an Israeli zoo...

      Wasn't that a baboon?

      Bonobos walk erect on their own all the time in the wild.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    257. Re:Thank God! by miu · · Score: 1
      Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup? A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton...

      The watchmaker argument has always pissed me off. It masquerades as logic by claiming that an artifact requires an intelligent creator, something that agrees with human experience, but fails to continue the use of logic with regard to the origin of the creator itself. At best the watchmaker principle is a useless bit of sophistry.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    258. Re:Thank God! by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 0

      Mentioning evolution makes it a religious issue because of the history of the evolution/creationism controversy. The sticker doesn't explicitly make any mention of religion, but religion is the driving force behind the sticker being placed there in the first place.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    259. Re:Thank God! by hords · · Score: 1

      Sure we've seen it happen. In fact we have caused it with all our pollution...

      example1

      example2

    260. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your missing a step though. Every human child has around 6 mutations. Evolution requiers that harmfull mutations stop being expressed so any child that is born has evolved. AKA it does not have any mutations that prevented his or her birth and they are difrent than a simple combination of there parents DNA.

    261. Re:Thank God! by malfunct · · Score: 1

      I still don't see how it is the incorrect usage, though the creators of the sticker would like you to jump to that conclusion. It just says that theories are not facts (though they leave out the important point that the theory of evolution is supported by many facts) and that they should be approached with an open critical mind. Everything should be approached with an open critical mind especially science. Is a sticker necessary? Of course not, but should the sticker be censored? No.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    262. Re:Thank God! by fredrikj · · Score: 1

      You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution. I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      A lot of people have, by studying the fossils and genetic make-up of monkeys and humans.

      If digesting information encoded in such forms does not qualify as "observation", then digesting information encoded in the electromagnetic waves that interact with one's retina does not count either.

    263. Re:Thank God! by Solandri · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Is it really that big of a stretch to say that if a small change occurs over a small period of time, then if you multiply the time factor by a billion, you would experience larger changes? That seems totally obvious to me. Is there any known mechanism for limiting the extent of the changes? What constitutes a large change vs a small change?

      I really don't see the distinction.

      You should. Microevolution can have two sources: genetic variation, or mutation. The oft-cited case of light-colored moths changing to dark-colored moths due to pollution darkening tree bark is genetic variation. Dark-colored moths already existed prior to pollution - the genes for it were already present in the gene pool. All that happened was the environment favored one genetic variation over the other, changing the relative frequency of those genes in the population. I don't think anyone questions genetic variation. But you can vary the frequency of genes in the gene pool forever, and you'll never develop new species.

      Macro-evolution can only come from mutation - the creation of new genes that weren't previously present in the gene pool. The best example of mutation is probably the annoying cold virus that comes up with a new, hithertoo never seen variant every year. Or bacteria which are beginning to develop resistance to our antibiotics faster than we can make new ones. The question then is does this happen quickly enough and often enough in a beneficial manner to allow the development of all the species we see today?

      There's evidence that points to the answer being "yes," but it's a far cry from "proof" as with genetic variation. The attitude of most biologists I've met seems to be: A) Macro-evolution exists, B) There is no other mechanism by which we could come into being (i.e. there is no god), C) We exist. Therefore quite obviously that's proof that macro-evolution is the process by which we exist. That conclusion may be likely, and it may even be true, but that reasoning is hardly proof. Remember, Occam's razor only tells you which answer is more probable, it doesn't tell you which answer is right.

      In science, correlation studies which find trends or possible links are a dime a dozen. High school students do them for science fair probjects all the time. Causation studies which prove a mechanism by which something occurs are much, much harder to pull off. We give Nobel prizes for them.

    264. Re:Thank God! by shobadobs · · Score: 1

      Well, considering that the well-adapted are the ones that get to reproduce, the average result of reproduction will be that better offspring occur. And given a long enough time, that offspring might be pretty darn advanced. It certainly wouldn't go the opposite direction. Since the direction of modification goes only up, you'd probably eventually get a bunch of creatures that are insanely-well adapted to their environment. They'd do this in different ways: by being fast, by being strong, by being hard to see, by seeing very well, by flying... Once creatures start existing, barring catastrophe, how could the process go any other way?

      Now, evolution into an intelligent species such as humans might be unlikely, but these billions of species reproducing for billions of years even managed to produce the works of Shakespeare!

      And while evolving into humans sounds unlikely, think about this comment heard in a car:

      Andy: "Whoa! Look at that license plate!"

      Bill: "What? Why?"

      Andy: "The sequence of letters is SZL-2855! The probability of it being that exact combination of letters an numbers is like, one in 175760000!"

      But then again, the Universe may have been created thirty minutes ago. Evolution just explains what happened before then.

    265. Re:Thank God! by BFaucet · · Score: 1

      Sure you can consider science to be another religion... the big difference is the importance of evidence and willingness to throw out common beliefs once it is disproven. If science were just another religion I doubt we would have accepted the earth is spherical just because some sailor sailed west and ended up east. Science doesn't accept anything without testing it or lots and lots of observation... and even then it has to be proven to be called fact. There's also documentation on how people came to their conclusions through experimentation and observation.

      The only great leaps of faith I can think of in science are 1+1=2 and the basic forces... and people are working on proving those forces.

      Then there's what most think of as religion... "this passage in this book that's been translated and reinterpreted many times and was origionally written by some dude who heard some stuff from some dude who said he saw some god in some desert that said we shouldn't work on Sundays bacause god will burn us."

      --
      -Derick
    266. Re:Thank God! by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1

      Hey, I have hope, I have joy, I have peace, and I have a purpose (I have found my primary callings to be logic, art and helping people). I don't feel guilty for things (I don't even know what you're talking about, what am I supposed to feel guilty for?), and even when I'm alone and feel helpless, I know things will get better and feel I can pull through it and people will help me. But do I believe in God? No. Believing in God may make you feel good, but that doesn't make it the objective truth. For me, not believing in God makes me feel good, because it means I'm not compromising my beliefs (e.g., that I don't know everything) and morals (e.g., not to tell a lie) just to try to feel good. But I don't believe that means God doesn't exist. What annoys me is that I am tolerant of the possibility of God, but religious people push it into my face that they are right without presenting any serious evidence -- so if when you see non-believers they are unhappy, maybe now you know why. I must say, we are surprisingly hopeful considering our constant harassment by the religious establishment. I'm sure one day the innate goodness of human nature will triumph.

    267. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup?

      Pah, VCR's coming from soup. That's just silly. Now my living room sofa, on the other hand, that came from soup. You should have seen it, it was really cool. I mean talk about a lot of soup--I had to get my hands on over 2500 cans! And then there was the giant bowl and spoon--don't even get me started on where I found those...

    268. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, gravity is a law, and you must obey it.

    269. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it's still bacteria. Hence micro not macro. You didn't read his whole post.

    270. Re:Thank God! by lemaymd · · Score: 1

      Lots of general answers about ape-man claims: http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/faq/Anth ropology.asp

      Don't be turned off by the fact that this material is from a creationist propaganda site, (most sites are propaganda sites at their hidden core) they cite University research where applicable, especially for Lucy.

      www.ideacenter.org is also an awesome resource.

    271. Re:Thank God! by databyss · · Score: 1

      The Creationists Texkbook:

      God made us all in his image. You look like God. You are ruler of this planet and all life on it.

      Other planets? hmm... don't know about them. They don't exist in the good book... Let's try this: Life only exists on earth. Works for me!

      The End.

      --
      Hmmm witty sig or funny sig? Maybe elitest techy sig!
    272. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the dictionary called them principals, get a beter dictionary or change your school.

    273. Re:Thank God! by pinkocommie · · Score: 1

      One thing, exclude humanity from it altogether, just look @ the theory of natural selection and how it would over millenia upon millenia react to changes in environment and how species would naturally adapt etc. I'm not saying oooh evolution is fact but why be all self-absorbed about its, natural selection is more then self-evident, heck our artificial selection changes things so dramatically in short periods of time that nature + the course of millions of years, it would seem that large scale change would be inevitable. A bit OT but i've often wondered how that would affect humanity once we're a space faring race, would we slowly but surely evolve into various subspecies locally adapted etc

    274. Re:Thank God! by zymurgyboy · · Score: 1
      Oh well, on the bright side, you might have a fair shot at permanently taping it shut at least. :)

      Damn, that was funny. I'm still laughing. Thank you.

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    275. Re:Thank God! by lemaymd · · Score: 1

      There's some pretty good scientific evidence for the Biblical creation account. Check out Answers in Genesis and The IDEA Center.

    276. Re:Thank God! by crashfrog · · Score: 1

      It is not clear to me what the sticker has to do with separation of church and state.

      Let me ask you this - what does the sticker say about evolution that wouldn't apply to any other scientific theory?

      Nobody would have had an issue if the sticker had been applied to the entire textbook; instead, however, it singles out one single theory that not-so-conincidentally contradicts the dogma of one religion; anyone who reads the sticker knows that it was motivated not by concerns about scientific tentativity but because the material contradicts a literal reading of Genesis.

      That's the church/state issue. Religious belief doesn't get to influence what we teach in a public school's science classroom.

      --
      I never have frustrations, the reason is, to wit:
      If at first I don't succeed, I quit!
    277. Re:Thank God! by NCraig · · Score: 0

      Your division of science and religion reminds me of an interesting quote:

      "Science without religion is lame; religion without science is blind."
      - Albert Einstein

      I am not particularly religious due to what I know (or think I know) about science and history. Still, the above quote always makes me think twice.

    278. Re:Thank God! by Fallen_Knight · · Score: 1

      but but but the earth is only 6000 years old!!!

    279. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't even know what you're talking about, what am I supposed to feel guilty for?

      Original Sin, probably. You know, the whole bit about how Adam and Eve were kicked out of paradise because they were curious about knowledge. Evangelical fundamentalists are heavily into that kind of thing.

    280. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1
      I'm not saying that I know what happened to start the universe -- in fact, I'm saying that I don't know. And neither does anyone else.

      What I am saying is that I'm willing to accept scientific explanations for natural phenomenon when the evidence supports that explanation; i.e., Newton's laws on gravity.

      Can someone show me the physical proof, the missing link, between modern human beings and monkeys?

      I believe that microevolution occurs, but I question macroevolution. Where is the physical evidence? Where's the missing link?

      We should be separating science from theology. They have two different goals. What I don't understand is why folks like you get so bent out of shape when people of faith say that God created the universe, when no one in the scientific community can dispute it.

      Since the goal of science is the pursuit of explaining the universe through observation, what's wrong with explaining the unobservable/unexplainable as God -- such as pre-Big Bang.

    281. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      There's two separate things implied by the term "evolution", one of which I agree with, and one of which I don't.

      Firstly, there's the notion of adaptability, or change. When a population is exposed to a change in environment, the change kills off that proportion of the population least able to cope with the change, and thus only the better adapted organisms survive. These then reproduce, creating a population which has an overall greater number of individuals adapted to the environmental change.

      That sounds fine to me. Notice that one of the assumptions is that the attribute "selected" here is already present in the population. This sort of "evolution" does not create any new attribute - it simply changes the proportions of the population which possess that attribute.

      The other element of evolution is progression. That due to a series of mutations, an organism is able to progress from a simple creature to a complex one. That attributes can spontaneously occur (usually ascribed to mutation), advantage an individual, are propogated throughout the group and, by increments, result in a drastically different organism. I don't hold with this, and I haven't seen much compelling evidence for it. Most evidence held up for evolution - those moths everyone learns about in biology, for example, or the stories about bacteria linked to by another poster, are an example of populations adapting, not progressing.

      An interesting thing to note, is that Charles Darwin, when he proposed what became evolution, was not familiar, as we are now, with basic genetics. We can see that variation within a population can be accounted for, not by mutation, but by the combination of dominant/recessive genes. Darwin had no such knowledge - to him two brown eyed parents giving birth to a blue eyed child would have been only explainable as mutation, not as the expression of two recessive genes inherited from each parent. Some of the effects he sees which he ascribes to mutation are more readily explainable now as genetic phenomena.

      To him, variation in a population could only be explained by evolution. We can now explain it through genetics.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    282. Re:Thank God! by tloh · · Score: 1
      I don't have to feel guilty for things...I know I'll be taken care of.

      I believe that is the same line of reasoning that motivates suicide bombers.

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
    283. Re:Thank God! by orangesquid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Dogma sucks. Always. Regardless of who is eating or regurgitating it.

      Going by from what I have found in my own research...

      Evolution by itself *is* just a theory (a hypothesis with support). We have observed evolution: that is a fact. We have observed speciation by evolution: that is also a fact. We have oodles of historical information which suggests evolution occured, and which would allow for speciation to have occured: that is a fact, too. There is not an overwhelming amount of historical evidence that speciation by evolution *was* the dominant means for the creation of new species; in other words, there aren't colossal numbers of near-identical fossils with only very tiny intermediate changes. We have very few direct observations of any kind of rapid, sudden, severe evolutionm, which might explain historical speciation. It is quite likely that many, many fossils are lost; only a scant numbers of fossils will stay preserved this long. It is also quite likely that evolution happens much more quickly from severe natural disasters (if we see a few new species with much better adaptation of water from the recent tsunami, I will not be surprised).

      Creationism by itself is *just* a hypothesis (a suggestion which would become a theory with adequate support). There is historical evidence of many things in the bible being true; however, that does not imply that the biblical story of creationism carries any weight. If someone could come up with data that would suggest that the immediate results of such a creation process are clearly present within the history of the early universe, creationism could qualify as a theory.

      You have to be careful with calling something a "fact." There are very few general facts about evolution. One is, "We have observed evolution and speciation by evolution in controlled environments." Another is, "There is overwhelming historical evidence to suggest evolution and speciation have occured." Theories are never facts (except in pure mathematics), but facts can support theories, and theories can be used to design new experiments which will create more relevant facts.

      I do not know, off of the top of my head, if the formal definition of evolution is worded like, "Small changes in organisms lead to adaptation to their environment" (implying always), or, "Small changes in organisms could lead to adaptation in their environment" (implying that this is a possibility, but not a requirement). The first is a theory stated as a law, the second is a theory stated as a possible explanation. I'm assuming that, when most people refer to evolution, they refer to the suggestion that evolution, as an explanation, ought to be taken as a law, based on the Wikipedia entry for Evolution, which states, 'The word "evolution" is often used as a shorthand for the modern theory of evolution of species based upon Darwin's theory of natural selection. This theory states that all species today are the result of an extensive process of evolution that began over three billion years ago with simple single-celled organisms, and that evolution via natural selection accounts for the great diversity of life, extinct and extant.'

      Creationism, as stated in the Bible, is very improbable. An all-powerful God could, of course, spontaneously create a Universe, complete with a history of dinosaurs, and complete with planets shooting away from each other as if there had once been a big bang; this suggests that, if the Universe is really only a few thousand years old, God has a great sense of humor.

      However, if the creation story is intended to be a metaphor, then who cares? Comparing known scientific data with a literary metaphor means nothing, because a metaphor is just a literary device used to describe the nature of something else. Of course, some could argue that it is an inaccurate metaphor, because of the way we are interpreting our translation of the original Jewish text.

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    284. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fossil evidence, autosomal and mitochondrial DNA are all just figments of the imagination then?

    285. Re:Thank God! by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      I have never heard a remotely plausible theory regarding the origin of life.

      That is because, I respectfully submit, you do not have an appreciation of cosmic scales. Put another way, the odds of you winning the lottery with one ticket are somewhere very near zero. However, the odds that somebody will win is very high. I hope that helps you understand how an extremely unlikely event can be all but inevitable as long as your universe is big enough.

      But just because we can't figure out how it started doesn't mean we should accept "it just happened by accident".

      In fact, we do just accept it. Acceptance doesn't mean that we will never challenge or overthrow that particular theory, just that at this point in time there isn't a better or comparable one. That's how science works.

    286. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Bacteria do indeed evolve as they become adapted better to the environment due to reproductive pressures. That is the _definition_ of evolution as it was hypothesized.

      No. Evolution has two components. One, that organisms adapt to become better suited to their environment. Two, that over time, these adaptations accumulate into a more complex organism.

      The parent poster is agreeing with one, but disagreeing with two. Evolution is not the same thing as change. Evolution is change leading towards increased complexity.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    287. Re:Thank God! by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 3, Informative
      It's even more plausable than that if you consider that the vast majority of the young planet was covered in an OCEAN of primative chemicals, being struck by lightning all over the entire planet at incredible ratios of strikes/square mile, the fact that certain chemicals tend towards each other more than others, the idea that a chemical structure eventually arose that could create copies of itself isn't very far-fetched, especially considering the extreme lengths of time all these chemical reactions had to occur over and over again all over the planet.

      Continue this by realizing that copying processes are not perfect, mistakes are made, and sometimes those mistakes can make a chemical structure that replicates itself in a different way with different chemicals that can still self-replicate the structure and you end up with different varieties of replicating structures competing for the same chemical resources.

      Continue this by seeing that some of these self-replicating structures were able to combine with other chemicals for use as an "outer layer" that happened to protect the replication structure from damage by UV rays or other chemicals that would cause its deterioration. You begin to see the prototypes of what we call "cells".

      Continue this all over the planet an inconceivable number of times for an inconceivable length of time and plausibility is certainly within grasp.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    288. Re:Thank God! by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Evolution is a very slow process; we don't need to observe it to determine that its a fact.

      We have observed evolution in action. The Bible doesn't mention anything about God creating a bunch of new, drug-resistant bacteria over the past 40 years, does it? The bacteria that survive our antibiotics have certain characteristics and mutations that allow them to survive and breed by natural selection for being fittest to survive in the environment in which they find themselves (our medicated bodies). And they breed like crazy, so their evolution is greatly accelerated compared to what we are used to.

      Of course, what little the Bible says about the subject is so abstract that it can twisted to survive scientific enlightenment. This is evolution at work, also. Maybe God created all the animals simply by zapping some amino acids with lightning and let the rest be done by natural selection. Maybe he set it all in motion by creating the big bang so he could just phone in the rest.

      Christ was actually quite set against organized religion; he got into his troubles for mocking the orthodoxy and telling people to make their spirituality an individual thing rather than kneeling in pews and chanting by rote. I think Christ would be quite appalled by the religion that carries his name.

      While on the subject, the committee that formed the whole of the religious canon of Christianity did so from a narrow selection of letters written by fanatical cult members over three hundred years earlier. Christ's divinity was decided by a (non-unanimous) majority vote of the men present. Much of the body of the Bible was written in letters by a schizophrenic who was born a hundred years after Christ's death.

      Religion is one of the better examples of evolution around. They all interbreed and mutate to survive their environment. Stoned any gays lately? Or adulterers?

    289. Re:Thank God! by abigor · · Score: 1

      Do you believe that not collecting stamps is a hobby? No? Then how can atheism be a religion, you stupid piece of shit?

      Or how about this: I have little green men living under my bed. What, you don't believe me? Why, that's no better than believing it.

    290. Re:Thank God! by zymurgyboy · · Score: 1
      They don't exist in the good book.
      Whoa there, cowboy! That's Good Book(tm) to you!

      Alpha State! Get your stickers and call the school board quickly! I think this databyss guy has found their next textbook.

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    291. Re:Thank God! by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 0

      What if these were creation science text books? They're called Bibles.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    292. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      evolution is a change in the genetic makeup of a group

      Evolution and change are not the same thing. According to the article you quoted, it is only evolution if there is a change in the genetic population of a group.

      What the parent was saying is that in the case of bacteria, there were no new attributes being developed. All that was happening is that the distribution of an attribute over a population was being altered.

      An example: There are 1,000 bacteria. 100 of them are resistant to a certain type of pollution. Their environment becomes polluted. 900 die, the 100 live, breed, and in the end, we get a population that is now mostly resilient to that polution. The bacteria have adapted. But they have not evolved - there has been no genetic change in their makeup. Just the genes that represent pollution resistance have become more widespread.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    293. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to suffer from something that can best be described as pomposity.

      Atheism is not a form of religion. Except perhaps in your anti-social world, and one's similiar to it, which do not regard how the word is commonly treated.

      Do you mean that atheists, by their beliefs, make positive yet unproven statements about the world? By a common definition (strong-atheism), yes, they certainly do. How does agnosticism look in that category though? What's a common definition of agnosticism? The belief that the answer to the question of the existence of deities is unknowable by nature (strong-agnosticism).

      The existence of deities is unknowable? Positive statement about the world? Check. Unproven? Check. So, what is it that makes the common agnostic less stupid then the common atheist?

      Even weak-agnosticism says something. Weak-atheism is the only related thing that says nothing.

    294. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forget the playground and just walk into your nearest Wal-mart....

    295. Re:Thank God! by miu · · Score: 1
      What we are seeing in America is the triumph of superstition in the guise of Christianity.

      The religious right loves to point out that the US is a Christian nation, but the Christianity of the founding fathers was that of the age of secular liberalism that despised the habits of mindless dogma, despotism, cruelty, murderous politicking and superstition of the Roman Catholic Church. They also avoided the fanaticism of the extremist Protestant sects that had been shipped to America due to their obnoxiousness. Somehow modern American Protestantism seems to have inherited the bad point points of those militant Protestant sects, but also managed to adopt some of the worst habits of the Catholics - especially as regards superstition and interference in temporal matters.

      The separation of church and state in the US was a reaction against the awful spectacle of Christendom in Europe. It has been a while and Christendom is in serious decline, but modern Americans need only look at the middle east to see a live example of the perils of allowing religion a voice in government.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    296. Re:Thank God! by tenaciousj · · Score: 1

      Then, surely her offspring will be born with this 'injured back' trait causing them to walk upright as well. Thus letting them survive where the other members of her species die off, proving that evolution is fact.

      Is this the point you were trying to make or no? I'm confused as to its relivence.

    297. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Thats not evolution, its genetics. You haven't evolved, you've inherited different genes. A population exchanging genes in this way cannot progress - evolution depends on the addition of extra genetic material into a population. Usually this is through mutation.

      And the same holds for bacteria - no new genetic information, just expressions of different subsets of the genetic information of the whole population.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    298. Re:Thank God! by Benwick · · Score: 1

      Now, who wants to start a campaign to sticker bibles?

      I've been reading Slashdot for six years, and this is the single best idea I have ever seen here.

      Where do we get the stickers? Can we sticker Korans, books of Mormon, Bhagavad-gitas, Dianetics, etc.?

      Bill Hicks: Has anybody ever actually seen a Gideon?

    299. Re:Thank God! by rdwald · · Score: 1

      Let me rephrase that. I linked to the sub-section of the "29+ Evidences for Macroevolution" page which describes the word "evidences." This page is what I'd been hoping for.

      In other words, the "Preview" button is there for a reason.

    300. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      The statement clearly is trying to mislead people into thinking it's false. It's liek slappign a sticker on your car that says "I am a pedo". Sure you might be a pediatricst, but more people are going to think your a pedophile. Although many more will scratch their heads and wonder what pedo means.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    301. Re:Thank God! by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

      The way I see it, if a bunch of retarded homicidal apes can turn into something as fantastical as our modern society, anything is possible. Prokaryots from ooze seems easy to believe by comparison.

    302. Re:Thank God! by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 1

      Don't be turned off by the fact that this material is from a creationist propaganda site, (most sites are propaganda sites at their hidden core)

      Dude, that's fucking hilarious. "Don't be turned off by the fact that my proof that the Holocaust didn't happen is on a Neo-Nazi propaganda site, as most sites are propaganda sites at their hidden core."

    303. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiot. The sticker states a fact. Stating a fact is unconstitutional?

    304. Re:Thank God! by Benwick · · Score: 1
      Literary value?

      Genesis 11:11 And Shem lived after he begat Arphaxad five hundred years, and begat sons and daughters. Genesis 11:12 And Arphaxad lived five and thirty years, and begat Salah: (Noah's age, 637 years old.),( Shem's age: 135 years old) Genesis 11:13 And Arphaxad lived after he begat
      Salah four hundred and three years, and begat sons and daughters. Genesis 11:14 And Salah lived thirty years, and begat Eber: (Noah's age, 667 years old.),( Shem's age : 165 years old) Genesis 11:15 And Salah lived after he begat Eber four hundred and three years, and begat sons and daughters. Genesis 11:16 And Eber lived four and thirty years, and begat Peleg: (Noah's age, 701 years old.),( Shem's age: 199 years old) Genesis 11:17 And Eber lived after he begat Peleg four hundred and thirty years, and begat sons and daughters. Genesis 11:18 And Peleg lived thirty years, and begat Reu: (Noah's age, 731 years old.),( Shem's age: 229 years old) Genesis 11:19 And Peleg lived after he begat Reu two hundred and nine years, and begat sons and daughters. Genesis 11:20 And Reu lived two and thirty years, and begat Serug: (Noah's age, 763 years old.),( Shem's age: 261 years old) Genesis 11:21 And Reu lived after he begat Serug two hundred and seven years, and begat sons and daughters. Genesis 11:22 And Serug lived thirty years, and begat Nahor: (Noah's age, 793 years old.),( Shem's age: 291 years old) Genesis 11:23 And Serug lived after he begat Nahor two hundred years, and begat sons and daughters. Genesis 11:24 And Nahor lived nine and twenty years, and begat Terah: (Noah's age, 822 years old.),( Shem's age: 320 years old) Genesis 11:25 And Nahor lived after he begat Terah an hundred and nineteen years, and begat sons and
      daughters. Genesis 11:26 And Terah lived seventy years, and begat Abram, Nahor, and Haran. (Noah's age, 892 years old when Abraham was born), Shem's age: 390 years old)


      I would rather study a phone book.
    305. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Theories don't change into laws through more "proving". Law and theory are just labels. You use law by tradition not because of a graduated namign convention.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    306. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      If Mendel's work is gold, but ignore mutation then you'll end up with genes being kicked out and none being created... meaning life would have died out a very, very long time ago.

      Not really. What you'd expect is that as a species spreads out over the earth, it adapts according to its environment as certain genes are selected.

      The thing is, not every gene that is not "selected" is discarded. They usually hang around somewhere in the population as recessive genes, or in the odd indivudual here and there, and are then pulled out of the genetic cupboard when the environment changes to favor them.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    307. Re:Thank God! by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      Well, if the theory is correct, we did. We just didn't record the observations.

    308. Re:Thank God! by tyler_larson · · Score: 5, Insightful
      This is bad. Very bad. Theories of evolution aside (I happen to agree with the text book, not the stikers), this decision is a direct and flagrant violation of the constitution.

      The text of the message: "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." contains no endorsement or condemnation of any religion, religious belief, or religious practice. The statement itself cannot be deemed a violation of the required separation of church and state. Had the statement actually endorsed a creationist idea, the case would be very different.

      The statement was added because of the compliants of the parents of the students who will be using those books. This behavior isn't unheard of--it happens every year with regards to sex ed and other "touchy" subjects that parents' children study in school. It's important that it wasn't the pastors, rabbis, or TV evangelists who pressured the school board, it was the parents. The sticker was a direct result of the desires of the actual members of that school district, not any religion or religious organization. Parents are totally within their rights to argue with the school board, regardless of their religion.

      The judge in this case ruled the stickers unconstitutional because of the religion of the people who supported it. "Bah," you may say. But think about it. The judge took up against the "religious" side because the issue is sometimes a point of religious conflict. This is exactly the sort of behavior the constitution prohibits.

      If you still don't see anything wrong with this picture, it's because you don't understand the meaning or purpose behind the separation of church and state. This amendment to the constitution was put in place forbid the government from oppressing any individual because of his religion. It is by considering atheism "yet another valid religious belief" that this religious protection is extended to them as well. And since athiesm is just another religion, it must be protected, but it cannot be favored. All religious beliefs, even the ones that don't call themselves "religious", must be given equal rights.

      What's wrong with this case is that it's an example of a judge ruling for a religion (the atheists), and not because there was anything wrong with the stickers. They neither promoted nor condemned any religion--or lack thereof. They only questioned a scientific principle. And it's not unconstitutional to question a principle--no matter how wrong you may be. Rather, the judge ruled against the "religious" because of their religion. The ruling was made as if the judge believed atheism to be the official religion of the state, to be promoted at the expense of others.

      If you're an athiest, you probably still don't see anything wrong with it. So how about this:

      Let's say that instead the issue at hand is a geography book, written by Christians, that said that Saudi Arabia is an ugly place that the world could do without. Some local Muslims take offsense and get the school board to put a sticker on the book that says, "This book contains some statements about the value of certain locations that are based solely on the authors own taste, and which should be approached with an open mind."

      In such a case, can a judge declare those stickers unconstitutional because they tend to support an idea which some Muslims see as a religious issue. The issue at stake isn't whether Saudi Arabia really is ugly or not. Likewise, the previous arguement isn't really about evolution. It's about the government taking sides on an issue just because a religion supports or opposes it.

      --
      "With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine. However, this is not necessarily a good idea...."
      RFC 1925
    309. Re:Thank God! by Mac+Degger · · Score: 1

      "
      You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution."

      That's irrelevant. Evolution has been observed and can even be made to happen. It is the name of an observable and testable process. Timescales are irrelevant in this case.

      Now where is your example of micro-creationism? I can give a ton of examples of (observed) evolution.

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
    310. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      "Evolution is just a theory" is a religous catchism, and thus a religous statement. like "what would jesus do?" I have a friend named Jesus, he'd problbly say "well I'll fuck your sister". But it's a religous catchism referign to a specific idealized Jesus.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    311. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks like meaningless playing with words. Something being a theory does not prevent it from being a fact. When the theory gets proven, it becomes a fact.

    312. Re:Thank God! by LO0G · · Score: 1

      Speciation in action:

      Breed a horse and a donkey. You get either a mule or a hinny, both infertile.

      Breed a tiger and a lion. You get a liger, again infertile.

      But nobody believes that tigers and lions are the same species (or horses and donkeys).

    313. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Name a positive mutation in, for example, drosophila (fruit flies). These beasties have been bombarded with gamma radiation and any other mutagenic source for a lot of years. Please summarize all the positive mutations observed, negative mutations, and how the species is advanced by these positive mutations.

      Or are there any?

    314. Re:Thank God! by LO0G · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up please - one of the best posts I've seen explaining the difference.

    315. Re:Thank God! by dondelelcaro · · Score: 2, Interesting
      That's not life. Amino acids can form proteins - to use the body-as-computer analogy, even if we assume DNA was formed and maintained at stable/favorable conditions, you've got the equivalent of a hard drive with an OS installed -
      It's more likely that the earliest forms of life were nothing more than RNA strands with the ability to self replicate. It's already well known that RNA plays a significant role in the most critical cellular functions (replication and protein synthesis) whereas the protein role in these functions is secondary. This hypothesis is commonly refered to as the RNA World hypothesis.

      The other half of this, separation of life from non-life, was most likley brought about by another set of events, codified into the so called Lipid World hypothesis.

      Finally, as far as homeostatis, every cell on the planet expends a considerable amount of energy carefully regulating its internal environment. There's nothing magical about a multi-cellular organism that obsolves it from this critical role. As you sit reading this, fully 2/3 of the energy being expended by your brain is going directly to maintaining a specific Na+/K+ concentration gradient. The same is true for the bacteria on your skin, but to a slightly lesser extent.
      --
      http://www.donarmstrong.com
    316. Re:Thank God! by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1

      About the bacteria, that is evolution in action. Some people try to split evolution into "microevolution" and "macroevolution" to get around that, so my post focused on the "macro" part.
      About religion, yes, religions do "evolve" over time; that's easily observed. However, what you said about Jesus and the Bible sounds like contrarian stuff to me.

      --
      No data, no cry
    317. Re:Thank God! by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
      Since the goal of science is the pursuit of explaining the universe through observation, what's wrong with explaining the unobservable/unexplainable as God -- such as pre-Big Bang.

      What's wrong with it is that it's just a baseless claim. Doesn't it strike you as contradictory to explain the unexplainable? If you're going to use the language of "seems likely..." and so on, doesn't it seem likely that you're going to be totally wrong if you try to explain the unexplainable? Why can't people just confess "I don't know" rather than always having to have an answer?

    318. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both are religious fundamentalist loonie sites
      trying to masquerade as "scientific".

    319. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder what "they" would say if I stuck a sticker in each and every copy of the Bible saying that god is "just a theory, not fact". Just a thought.

    320. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      The fact that Miller's experiments are still being used in Biology text books shows that the the Evolutionist movement will stop at nothing to prove their point, even if it is bad science.

      yawn, someone proves under some circumstances something can occur is a proof of concept. It doesn't have to mean thats the way it happened. It's a stupid catchism, a simplification to illistrate an idea. A person like you makes a scarecrow arguments out of such things because you have no argument of real substance.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    321. Re:Thank God! by rilian4 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The poster fails to realize that all biology texts already state the same thing on them on the inside.

      The poster also fails to realize that the entire concept of "separation of church and state" isn't even written into the constitution. That phrase comes from 1 source...a letter written by Thomas Jefferson in response to a letter written to him by a pastor with concerns about the Bill of Rights in 1789. That pastor asked if the clause stating "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..." The pastor was concerned that this clause could later be turned against religious people. Thomas Jefferson replied that he didn't feel that to be a problem since there was "...a wall of separation between church and state...". This separation existed to protect those who practice a religion from the government. Not to protect the government and any citizens from religion.

      I feel that I would be remiss if I did not point this out. Go read the 2 letters, they are on historical record. Research the lives and backgrounds of the founding fathers. You'll be surprised at how high a percentage of them were religious.

      This sticker thing is ridiculous. The article states that 2000 parents complained that evolution was being taught as fact to their students when there are obvious problems with the theory. Only 6 parents complained about the sticker and their wished overrode the wishes of 2000...Do the math folks...

      --

      ...quicker, easier, more seductive the darkside is...but more powerful, it is not.
    322. Re:Thank God! by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      Then, surely her offspring will be born with this 'injured back' trait causing them to walk upright as well. Thus letting them survive where the other members of her species die off, proving that evolution is fact.

      Might I direct you to the bottom of your spine, and the fused bones that make up the coxic, as a good example that this theory might actually in fact be correct.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    323. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Sorry but you only have two choices. If it wasn't by chance. Then you must accept it was of divine origins. The 'third' option: life is alien to this world, is simply pushing back the debate chronologically because that alien life must have come into being somehow.. which brings you back to random or divine. Divine can cirumvent the alien paradox since it could plausibily be beyond time etc etc...

      Wait can't I accept it was divine and random. God seems fairly unpredictable. I'm pretty sure he enjoys randomness and diversity. I beleive in both. My Christian god works in random and obscure ways.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    324. Re:Thank God! by AndyL · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "I'd have to say that most "Evolutionists" have as closed a mind as us "Jesus Freaks". "
      The difference between science and religion is not that the scientists are supposed to consider every crazy, unsupported idea that comes down the pike.

      The difference is that if the leading scientific theory is proven wrong then it is no longer the leading scientific theory.

      Only religious types think that a "Belief" is something you have to decide early then never change.

    325. Re:Thank God! by mikeg22 · · Score: 1

      Don't be turned off by the fact that this material is from a creationist propaganda site

      Excuse me? Hate to tell you, but all those articles contain are either claims that have been roundly discredited by the scientific community or insignificant nitpicks that say nothing about whether the fossils came from an ancestor to humans. You don't really believe their BS, do you? If you do, I'm afraid I can't do much to help you, its too late.

    326. Re:Thank God! by Pooua · · Score: 1
      Who does a detective trust in a murder case? The physical evidence or the witness?

      Why should he trust either? If physical evidence and deduction are so good, why are about half of all murder cases unsolved? There is a difference between witnessing a crime as it occurs, and deducing what happened from the physical evidence. The older the evidence, the less reliable it is.

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
    327. Re:Thank God! by shawb · · Score: 1

      Thats not proven and prolly not true as modern people tend reproduce less often as they are more successful

      From an ecological point of view, this actually makes sense. Sometimes fitness is not about having the most kids. Evolutionary fitness is defined something like the number of your offspring who can grow up and have offspring. Often times simply having lots of children does not ensure that they will be able to grow up and have offspring of their own.

      And then there are pressures that are on an entire population rather than the individual. Breeding too fast can make to size of the population grow at such a rate that not everybody can be taken care of. So various techniques are used to ensure that energy is not wasted on producing offspring t hat die before they can reproduce. Instead energy is focused on properly rearing a small number of children who have a much higher likelyhood of having children of their own. E.G. having enough money to send all of your children to college so they can (hopefully) get a good education and then a stable job which will attract a longtime mate (what we call spouse) may in fact make you more "evolutionarilly fit" within the constraints of modern society than popping out so many children that you can hardly feed them, much less put in the time to make sure they get a proper education and then attract a fit mate.

      --
      I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
    328. Re:Thank God! by Ra5pu7in · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's funny, because the issue of Discover Magazine that arrived in my mailbox sometime in the last week says on the cover "Scientists at Michigan State Prove Evolution Works".

      No surprise there. Every new biological discovery seems to be heralded in these magazines as "new proof of evolution" or "evolution at work". Even when other reputable scientists dispute the findings, or even if the proof turns out to only show that a specific test worked, these kinds of headlines show up.

      Now that you know what the word "theory" actually means

      Theory, the word, actually has multiple meanings - leading to much of the confusion. Take a look at Merriam-Webster. You'll find "the analysis of a set of facts in their relation to one another", "abstract thought : SPECULATION", "a plausible or scientifically acceptable general principle or body of principles offered to explain phenomena", "a hypothesis assumed for the sake of argument or investigation", and "an unproved assumption" -- each of which puts a different flavor to the discussion. Notice that NONE of the definitions given implies that a theory is a fact. The closest ones state "plausible or scientifically acceptable" and "hypothesis assumed".

      The important definitions of fact are "something that has actual existence" and "an actual occurence". Evolution is an assumed occurence based on the relationships between different life-forms. It doesn't ever point to an actual occurence - it points to two separate facts (actual fossils that can be dated) and infers an occurence between them. The actual occurence is not known - in fact, many books on evolution say "we don't know how this happened, but x evolved into y as you can see by ..." So how did evolution work? Some say radiation-damaged genes, others refer to chaos theory, others say that isn't important. That last is the most foolish, because what is the theory of evolution without an explanation of how it really works.

      The key distinction the groups who pushed for those stickers are trying to make is that while many believe evolution "may, for all practical purposes, be treated as a fact", it is not a fact. To their dismay (though they will seldom admit this), this is equally true of their own theories (translate as religious beliefs). To everyone's dismay, this is the case with many things we believe to be fact. Einstein's theories are still just that - theories. Two thousand years from now humanity may learn that they were radically incomplete and our insistence on teaching them as fact prevented us from entering entire fields of knowledge.

      ==============

      As a side note, I think this federal judge - if he actually claimed that the sticker attempted to inject religion into state materials - may have made it easier for this to be appealed. The sticker was written very carefully and makes no mention of religion. Nowhere does it mention the Bible, Christ, Christianity, creation, or anything religious. In fact, if you were to show that sticker to any person who knew nothing about the controversy here and that the opponents of evolution theory are religious, they wouldn't necessarily connect religion. They could suspect a renegade group of scientists. By calling the sticker religious the judge reveals a clear bias and picking of sides rather than an impartial consideration.

      --
      I was taking one day at a time, but then several days got together and ambushed me. (from a Rhymes with Orange comic)
    329. Re:Thank God! by Moofie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe we shouldn't put stickers on textbooks that are explicitly designed to mislead, rather than educate.

      I'd rather there be a whole chapter or two on critical, skeptical thinking. I think that'd be a much better use of all of our time.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    330. Re:Thank God! by Atrax · · Score: 1

      An example: There are 1,000 bacteria. 100 of them are resistant to a certain type of pollution. Their environment becomes polluted. 900 die, the 100 live, breed, and in the end, we get a population that is now mostly resilient to that polution. The bacteria have adapted. But they have not evolved - there has been no genetic change in their makeup. Just the genes that represent pollution resistance have become more widespread.

      I'd just like to extend that sentence a little

      start with a population of ordinary bacteria, fast-forward a bit, let them reproduce a bunch and observe.

      With a large enough population, and enough generational cycles, you'll eventually get some mutations, some of which may be beneficial, some of which will just kill the organism, and some of which will have no discernable effect. The organism has now evolved. OK? It's changed.

      The less spectacular mutations are more likely to establish, since they are less likely to have a catastrophic effect, so the population will vary, but not by a lot, as the generations go by.

      The mutations have appeared and they've become established. They're currently doing nothing to help or hinder the population.

      Now, for argument's sake, we'll say the mutation we're looking for has the side effect of imbuing resistance to poison x. This may not even be the primary effect of the mutation. it may just be a tiny alteration in the structure of a membrane that inhibits molecules of a certain structure from permeating, or it may be a variation in enzyme production which can help break down the poison once it's in. This is outside the scope of the discussion so we'll just leave it.

      Now let the level of poison x in the system increase. Slowly. Even if it's only a very slight increase, the resistant bacteria will start to become more common as the non-resistant forms are killed off. The natural cycle of reproduction will ensure the population is topped up, and each time round, more resistant bacteria survive. that's natural selection.

      I add this clarification just to make 100% clear the fact that selection and evolution are not the same - they are two different processes which happen to interact within a given environment. TOo many people seem to have misconceptions about this which somehow stop them grasping the simplicity of the whole thing.

      1. evolution happens
      2. natural selection happens
      3. evolution is just random
      4. natural selection is non-random
      5. both processes generally take place in tiny increments
      6. both processes take place over very large timescales

      just so we're all clear.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    331. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup? A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton...


      The watchmaker argument has always pissed me off. It masquerades as logic by claiming that an artifact requires an intelligent creator, something that agrees with human experience, but fails to continue the use of logic with regard to the origin of the creator itself. At best the watchmaker principle is a useless bit of sophistry.


      I think the problem is while protiens and other organic bits that make a cell up tend to be more stable in a "cell" then in free ion states or in elemental forms, a bit of silicon and metal is just as stable as a VCR or as a lump of rock. So it's a interesting and cheap rhetorical argument it's a pretty stupid anology.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    332. Re:Thank God! by Botty · · Score: 0

      Troll.

      Ah, great, you refuse to believe in anything that takes longer than our short human lifespans to happen.

      No. Nowhere is there any evidence that I believe this. You are putting words in my mouth (or words in my post). I was making fun at the OP that evolution, as in the evolution of man that explains our origins has NOT been observed.

      But aside from that nonsense, here's an interresting point of "macro"evolution: Look at a wolf. Good, good, notice the yellow eyes, the firm, proud buttocks, and the shading of the pelt. Now, look at a chihuahua.

      Ummm, whats your point? Wolves and chihuahua are related? How. Show me their common ancestor.

    333. Re:Thank God! by Kadmium · · Score: 1

      God's green earth? Shit, something tells me I owe a lot of back rent...

    334. Re:Thank God! by doublebackslash · · Score: 1

      "my basic theory breaks down at absurd velocities for some reason"

      If more scientists spoke that way they would be drasticaly more popular to people such as myself.
      That makes me smile.

      --
      md5sum /boot/vmlinuz
      d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e /boot/vmlinuz
    335. Re:Thank God! by Wavicle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All it's saying is to keep an open mind that it's only an unproven idea

      The verbage specifically states that evolution is not a fact. They don't know that it is not a fact. The sticker is playing games with semantics ("Oh we mean not a fact as in something is either a theory or a fact") but was clearly cleverly written such that it could easily be read as saying "Evolution is false."

      Doesn't sound very open minded to me.

      As far as I know, no one has actually observed macroevolution.

      There have been several instances of observed speciation in plants and insects.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    336. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the
      > primordial soup?

      Well, to a degree, yeah. The playback isn't too great, but I do recall images that I've seen.

    337. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Natural selection explains how it's possible, but there is no evidence, let alone proof, that there isn't some other force, either supernatural or natural (and just not yet discovered), which pushed evolution in the right direction.

      In science we go by what is proven, not by what is not proven. When some one comes with proof that something "supernatural" pushed evolution in the "right" direction, then we will accept it. Until then, its a wild guess with no substance.

      By the way, can you prove that you were not dancing naked yesterday nite ? If not, you must have been dancing naked. Hows that sound ?

    338. Re:Thank God! by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      why are about half of all murder cases unsolved?

      I will now be flippant and reply "lack of physical evidence".

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    339. Re:Thank God! by Foolhardy · · Score: 1

      I'd like to add that in order for selection to work, there needs to be a consistent environment, or at least one that changes slowly. Selection molds the genes to reflect the environment; the more consistent the environment, the better evolution can reflect it.

      If an instance of mutation X is culled because it is wasteful, but becomes beneficial later when the environment changes, the mutation will need to happen again to get a chance to propogate. Although the probability is the same the second time, the first chance was wasted on a now obsolete environment.
      This can work if the environment changes slowly enough for the evolutionary cycle to adapt. For changes that are too rapid, the organisms will be left with selectional choices that poorly match the new environment. Culling mutation X worked last time (in the old env.), but evolution can't see the future and has to constantly correct itself to adapt to the changing environment.

      Since each organism or even each population don't live in a closed environment (each seperated from each other) part of the environment is other organisms. Together, the species' will tend to drift until a balance between them is reached where each can be specialized, AKA each species having a niche.

    340. Re:Thank God! by leomekenkamp · · Score: 2, Informative

      We have very few direct observations of any kind of rapid, sudden, severe evolutionm, which might explain historical speciation.

      As a matter of fact: we have such direct observations. Take dogs for instance: they evolved out of domesticated wolves in a symbiotic relation with homo sapiens. Dogs have certain characteristics that wolves do not possess, like for instance the ability to 'follow eyes' and determine what a human being is looking at.

      Also, a lot of new flowers are cross-bread to create new flowers with distinctive characteristics.

      There are also a few posts further down that have urls on the process on speciation.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    341. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      And to this day there isn't any real evolution hapening in an observable rate

      Lets see, Bacteria evolve at a observable rate. Interchangin shape/diet/metabolism ect at a alarmign rate. People exhibit it as well, tending to get taller more swarthy and eyes and hair gettign darker. We have plants that seems to be shifting population characteristics too. I see it everywhere, I think your reading the wrong theory of evolution. Evolution doesn't mean watching a slug turn into a andriod killing machine in 100 years, it's a population of mostly white swallows chanign into a population of mostly black swallows when some pressure kills off swallows that are white.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    342. Re:Thank God! by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      I thin his point is the opposite: that there ISNT a good reason to separate micro and macro evolution. I agree. The distinction is nitpicking by people who have no idea what they're talking about. Amen.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    343. Re:Thank God! by Liquiddarknessvi · · Score: 0

      The Canon of the New Testement was put together by the Church fathers; not to be the only refrence to christianity. But, to be a guide filled with first or second hand accounts to the acts of Christ and his apostles. All of the accounts in the New Testment were not simply selected by these men. They were crticised by them under certain crterias. Namely histrorical and redaction criticisms. Other criteria were set up to maintain a timeframe from the birth of Christ. The bible is, acceptably, biased and christians who do not belive that are simply diluded. It was not meant to be followed to the t. It was simply a glimps into the life of the most recognizable figure today. It was based opon what we call the "Lennigrad Parchment" or "Codex"; which were, at the time, the oldest know copies of these letters. Today what is know as the "Dead sea Scrolls", which were excavated from several caves in an area called Qumran are the oldest known copies. These copies of our canon, although 100s of years older then the Leningrad Codex, are often to the letter acurate to them. So even though we possess none of the autographs we can rest assured that they have maintained accuracy. Along with our canon at qumran we also found several non canonical books which some belive the Catholic church attempted to suppress. Christians who base their entire lives and arguments on the bible will fall short. Clement, one of the early church faters, wrote several letters which he called "inspired". He also gave us evidence that he had studied various Gnostic and deutoronomical works. For a broader perspective on christianity one must look into all the religions and beliefs of those who claim to know Yahweh. The Apocrypha, Nag Hamadi Parchments , The Koran, and the Book of Enoch should be studied and considered. The bible was simply a selection of letters that were idiot proof and gave straight forward anwsers that required little questioning of ones faith. Its kinda like an idiots guide to God. To say that evolution is a theory is a perfectly accurate statement if I were to use the world logic. Post Modernism relies heavily on the idea of Reletivism and Reletive truths. So if you can say God is right for me and not for you (which is often taught in schools)Why do I not have the right to say evolution is right for you but not for me? I should have the right to offer an alternative idea to a speculative theory. There is no way to prove that we evolved from apes because there is no one who was there to document it; just like there is no way to prove God created everything because there was no one there to see it. No one is saying that evolution is not in itself a sound theory. The real issue is the idea of man being sentient and and having emotions rather then simply instinct. So if someone is so inclined to put a sticker on a text book then let them and you can stick as many stickers as you want in my bible.

      --
      Geek Code Version 3.0 GSS d? s++ :++ a--- C++++ UL+ P L+++ E W+++ N+ O? K- W--- O- M+ V-- PS--- PE--
    344. Re:Thank God! by jcr · · Score: 1

      The separation of church and state in the US was a reaction against the awful spectacle of Christendom in Europe.

      More like, it was a reaction to England's persecution of minorities who didn't follow the Anglican schism from the Roman Catholic church. The English who didn't want to play along with the established religion had the choice of being harassed at home, or going elsewhere. Many of them went to America.

      When we overthrew the King's government in America, there wasn't any particular sect that held a majority, so we wisely decided to prohibit any religion from gaining the power to impose its doctrine on the country as a whole.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    345. Re:Thank God! by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      Depends on whether said bibles are mandatory reading in public schools funded by taxpayer money.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    346. Re:Thank God! by mikeg22 · · Score: 1
      Creationism stands on much stronger footing that evolutionism...
      Certainly, if you consider "stronger footing" to mean the exact opposite. Shall we compare?

      Creationism makes no predictions, is unfalsifiable, has never been observed, has failed the peer review of the scientific community, and directly contradicts the currently accepted models of physics, math, biochemistry, and geology.

      Evolutionism makes predictions, can be falsified by evidence, has been observed both directly and indirectly, passes peer review with flying colors daily, and fits in snugly with the currently accepted models of physics, math, biochemistry, and geology.

      Winner? Evolution. Creationism didn't even show up to the fight...
    347. Re:Thank God! by fossilstar · · Score: 1

      "One nation, under-educated."

      --
      "Support our Oops."
    348. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Oh, I don't mean in the strict sense. Science is a method for describing cosmic fact. Religion is a method for expressing cosmic meaning. I mean in the practical sense. All people need something to believe in, and frankly, for many people, science has BECOME their religion, a source of both fact AND meaning. Because of the fallibility of man, science (the religion, not the method) even has it's own dogmas now. Evolution has become one of those dogmas, but it's not the only one. I'm not saying that evolution is false, but it's not held to the same standard as other hard sciences. If cold fusion were held to the same standard, it'd be scientific canon by now.

      Did you happen to miss the major upheaval and intense scrutiny that occured after Darwin published the original book? Not held to the same standard? How about the toss back and forth between the two scientific factiosn that occured for a hundred years after that? I think your making a pretty weak argument there.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    349. Re:Thank God! by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      Note common use, CID, #1, below, it's general use synonym, and, more specifically, Wordnet #2. Learn to separate your dislike of people who may be ignorant and your reaction to law. Although the fundamentalists' motivation for this act was certainly something else, the sticker was not factually incorrect in the way that you propose.

      Additionally, that evolution works and that evolution happened are two different suppositions, and, anyway, I'd advise not taking the watered-down science of Discover too far as proof of anything.

      For the record, I am NOT a creationist. I just feel that, if you are going to argue a point, you should do it with your head and not your heart, or you end up in the same indefensible position that your opponents are in.

      "The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48"
      Theory The"o*ry, n.; pl. Theories. F. th'eorie, L.
      theoria, Gr. ? a beholding, spectacle, contemplation,
      speculation, fr. ? a spectator, ? to see, view. See
      Theater.
      1. A doctrine, or scheme of things, which terminates in
      speculation or contemplation, without a view to practice;
      hypothesis; speculation.
      1913 Webster

      Note: "This word is employed by English writers in a very
      loose and improper sense. It is with them usually
      convertible into hypothesis, and hypothesis is commonly
      used as another term for conjecture. The terms theory
      and theoretical are properly used in opposition to the
      terms practice and practical. In this sense, they were
      exclusively employed by the ancients; and in this
      sense, they are almost exclusively employed by the
      Continental philosophers." --Sir W. Hamilton.
      1913 Webster

      2. An exposition of the general or abstract principles of any
      science; as, the theory of music.
      1913 Webster

      3. The science, as distinguished from the art; as, the theory
      and practice of medicine.
      1913 Webster

      4. The philosophical explanation of phenomena, either
      physical or moral; as, Lavoisier's theory of combustion;
      Adam Smith's theory of moral sentiments.
      1913 Webster

      Atomic theory, Binary theory, etc. See under Atomic,
      Binary, etc.
      1913 Webster

      Syn: Hypothesis, speculation.

      Usage: Theory, Hypothesis. A theory is a scheme of the
      relations subsisting between the parts of a systematic
      whole; an hypothesis is a tentative conjecture
      respecting a cause of phenomena.
      1913 Webster Theosoph

      "WordNet (r) 2.0 (August 2003)"
      theory
      n 1: a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the
      natural world; an organized system of accepted knowledge
      that applies in a variety of circumstances to explain a
      specific set of phenomena; "theories can incorporate
      facts and laws and tested hypotheses"; "true in fact and
      theory"
      2: a tentative theory about the natural world; a concept that
      is not yet verified but that if true would explain certain
      facts or phenomena; "a scientific hypothesis that survives
      experimental testing becomes a scientific theory"; "he
      proposed a fresh theory of alkalis that later was accepted
      in chemical practices" syn: hypothesis, possibility
      3: a belief that can guide behavior; "the architect has a
      theory that more is less"; "they killed him on the theory
      that dead men tell no tales"

    350. Re:Thank God! by wass · · Score: 3, Informative
      Religion demands adherence without proof. Science demands adherence only with proof.

      Not universally. Western religions tend to demand adherence without proof (leaps of faith and such), but Eastern religions (and some Jewish mysticism) tend to be more philosophical and introspective. For example, in Zen Buddhism blindly adhering to written or taught dogma is typically shunned. Instead, the wealth of religious texts in these zen sects are to be taken merely as a "finger pointing to the moon". If you spend too much time looking at the finger, you'll lose sight of the moon.

      --

      make world, not war

    351. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      This is an excellent point. Why are Creationist so defensive about their theory? Is there some dark secret that they don't want us to know? Theologins (and other light weight academics, for that matter) have come up with some seemingly ridiculous ideas in other areas and have been allowed to pursue them to the point that they became mainstream. Deconstruction was once considered ridiculous, now it's the standard in literary analysis.

      These kinds of changes have been stifled in Theology, History, etc. for decades because Theologins can't pose anything that undermines creationism without being excommunicated from the Church. Yes. Excommunicated. Gee, that's a religious term, isn't it?

      If Theology is going to be this pure study of what's out there, then it needs to be sincerely open to study of many different ideas. Have you ever honestly looked at the evidence for a global flood of immense proportions? It's scary.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    352. Re:Thank God! by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      Uh, you reversed the fellow's arguments, i think. His point was that a process of change occurs as a logical result of the three factors listed, or,to put it in a different way, that the three statements together are logically equivalent to a statement of a form of evolution. So he has asserted that A implies B, and you response was "No, B doesn't imlpy A".

      My point here is that, while you're likely mostly correct, your post isn't really relevant to its parent.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    353. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry? Where are the missing links? In this particular case, evolution, in my opinion, flies in the face of science by ignoring some of the obvious missing pieces of evidence.

      Perhaps I'm in the minority, but I came to my faith, not early on in my childhood, but much later in adulthood. Being agnostic most of my life and growing up with science in school, I was (and still am) very interested in things like astronomy and cosmology. Frankly, I see the beauty of God's work in the heavens every time I set up my telescope.

      However, perhaps unlike many baptised-at-birth Christians who knew about the teachings of Jesus their whole life, I came to faith through my own search for answers to bigger questions. To me, it simply seems to impossible to think that the universe and all that's in it, including us, is the result of some random roll of the cosmic dice.

      On the other hand, I see a certain parity between science and religion. I don't think they necessarily have to be mutually exclusive. Just like science can't explain the pre-big bang universe, it also can't explain the "Why am I here question?". If you can accept that science, when pursued in a truly unbiased way, helps to explain the physical universe and the phenomenon that we see in it, then it seems natural to me to think that religion is the way to explain the "Why am I here question?".

    354. Re:Thank God! by Pooua · · Score: 1
      Afterall your obviously different than your parents and it is easily showable that your DNA is more or less a combination of theirs with some randomness thrown in (in the form of mutations etc...).

      That hasn't really been all that "easily showable." Even the most obvious cases of genetic mutations take quite a bit of work to isolate (though this is getting much easier, due to advances in technology).

      So for the sake of argument we'll focus on those typically few random mutations of which about 90% tend to be neutral, 5% tend to be harmful and in severe cases the individual will die extremely premature or the individual will not reproduce. The other 5% are good mutations.

      Your numbers are odd. For one thing, beneficial mutations account for a lot less than 5% of all mutations. But, proceeding...

      So starting right there, Bad genes, by design of evolution, are weeded out slowly but surely (more or less).

      Unless the reason for the bad gene is a flaw typical of the good gene, or the bad gene does not diminish reproduction. Huntington's Disease is said to be one genetic mutation that evolution won't weed out of the population, because it affects the individual long after typical reproductive years.

      This is the premise of evolution on any scale. Now you try to differentiate between Micro and Macro evolution. This is akin to stating that because the atom is so small, and made up of nothing but a few basic particles, that they couldn't obviously combine to form something unique and different on a much larger scale.

      Actually, it is akin to claiming that collections of atoms may form into many varieties of rocks, but aren't likely to form into complex machines on their own.

      Micro and Macro evolution are the same thing just as matter is matter on any level you look at it.

      Except that they aren't, and that is the core of the discussion.

      Perhaps numbers will help to better illustrate the point. Lets say that instead of having a perfect 50/50 split of genes from your parents, you instead had nearly a 50/50 split with .0001% variation due to random genetic mutations. That is 1 part in 1 million, a very small amount.

      OK, and if humans have only 35 thousand genes, a variation of 1 part in 1 million has a very low signal-to-noise ratio. For all practical purposes, that mutation is not going to be expressed.

      Now you go on to reproduce 2 children, one dies from a genetic disease, the other reproduces also with a 50/50 split and .0001% variation. Over the course of 40,000,000 years (more accurately, generations) this comes out to a 4000% difference amongst the initial parents and the newest generation of offspring.

      Your example requires us to assume that none of the mutations are ever corrected (despite the fact that genetics has methods of correcting errors) and that these mutations actually build up in time without sterilizing or killing the population. Indeed, it is possible that species are able to alter their rate of mutation and have some control over which mutations they allow to be expressed. The real world could be a lot more complex than evolutionists ever imagined.

      That is a huge difference and our genes are not nearly close to being 4000% different than pigs and apes, so clearly although the mathematical model provides an ideal scenario, it shows that with even very minor variations, over the course of time different species will emerge.

      There are natural limits to biological change. That puts a crimp in theories of common descent.

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
    355. Re:Thank God! by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      "Evolution" is not a theory, although there are many theories that attempt to explain why evolution works the way it does. That species are evolving at this moment, and have been doing so for billions of years, is as much a scientific fact as that the earth orbits the sun.
      The accusation that the evolution is "merely a theory" is a common thread in fundamentalist dogma.

    356. Re:Thank God! by l0b0 · · Score: 1
      The sticker made no reference to any religious beliefs, and only cautioned the reader to take the material with a grain of salt. This is *always* good advice: people should never blindly accept any theory as fact.

      If you want to be pragmatic, you'd have to say that nothing is fact, because nothing can be proven with absolute certainty. In real life, "fact" can be measured by how much you believe in it, what you think (or have registered) that a large part of the population believes, or by any other means you like.

      What actually is fact, nobody can decide. And here's my point: Maybe evolution is fact, within a reasonable limit of quirks. Nobody will ever know, because nobody has seen the whole Earth since it "started" until today. But there's no way to be sure that evolution is not fact.

    357. Re:Thank God! by travisco_nabisco · · Score: 1
      If they hadn't mentioned evolution

      They only mentioned evolution, because that is the only theory that is presented in modern science books. It would be kinda strange to say that 'creationism' is only a theory, when it isn't even taugh in the text book.

    358. Re:Thank God! by sbaker · · Score: 1

      The trouble is that people will insist on equating 'evolution' with 'people came from monkeys'.

      Whilst I'm personally convinced that humans evolved from apes - which in turn evolved (via a long chain of intermediates) from simple single-celled critters, that's largely irrelevent to what schools have to teach.

      No matter what your religious beliefs are, it is essential that the principles of evolution are understood.

      Evolution is EASY to demonstrate - take any drug-resistant disease for example.

      If you take a population of (say) Tuberculosis-causing bugs in a hospital and start trying to kill them off by pumping their human hosts full of drugs, then they will evolve over a suprisingly short period of time to become immune to your particular suite of drugs. You had one species of bacteria - now you have a different species - and you saw it happen (in fact, you MADE it happen).

      That's what evolution is all about - and I really don't see why anyone should have a problem with that being taught as THE TRUTH. It's essential that our future doctors and biochemists learn that evolution truly happens and is an important part of our daily lives. We can't have even the most religious of them doubting that evolution is an important mechanism - and we probably don't care much whether they believe that all humans are descended from Adam and Eve.

      It's essentially impossible for science to prove that some supernatural force didn't create the entire universe in an instant with all modern creatures in existance and with fossil dinosaur bones and carbon-dateable mammoth carcasses being 'planted' by God to fool the unfaithful.

      You just can't disprove that - any evidence you come up with to 'prove' that no God was involved can just be added to the pile of things God put into the initial state of the universe for whatever bizarre reasons he/she might have.

      Science's only tool is Occams Razor which just isn't strong enough to generate 'Laws Of Nature' - ironically, it's a result of faith in the underlying simplicity of the universe. That's why the origin of species is just a theory (albeit a well accepted one with an immense body of evidence behind it).

      However, you can convince people that bacteria will respond to an evolutionary pressure by changing their DNA and breeding their way into becoming a distinct new species. Because they do so over a sufficiently short time that humans can watch it happen, it's hard to claim that this isn't 'evolution'.

      This isn't just something that happens to bacteria. I heard that marijuana plants in South & Central America that have been repeatedly sprayed with herbicides by anti-drug aircraft have now evolved into plants that are immune to all of the common herbicides. They now flourish because the herbicides are killing off weeds and other plants that encrouch on their fields.

      Evolution in action is undeniable.

      --
      www.sjbaker.org
    359. Re:Thank God! by orangesquid · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. that's good evidence. I was someone would be able to pipe up, though, with some examples of speciation we've seen where the organisms were structurally different and couldn't interbreed...

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    360. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to make it clear that a science textbook is full of theories and not facts and put a sticker on the book to that effect then folks may think you are nuts, but go for it.

      When you pick out a single theory from the whole text then it is obvious that there is another agenda, and since the folks that push that agenda are all christian anti-evolutionists it then becomes a church/state issue.

    361. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Einstein never got a Nobel prize for this comment.

    362. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Besides, my faith is based on the observed resurrection of Jesus Christ, not by one or two people, but by hundreds.

      Hundreds? My ass! Actually, when I read the bible, it clearly stated that nobody saw the resurection occur. In fact, the body just came up missing and everyone started speculating on what HAD to have occured. Personally, I believe some of his followers stole the body and started rumors of his resurrection to gain more believers, thus gaining more power over others.

      And besides, that book of fairy tales has been mis-translated and altered so many times by those in power, who's to say what is legit in it any more. For all we know, he didn't even die in the first place. Maybe he just went into a coma from all the pain and was later nursed back to health by his followers when they took his body from the tomb.

    363. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >still bacteria. Hence micro not macro.

      macroevolution refers to large changes like speciation/forms as opposed to small changes like mutations. it has nothing to do with the size of the oganisms involved.

    364. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a fact. It's been observed.

      You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution. I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.


      Your confusing a real argument with a logical fallacy. I see a bit of false anology mixed in with hasty generalization and a heaping dose of recasting the argument.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    365. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or that God has a sense of humour
      And where is the evidence for god's existence? And why do you think its "god" not "gods" ? I guess you have used your theory to prove your theory. Great !!

    366. Re:Thank God! by Nate4D · · Score: 1

      If by "Western religions", you mean Christianity, then, no. Contrary to popular belief, the Christian view has always been, "Look at the evidence." The reason most early Christians believed Christ had resurrected? No friggin' body to be found. It wasn't a random leap of faith; the body wasn't where they put it, and no one could show them where it was. Heck, the Pharisees didn't even try to pawn off a fake on them, which is really surprising, if you think about it...

      --
      "Oh, I like geeks way better than I like humans." - Mari Sarris
    367. Re:Thank God! by Lucidwray · · Score: 1

      So you think that just because humans cant cause a positive mutation in a single species in a relatively short period of time ('a lot of years' does not an evolution make), is cause to discredit an entire scientific theory. I have news for you; evolution is based on the one constant that time is in abundance.

      Time to read up on your science you moron.

      --
      My sig can beat up your sig.
    368. Re:Thank God! by jcr · · Score: 1

      These kinds of changes have been stifled in biology, geology, etc. for decades because scientists can't pose anything that undermines evolution without being excommunicated from the field. Yes. Excommunicated.

      Nonsense. Excommunication is a order given by a religious authority, such as the Pope. It requires the followers of that leader to refrain from communication with someone, under penalty of being tossed out of the club. (At least, that's what it means these days. A couple hundred years ago, talking with an excommunicate person could get you tossed in prison or tortured to death.)

      When a crackpot tosses off a flimsy conjecture like "intelligent design", he's not excommunicated. He may be ignored, ridiculed, etc, but a scientist is not in peril of his life, liberty, or his standing in his profession for speaking with the crackpot.

      Gee, that's a religious term, isn't it?

      Yes, and that's why it doesn't apply.

      If science is going to be this pure study of what's out there, then it needs to be sincerely open to study of many different ideas

      Ah, but it is! Of course, what the creationists are promulgating are not "many different ideas", but the same old flimsy conjecture.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    369. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These beasties have been bombarded with gamma radiation and any other mutagenic source for a lot of years.

      This statement merely explains your problem with understanding evolution. To state that fruit flies have been exposed to human testing for "a lot of years" and asking what evolutionary processes have occurred in this period of time, shows that you are completely incapable of understanding the vast amounts of time that evolution naturally takes place in.

      Count to a million. I dare you. One...two...three... all the way to a million. Then do it again, and again. A hundred times. Maybe then you'd be able to understand how much time we're talking about.

    370. Re:Thank God! by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1
      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    371. Re:Thank God! by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      I'm quite aware of common use of the word, and I don't care. When a SCIENTIST uses the word "theory", they do not mean "hypothesis". The two words have very seperate and distinct meanings in the world of science.

      You can quote all the dictionaries you want, but in this context you'll still be wrong.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    372. Re:Thank God! by Lucidwray · · Score: 1

      To me, it simply seems to impossible to think that the universe and all that's in it, including us, is the result of some random roll of the cosmic dice.

      But if someone else rolls the dice, it makes it all better and explains it all..

      Your fooling your self, hate to yell ya....

      --
      My sig can beat up your sig.
    373. Re:Thank God! by dabblah · · Score: 1

      It is very clear to me that this sticker has everything to do with the separation of church and state. In the South, and the same mentality can be found in the southwest and planes states, it is fashionable to reject science in the name of religion. What competing "theory" actually can claim to displace evolution in the context of scientific instruction as the process by which humanity came to be? On thinking about it now, it occurs to me that evolution is probably not properly labeled a theory anyway, but would more properly be a framework within which individual theories explain events. I digress.

      The answer to that question from which the sticker comes, and from which the Alabama textbook introduction comes, is god created the world in seven calendar days about six or seven thousand years ago (or some reasonably close variation of that statement). The two problems with calling this a theory are there are no data to support it, and it is not a proposition subject to disproof. A scientist does not label a statement which is not subject to disproof a theory. A statement not subject to disproof is something uninteresting to science in general. Even an axiom must have support, and in the name of science may be accepted or rejected depending on context (thinking of the Axiom of Choice here, particularly).

      As an anecdote, my biology education in High School occurred in the mountains of North Carolina. I was a strong student in most subjects, and I was a B to A- student in biology depending on the topic other than this one. The A students in that class were all religious fanatics, and therefore I was by far the strongest student in the genetics/evolution chapters because I found it interesting and the rest of these kids just rejected it out of hand. Also, at the start of this segment of the class This was an honors class. These people, or those like them, will be the community leaders. The know nothing cycle will perpetuate itself.

      Were it possible to take that sticker out of context, then the post's admonition "This is *always* good advice: people should never blindly accept any theory as fact." would be valid. I, and the judge being a man (or woman?) of the south, know the context. The sticker represents dogma. Those concerned with educating the children of America in science must insist that science be taught as science and freed from dogma.

    374. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1
      First, no one said that God is always benevolent -- consider His reasoning behind the great flood of Noah's day (that is if you believe what's in the Bible). I doubt that every man, woman, and child living in that time was "wicked", but God said He would wipe them from the face of the earth.

      No one can claim to know the mind of God or His reasoning for doing the things He does.

      Second, I believe you are somewhat misquoting what is in the book of Revelation. Yes, it does mention 144,000 people being brought to heaven. But, then John also describes seeing before him a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people, and language (Rev 7:9).

      To misuse (and misquote) a quote from the Carl Sagan book "Contact", If we are alone in the universe (without God), what a great waste of time! :-(

      Besides, what would be worse? Believing in a God that doesn't exist, in which case when I die I'll be no different than anyone else that died before me -- worm food. Or, to not believe in a God that does exist and will punish you for eternity for not believing in Him and His Son when given the truth?

    375. Re:Thank God! by tdelaney · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And yet we appear to be observing it here in Australia, where over the last 30-odd years *three* species of snake appear to have bred out mouths large enough to eat cane toads that are old enough to produce enough poison to kill them.

      These snakes can still eat younger cane toads, but not the ones that can kill them.

      But no one's ever observed macro evolution.

    376. Re:Thank God! by FriedSpam · · Score: 1

      Glad you posted these.

      Keep in mind, though, that these 'species' are generally based upon a sample of... one. And partial ones at that.

    377. Re:Thank God! by Wavicle · · Score: 3, Informative

      The judge in this case ruled the stickers unconstitutional because of the religion of the people who supported it.

      No, the judge in this case ruled the stickers unconstitutional because an attack directed at evolution in this manner, to any reasonably intelligent person, is an endorsement of religion. This was simply christian fundamentalists trying to play fast and loose with the rules.

      They neither promoted nor condemned any religion--or lack thereof.

      I don't see how you came to that conclusion, but it is not the conclusion the judge said he came to: "By denigrating evolution, the school board appears to be endorsing the well-known prevailing alternative theory, creationism or variations thereof"

      If this were allowed to stand, we'd see them attacking all sorts of things that conflict with their interpretation of the bible:

      Geology text: "This text book suggests that the rocky material of the mountains between arizona and utah are too hard to have had the Grand Canyon formed by all the floods of the last 10,000 years, which is a theory not a fact. Readers are asked to keep an open mind..."

      Physics text: "This text book suggests that the half life of some radioactive materials found on earth, and the relative amounts of decay products found with them, indicate that they have been around for billions of years, which is a theory not a fact. Readers are asked to keep an open mind..."

      Sometimes an attack on science that is popularly at odds with religion is an endorsement of religion. No matter how well you dress it up.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    378. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      What's funny is that your statement is only a theory as well with no proof to substantiate the claim.


      What's funny is that your statement is only a catchism as well with no argument to substantiate the claim.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    379. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Pity we've never seen it happen. Evolution is not observable or testable because it happens over a period of time far, far greater than human life. All we can do is inspect the evidence, and construct theories around that evidence. That's closer to the study of history than science. Both science and history are methods of discerning truth, but they use very different mechanics. If you can't test something, or observe if, it's hard to form a scientific theory about it. You may use scientific techniques to find the evidence, but when it comes to interpreting it, all you can do is try and find an explanation that matches most of the facts you know about.

      Please, please, please try taking a university biology course not offered by a "christian" college. You haven't the faintest clue what evolution is. It's not fish -> bird. it's mostly red fish -> mostly black fish.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    380. Re:Thank God! by Arru · · Score: 1
      Don't get me wrong here - the notion that some all-seeing, all-knowing invisible superhero created life so that it could be fawned over is even more absurd. But just because we can't figure out how it started doesn't mean we should accept "it just happened by accident". Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup? A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton...

      Taking into account that we are intelligent life (while far-fetched ;-) sitting here discussing this, the conditioned probability of life arising one way or another is 100% so we are not really in position to judge the likelihood of it.

      BTW, VCRs did indeed rise spontaneously out of the primordial soup, as part of the eventual human civilisation. Took a few years, though.
      --
      There's no 'on' position on the Slacker switch!
    381. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

      I don't believe that's macro evolution. I believe that's microevolution where the snakes are adapting to their environment. Where is the new species that came from these snakes?

    382. Re:Thank God! by skinfitz · · Score: 1

      mod parent troll

      How about people mod the parent however they bloody well like?

      Here again we see the creationist nutters telling the rest of us how to think. How about you back off and let people make up their own mind, nazi.

      While you are at it learn about punctuation and grammar - such as starting a sentence with a capital letter and ending it with a full stop. People would be forgiven for thinking you are an under-educated religious nutcase; but then you evidently are.

    383. Re:Thank God! by Boronx · · Score: 1

      So far so good. I'm probably due a couple billion more at least.

    384. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      People have looked, and looked and looked. And not once has a crreationist ever turning into intelligent human being. It's changed - but it's always remained a dolt.

      You have to remember that quick change in a creationist is NOT intelegence - creationist genes are programmed for rampant stupidity.

      Creationism has never been observed under any scale. The only thing that's been observed is a mindless rhetoric becoming moreobvious. But actual thought in a creationist has never been seen.

      Logical fallascy you used: Slothful Induction and a bit of Fallacy of Exclusion.

      Pat yourself on the back, you just made yourself look stupid.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    385. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet that both rush and the president know how to spell "yourself" and both know enough grammar to use "you're" correctly.

      genius

    386. Re:Thank God! by DigitumDei · · Score: 1

      I somehow doubt the people putting these stickers on the books would want their children to learn something as evil as critical thinking...

      Though I agree, critical thinking/scepticism as a class on its own would be one of the most important subjects a student could take. Taught properly and it would benifit that student in almost every aspect for the rest of their life.

    387. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      With a large enough population, and enough generational cycles, you'll eventually get some mutations, some of which may be beneficial, some of which will just kill the organism, and some of which will have no discernable effect. The organism has now evolved. OK? It's changed.

      Yes, I agree, if that is observed the organism fits with the definition of evolution quoted. I was pointing out that adaptation through natural selection is not evolution.

      Personally, I think that mutation is another mechanism for adaptability. I don't think that the gradual accumulation of mutations would really result in a more complex organism. As far as I know, organisms have never been observed to evolve in complexity, just to adapt better to their environment. That, however, is my opinion. I consider it to be a reasonably educated opinion, but I don't follow the field incredibly closely.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    388. Re:Thank God! by mattkime · · Score: 1

      whew....thank god he's on our side ;)

      --
      Know what I like about atheists? I've yet to meet one that believes God is on their side.
    389. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1
      But if someone else rolls the dice, it makes it all better and explains it all..

      Perhaps that's all religion and faith is about...a belief that there's a Higher meaning to our seemingly insignificant lives here on this rock. I mean, why else are we the only species to be congnizant of our own mortality and have the seemingly hard-wired need to search out for our origins and Creator, rather than be perfectly happy eating, breeding, and dying without caring about what/who we are?

      Then again, there are those that are perfectly happy to do those things... :-)

      If those that think we are just animals evolved from lower primates without a Higher purpose, then what value is there in our other beliefs of right and wrong? Who cares? We just die when it's over anyway, right? So eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die?

      That would seem all too pointless to me.

    390. Re:Thank God! by orangesquid · · Score: 1

      Thanks! The first link says a lot of the things I was trying to say, but they obvious understand what they're talking about a lot better... and the second offers some good evidence for large-scale evolution.

      Of course, all of this rests on the law of temporal causality. If it could be demonstrated that the natural progression is actually quite artificial (suppose, for example, we're just inside a computer program run by some grad. student named Yhwh Lsokp at XJiwJDop University, and he keeps pausing time, adjusting things (therefore interfering with causality), and then unfreezing time). Our knowledge of the laws of nature suggests that these laws don't change randomly (Although they do seem to change gradually). Who really knows? Go ask a philosopher... ;)

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    391. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Please, please, please try to discuss things rationally without spouting off stupid slurs, since you seem so intent on worshipping the rational process. Educating yourself on the topic at hand would also be nice.

      Mostly red fish -> mostly black fish is not evolution. It's adaptation by natural selection. That is, a redistribution of the frequency of an attribute already existing in a population due to a change in the population's environment.

      Evolution involves the introduction of new genetic material, generally through the mechanism of mutation, which is then subject to natural selection.

      Not part of the scientific defintion, but something that is usually assumed in these sorts of discussion is that these evolutionary changes, over the course of time, change a simple organism to a more complex one.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    392. Re:Thank God! by mrjb · · Score: 5, Funny

      As opposed the highly probably theory of Noah's ark being beached and somehow the Kangaroos and Koalas all flew to Australia

      Now c'mon. Everyone KNOWS kangaroos don't fly. They jumped there. As for the koalas, they didn't fly nor jump-- they haven't got the wings or legs for it. Obviously, they teleported. I saw it once in a cartoon, so it must be true.

      --
      Visit http://ringbreak.dnd.utwente.nl/~mrjb/growingbettersoftware to download your free copy of the book
    393. Re:Thank God! by Arru · · Score: 1
      I feel that I would be remiss if I did not point this out. Go read the 2 letters, they are on historical record. Research the lives and backgrounds of the founding fathers. You'll be surprised at how high a percentage of them were religious.
      Shocking thought: there may actually be religious people who do not wish to force their belief onto others. There may in fact even be religious followers who can understand and appreciate science. And maybe, just maybe, the founding fathers of the USA swung that way.

      Science tries constantly to nail things down to definitions, religion will always be whatever anybody wants it to be. Good or bad.
      --
      There's no 'on' position on the Slacker switch!
    394. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1
      What about quotes such as these from Darwin himself (http://mywebpages.comcast.net/mkent595/Macroevolu tion1.html)?

      Quotes by Darwin in The Origin of Species: "why, if species have descended from other species by insensibly fine gradations, do we not everywhere see innumerable transitional forms?

      "[Since] innumerable transitional forms must have existed, why do we not find them imbedded in countless numbers in the crust of the earth? Why is not every geological formation and every stratum full of such intermediate links? Geology assuredly does not reveal any such finely graduated organic chain; and this is perhaps is the most obvious and gravest objection which can be urged against my theory." C. Darwin quoted in The Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection, 1974, pg 202, 292.

    395. Re:Thank God! by HuguesT · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course there are facts in science.

      For example the way apples fall from trees or the way planets revolve around the Sun are all facts. They happen, they can be observed. In fact these two facts are part of the more general phenomenon called gravitation. We observe that massive body attract each other.

      On the other hand General Relativity (GRT) is the best theory of gravitation we have today. We already know that it is not a perfect theory, in particular that it is not compatible with other theories we have such as quantum theory (QT).

      It is a fairly safe bet that at some point in the future either GRT or QT or both will be replaced with something more accurate.

      Science is a process by which an explanation can be given for facts, more exactly *how* they proceed (and certainly not *why*, this is where religion and metaphysics come in). These explanations are called hypotheses in the beginning when they are born and then theories when they begin to get accepted, in particular when they happen to match observation up to a certain precision, and are useful to make predictions, i.e. predict future observations.

    396. Re:Thank God! by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      Explain the optical isomer problem with aminoacids and I will feel alot better about this "experiment".

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    397. Re:Thank God! by CactusCritter · · Score: 1

      Narchie Troll pronounced:

      Evolution is a fact. It's been observed.

      Yea and verily, most especially with dogs, cats, and pigeons. The selection factors for "success" were provided by humans, but it creates proof that small mutations do occur and that the offspring do respond to the selection factors.

      There are theories as to its mechanisms. Note I said "theory", not "hypothesis"; in general, a theory is the best you can do when describing a process in science. The common use of 'theory' to mean 'unproven concept' is not the way science uses it.

      Judging by my experience with more recent graduates of the high school from which I matriculated in absentia in 1945, it is very difficult to convince lay persons that a hyothesis does not become a theory until facts that demonstrate it have accumulated. When the facts were based on predictions not made by any previous theory, the theory reaaly becomes rock-solid.

    398. Re:Thank God! by Trogre · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a fact. It's been observed.

      Yes that's true.

      If you define evolution as change over time. Plenty of examples: Peppered Moths, island-dwelling birds losing flight so as not to be swept out to sea, domestic animal/plant breeding, bacteria resistance to antibiotics, etc.

      If, however, you are referring to a system where genetic mutations and natural selection result in an organism more complex than either parents, then that has never been observed, either in living ecosystems nor the fossil record.

      It is the latter definition that is in most peoples minds when discussing the validity of evolution.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    399. Re:Thank God! by R.D.Olivaw · · Score: 1

      you mean it's more than 6000 years old?!

    400. Re:Thank God! by jericho4.0 · · Score: 1
      What would be worse is being a weak little worm afraid of hellfire all his life. Any god who would punish for eternity can go fuck Himself and His Son, I would rather burn in hell and spit in His Face.

      --
      "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
    401. Re:Thank God! by ezeri · · Score: 1
      Well, I wouldn't have responded if you hadn't posted this:


      Did Jesus exist? Who the fuck knows. It was 2000 years ago. He could have been a she, she could have been a thief who raped hordes of people.


      No, Jesus realy did exist, there aren't any credible historians who would tell you otherwise, it's as much if not more historical fact as just about any major figure in history.

      And second, because I'm already responding, no one is saying your only a good person if you go to church, etc (well at least not any one who has a clue about the gospel).
      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    402. Re:Thank God! by Trogre · · Score: 3, Informative

      Please don't ever link to talkorigins.org when discussing open minds again.

      Is is a site notorious for exaggeration and plain misinformation about such topics.

      You might as well link to Microsoft's "Get the facts" campaign page to encourage open minded discussion about Linux.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    403. Re:Thank God! by Arru · · Score: 1

      Actually, with contraceptives and all, the ones in most desperate need of sterilization are not atheists...

      --
      There's no 'on' position on the Slacker switch!
    404. Re:Thank God! by ezeri · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When scientist start to develop there own "beliefs" that must be believed in order to be an accepted in to the community, they have crossed the line in to what we would call a "religion" and excomunication, as the word is used today, is exactly what shunning those who don't ascribe to the accepted beliefs is.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    405. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Mostly red fish -> mostly black fish is not evolution. It's adaptation by natural selection. That is, a redistribution of the frequency of an attribute already existing in a population due to a change in the population's environment.

      Let me repeat myself. Please go to college and learn what evolution is and not what you define it as.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    406. Re:Thank God! by AVee · · Score: 1

      "I think that it's very plausible that ..."

      And isn't that what we call 'theorie', and not 'fact', atleast until it's proven?

    407. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that the stickers refered to any religion but that they were motivated by religous beliefs on the part of state officials. To turn it, round imagine trying to insist that every copy of the bible had a sticker stating that much of the contents could not be validated as being factually correct. Quite rightly there'd be an outcry.

    408. Re:Thank God! by wass · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Contrary to popular belief, the Christian view has always been, "Look at the evidence."

      Okay, I've been to a few church services (Catholic, Gospel, several other Protestant sects), but I've not encountered this view. Can you show in the Bible, the associated liturgy, or transcripts of well-known prechers/ministers where one is urged to challenge conventional views (as in the Eastern religions I mentioned previously)? Or specifically where the lack of evidence (sorry, a missing body does not by itself indicate resurrection) of the Resurrection, Heaven, Hell, Satan, etc imply that these components of Christianity aren't that important to it's overall practice? Or better yet, where accepting Jesus isn't as important as helping someone more needy?

      I'm not trying to denigrate you nor criticize Christianity, it's just that all of my experiences at Christian ceremonies and services focused primarily on faith and had very little to do with experience. So I am curious to know about this. I'll admit I've perhaps only been to 15 church services total, so that's a relatively small sample size. In my experiences so far, most of these services involved three basic tenets, all with a common reward or punishment - Accept Jesus, avoid sin, and practice righteousness of character. Adherence to these goals (with absolutely no evidence that is shown) will reward the good Christian soul with Heaven, failure to do these will send him/her to hell. The reward of heaven by accepting Jesus is the concept most often mentioned, seeming to permeate everything (in my experiences anyway). And quite often (most notably on the TV bible personalities) versus are quoted directly from the bible and presented as fact, or as the absolute authority on which to base your actions.

      I don't see how blindly accepting Jesus and Heaven or Hell has anything to do with experience and proof, but only as blind faith. I've never seen a preacher/minister or religious Christian question whether Heaven/Hell exists or whether Jesus was really the Son of God. Neither on top of that have I seen the encouragement of challenging conventionally-established views. Once again, I'm not criticizing any of these sects of Christianity, but in my experiences so far they have not demonstrated to me any sense of experience, but instead base almost everything on faith.

      I'm sure there are churches or other branches where being a "Good Christian" and helping others is more important than accepting Jesus and going to heaven, and where they discuss complicated situations and how to best deal with them (with no persuasion of heaven/hell by choosing the right path), etc. But I've not encountered any of these yet.

      --

      make world, not war

    409. Re:Thank God! by Seeker5528 · · Score: 1

      "The difference is that if the leading scientific theory is proven wrong then it is no longer the leading scientific theory."

      "Only religious types think that a "Belief" is something you have to decide early then never change."

      During the time it has taken for many theories to be considered "proven wrong" the old theory was religiously clung to until the mass of ideas revolving around the new theory was so great there was not much choice other than to let go of the old.

      People like to quote "Seek and ye shall find" but have a tendency to forget to take the blinders off, so only see things that support their pre-concieved notions.

      Scientific... Religious... Doesn't matter, it is a part of human nature and we are all guilty of it at times to some greater or lesser degree.

      Later, Seeker

    410. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      May I direct you to junior high biology class? Lamarckian.

    411. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

      Wow, that's a lot of anger you have...Not understanding Christian beliefs, as you apparently don't sadly enough, you don't realize that I don't fear Hell's fire -- believing in Jesus Christ as the Son of God and believing that he is my Savior eliminates that fear.

    412. Re:Thank God! by xgamer04 · · Score: 1

      Wow, good job taking the post out of context. Use some ellipses or something.

      troll style: 5.9
      troll technical accuracy: 5.8

      you're still in the running to win the gold!

      --
      When you look at the state of the world, how can you not become a radical, liberal anarchist?
    413. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with the sticker is that it stated that a particular theory was not a fact. If they hadn't mentioned evolution, it wouldn't have been a "religious" issue.

      So which is it? Is evolution a religion or in some way considered a religious topic? Then shouldn't it be subject to the same seperation as is enjoied the world over by creationist known as Seperation of Church and State. --OR-- Is it a science? In which case isn't the study of creation a science in a similar fashion?

    414. Re:Thank God! by azzy · · Score: 1

      We exist for the same reason every other living creature exists - to pass on our genetic material to the next generation. We're vessels - and nothing more. You've just been conned into thinking you are more important than snail, or a mouse, or an elephant, or some bacteria - you aren't. I'm not. None of us are. The fact that the vessel might enjoy itself during it's existance is neither here nor there in the sceme of things - less than the blink of an eyelid in cosmological or geographical or even evolutionary terms.

    415. Re:Thank God! by azzy · · Score: 1

      Then I gues there should be a sticket on all physics text books saying: The content of this book is only theory - it is entirely possible that everything we currently believe is false and will be proven so tomorrow by a brilliant scientist. Same for chemistry books, geography books, any science book, heck, might as well include all non-fiction books - don't want to get caught out.

    416. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Oh My God that was eye opening shit! I'm now a believer. You should check out http://www.white-history.com. It's got all kinds of real good scientific evidence for why white people are the most superior form of human on Earth.

      Are you high? Dumbass.

    417. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wiping out my old grade school science book. Would you look at that?! There's a glossary in the back of the book, and it defines what THEORY is! Oh jeez louise! Who would have thunk it! The fact remains that this sticker is attacking one specific theory of science and no other, for the simple fact that people believe it negates their idea behind the creation of life. Did the sticker say that all the theories covered in this book are just theories and not proven to be true? Did it mention anything about the Theory of Plate Tectonics? What about Gravity, Relativity, any other of the hundreds of scientific theory that exist? NO! And lastly evolution doesn't detail how life was created, it simple details how life changes. I don't understand why it's so difficult for some people to see scientific ideas more as god's handiwork, rather than something that completely discredits his existence. And afterall, who said they heard god? Other men, and that's who wrote his story so how can you say they are right, but other men wrong?

    418. Re:Thank God! by Atrax · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, organisms have never been observed to evolve in complexity, just to adapt better to their environment

      well, that depends on the operative definition of complexity. There are numerous organisms which you'd immediately consider less complex than humans which actually have more base pairs in their genome (and vice versa, of course). so if you measure purely by base pairs, they're potentially more complex. Clearly we're more complex, you'd say, from an anthrocentric point of view.

      Arguably, any single mutation could be said to add complexity, so again consider the vast scale of time and population numbers and purely mathematically, there is a path from simple to complex. So it also depends on your scale.

      I see no obstacle at all in moving from simple to complex, however the timescale involved is so large that we just can't see it in action and have to infer it from secondary evidence, as we're doing now with genetic/genomic studies, and as we have done in the past with less sophisticated techniques.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    419. Re:Thank God! by azzy · · Score: 1

      I'm a scientist - in fact I have 2 science degrees. I just shouted out the word 'theory' (surprising my work colleagues) but I actually meant 'hypothesis'.

      *5 seconds later*

      Oo I just did it again - I'm getting strange looks now, but I have at least proven you wrong.

    420. Re:Thank God! by AVee · · Score: 1

      No, I'm not. I said "evolution." So did the sticker.

      RTFA, it said '..regarding the origin of living things'. It's talking about the 'monkeys turning into humans' part.

    421. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put that the other way, if a certain state education authority is going to put stickers in the front cover of a textbook containing a general discussion for all the major religions in the work and saying like "Caution: This textbook contains material on Christianity. Christianity is only a belief, not a fact, regarding some superstitious practice of ancient people. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." I am quite sure it will be sued the other way round... And I do think it is a case of singling out a particular religion.

      Applying similar criterion here, I agree with the court's decision. The Board of Education has no right to endorse or discredit any particular religion.

    422. Re:Thank God! by Flaming+Foobar · · Score: 1, Insightful
      yeah ... wtf? I mean, telling kids to have an open mind and view something critically ... it's almost like we want them to think for themselves. Well, at least you can always trust the government to put an end to that.

      The problem is - the kids weren't really being told to think critically. There's a difference between saying "Think critically!" and, "Evolution isn't a fact - think critically!" Don't you think?

      --
      while true;do echo -e -n "\033[s\n\033[u\134_\033[B";done
    423. Re:Thank God! by azzy · · Score: 1

      I think you mean that it's a 'theory' that they don't work?

      *ducks*

    424. Re:Thank God! by Forbman · · Score: 1

      And quite often (most notably on the TV bible personalities) versus are quoted directly from the bible and presented as fact, or as the absolute authority on which to base your actions.

      Sorry, every Christian church sermon has at least one biblical reference to it (taken out of context, of course).

      WWJD? JW (Jesus wept).

    425. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too lazy to create an account...

      but here's what i think anyhow

      1. gravity isn't a law, it's a theory
      2. scientists know that you cannot disprove something entirely- that's why we have thoeries instead of laws for these cases. Most laws are mathematically proven.
      3. the missing link has not been found, but the trends in the primates, specifically in the great apes, leading down to the genus homo, are strong enough to suggest that we have a very recent (in geological time scale terms) common ancestor. And that is what is it all based on. the evidence from fossils, artifacts, and ecofacts proves to many degrees that we have a common ancestor. humans are the only deductive creatures on earth- and with this we have deduced our evolutionary history. Your physical evidence for macroevolution is in one thing alone: fossils and the like. we are NOT stupid animals, we have deductive reasoning. these traces give us the answers we would otherwise not have- and we use them to prove things instead of to explain them away with myths.
      4. my big conflict with religious people is that they think that by not being able to prove them wrong, they have been proven right. Granted, many many many athiests and evolutionists will say that their way of thinking is absolutely right just as creationists will. But the fact of the matter is: scientific thoeries and experiments are based on one thing alone- if you can't disprove one thing, than you can't prove another, and vice versa- and proving one thing does not disprove every other option because we simply do not know every other option, and vice versa.
      5. you just said that the goal of science is to explain the universe through observation... then the problem with explaining away the unobservable and unexplainable with god is just that- it is UNobserved. we don't have an explanation for pre-Big-Bang, but no scientist would explain it away with "a big guy in the sky." A believer would. You complained about keeping the science and theology separate, but you just threw them both together. So then, where were you going with your entire post?

      I am an evolutionist, an athiest, a scientist at heart, but i know that those three things don't always have to be one in the same. I see proof for evolution so I accept it. I don't believe in a god or gods so I am not religious. I accept science for what it is, so I use it. By not all evolutionists are athiests, not all athiests are scientists, and not all scientists are evolutionists. I know how to keep them separate instead of just saying it because I think that will help me get my belief across to other people.

    426. Re:Thank God! by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1, Insightful

      More elegant solution would be to require the creationists to put similar stickers into their Bibles.

    427. Re:Thank God! by Dh2000 · · Score: 1

      Yes, this disturbs you, because you are afraid of death. So, you must create (or borrow) a fantasy -- an explanation to regain a measure of peace.

      I and many others don't need such a emotional support structure.

    428. Re:Thank God! by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Then what created this..."intelligence" that created everything?

    429. Re:Thank God! by Lonath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know if your post was serious or not, but I believe it was, so I wrote this.

      You know what? God isn't fooled by BS. People are fooled by BS and we BS each other all of the time because we can get away with it sometimes. Your statement that this is only about having people keep an open mind is a LIE. You know it's not true and what it's really about is that you want to impose your religious beliefs on others because you feel that certain scientific discoveries don't follow your religious beliefs. Please don't LIE about your real motivation which is to have your religious beliefs taught in school...and you know that "intelligent design" is in fact creationism with a shiny new coat of paint. There are, of course, liars who claim that ID and creationism aren't the same thing, but that doesn't make it so.

      There have been observations of simple organisms mutating (you would call that microevolution) in short periods of time, so why can't we extrapolate to the possibility of large changes happening over longer periods of time? Why would things all of a sudden hit a wall and stop working? We certainly have DNA testing now that's getting easier and easier and we're moving into the age of genetic manipulation, so it's not clear to me why you think this is an unproven theory or idea. Genetics and evolution have been shown to be true, and those FACTS are being used to genetically engineer things that will hopefully make our lives better (but which could kill us all , too .... :P). You hold out for a type of proof that you know can't be observed for a very long time, not because of any scientific basis. You know that science can accept different kinds of evidence to prove something, but you reject it because it contradicts your religious beliefs. How many years and how big of a mutation would it take for you to accept evolution? My guess is that you would keep saying things are only 'microevolution' and require some massive change that probably took millions of years to come fully to fruition. If you're willing to be honest, you probably won't ever be satisfied with any evidence that will appear, and so please stop lying about wanting observations, when you don't want them and won't ever be satisfied with them. Instead you want to keep searching for that narrow corridor for a counterexample, or an anomolous or unexplained event, or an incompletely explored space of possibility so you can cling to your religious beliefs.

      Guess what? The old old testament (Jewish Torah) isn't literally true. It's metaphorical. The universe isn't 6000 years old, and Noah didn't take 2 of every creature onto a big boat. I feel a great deal of pity for people who think they're living in a tiny, young universe that just popped into existence rather than the vast, ancient universe that appears to be out there. It must be very lonely and scary thinking that the Earth is all we will ever have, and things are only going to get worse and worse until the chosen people are drawn up into heaven leaving the rest of the losers like me behind. Do you know why I know that the old old testament isn't literally true? It's because God isn't an asshole.

      Do you know what I call an entity that makes things appear a certain way (such as a vast, ancient universe), when it's really another way ( such as a tiny, young universe that popped into existence several thousand years ago), and then allows intellignet things within the univsrse to discover how it works and gives them the ability to see that the universe looks vast and ancient? I call such an entity is an asshole. If you take the old old testament literally and believe that the universe is this tiny thing that popped into existence a few thousand years ago while at the same time that we've been given the ability to explore and understand our universe and see that it certainly looks vast and ancient, then you believe God is an asshole who's playing a giant trick on us. Please don't talk to me about having faith that this is the way things are.

    430. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      too lazy to create an account...

      but, on just this little opener: "God clearly indicates..."

      no shit, you talked to him? for real, lemme get his number or something. wait, you're saying that you read that he said something from something someone wrote? OH! ok... then yeah, the he said she said crap really doesn't make me believe any of the shit you're saying.

      and i've always been taught to not believe everything you hear- somehow, evolution has a stronger footing to me... i dunno, maybe because there's some proof behind it- you know that kind of proof that comes in fossils and the like... crazy proof that actually real.

    431. Re:Thank God! by onClipEvent · · Score: 1
      taken from www.sciam.com (Scientific American), "15 Answers to Creationist Nonsense"

      (myth) 1. Evolution is only a theory. It is not a fact or a scientific law.

      Many people learned in elementary school that a theory falls in the middle of a hierarchy of certainty--above a mere hypothesis but below a law. Scientists do not use the terms that way, however. According to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), a scientific theory is "a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world that can incorporate facts, laws, inferences, and tested hypotheses." No amount of validation changes a theory into a law, which is a descriptive generalization about nature. So when scientists talk about the theory of evolution--or the atomic theory or the theory of relativity, for that matter--they are not expressing reservations about its truth.

      GALÁPAGOS FINCHES show adaptive beak shapes. In addition to the theory of evolution, meaning the idea of descent with modification, one may also speak of the fact of evolution. The NAS defines a fact as "an observation that has been repeatedly confirmed and for all practical purposes is accepted as 'true.'" The fossil record and abundant other evidence testify that organisms have evolved through time. Although no one observed those transformations, the indirect evidence is clear, unambiguous and compelling. All sciences frequently rely on indirect evidence. Physicists cannot see subatomic particles directly, for instance, so they verify their existence by watching for telltale tracks that the particles leave in cloud chambers. The absence of direct observation does not make physicists' conclusions less certain. for the rest of the 14, go to the site mentioned above.
    432. Re:Thank God! by ezeri · · Score: 1

      Oh no! The children of this poor counting are going to view evolution with perhaps a little more skepticism. They might actualy question something they read in there book without blindly accepting it as truth. They can't be allowed to do that, they aren't smart enough to actualy consider evidences themselves before deciding what is right. If we lose the ability to decide for them what is fact and what isn't the concequences could be disastrous!

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    433. Re:Thank God! by wass · · Score: 1
      Off topic, but I recently saw a bumper sticker that said "Capital Punishment - WWJD?". I bet a number of religious Republicans don't want to go there, but raise enough awareness and people might realize the un-Christian actions of the republican party (eg Bush's term in Texas w/ high rate of execution).

      For example, given the seemingly paradoxical relationship between Christians and Republicans, I would love to see the following bumper stickers:

      • "Attack Iraq? WWJD?"
      • "Abu Ghraib? WWJD?"
      • "Human Rights Violations at Guantanamo? WWJD?"
      • "Environmentally-irresponsible SUV's? WWJD?"
      etc etc. Then again, I'm sure Karl Rove would be able to find some New Testament quote that, taken to the letter instead of the spirit, would seemingly support each of these activities.
      --

      make world, not war

    434. Re:Thank God! by lisaparratt · · Score: 1

      Yes, they should learn the difference between a theory and a fact. The important thing they should learn is that there's no such thing as a fact outside the realm of ideology. Everything else is simply the best model that fits the observations, because it's only possible to disprove something, not prove it.

    435. Re:Thank God! by m50d · · Score: 1

      I don't think that's a reasonable interpretation of what's written. I think the only reasonable interpretation is that creation occured in some way similar to what is described (which what you've said isn't, it's a massive leap from the story as written to what you're saying) or the story is wrong.

      --
      I am trolling
    436. Re:Thank God! by ezeri · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ohhhh! The children might actualy question evolution! They might listen to what these "christian nut jobs" have to say about it!

      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented. Do you realy think these children can only handle one view, or that thay are completely incapable of making there own desisions on who they are going to believe. I mean after all, if evolution is so obviously the only possible answer, they shouldn't the evidence be able to speek for itself, why should it be above question and debate?

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    437. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those sites say there is more evidence that Neandertals and Humans are the same species! Alright, if you really see any stubby, thick boned hairy brow ridged people with occipital buns, no chins and barrel shaped chests walking around? If you do let me know.

    438. Re:Thank God! by japhmi · · Score: 1

      One problem I've seen in particular with the teaching of evolutionary theory (at least when I was in High School) is that they don't teach the evolution of the theory.

      We usually see textbooks saying that Darwin came up with evolution, and that his theory is what we believe today. In reality, his work was simply the first to cause a large proportion of scientists look at evolution (a theory that existed at the time), and that it has been revised and updated since then.

      There's a bit of mondern Darwin-worship, as if he had determined this whole theory that comes down to us today.

      --
      "Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys" P. J. O'Rourke
    439. Re:Thank God! by ponos · · Score: 1
      Furthermore, evolution does not attempt to explain the origin of life, only the ways in which it has changed since it began. I have never heard a remotely plausible theory regarding the origin of life. People have not yet been able to create anything nearly as complex as a machine which can produce more of itself outside of laboratory conditions, and the idea that such machines just "happened" accidentally is far-fetched at best.

      Some quick facts: (a) "Evolution" is a scientific fact because it has been observed in nature. Really! That's what Darwin's trips around the globe were about. (b) The "Theory of Natural Selection" is just a theory that explains "evolution", but no serious scientist ever proposed something else, which makes it equally plausible to many other scientific theories. (c) "Evolution" and "natural selection" are assumed to start from very primitive "cell-like" formations that you'd be hard pressed to call "alive", not necessarily from monkey-ancestors, which are extremely advanced (phylogenetically almost human). (d) Scientists can make major modifications to living organisms (genetic engineering) and some have even built a virus from scratch (buying basic components from various companies). Sure, a virus is just a bunch of DNA and a protein envelope, but it is (almost) alive, by most definitions. A simple (man-nade) bacterium is not far, I think. Maybe in 20 years time...

      Regarding the origin of life: some famous experiments have shown (in laboratory conditions) that with sufficient heat, time and simple chemical substrates (things like CO2, urea and simple sugars) you can spontaneously get rather complex bio-molecules, like amino-acids or nucleotides. Membranes will automatically form if appropriate molecules are available (soap, for example automatically makes membranes, that's why it encloses "dirt" molecules inside). It is reasonable to assume that the above substrates slowly combined into stable forms that gradually evolved. No magic involved here, just a lot of time and patience. Sure, it isn't trivial and it has been a billion year process, but there are no evidence of a sudden "switch" from non-life to life (creation).

      One would say that God made a universe where life is possible, even maybe inevitable. The purpose of life is a religious and spiritual issue and everyone can choose their own interpretation. How it came to be is being scientifically worked upon.

      P.

    440. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On a sample of one. Dude the propoganda site itself listed how many of each specimen was found. And why if those fossils aren't valid, does that discredit dinosaur fossils too?

    441. Re:Thank God! by miu · · Score: 1
      More like, it was a reaction to England's persecution of minorities who didn't follow the Anglican schism from the Roman Catholic church. The English who didn't want to play along with the established religion had the choice of being harassed at home, or going elsewhere. Many of them went to America.

      The educated of the 18th century were very interested in the ancient Roman Republic and Empire. This is shown not only in the form of government adopted in the US and France, but in philosophy, statuary, architecture, mottoes, and so on. Anyone who studied the history of Rome and Europe could not have failed to appreciate how antithetical to freedom is the marriage of religion and government.

      The creation of a modern democratic state was a risky social experiment that could have easily failed, the foundation of the nation and its principals was thought over and argued over from every viewpoint. I think the reason behind the decision to separate church and state was more a considered philosophical decision than a simple reaction to persecution by the English church - such experience had something to do with it of course, but I think that that experience was viewed as a typical consequence of a state religion.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    442. Re:Thank God! by Buchenskjoll · · Score: 1

      Here is your bible sticker: "Although a lot of people believe God to exist, God is a theory, not a fact. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered. PS: Don't try to make water into wine, or impregnate virgins by proxy at home".

      --
      -- Make America hate again!
    443. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      # Biology.
      1. Change in the genetic composition of a population during successive generations, as a result of natural selection acting on the genetic variation among individuals, and resulting in the development of new species.
      2. The historical development of a related group of organisms; phylogeny.
      The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition

      1. A continuing process of change from one state or condition to another or from one form to another.
      2. The theory that groups of organisms change with passage of time, mainly as a result of natural selection, so that descendants differ morphologically and physiologically from their ancestors.
      The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary

      1 : a process of change in a certain direction (there has been much discussion as to ... the possible evolution of benign adenomas into invasive carcinoma --Journal of the American Medical Association)
      2 a : the historical development of a biological group (as a race or species)
      b : a theory that the various types of animals and plants have their origin in other preexisting types and that the distinguishable differences are due to modifications in successive generations
      Merriam-Webster Medical Dictionary

      source

      Emphasis added. Care to post the defintion of evolution taught to you in whichever august institution you attended? Because all of these seem to encompass my definition.

      If all your going to say in your posts is "you're wrong", don't bother replying. You accomplish nothing.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    444. Re:Thank God! by edin1 · · Score: 1

      I never let slashdot interfere with my religion (aka islam)

    445. Re:Thank God! by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Maybe the sticker shouldn't be censored, but it should be amended with something like "creationism is made up by people with an agenda and based on dubious facts 'created' out of thin air".

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    446. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      well, that depends on the operative definition of complexity. There are numerous organisms which you'd immediately consider less complex than humans which actually have more base pairs in their genome (and vice versa, of course). so if you measure purely by base pairs, they're potentially more complex. Clearly we're more complex, you'd say, from an anthrocentric point of view.

      Arguably, any single mutation could be said to add complexity, so again consider the vast scale of time and population numbers and purely mathematically, there is a path from simple to complex. So it also depends on your scale.


      I'd tend to judge complexity based on the individual attribute being modified. Something that went from having no power of locomotion to using a flagellum, or from having a patch of light-sensitive skin to a retina, or moving from no vocalization to rudimentary vocalization. Those are the sort of things I'm talking about when I'm talking about increases in complexity. Even these examples would constitute a multitide of evolutionary steps - I'm sure someone with a more intimate knowledge of biology could come up with better examples. But I think they convey my meaning.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    447. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It is not clear to me what the sticker has to do with separation of church and state.

      It's a public school. State funds may not be used to spread religious propaganda. Like it or move to Iran.

    448. Re:Thank God! by Forbman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When churches also start presenting evolution as part of God's order, then perhaps schools can bring in Judeo-Christian creationism. But if they do that, then by fairness, they should also bring in as many other religios ideas of the creation mythology: Greek is obvious, but there are a bunch of similar-but-different Native American versions that have NOTHING to do with the Judeo-Christian view. Oh, I forgot. They're just a bunch of brown-skinned pagans.

    449. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Also, small, simple systems are easily mutated chemically at such a stage, so new variants would crop up in the process of dividing or chemically reacting, continuing the diversification. Over time pieces combine or split and grow in complexity, eventually joining into simple multicellular organisms, then further.

      Yes, it's called an emergent system.

    450. Re:Thank God! by jazman · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      > If things get somewhat heated I am tempted to say "there is no mention in the scriptures stating the Book of Genesis is a scientific paper."

      Well, it isn't. It was written way before the current scientific process was developed; plus, it was written with a global audience in mind, not a highly trained audience. If it had been a scientific paper then it would have been meaningless until recently and would have failed in its objective to give people an outline on how God created the world.

    451. Re:Thank God! by flyingsquid · · Score: 1, Funny
      The way I see it, if a bunch of retarded homicidal apes can turn into something as fantastical as our modern society, anything is possible. Prokaryots from ooze seems easy to believe by comparison.

      And anyone who doubts we're descended from apes, take a look at the current occupant of the Oval Office.

    452. Re:Thank God! by Flaming+Foobar · · Score: 1
      The reality, though, is that it isn't completely verifiable, and that's why it isn't a fact.

      NOTHING can be completely verified. You can't prove your own existence, for instance. You can't prove that what you see is really there. You can't know that what you observe is the same as what others observe. You can't prove that 2+2 is always 4.

      Does this render all science invalid? Of course not. I'll leave it to you to figure out how scientists get around this. Suffice to say, the argument you give is very unscientific.

      --
      while true;do echo -e -n "\033[s\n\033[u\134_\033[B";done
    453. Re:Thank God! by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      c) Two leading "origin -of-life" researchers confirm that Miller used the wrong gas mixture. "Science" magazine said in 1995 that experts now dismiss Miller's experiment because "the early atmosphere looked nothing like the Miller-Urey simulation."

      Who comes up with these revisions, however? Not the creationists. The scientists. Scientists are constantly looking to poke holes in theories, since proving old ideas wrong or proving a new idea is a good way to get a job, fame, funding, and so on. Scientists can be prejudiced to be sure, but ultimately they test their ideas and sooner or later discard them if they're wrong. The old stanley/miller experiments may be wrong so they're looking in a new direction. In contrast, the creationists are stubbornly holding onto a viewpoint that was obsolete 2000 years ago.

    454. Re:Thank God! by rburgess3 · · Score: 1

      Again crops up the misunderstanding between the definitions of 'theory' and 'fact'. One does not move from 'hypothesis' to 'theory' to 'fact'.

      In layman's terms:
      A Hypothesis is what you have BEFORE you conduct an experiment. In this case: Species are related to one another by descent was the starting hypothesis.

      A Fact is what you collect when testing a Hypothesis. In this case: Fossil records of 'inbetween' species, known examples of speciation, observable changes in structure due to differing environments, etc.

      A Theory is a Hypothesis supported by facts. In this case, the Hypothesis of Evolution has moved to the Theory of Evolution because the facts so far collected support the Hypothesis. If the facts had not supported it, it would have been dropped.

      That's it, really. Unfortunately, English (and language in general) is ambiguous, words can have several meanings and it is not always easy to use context to determine which meaning is being used.

      To add to the confusion you have a 'Law'. A Law is a Theory that the community at large has chosen not to argue about. We still talk about Newton's 'Law' of gravity, even though it's well known that Einstein's General Relativity is more accurate.

      Now, off on a tangent...

      Let's contrast with 'Intelligent Design'.

      Hypothesis: God created life because life is too complex for it to be otherwise.

      Facts:

      Theory:

      See what biologists are getting at? Creationism is not a theory, it isn't even a very good hypothesis, IMO because while a god being involved IS an answer, it's an answer that's more cop-out than anything else. What further knowledge does one gain by proclaiming that a god 'did it'? None. The phrase 'god did it' has zero information content. When religion clashes with science, the track record is obvious:

      Science: 100%
      Religion: 0%

    455. Re:Thank God! by Blue_Nile · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are thinking of micro evolution. In your example the bacteria gains an immunity, Theres no argument there. Macro evolution is what the argument has always been about. They don't have any proof of bacteria turning into a cat, Or a reptile into a bird.

      --
      Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes
    456. Re:Thank God! by SmittyTheBold · · Score: 1

      ...cautioned the reader to take the material with a grain of salt. This is *always* good advice: people should never blindly accept any theory as fact.

      Don't forget that the school system does not want you to question authority...

      (Look up John Gatto, he's got some interesting writing out there.)

      --
      ± 29 dB
    457. Re:Thank God! by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      Sorry but you only have two choices. If it wasn't by chance. Then you must accept it was of divine origins.

      How in the hell did this thick skulled troglodyte get modded "insightful"? The whole point of _Origin of Species_ is that it isn't all just chance, dumbass. Some genes are better suited to the environment so they are more likely to be passed on to the next generation. The entire point is that survival and reproduction are nonrandom.

    458. Re:Thank God! by shic · · Score: 1

      While I'm no creationist, and while I concur with your explanations of scientific theory and law - I am far from convinced by your explanation of "fact". Specifically with your gravitation example I'm compelled to disagree. If you said that it was a fact that the specific hammer you just dropped fell to the ground, that would be OK, but you are making a lot of assumptions if you want to suggest that every hammer I drop will fall to the ground too. For example, I may be standing under a large electromagnet when I drop the hammer, or maybe the hammer I'm holding is already resting on a table. The hammer example for gravity is an observation - nothing more - certainly not a fact that can be assumed of all hammers or all environments.

      Your claim that it is a fact that a genetic sequence can change sufficiently to form a new species is even more suspect. I agree that there is a massive body of evidence that supports the theory of evolution and that there is scant reasonable evidence in support of other explanations. This does not make "evolution a fact." Specifically I find a number of problems with jumping to such a conclusion. The least contentious objection I can raise here is that evolution is a theory about the origin of species and not a theory about the mutation in existing creatures. For example, I see it possible for a reasonable person to believe the outcome of "speciation" experiments and to accept that observations about creatures in the wild do not conflict with the theory but to reject the idea that evolution explains how today's creatures emerged. Despite my own belief that those who hold an opinion contrary to evolution probably do so as a result of poor analytical reasoning - this doesn't make evolutionary theory a fact, any more than a falling hammer proves either Newton or Einstein presented facts about gravitation.

      My own feeling on the matter is that the judge was wrong to order the stickers removed. I would have preferred to require additional stickers - one for each scientific theory - stating that they too are not facts. Just let me buy shares in that self-adhesive label company first!

    459. Re:Thank God! by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "As you sit reading this, fully 2/3 of the energy being expended by your brain is going directly to maintaining a specific Na+/K+ concentration gradient."
      So 2/3 of the energy is used to regulate one's internal environment? Got any more basic reading on this subject, for someone who doesn't know much about it?
      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    460. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a Christain and I agree with you on your non-literal interpretation.

    461. Re:Thank God! by master_p · · Score: 1

      Look, it's either that life has accidentally happened or someone designed it. You can't claim that you find both options absurd. You have to accept one of them, simply because there is no third option. The two options available are mutually exclusive.

      I don't understand why people find the notion of something 'intelligent' created by accident absurd.

      First of all, the mathematical theory of chaos crearly demonstrates that some times order arises from chaos randomly.

      Secondly, if the universe is too complex to have been created by accident, then what about the creator of the universe, which is more complex than the universe itself? This thought leads to infinite recursion: if something is created on purpose by a creator, then the creator, which is by definition more complex that its works, must also have been created.

      Personally, I have no problem accepting that I am the result of an 'accident', i.e. of randomness. It does not make me less worthy or less capable of what I am.

      I think the main reason people deny evolution is simply a psychological one: they just can not stand the fact of their insignificance.

    462. Re:Thank God! by binary+paladin · · Score: 1, Troll

      "It's a victory for reason over religious mumbo-jumbo."

      Heh. So a sticker that states: "This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." should be banned and somehow this is "a victory for reason?"

      I don't know who scares me more, Fundementalist Christian freaks or the people in your camp who keep telling yourselves you're "intellectual" and "scientific."

      Evolution is a theory and like EVERYTHING, from theology to politics to science it should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.

      The Christians cheer when their crap is stuffed down everyone's throats and you cheer when people are silenced. The world's problems are obvious.

    463. Re:Thank God! by MrNiCeGUi · · Score: 1

      Atheism is not a religion and don't try to spin it as such, you fuck. If it was I'd have my own Church of Latter Day Atheists or somesuch and I'd demand the tax exemptions that churches have. Guess how well that would fly. Atheism is not a religion and is not considered a religion by any state when push comes to shove. This is only a silly argument spouted by bible-huggers who feel opressed that not everybody is kneeling before their cross.

    464. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop saying that!

      I cringe every time some idiot says that "We evolved from apes"

      we DID NOT evolve from apes, we evolved from the same things that apes evolved *FROM*.

    465. Re:Thank God! by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      Except we're still a bunch of homicidal apes. All we've fixed is the "retarded", and that's only because the term is completely relative.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    466. Re:Thank God! by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      Eh, intelligence is just the ability to cope with a variety of situations. Since the universe consists of a variety of situations, I'm personally not too suprised that selection pressures seem to be favoring intelligence at this point.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    467. Re:Thank God! by seraphina · · Score: 1

      Okay, so we can go round placing stickers on Bibles and other religious works saying "Some of the stuff in here is historically accurate but the rest of it has no basis in fact"

      Yeah, right.

    468. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Evolution is a very slow process; we don't need to observe it to determine that its a fact."

      What a liberating view of science! We don't need to see it if it's slow! No evidence required anymore!

      "To me, the fossil record is quite enough..."

      As you say, "To you". This is subjective opinion, not a basis for determining what is fact and what is not.

    469. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow - you are truly beyond help.

      They link all arguments back to peer-reviewed scientific articles.

      You know, by the experts?

      I'm just surprised that you can be a creationist and yet still manage to use a computer.

      Wow.

    470. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Law: Not really related to any of the other definitions. It's just a mathematical relationship between two values.

      I don't know which one is your mother tongue, but in mine _and_ in English, the word "law" is defined differently. It's not only a mathematical relationship. See "dictionary.com" for a more complete definition.

      Specifically, one can talk about "legal" laws (duh!) and "the law of gravity".

      Also, I agree with your definition of fact. Another replier suggests a hammer dropping is just an observation. Well, sure... but other people also "observe" this, so it's safe to deem it a fact. That said, everything is always just observed (I think this is called Phenomenology, IIRC).

      DISCLAIMER: I happen to have a creationist friend, and I also happen to believe in God (I'm a Christian). Though he's generally a good fellow, he blatantly refuses all proof of said evolution theory. This issue has thus some personal "color" to me.

    471. Re:Thank God! by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      We have innumerable transitional forms. The thing is that the changes are so tiny, and things are so slow, that we don't really notice them.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    472. Re:Thank God! by BeatlesForum.com · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Creationism, as stated in the Bible, is very improbable.

      So were many miracles performed in the Bible, but it's faith-based and not fact based. I believe evolution (the part that states all life formed from some primordial soup as well as we all evolved from apes) is ridiculous as best; just as the chair you are sitting in had an intelligent designer, so did the rest of the universe. (I believe I read that humans and bananas share a significant part of their DNA. Did we all come from bananas instead?) I think it's highly unlikely that so many different life forms on this planet came from an amoeba floating in early-Earth soup. The chances of this happening are probably along the scales that you think the chances of creationism are of happening.

      I know Slashdot is a secular site that looks for the facts as proof, but there are some things that just require faith. Jesus is the way, the truth and light and no one comes to the Father except by him. Might be offensive to some (just as some topics are to others), but I believe it's the truth just as I believe the Bible is the absolute truth.

      --
      When millions disappear from earth, it's not aliens, it's the rapture.
    473. Re:Thank God! by henni16 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Please.
      The koalas were simply taking a nap in the kangaroos' bags.
      You have to be resourceful if you have only one boat for that many animals!

    474. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      Change within a species is not evolution, it is adaptation or a fluke. Evolution, for the longest time, was defined as change from one species to another (which has never been found). Just because 'scientists' have altered the definition of evolution (because they can not find evidence to back up what they thought was right) does not make it right. A dog has always been a dog, a cow has always been a cow, and a human has always been a human (except for my brother, he looked a lot like a monkey when he was little).

    475. Re:Thank God! by cartzworth · · Score: 0

      Or maybe "The people who ruled this sticker unconstitutional believe in freedom of speech unless it disagrees with their agenda"

    476. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Actually this is a fantastic case for clarifying separation of chuch and state issues! Objections to chuch and state rulings often focus of the wrong aspects and miss the actual legal problem.

      I can see this rulling being struck down on apeal simply because the judge looked at those wanting the sticker and not what the sticker said.

      You have it backwards. The contents of the stickers are not a violation of church and state. We do indeed have to look to those who imposed the rule to find the violation.

      Had the school officials had a legitimate governmental purpose, perhaps some intent to ensure a good education and understanding of science theories, then these evolution stickers would have been perfectly legal. Of course if that had been the purpose of the rule then it obviously would have applied to all science theories. They would have plastered science textbooks with dozens of other stickers like as the following:

      This textbook contains material on gravity. Gravity is a theory, not a fact. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.

      That is not what they did. Their purpose for imposing the rule was NOT to ensure a good education and understanding of science theories.

      The separation of chuch and state issue is not about the content of the stickers. It is about the permissible purposes for which the force of government may be applied. It is about the right to religious freedom. Freedom from the force of government being used against us for religious purposes. About prohibiting anyone from hijacking the force of government against the rest of us for religious ends. Prohibiting the use of government power to grant favor to any particular religion or religious belief over any other.

      A crucial factor is that separation of chuch and state only restricts the government and the use of government power. It only applies to people when they are weilding power as an agent of the government. A government employee is free to have religious items and texts amongst the personal knick-knacks on their desk, but they cannot use their governmental authority to have a favored religious text carved on the entranceway of a government building itself.

      (1)The school officials involved were clearly acting in an official capacity as agents of the government itself.
      (2)Making these stickers mandatory in the school books is clearly a use of government power.
      (3)There was no legitimate governmental purpose served in targeting one particular field of science for official governmental discredit. The sole purpose it serves is as a grant of governmental favor for certian religious beleifs. A prohibited purpose for imposing the force of government power.

      1,2,3, a violation of church and state.

      Unless of course you can think of some valid governmental purpose to be served by targeting one particular field of science with such stickers, and that that was actually the purpose they intended.

      Oh and one more thing.... These stickers are just plain wrong. Evolution is not a theory regarding the origin of living things. Evolution means and explains change, not origin. That error just further highlights the Creationism and religious motivation/purpose for the rule.

      And to this day there isn't any real evolution hapening in an observable rate.

      Sure there is. I remember reading a facinating example involving birds. Google for "Ring species". A recent evolutionary event with two incompatible species and ALL of the intermediate forms!

      there is micro evolution but no macro evolution were species jumps are being made.

      Yes, we have seen new species arise. Well documented.

      Define micro vs macro. Hell, practically all of the differences between chimpanzees and humans are micro. Our DNA is 98.4% the same. A hand full of mutations here and there, slightly less hair growth, somewhat larger build, slightly different bone propo

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    477. Re:Thank God! by ddimas · · Score: 1
      1. A set of statements or principals devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena.

      This is what scientists mean by a theory. Nothing in science is a fact. As more observations are made, theories can change, or new ones are developed.


      Stick your hand into a vat of sulfuric acid. You will be burned. That is a fact. Your statement is nonsense.

    478. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Well once it all got going, there is an infinite number of ways in which life could have developed (Evolution as we know it today seems the most probable). I was refering to the spark. While if the original spark was "random", I mean that only in the sense that it was universally improbable, but naturally destined to occur thanks to natural laws. I did not mean to sudgest that positive mutation and selection was a purely random process, although there is an element of chance in what mutations will arise, and whether a positive one will meet an unfortunate end before it can breed.

    479. Re:Thank God! by Laglorden · · Score: 1

      So you really think "evolution" should be that a cat "evolves" into a dog?

      Evolution is a fluke and evolution is adaption within a species.

      Definitions is nice, some people define cats or cows as humans.

      If I or some descendant of me evolved stuff to help me better cope with the world at some point I could define people having these "adaptations" as a new species. Homo Slashdotties for example and voila, you have evolution.

      Most things doesn't live short enough time for us to notice. But for example bacteria will get immunity the pencillin after a while -> adaptiation yes! -> evolution yes! -> new species? maybe if we think them different enough

    480. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone doubting this 'theory' shoudl read the Blind Watchmaker by Dawkins. it explains evolution, definitively.

    481. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree with you more. I don't think micromanaging an entire universe would be very stimulating. If there is a diety (and I believe there is) the most likely means of creation (in my mind) would be the one with the least intervention necessary, just get the ball rolling so to speak...

      That being said. That would fall under the 'random' although perhaps planned event that was the beginning of life. If it was planned it must have been one hell of a 'shot' through time to setup the universe so this planet formed etc etc... However that is all nothing more than one persons guess work and idle speculation. The intention still stands. Life either started through natural process, or direct formation.

    482. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Is is a site notorious for exaggeration and plain misinformation about such topics.

      Go on then, give a few _specific_ examples then of pages on talkorigins that exaggerate and/or spread misinformation. Have you yourself actually ever read a single article on it (if so, then what), or are you just regurtitating crap that someone else has fed you?

    483. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      I agree, if you simply answer every question with "magic", you'll never try to dig deeper. The mind of a scientist should always question and always explore further into the unkown. A scientist is an explorer of knowledge, if we believe we have explored everything we will not venture futher into the unknown.

      Having said that, it doesn't remove the possibility that somthing could be 'magic'. Although it would take intensive scientific study to conclude this, and even then would most likely be proven later that the testing methods simply weren't accurate enough. God is in the unknowns, therefore shouldn't religion explore the unknowns further? I disagree with your conclusion that religion defaults scientific exploration. There needs to be a balance. Somthing IDists can't seem to grasp.

    484. Re:Thank God! by bentcd · · Score: 1

      While it may be technically correct to call the theory of evolution only a theory, you cannot include a message such as this in a science textbook without considering the target audience of the message. More likely than not, the target audience is not a bunch of scientists, but rather a bunch of kids who have not had a thorough introduction into the rigorous definition of "theory" in a scientific context. In stead, the target audience considers a "theory" to be something highly speculative. This is not consistent with the technical meaning of the word and so the message is highly likely to be misunderstood by the target audience. As such, the message is highly misleading and should be either removed or reworded.

      I might add that if we should disregard the vocabulary of the target audience when writing text books, we might as well write them in Sumerian. Then at least they won't be doing much harm.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    485. Re:Thank God! by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Comparing a VCR to the origin of life is a bit well... comparing oranges to Boeing 747s.

      Since the Earth cooled enough to support any forms of even the simplest life as we know it, it took THREE BILLION YEARS to go from the primordial soup to the first multicellular creature. With that amount of time and the right chemical mix, it's almost inevitable something self replicating will come from that.

    486. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Good point. I'll add a condition to make it accurate.

      "... " Assuming there was an origin to life "..."

    487. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      If you reply "I don't know, and we can never tell" to everything, you won't get anywhere. Atheists say "There is no god." and based on that assumption have made great advances in science. Theists say "There is a God." and have made great advances in philosophy. Agnostics say "Maybe there is nothing, maybe I'm still asleep... mmm sleep I'm going to go sleep." I doubt there are more than a handful of true Strong Agnostics, and there are far far too many weak agnostics "Who cares I want a burger."

      I choose theism because if you run the equation, I like the answer. I'm a believer because I want to be.

    488. Re:Thank God! by bentcd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Moreover, one might observe that the proposed unlikely event is in fact "life evolved out of chemical goo". It is _not_ "life evolved out of checmical goo _on Earth_". That it happened on our planet is not a coincidence at all - after all, if it had not, the question would never have been posed in the first place. Since the question cannot be posed on a planet where life happened to not evolve, the fact that it happened on "our" planet is a given.

      Therefore, scale the probability of life evolving on an Earth-like planet by the number of Earth-like planets in the universe (likely to be a lot) and it's not at all amazing that it happened in at least one place. I'm not even sure it should be limited to only Earth-like planets.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    489. Re:Thank God! by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      "Even evolution gets stuck at some point of time were it resolves to somethign was just there. And to this day there isn't any real evolution hapening in an observable rate. Sure there is micro evolution but no macro evolution were species jumps are being made. Why did it stop?"

      Wrong, wrong, and wrong. Please read more. Origins is a good start. You simply show your ignorance here.

      "I guess this is one topic that will probably turn into a flame war or somethign."

      Well, your lack of education would be one reason. You know, pretending to side with the "idea" of evolution, but pointing out "weaknesses" which, when examined, are really only holes in your education.

      I think that's what starts up the flame wars, you know?

    490. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      F is not in fact equal to ma, but it's a handy approximation for largish objects. For the very small, though, you have to use quantum theory (which is a 100 years old this year).

      Thus F=ma can hardly be described as a law.

      In fact I don't think anything in science can be described as a law, and the idea that scientists are discovering "THE SECRET LAWS OF THE UNIVERSE!" is one of the greatest dangers to science today: it's transforming it from a system rational inquiry to a sort of alternative religion with unbreakable dogma and, crucially, disdain and even punishment (such as lack of funding) for "heretics" who dare contradict this dogma.

      Frankly I think scientists should entirely avoid the use of uncompromising words such as "law" and "rule", and return to the humble state of, as Newton put it, accidentally discovering shells on an infinite sea-shore.

    491. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From LP News Online:
      ( http://www.lp.org/lpnews/0104/affiliatenews-fl.htm l )

      * FLORIDA

      Banning library books? What about the Bible?

      Libertarian Charles Schrader got angry when the Marion County Commission almost banned a book from a local public library, so he's asking them to censor another "filthy" book -- the Bible.

      "It has pornography [and] cannibalism like you wouldn't believe," said Schrader. In fact, he noted, the Bible is filled with graphic descriptions of rape, murder, torture, and incest, so shouldn't the Commission ban it like any other "pornographic" book?

      Schrader made his tongue-in-cheek suggestion in late January, after the Commission considered a request to ban a sex education book.

      "I admit there's some facetiousness," he said. "I do not have any illusions that they're going to remove [the Bible]. And as a staunch defender of freedom of religion, I don't really want them to."

      Instead, said Schrader, he wants to make the point that censorship is wrong -- and that the County Commission should not be in the business of deciding which books are acceptable.

    492. Re:Thank God! by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      "Because The South traditionally has a problem with adhering to the rules of seperation of church and state."

      Uhh, fuck off, son.

      Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas are not in the south. You Northerners have just as much problem keeping your seperation.

    493. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      My own feeling on the matter is that the judge was wrong to order the stickers removed. I would have preferred to require additional stickers - one for each scientific theory

      Chuckle, as I just wrote that example in a post a little while ago. It is not the stickers or the contents of the stickers which are unconstitutional. Had they had a valid purpose, say aiding the education of science and clarifying theories, it would have been perfectly legal such stickers on every scientific theory.

      The problem is that laws or other imposing of the force of government may only be done for a constitutionally permissable purpose. In this case we have school officials abusing government power for an impermissable and strictly religious purpose. A law or government action can violate separation of chuch and state based on unintended effects or based on intended purpose regardless of any effect at all.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    494. Re:Thank God! by pjt33 · · Score: 1
      Very little of what you encounter in math textbooks rises to the level of mathematical law.
      It is fair to say that because your school textbooks taught arithmetic as "this is the way it is", rather than starting with modus ponens and Peano's axioms, it was not proven. You, however, seem to be alleging that it is not provable.
    495. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think alot of people do not understand the actual definition of faith. The apostle Paul actually defined it when he said "Faith is the assured expectation of things hoped for, the evident demonstration of realities though not yet beheld" Basically, faith isn't blind. REAL faith isn't blind. Alot of people look to the Bible to disprove every theory or idea scientists put forth to support the theory of Evolution, but it's not there to do that. If you think of the Bible more as a incredibly well put together Time Magazine, you will see more of the point. Its not there as a science text book, it is there to let people know about the issues that we as a human race are facing in this time period, namely the last 4-5000 years or so. The Bible is accurate when it does touch on some scientific aspects though, that are far beyond its years, namely, in Job, the earth is referred to as a circle, the hebrew word used actually meant sphere. Don't look to the Bible to argue with the evolutionists, do look to the Bible to see where we are in the stream of time, and learn the best way to live your life.

    496. Re:Thank God! by godless+dave · · Score: 1

      Because the "alternate view" is complete balderdash. If there were weaknesses in the theory of evolution (there aren't) and there were serious, scientifically viable alternate theories (there aren't) it would be a whole different story. Of course students should be thinking critically about everything they learn in school. Singling out evolution suggests that there's something different about it, that it's less well-supported than other aspects of science.

      --
      "If it's real, then it gets more interesting the closer you examine it. If it's not real, just the opposite is true." -
    497. Re:Thank God! by pjt33 · · Score: 1
      Ironically, it would have been nice to have had Science around in a mature state at the time to record enough details to actually do this.
      Do you mean to say that you think science is in a mature enough state to identify the presence or absence of divine inspiration in a statement made today?
    498. Re:Thank God! by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

      fact #2: a genetic sequence can change sufficiently to form a new species. Speciation has been observed more than once in the laboratory and in the wild, so this is a fact. Since we call this process 'evolution', that means evolution is a fact. Keep reading for more explanation of this.

      For my own information, can you mention a couple cases so I may do some research? Thanks.

    499. Re:Thank God! by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      Why should evolution be questioned more in schools than any other scientific theory?

      It's one thing to encourage skepticism. That's good. Skepticism should be encouraged in every field. However, the religious nut jobs (no sarcasm, because that's what they are) are responsible for singling out evolution as if it, somehow, is less scientific than any other part of science.

      It isn't any less scientific. It's wrong for the nut jobs to debase education in this way. It's even more wrong that they'd abuse public funds by forcing taxpayer funded schools to make these kinds of claims.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    500. Re:Thank God! by mistersooreams · · Score: 1
      To me, it simply seems to impossible to think that the universe and all that's in it, including us, is the result of some random roll of the cosmic dice.
      You know if the dice had turned up some other way, we wouldn't be here to wonder how it happened?
    501. Re:Thank God! by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Every creature is between evolutionary states.

      With the possible exception of the last few dodos? :-)

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    502. Re:Thank God! by LordKazan · · Score: 1

      "This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

      That's not what it's saying and you know it

      --
      If you cannot keep politics out of your moderation remove yourself from the Mod Lottery.. NOW!
    503. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 3, Informative

      never been found

      You have been missinformed. Many example of speciation have been observed.

      But even better than mere speciation is the absolutely facinating sub-catagory of ring species which have been found. Not merely a case of a single species diverging into two incompatible species over short timescales, but having the FULL range of intermediate forms available to study!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    504. Re:Thank God! by athlon02 · · Score: 1

      How can macroevolution be extrapolated from microevolution? ... I've been told when trying to figure out if a plant is safe to eat you go through a process of tasting, then chewing, then swallowing, each time waiting a period of time before doing the next step. The thing is you have to repeat the process SEPARATELY for leaves, branches, and fruit (berries or what not) from the SAME plant.

      Microevolution does not necessarily prove macroevolution. If you prove one you must prove the other separately, otherwise you are not following the scientific process... your "extrapolating," as you put it, is poisonous to the scientific process because it assumes too much.

      I agree that microevolution occurs... a beagle with a golden retriever... yeah that's microevolution in action. But I can't extrapolate a human from an ape or an amoeba based on a new breed of dog.

      Sites like this have articles to help show how you can harmonize the Bible and science without need of evolution, the Big Bang or otherwise. The site doesn't simply quote religious philosophers or scientists, but includes quotes from men like Carl Sagan to disprove their own theories and show how even evolutionists, like Mr. Sagan, didn't believe evolution as deeply as they wanted us to believe. I'm still looking for proof on how the O.T. is metaphorical and not literal plus metaphorical. (Side note, please remember that the Torah is Genesis to Deuteronomy, not the whole of the O.T. canon). One common rule of hermeneutics (the science of interpreting the Bible) is that you take a passage as being literal unless the context demands a non-literal interpretation. If the days of creation were not literal 24 hour days, but were 1 billion (or another large number) years each then plants went quite a long time without the sun and hence photosynthesis... YIKES!

      I'm not trying to preach or flame, just asking you to be careful which theories and ideas you accept as true.

    505. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he should try sticking his head in first just to test you theory. :)

    506. Re:Thank God! by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >The least contentious objection I can raise here is that evolution is a theory about the origin of species and not a theory about the mutation in existing creatures.

      That is completely incorrect. Evolution says nothing about how life began, only what has happened to it since then.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    507. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Funny you mentioned dogs.
      (quoted from another forum)

      About twenty thousand years ago, a species of carnivores roamed the earth. Social animals who lived and hunted in packs. Wolves.

      Some of these wolves were taken in by humans. By their own nature, wolves were suited to live with humans - and humans bred these wolves according to human wishes.

      Now, twenty thousand years later, wolves still exist. And another group of animals exist: dogs.

      Dogs are not wolves. Dogs are - in all their variety, from huge St.Bernhards to tine Chihuahuas - very different from each other and very different from wolves.

      A contemporary observer could state that something like a poodle could not come from a wolf - and indeed you will never see a wolf giving birth to a poodle.

      And yet, every single kind of dog around today is descended from a wolf.

      So we can see:
      1. Huge changes in outer form as well as behaviour and intelligence (yes, dogs are more intelligent than wolves, in a very human way) can happen.
      2. New species of animals can descend from an original kind without the original kind disappearing.

      Now you might object that in the case of wolves and dogs, it was an intelligence - humans - that "created" dogs. This is correct.

      But how did humans "create" dogs? Dogs were not created like a work of art is created or a machine is. Dogs were bred.

      What is breeding? Breeding is the selection of attributes by determining who is going to have offspring.

      In the case of dogs, it was humans who did the determining. We might call that "artificial selection".

      But it is possible - even inevitable - that even without intelligent interference, certain variants of a species will have more offspring than others.
      The variants selected in this way will be those who are best suited to live, survive and procreate in their enviroment. So here the enviroment determines who is going to have offspring. This is called "natural selection".

      And this is the way humans could have come from "apes" without an ape ever having to give birth to a human - just as a wolf never gave birth to a Chihuahua.

    508. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Insightful? You have to be kidding. This poster has mush for brains and has done zero research. Par for Slashdot.

    509. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Go ahead and arrest me.

    510. Re:Thank God! by bentcd · · Score: 1

      This raises two questions:

      1) Does the theory of evolution require that organisms should become "more complex"?

      2) What does "more complex" mean, exactly?

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    511. Re:Thank God! by srleffler · · Score: 1
      Darwin has been dead for over a hundred years. Why would you think anything he had to say is relevant to a present-day scientific debate? There has been a hundred years of scientific progress since Darwin. It isn't really even his theory anymore. 'Darwinian' evolution in its true sense is long dead, replaced by more modern models of how evolution operates. These models are based on the evidence provided by genetics, etc.

      Besides that, though, we do find transitional forms embedded in the earth. There is no lack of them, given how rare it is for a dead creature to become fossilized.

    512. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Compromise:

      Put a sticker on the books - "be critical"
      And put the same sticker on teh bible..

    513. Re:Thank God! by Robb · · Score: 1

      Another point of view is that science and religion are philisophically related because both concern themselves with man's place in the universe.

    514. Re:Thank God! by pcmanjon · · Score: 1

      " Evolution is a fact in that we know it occurs and it has been seen occuring."

      No, that makes it a theory. Look up the scientific method on wikipedia.

      A fact (or law) would be gravity, something you can see with your own eyes.

      It's really weird, the difference, I mean if you can whitness it under a microscope it should be a law right? But it isn't. A law is something that is prooven to happen once, and always happen no matter what. Inertia is a law.

      We can't be certain that bacteria will -always- evolve, or if what we're seeing isn't even evolution at all but pre-coded in DNA. Until we understand how DNA works 110% we can't make it a law.

      Did you know that the Earth revolving around the sun is a theory and not a law?

    515. Re:Thank God! by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      There are no laws in science. Scientific Laws are just theories that people have thought at some time or another were somehow fundamental. e.g. the laws of thermodynamics, The Law of Gravitation.

      We have Newton's "Law" of Gravity and Einstein's "Theory" of general relativity. Which are the more accurate - the law or the theory?

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    516. Re:Thank God! by IngramJames · · Score: 1

      Heh. So a sticker that states: "This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." should be banned and somehow this is "a victory for reason?" ...
      Evolution is a theory and like EVERYTHING, from theology to politics to science it should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.

      I may have misread that, but you appear to be advocating the addition of a sticker to every single book about any subject.

      The Christians cheer when their crap is stuffed down everyone's throats and you cheer when people are silenced

      Actually, the cheering is about their crap not being stuffed down our throats. If anyone tried to silence their freedom of speech, I would defend those rights to the utmost.

      --
      'No rational religion claims "supernatural" exists, that's an atheist slander.' - seen on slashdot.
    517. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything is belief..

      But "science" tend not to burn people on the stake for their beliefs.

    518. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah,

      you are saying no, but at the same time still actually obeying the law. Now, if you will give us the date and time where we can observe you breaking the law, and we do observe you doing so, we can bring the matter up again.

      foolscap

    519. Re:Thank God! by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to say were not all individual precious snowflakes created from the loving bosom of an omnipotent person who watches and loves us and awaits our return after our meat-bags expire?

      Oh dear - please tell me Im not alone.

    520. Re:Thank God! by Jonathan · · Score: 1

      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented. Do you realy think these children can only handle one view, or that thay are completely incapable of making there own desisions on who they are going to believe.

      No, I don't believe children are capable of making their own decisions. That's why they aren't allowed to vote or marry. It's up to adults to make wise decisions on what to teach them. Trying to convince children that the scientific community has any doubts about evolution is simply dishonest.

    521. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course it looks odd because it shows that you are a fucking moron!

    522. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      This is not proof of evolution. Ring species actually prove the Bible: Noah probably had one breed of each 'type' of animal, from which all other 'types' came (i.e. he had one pair of dogs, and from those, we get all the various types of dogs we have now). This is not evolution. Evolution would require that 'information' be added to DNA. Ring species shows a degredation of DNA, nothing is added.

    523. Re:Thank God! by SteveXE · · Score: 1

      "To me, it simply seems to impossible to think that the universe and all that's in it, including us, is the result of some random roll of the cosmic dice." And to me it seems impossible to beleive it was all created by one being. I think its far more likely we are just a lucky role of the dice, just like polars bears were lucky to get all that warm fur...or was that just evolution?

    524. Re:Thank God! by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

      And that's why I don't leave the house. :)

    525. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That is why evolution is a theory and not a hypothesis. Evolution is supported by facts. There is no rational dispute to these facts. Evolution is not in question.


      Try doing so research instead of repeating the BS you were taught is school. There is no 'factual' support for evolution. It has never been observed. It cannot be tested. It cannot be repeated. It even fails to explain anything in the world around us. Yet it is preached as if true when there is no rational basis to believe in it. The truth is that evolution is religious, not scientific.

    526. Re:Thank God! by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Because it is a SCIENCE textbook.

      There is more than enough critical dissent on the finer points of evolutionary mechanisms to give those prone to blind faith pause. There is simply no need to pollute science textbooks with dressed up fundementalist xian propaganda.

      There's a place for examining such propaganda in schools: social studies (world affairs) & english class (rhetoric).

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    527. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or the judge simply saw past the religious bs smokescreen.

    528. Re:Thank God! by instanto · · Score: 1

      For a cooking book.

      The "food" your can "make" from "reading" this "book " may not in fact be "food", but something else, "we" dont "know" yet, but "rest" asured that as we "speak" millions of "dollars" and unfathomable "knowledge" is being put to the "test" of "discovering" what "you" are "reading". Ps: Try the taco on pg. 34

      --
      // instant - "I for one welcome our new Decaff Coffee-Flavoured-Coffee Overlords"
    529. Re:Thank God! by codehoser · · Score: 1

      Science can't yet explain the "Why am I here?" question. Some of us are alright with that. People that aren't alright with that seem to need to latch on to something with an "answer", and it tends to be religion.

      But the "answer" that religion gives doesn't have any evidence that can be verified scientifically. That doesn't mean that it's necessarily wrong, it just means that there's no reason to believe it at this time.

      See? You've made a terrible mistake! I'm just glad I could help out.

    530. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The belief that there is no god is obviously a belief of a religious nature. A religious belief. And under the constitution it rates full and equal protection.

      And while you can quibble over the definition of "religion", I would say that atheism pretty well qualifies. It just doesn't have a formal organisation, and it's only tenet is that there is no god.

      If you were to form some sort of organizied "church" for it it would indeed be tax exempt yada yada yada. Sure some people will scream and yell about it, but I have little doubt you can win in court.

      And acknowleding that atheist belief is a religious belief is actually quite usefull in these chuch-and-state arguments. Prohibiting the government from meddling in religion, prohibiting the government from sticking god into the pledge, prohibiting the government from putting god on money, none of that is "making the government atheist" as they love to claim. Requiring the government to remain entirely silent on the issue of god is in no way promoting atheism. The government is just as prohibited from promoting the belief that there is not god as it is prohibited from promoting the belief in a god.

      Taking "in god we trust" off of money is not athesist. Placing "trust money because there is no god" on money would be atheist. Obviously the "pro-religion" side is going to find the second quote unacceptable, and they are defenseless when you point out the fact that the first quote is no better than the second quote. If it is unacceptable for you to put one religious belief on money then it is equally unacceptable for them to put another religious belief on money.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    531. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you "prove" that I will burn my hand. No. So it's not a fact. It is observed/assumed that this will happen and probably would happen if you did it a 999,999 times in a row. But you can not actually "prove" that it will happen on the millionth time.

    532. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the argument about koalas ending up in aussie land is easily explained. There were only 2 koalas, one of each sex. They wandered around together and aussie land is where they ended up, they just didnt have little koalas till they got there. Remember there were only 2 of each animal, so naturally some places dont have them because they couldnt get everywhere.

      PS I believe in evolution. And not being american have cant help put find in ironic that religious fundamentalism is a big issue for your govt when it occurs in other countries, but of course there is no problem with religious fundamentalists screwing up your own society.

    533. Re:Thank God! by dumeinst · · Score: 1

      Bitter much?

      The disbelief of an all powerful being requires as much faith as the belief in one. I'm sorry to inform you that your world view is not a panacea

    534. Re:Thank God! by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented. Do you realy think these children can only handle one view

      given how brainwashed a mind is, as a result of religious teaching, YES, its very possible that we will raise kids that can't hold multiple ideas in their mind that weren't spoon fed to them by some high-horse moralist wannabe.

      we've worked hard (as a society) to keep a separation betweeen wives-tales and superstitions of the middle ages and actual hard science.

      are we soon going to allow 'doubt' that evil is caused by a black cat crossing your path? do we allow kids to throw salt over their shoulder, for good luck?

      there must be a clear line drawn between the dark ages of thought and modern thought.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    535. Re:Thank God! by famebait · · Score: 1

      You're right. In tyhe name of fairness I propose to keep the warninjgs, and also introduce mandatory labelson all religious texts, warning that the contents are or are based on unsubstatiated mumbo-jumbo and makes no sense in any case.

      --
      sudo ergo sum
    536. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "moron" : was that word really necessary?
      If you can't argue without resorting to insults, perhaps your discourse isn't as solid as you pretend it to be?
      Now guess who's the moron?
      YHBT. YHL.HAND.

    537. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      What proof do we have that anything, including the earth, is 20,000 years old? Regarding wolves/dogs: read http://www.answersingenesis.org/Home/Area/feedback /negative_25june2001.asp

    538. Re:Thank God! by fish+waffle · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with this case is that it's an example of a judge ruling for a religion (the atheists), and not because there was anything wrong with the stickers. They neither promoted nor condemned any religion--or lack thereof. They only questioned a scientific principle.

      Let's put this another way. Suppose the science-literate majority insisted that stickers be placed on bibles stating that the concept of a diety or "god" was an unproven and unprovable theory that is not supported by any observable phenomenon, and readers should attempt to keep an open mind with respect to the validity of the writings within. Would the religious be content with that? It's just a statement of fact, neither promoting nor denegrating any particular religion or religious practice.

      Do you really believe that the people pushing those stickers just wanted to point out the difference between theory and fact? It seems grossly obvious to me (and clearly many others) that this is religious message with a religious motivation. That the judge saw through this thinly veiled attempt to push a religious agenda is heartening, and is why we have human beings decide whether something is legal or not rather than using computers.

    539. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EVOLUTION= Change in gene frequency in a population over time.

      NATURAL SELECTION= directional evolution (generally thought of as meaning that adaptive changes become heritable)

    540. Re:Thank God! by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      To me, it simply seems to impossible to think that the universe and all that's in it, including us, is the result of some random roll of the cosmic dice.

      think numbers. large numbers. very very large numbers. units of time. very large units of time.

      ever heard the 'million monkeys type out the works of shakespear' quote? think that's impossible? given a VERY large amount of time?

      those numbers do give people a hard time. numbers so large, we have no common experience that even comes close. but the fact that we want to compare the age of the universe to our own small lives; does not invalidate the math and statistical theories.

      randomness, given enough time, _can_ explain a lot.

      but an angry bearded guy in the clouds - man, you're never going to get anywhere with THAT kind of medieval thinking. I'll take randomness in science over the Loving-God/Angry-God thing anyday.

      (and if I need an Angry God being, I'll pray to joe pesci. at least he has a way with baseball bats and noisy neighbors that might come in handy..)

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    541. Re:Thank God! by Bastian · · Score: 1

      This was my initial belief, but I looked up the definition online and the definition as used in biology was this: "Change in the genetic composition of a population during successive generations, as a result of natural selection acting on the genetic variation among individuals, and resulting in the development of new species." According to this definition, at least, you can't separate the theory of evolution from that of natural selection. Looking up "natural selection" seems to confirm this, "evolution" is just short for "Darwin's theory of evolution", and it seems to me that natural selection, as the sole basis for the origin of human life, is far from scientific fact.

      There's a lot of misinformation out there, and you're going to find a lot of it online. The fact of the matter is, evolution can't possibly be synonymous with Darwin's theory of natural selection, because scientists had been actively trying to figure out how evolution works long before Darwin was on the scene. Look up Lamarckian Evolution to read up on an older competing theory for how evolution works. It was still fairly popular as recently as 100 years ago.

      In fact, there is some more recent research showing that there might be Lamarckian elements to evolution, which would necessitate the replacement of Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection with a new one. Let's sincerely hope that the law and the theory are separate entities, because otherwise we're going to have to come up with a new word.

    542. Re:Thank God! by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Your religion can't answer "Why am I here?" any better than science. I'm not even sure that's a useful question to ask. The fact is, we are here.

      The real question is: what are we going to do now? And we don't need mythological gods to tell us the answers to that, we can easily examine our lives and make those decisions using our own neurological processes (if, in fact, we are even capable of "making" decisions-- I strongly recommend a book by the name of "The Illusion of Conscious Will" for some scientific discussion of this age old question). Surely if there is a god who gave us the ability to think and free will it was because he/she wanted us to use our minds and decide for ourselves?

      --
      I do not have a signature
    543. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, Evolution is a fact. It's not a theory, it's a fact.

      "Natural Selection" was Darwin's theory to explain the FACT of evolution.

      Just as there are theories (like quantum gravity) trying to explain the fact of gravity. We don't actually know how or why gravity works, but that doesn't make it any less real. We don't know all the details of evolution, but that doesn't mean evolution isn't real.

      That so many people cannot distinguish between the fact of evolution, and the various theories that attempt to explain the facts of evolution is beyond me.

      All of biology only makes sense within the context of evolution. Evolution is as well established as any scientific fact out there. To reject Evolution is to reject science itself, period.

      It saddens me that intelligent people seem so threatened by something so obvious as the fact of evolution that they would attempt to deny it, soley to preserve the illusion that humans are somehow distinct and separate from the rest of the animal kingdom.

      Hell, even The Pope believes in Evolution!!

    544. Re:Thank God! by dajak · · Score: 1

      It kind of reminds me of my favorite argument about the "Newton was Wrong" folks: No, he wasn't wrong. His equations were accurate to a certain point. If he had the ability to hurl apples to the ground at velocities comparable to light (and be able to measure the consequences), he would have certainly had the wherewithall to at least state "my basic theory breaks down at absurd velocities for some reason".

      The theory that the earth is flat is also pretty accurate, and only breaks down at absurd distances for some reason. We all use this theory, and even land measurers use measurement systems that are based on the theory that the earth is flat.

      We do not know or care who invented the flat earth theory, but we all believe that the people who defended the theory against the more accurate theory proposed by Copernicus, Keppler, and Galileo are religious lunatics.

      The scientist that invents the new theory is treated kindly by history, while the people that represent the one being replaced are evil.

      Given what we know of Newton't vanity, it is fortunate for him that his theory was replaced with a more accurate one after his death. I am not sure he would have handled that gracefully.

      Newton's theory of gravity and the flat earth theory are still most appealing from a computational point of view.

    545. Re:Thank God! by 74nova · · Score: 1

      i am a christian, but i can very much see all of your points. in fact, i agree for the most part. while i believe that i am right, i dont feel the need to cram it down everyones throats. you have your right to believe what you want, too.

      my problem with this sticker crap is that i dont see anything about religion on it. i dont even see anything about creation. it would seem to me that all it does is say "take a scientific approach to this theory". how is that unscientific in any way?

      --
      use your turn signal! you people act like it's divulging information to the enemy
    546. Re:Thank God! by cev · · Score: 1

      I'd rather there be a whole chapter or two on critical, skeptical thinking. I think that'd be a much better use of all of our time.

      In a science text, that chapter is called "introduction." CV

    547. Re:Thank God! by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      Actually, that is not true. A scientist is often forced to "observe" an event by observing the traces that that event leaves behind (in one sense, every visual observation is only an observation of the light particles 'left behind' after an event).

      We can observe changes in skeletons, and genotypical and phenotypical (confirmed by DNA testing) similarites, and their changes over time. We can observe changes in available moisture over time by looking a a cross-section of a tree trunk. We can observe evolutionary changes through the fossil record, and from DNA.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    548. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented."

      To be consistent, I hope you advocate that a sticker be placed forcing the children to question the whole "round earth theory" and to consider that the earth might be flat. I mean, according to your "logic", to do otherwise wouldn't be open-minded, would it?

      To reject evolution is akin to rejecting that the earth isn't flat. To accept the nonsense of creationism is no different than insisting the world is flat.

      It's ignorant, unscientific bullcrap.

      Creationism can be taught in schools, in the context of a "mythology" class, or a comparative religions class (where they can teach all the various creation myths out there). It does not belong anywhere near a science class, because it has NOTHING to do with science.

    549. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      They only mentioned evolution, because that is the only theory that is presented in modern science books.

      Wow, I new some schools were really rotten on science, but I never knew there were any schools that taught nothing but evolution.

      You mean your school never touched on the theory of gravity or atoms or relativity or plate technonics or chemistry or magnetism or quantum mechanics or light or anything else?

      Either that, or you are under the scientifically illiterate impression that evolution is "merely" a theory while everything else in the textbook is somehow "real science". Chuckle. Nope, it's all "real science" and it's all theories. There's electricity theory powering your computer and light theory giving you the colors on your monitor.

      Evolution is "mere theory" just like gravity is "mere theory".

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    550. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is *always* good advice: people should never blindly accept any theory as fact.

      True, but as in any other knowledge-based science the current conset (which happens to be evolution) can be taken for granted, and used as the foundation for further research. It's perfectly normal. You could as well question - say - quantum theory, because it conflicts with einsteins theory.

    551. Re:Thank God! by arevos · · Score: 1

      Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry? Where are the missing links? In this particular case, evolution, in my opinion, flies in the face of science by ignoring some of the obvious missing pieces of evidence.

      There are a number of reasons why the so-called missing link cannot be presented. Firstly, because the fossil record is incomplete; the chance of a dead animal becoming a fossil is smaller than, say, being struck by lightning. Secondly, fossils are rather difficult to find; they're buried in rock.

      But lets put aside such difficulties, and look at the term "common ancestor". The so-called missing link is the ancestor that we and apes have in common. It is a mistake to assume that this missing link would look humanoid, or walk on two legs. More likely it would just appear like a large monkey, or a primative ape.

      So even if scientists found the missing link, how could they tell what it was? They could classify it, give the species a name and speculate on its life and habitat, of course. But fossils are, at the end of the day, just rock. There isn't any way to tell whether man and ape are decendants of such a creature or not.

    552. Re:Thank God! by aborchers · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I and many others don't need such a emotional support structure.


      No, but for some reason I can't understand, you are compelled to antagonize those who view the world differently from you. What motivates that?

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    553. Re:Thank God! by Kolisar · · Score: 1
      At the risk or losing what ever positive Karma I have, here goes:

      First of all, religion has a place in society and all religons are valid (comment not intended as flame bait), I believe the issue here is what is the responsibility of the education system. I believe that responsibility is to teach students the basics they need to function in not only our society but the world: literacy in their native language (as a minimum), basic math (everyone should be able to balance a checkbook and calculate a tip), enough history to hopefully prevent the repetition of the errors of the past, the currently accepted basic scientific theories, and most importantly to think for themselves. Critical thinking (mentioned in other posts in this topic) is one of the most important skills a person can have, students need to be taught to question everything, including established "facts". If no one questioned the "facts" we would still consider the earth as the center of the universe and believe that it is flat.

      Religion has no place in the school system and parents who feel the need to have someone else teach their children their particular religion should send their children to religious classes after the normal school or to private religious schools. If the government were to be responsible for religious education they would either have to teach ALL religions equally or select one and I believe our country was formed in protest to state sponsered religion (among other reasons) and that the constitution prohibits a state sponsered religion which, anything other than all religions were taught in our schools, would equate to state sponsership of that (of those) religions.

      Again, let me be clear, I have nothing against religion (I feel that every religion is valid and can be learned from) and that people should be allowed to believe in whichever dieties or diety they choose without the government becoming involved.

    554. Re:Thank God! by Papparazzi · · Score: 1

      Isn't a drug resistant staph infection still a staph infection, or would it be an entirely new infection which should be given a seperate classification such as staph type b? Or perhaps a new and entorely di

      --
      01101101 01111001 00100000 01110011 01101001 01100111
    555. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Evolution is a FACT.

      "Natural Selection" is one theory that attempts to explain that fact.

      Creasionism is not even remotely science, and doesn't belong anywhere in any science class, period. It isn't a theory at all, it isn't science at all, and it's not based on any factual evidence at all.

      And yes, I cheer when ignorant lies and fantasies are stopped from being shoved down people's throats or brainwashed into the public at public expense. That isn't a problem. I wish more people would.

    556. Re:Thank God! by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      That would seem all too pointless to me.

      Here's an excercise:

      * go find an activity that is completely pointless

      * create a mythos the gives meaning to the activity

      * Profit?

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    557. Re:Thank God! by Finuvir · · Score: 1
      Off topic, but I recently saw a bumper sticker that said "Capital Punishment - WWJD?".

      Let he who is without sin throw the switch.

      --
      Why is anything anything?
    558. Re:Thank God! by phyruxus · · Score: 1
      >>Of course there are facts in science. For example the way apples fall from trees or the way planets revolve around the Sun are all facts.

      You're missing the point of what Ted Williams' Frozen said.

      That an apple falls from a tree at time t is a fact. The WAY (or process by which) the apple falls from the tree would fall under theory - as in theory of gravity. Likewise for planetary orbits - That planets orbit the sun is a fact. WHY planets orbit the sun, falls under theory.

      The issue with the stickers is that they use the word "theory" in an ambiguous way to imply that evolution is not credible on the grounds that it is a theory. Ted Williams' Frozen used gravity to point out that this implication is intellectually dishonest.

      When Ted W Frozen said "nothing in science is a fact" I'm pretty sure he was expressing that in science, assertions are not elevated to the level of unquestionable dogma. I am pretty sure he was pointing out the fallacy of the sticker people - they want to have the schools teach that evolution is "one of many" explanations on the grounds that it is not irrefutably known to the last decimal, with every branch explored and every question answered fully.

      Finally,

      1)There's two parts to the "is evolution true" discussion: That species change over time, which is immutable fact. It's in the fossil record. Species change into other species. This is not a theory. The "theory" of evolution is about HOW species change over time.

      2) I'm really glad the court was able to cut through the crap in this case. I was afraid that the court might be mislead on #1, or that their impartiallity might be compromised. After all, this would be a huge coup for the neocons.

      --
      "A witty saying proves nothing." ~Voltaire
      "d'Oh!" ~Homer
    559. Re:Thank God! by Papparazzi · · Score: 1

      stupid laptopmouse..grrr ....entirely different name. Grrrr!!

      --
      01101101 01111001 00100000 01110011 01101001 01100111
    560. Re:Thank God! by aborchers · · Score: 1
      Rejecting evolution because it contradicts the old old testament is about as deep as people who reject God because religious people aren't perfect, and religions aren't perfect.


      Thank you. I have been trying for years to come up with that statement, and you finally put it in words.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    561. Re:Thank God! by halivar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While on the subject, the committee that formed the whole of the religious canon of Christianity did so from a narrow selection of letters written by fanatical cult members over three hundred years earlier.

      You've been listening to Jehovah's Witnesses. You should stop doing that. Trinitarian theology is very strongly rooted in the New Testament.

      Much of the body of the Bible was written in letters by a schizophrenic who was born a hundred years after Christ's death.

      I assume you're talking about Paul. The hypothesis that the Pauline epistles were written years after Jesus' death has been largely discredited by the finding of numerous copies dated around 65 AD, very close to the time the scriptures place themselves. We also have a few copies of the gospels from the same time period. As it is, we have more historical evidence for the correct dating of the New Testament than we do for the epic of Gilgamesh. Or so I've heard; don't take my word for it.

    562. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Stoned any gays lately? Or adulterers?"

      I live in Texas, so.... yes!

    563. Re:Thank God! by koekepeer · · Score: 1

      "Of course there are facts in science."

      the examples you state (or anyone could state) are just highly probable events, not facts. facts do not exist (in science). they are just artifical constructs to stop us from panicking *grin*

      like you rightfully state later on in your post, it's all about hypotheses. even if facts existed, our inherently biased observatory powers would prevent us from identifying them.

      sheesh, people like Russell tackled the issues you are putting forward beginning last century already.

    564. Re:Thank God! by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      Arguably evolution is even _better_ supported than gravity/general relativity. After all, we know the mechanisms underlying evolution and while it's not exactly a deterministic process, we can still make reasonably accurate predictions. Whereas the best we can do for gravity is a idealized 2-body mathematical approximation. We still don't really know for sure why two masses fall towards each other.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    565. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It almost sounds like creationist thinking, almost as though you believe that intelligence is a specially favored trait for survival and that intelligent entities are somehow "more evolved".

      Intelligence is only one of the many directions life has taken. It may not be evolution's most fortuitous experiment: there's certainly some short-term gain for DNA's survival possibilities, but it has resulted in the appearance of a species capable of eliminating all DNA instances on the planet.

    566. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This statement merely explains your problem with understanding evolution. To state that fruit flies have been exposed to human testing for "a lot of years" and asking what evolutionary processes have occurred in this period of time, shows that you are completely incapable of understanding the vast amounts of time that evolution naturally takes place in.


      So you're saying, by definition, that macro evolution is not observable?
    567. Re:Thank God! by larsho · · Score: 1

      Now, who wants to start a campaign to sticker bibles? Kids should be aware that the contents of that book are just a theory, and a pretty poorly supported one at that...

      I think all kids are aware of this.

      More imporantly, Bibles are not taught in school, so you miss the point.

      The point is this: People should be allowed to believe what they want AND teach this to their children.

      This whole discussion becomes pretty clear if we imagine the opposite situation: Creationism is the presented as the truth and the Bible is used in biology classes. Then, I think the minority (evolutionists) should have the right to present a different view, or at least put stickers on the Bibles.

    568. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "it would seem to me that all it does is say "take a scientific approach to this theory". how is that unscientific in any way?"

      You don't find such a thing redundant on a scientific text book??

      That's odd.

      And obviously the motivation for putting the sticker on is purely religious, and that in and of itself makes it pretty scary. Look, either you want the sticker on everything, or you think it's ridiculous to put it on anything. I'm in the latter camp. This position of wanting to put it ONLY on biology textbooks that mention evolution is such "cherry-picking" that it's motivation should be obvious to you, even if it isn't explicitly spelled out.

      Religious objection should have no bearing on the discussion and teaching of science.

    569. Re:Thank God! by lemaymd · · Score: 1

      those articles contain are either claims that have been roundly discredited by the scientific community or insignificant nitpicks that say nothing about whether the fossils came from an ancestor to humans.

      I haven't read anything recently speaking to these claims, it just seems as though the textbook producers doggedly hang on to old, discredited specimens. There are numerous in-depth articles explaining why it is highly implausible that any of these ape-men were human ancestors, and in fact the articles I listed give brief allusion to these when they say that it is most likely that most of these ape-men are in fact true apes. Evolutionists are simply grasping for straws trying to make intermediate forms from these ordinary creatures.

      You don't really believe their BS, do you?

      I and a large number of others see the evolutionists as the ones promoting irrational fantasies that can't be proven or reasonably trusted.

    570. Re:Thank God! by allanj · · Score: 1

      It is a fairly safe bet that at some point in the future either GRT or QT or both will be replaced with something more accurate.

      I've been thinking about this, and your post just triggered me. We've had physics for millenia (the four elements? Ancient Greek theories about atoms?), and all the previous attempts have proven to be wrong. Not altogether wrong, mind you - there were just classes of problems they could not answer satisfactorily (or at all). Every new iteration of physics theory has come about to correct some area of "wrongness", and we still see this today (superstring theory or Grand Unified Theory, for instance).

      Today the areas of wrongness usually either involve the very tiny stuff (atoms and subparticles thereof) or the very big stuff (cosmic theories like Big Bang - where's the dark matter?), but I'm firmly convinced that our "laws" of physics are wrong - at least in the sense that they are still not accurate enough in the extreme situations. So far, all other attempts have been proven wrong sooner or later - why should we be at the end of that particular road now? I'm pretty sure lots of people have concluded that throughout history, but they were - in hindsight - wrong.

      Of course the current laws of physics are immensely useful, but they are bound to be wrong in one way or another.

      --
      Black holes are where God divided by zero
    571. Re:Thank God! by arose · · Score: 1

      "Communism vs Capitalism? WWJC?"

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    572. Re:Thank God! by oz1cz · · Score: 2, Informative
      Oh, I forgot. They're just a bunch of brown-skinned pagans.
      FYI: There are more non-white Christians than white Christians in today's world.
    573. Re:Thank God! by cortana · · Score: 1

      Whoa, we don't want that! The Orange County Book Burners responsible for the sticker would just pull their kids out of school all together--better they are home schooled, than their minds are poisoned by the evil of books!

    574. Re:Thank God! by dr+eldritch · · Score: 1

      It's not horrible to have alternative view presented...so long as these views have a legitimate backing of evidence. Presenting a theory of Creationsim alongside evolution in a science text is inappropriate, since there is no evidence whatsoever to support Creationsim. Creationism is strictly a theological construct, requiring "faith" for belief. Science is about evidence.

      --
      out through the in door
    575. Re:Thank God! by tsr2 · · Score: 1

      They should put the same stickers on the front of bibles, just replace Evolution with Creationism.

    576. Re:Thank God! by arose · · Score: 1

      But science concerns itself with man's place in the universe in the literal sense...

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    577. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Furthermore, evolution does not attempt to explain the origin of life"

      Are u kidding me? You must only be thinking of what is called "Micro Evolution". Micro Evolution explains how species adapt to meet the needs of their environment. Or maybe "biological evolution" which is suppose to explain the diversity of life.

      You got chemical evolution, which is suppose to explain the process of creating life from nonliving matter. This sounds a lot like theorizing about the origin of life?

      Not to mention cosmic evolution.

    578. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Count the many atheistic gourps that are 501(c)3's and realize you're lying. Just because you don't use athe word "church" in your group think doesn't mean it's any different. Unless, of course, it is different, and you're going to hell or something.

    579. Re:Thank God! by Green+Salad · · Score: 1

      do we allow kids to throw salt over their shoulder, for good luck?

      It works on my icy driveway. More salt=fewer accidental slips.

      An underhand toss is ok for short distances, but an over the shoulder throw gets the salt further...you inconsiderate clod!

    580. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Heh. So a sticker that states: "This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." should be banned and somehow this is "a victory for reason?"

      Yes, because the next step after the stickers is going to be having intelligent design theory taught alongside evolution as an equally valid theory, and it simply isn't. The evidence is on the side of evolution and that is what should be taught. If/when intelligent design theory supporters collect enough evidence to replace evolution as the preferred theory of origin then it will be taught in textbooks. Until then it doesn't deserve to be, at least not in a science class. Nipping this in the bud means we don't have fight a bigger battle down the road.

      Evolution is a theory and like EVERYTHING, from theology to politics to science it should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.

      True, but you seem to be minimizing the "studied carefully" part. These kids are just starting to learn about the ideas behind evolution at this point. They aren't equipped to criticize it yet. I know it may be a strange concept here on /. where reading an article on any subject automatically qualifies you as an expert, but it helps to have a thorough knowledge of a subject before you start trying to poke holes in it. I have seen too many times some punk with a handful of knowledge (that includes me) making some grand argument that he thinks provides some new insight or debunks some established theory, when at best he is making points that more knowledgable people have already made. At worst he is just making a dumb argument. This happens too often in the evolution/creation argument and it explains why we keep covering the same ground going over and over for decades. So let's try teaching our kids what evolution actually is before we encourage them to criticize it.

      The Christians cheer when their crap is stuffed down everyone's throats and you cheer when people are silenced. The world's problems are obvious.

      Who is being silenced? Did this ruling also close all of the churches in the area? As someone who was raised in the deep south going to church every Sunday and most Wednesdays I can tell you that the creationist theory of the universe is not in danger of being suppressed. When you compare the amount time these kids will spend in a classroom learning about evolution and the amount of time sitting in a pew learning about the Lord's plan, there is really no contest.

    581. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I had an Electromagnetics textbook written by a prof who I assume was tortured by people like me who enjoy pointing out that these theories are all just based on past observations.

      There were frequent sentences in this textbook to the effect of "we know this is a theory based on what has already happened, but until something happens that doesn't fit in these theories we have a right to them." I thought this was hilarious. (My link might not be the same book, I can't remember the cover too well but it seems right)

    582. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, the magic wand of "time". Given enough time, evolutionists believe anything can happen. Yet what is the effect of time on a system? Entropy wins, degeneration happens. Without a force to guide it, energy applied results in chaos. Other than systems with chlorophyll in them, solar energy leads to decay. Check what happens to anything left in the sun long enough.

      Example: on 12/7/41 a country added massive amounts of energy to some vessels at Pearl Harbor. This energy resulted in increased chaos. Some years later, energy was added to two cities (by "fat man" and "little boy") and nothing was organized by that either.

    583. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh lord.

      Look, we don't know exactly how gravity works. The mechanics of it at the sub-atomic level. Heck, there isn't even really a leading theory for how it works.

      This does not mean that gravity isn't real. It just means we don't know all the details yet.

      Evolution is a fact. "Natural Selection" was one theory put forth to explain the observable fact of evolution. It has been refined over time, and there are competing theories debating certain points of the mechanics of evolution. Just because we don't know every detail about how it works does not mean it isn't a fact.

      The physicl evidence for common ancestry exists in our cells and in our DNA. Missing links are being discovered all the time. Evolution is about as pure as science gets and flies in the face of NO scientific principles. Your ignorance of the subject doesn't render it any less valid. It just mean you're ignorant.

      And that's what God is, and always has been: man's hand-waving to cover his own ignorance. When man didn't know why the wind blew, or what thunder was, he invented gods to explain them. Man has ALWAYS created gods in his own image, not the other way around. The concept of "god" is just a hand-waving, whistling in the dark way of avoiding saying "I don't know", and nothing else.

      There is no parity between science and religion. They are opposites. One is reason and provable and constantly changing and moving towards more correctness... the other is blind, ignorant, based on mindless unquestioning dogma and flies in the face of observable phenomina, and is rarely self-correcting.

      That it is impossible for your mind to believe that the universe exists without some "creator" or other invisible sky fairy is not proof of the existence of God, or even proof that evolution is false... it is nothing more than the failure of your own imagination.

      Just like science can't explain the pre-big bang universe, it also can't explain the "Why am I here question?"

      Religion cannot explain either of those things either. "Making up stories" is not "explaining". It's just making up stories. Religion is nothing more than someone who is too arrogant or uncomfortable to say "I don't know" claiming to know something they simply do not, and cannot.

    584. Re:Thank God! by dalutong · · Score: 1

      Um? The origin? There was none. Time had no beginning. Since there has been time in infinity there have been plenty of chances for the most random of things to occur. That includes what would have been necessary for the earliest organisms to be formed.

      I find that many people can't imagine that there was no beginning but that's because of the culture we're raised in. Also, we might eventually find evidence that provides more light on the "how did that first jump into life happen." But we're not going to make it up. And we're certainly not going to say, "well, since we can't understand it presently it must have been created by intelligent design!"

      --

      What comes first, finding a teacher or becoming a student?
    585. Re:Thank God! by Democratus · · Score: 1
      Okay, first off you suggest using Wikipedia as a reliable source?

      I looked up the history of the battle of Thermopolae last month and there was some nice writing there about how some guy loves boobies. Very nice. Good way to establish credability in your following arguments.

      You quote another user who states "Evolution is a fact in that we know it occurs and it has been seen occuring."

      You refute that this is a fact, but then say how Gravity is a fact because we see it?

      1) You didn't refute that we can see evolution occuring

      2) You state that we can see Gravity, thus it's a fact.

      There's a bit of contradiction in your argumentation.

      Also, you can't see gravity. Nobody can. You can see objects moving towards each other, but you are only observing the objects - not gravity.

      Then you state:

      "A law is something that is proven to happen once, and always happen no matter what."


      But that is just the problem. You can't ever know that something will "always happen no matter what". All you can do is test something again. As long as the test gives you the same results then your theory holds "so far".

      I love how you then state that we need to understand DNA 110%. Very scientific.

      And finally you tell us that the earth revolving around the sun is a theory and not a law. Well, it's certainly not a law. I don't think I've ever seen a law that states this.

      However, we can observe the earth revolving around the sun. It is a fact. You even say as much (observation = fact) in one of your several points-of-view.

      Conclusion:

      If someone wants to perface a scientific textbook with a definition of theory, hypothesis, fact, and observation - I have no problems. In fact most science textbooks DO have these explained in detail.

      But when someone wants to put a sticker on a book that addresses a SINGLE theory because it contradicts their religious beliefs...

      The judge did the right thing.
    586. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would seem all too pointless to me.

      That is a failure of your own imagination, not anything profound.

    587. Re:Thank God! by mensa4dummies · · Score: 1

      "Thinking critically is the foundation of science. Faith is the realm of mysticism."

      And faith in scientists and textbook editors is laziness.

      I agree, be critical of the Theory of Evolution. When you are, you can see that it does explain adaptation but not origination.

      The uncaused cause. There in lies the rub.

    588. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was nothing on the sticker mentioning religion at all. Simply that evolution is a theory and should be carefully and critically considered.

      You stated that:
      If they hadn't mentioned evolution, it wouldn't have been a "religious" issue.

      So by, your argument, mentioning evolution it became a religious issue. This leads me to the conclusion that a discussion of evolution is in itself a religious topic. Therefore we should all be up in arms that these schools are teaching a religious topic!

      So either evolution isn't a religious topic, in which case the stickers should be perfectly acceptable*. Or it is a religious topic, in which case it shouldn't even be taught at all.

      *Perfectly accpetable in the sense that any science textbook which teaches any theory as though it were a fact needs a sticker like this to point out that this theory is indeed, just a theory. My understanding is that these textbooks presented evolution as a cold hard fact, in which case the stickers were absolutely necessary. I would suggest that some of the obstacles to evolution also be presented, or even contradictory positions. Is the theory of evolution so weak that it must be taught as a fact and not thought about critically?

    589. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called action and reaction.

      A religious nutcase insists that public schools teach that their invisible sky-fairy is real and true, and I react negatively to that.

      I don't care what people use as mental crutches to get through the day on their own time and in their own personal life. But when they try to pass off their crutches and delusions and irrational beliefs as fact in the public forum, then yeah, I'm going to push back and stand up for our Constitutional separation of church and state.

      It always galls me how religious people always START the problems by attacking, and then whine that they're attacked when people react by defending themselves.

    590. Re:Thank God! by aborchers · · Score: 1
      First of all...,

      hermeneutics: The theory and methodology of interpretation, especially of scriptural text.


      Note that it doesn't mention the Bible, unless you are assuming that it is the only scriptural text, which puts you on dangerous grounds from a critical thinking perspective.

      As for literal or non-literal. When all the (non-testimonial) *evidence* in the universe points to its being old, doesn't the context demand that the 6 days or Creation be considered non-literal?

      Also, your photosynthesis argument is both a straw man and a red herring. I have never heard any advocated of evolution claim that plants were around for 1 billion years between their emergence and the emergence of animal life. In general, evolutionary theory is going to be consistent with accepted *scientific* theory about the age of the universe and the solar system. It must in order to be credible. The interval from the Jurassic to the common era is commonly accepted at only 65 million years, for example, and the prior eras in the history of life on Earth stretch for hundreds of millions of years, easily within the boundaries of the accepted "old" age of the solar system.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    591. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented.

      Because creationism is not science.

      You wanna teach it in Theology class? Go for it.

      As an evolutionist, I'll support you all the way, and I'll even argue that evolution should not be taught in a Theology class, because it does not require the belief in any God.

      By the way, when we speak of the alternate view that is Intelligent Design, we are talking about the holy Enuma Elish, in which Marduk, whom we hail by his fifty names, created it all, right? Not that silly Judeo-Christian God of yours. Right?

    592. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I recall reading, some years ago, about a religious community in British Columbia which ran its own schools. The kids were actually taught that "1 + 1 = 2*", where the asterisk was intended to represent the alteration that numbers are subject to when manipulated.

    593. Re:Thank God! by mensa4dummies · · Score: 1

      Darwinian Dogma. I think I have the name for my new band!

    594. Re:Thank God! by DemingBuiltMyHotRod · · Score: 1
      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented.

      It is not horrible to have an alternate view presented. It is however, horrible to have the state lend credence to the fringe beliefs of one particular group of religious nut-jobs.

      If creationism is going to be taught in schools, then the creation myths of all other religions should be taught as well, unless it is the state's position that one particular religious viewpoint should be preferred and promoted.

      I, for one, would prefer not to have a state established religion. Presumably there is a silent majority that agrees with this viewpoint, seeing as how seperation of church and state made it into the Constitution. ("Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion...")

    595. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The proposed textbook sticker was deceptive because the word 'theory' has different meaning in science and common language. Science talks about relativity theory, Newton theory, etc, which have extremely strong experimental support. In common language 'theory' is subjected to much lower standard ('that is theory' means no factual support).

      'Creation theory' is a theory in common language sense. 'Evolution theory' is a scientific theory.

      I would have no problems with adding 'creation theory' to the scientific curriculum but only after its proponents provide adequate *scientific* arguments.

      Finally, it is characteristic that the usual criticism of the Darwin's theory ignores advances of contemporary evolutionary biology.

    596. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fact #2: a genetic sequence can change sufficiently to form a new species. Speciation has been observed more than once in the laboratory and in the wild, so this is a fact. Since we call this process 'evolution', that means evolution is a fact. Keep reading for more explanation of this.

      Lets make sure we make a distinction here between Microevolution and Macroevolution.

      What you've just described here is microevolution. Which yes, is a fact.

      Macroevolution, that is, one species changeing into another species is by no means a fact. It is not an observable process and there exists no proof that such a change happens. Macroevolution is a theory.

      Perhaps what I'm calling Macroevolution is what you're calling "The Theory of Evolution". Maybe we're talking about the same thing here, but I just wanted to make that distinction.

    597. Re:Thank God! by Papparazzi · · Score: 1

      :)
      "a bunch of retarded homicidal apes"
      Things don't change much with time hunh? :)

      --
      01101101 01111001 00100000 01110011 01101001 01100111
    598. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you don't believe that MILLIONS of years of micro-evolution piled up on top of each other over time would result in macro-evolution? Excuse me?

      I mean, if you admit that micro-evolution does happen, and that we can see even dramatic results within just a span of years and decades, then how can you assert that such changes would not accrue over millions of years, resulting in what would by then be a completely different species?

      That makes no sense. You're desperately clinging to an idea that evolution doesn't happen out of some emotional need, and not based on any facts or understanding of the science involved. In short, you're not really being rational.

    599. Re:Thank God! by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
      Instead of that, the textbooks present a history of events involving the theory, and explain evolutionary theory, but do nothing for showing weaknesses in evolutionary theory.

      Funny, nobody complains if a book on relativity or quantum mechanics just explains those models (which is what "theory" means here, not in the sense that Cobb county used it), without pointing out the major weakness that they aren't compatable. (Note that this does not make the models wrong or "guesses", as the evolution stickers would suggest, but just incomplete.) How many books on Newtonian dynamics point out it is an incomplete model because it doesn't take into account relativity effects. Newtonian dynamics is almost universally used in engineering and science except for the few fields where relativity is required.

      It is only when the presented model differs from a religious doctrine that some people seem to find the presentation should require listing of weaknesses or suggest that the whole thing is a "guess". People who think "theory" and "facts" are different and are metrics for how to present a model are the ones who need an education on just what knowledge is and how it is formed.

    600. Re:Thank God! by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      In this particular case, evolution, in my opinion, flies in the face of science by ignoring some of the obvious missing pieces of evidence.

      A theory is valid as long as there is no better theory available. If you can come up with a better theory, then that one will be valid. That doesn't mean that a hypothesis which explains nothing and is readily disproved was equally valid.

      Just like science can't explain the pre-big bang universe, it also can't explain the "Why am I here question?".

      This argument always surprises me - the religions I'm familiar with (not many, admittedly) don't provides an answer explanation to this either. An omnipotent god who needs to do something doesn't make sense, and saying "because god did it" or "because god wants it" is not technically an explanation.

    601. Re:Thank God! by clickster · · Score: 1

      It's the school's job to teach science and stay out of religion. Religion is the parent's domain. If you don't believe in evolution, tell your kids that. It's no different than telling your kids that you think their history book's interpretation of how an event or period of history happened is crap. It's like an atheist wanting to sue you because you told their kid about the Bible or God. If someone else has complete control over your child's beliefs and you don't have any influence over them (your kid), then you have serious parenting issues.

      --
      If you mod me down, I shall become less powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    602. Re:Thank God! by jotok · · Score: 1

      Yes...Youth sees the sun rise and denies that the previous day ever occurred.

    603. Re:Thank God! by sbrown123 · · Score: 1

      Okay, I have no problem with the sticker EXCEPT it never includes "Creationism is a theory, not a fact". Seems fair to present BOTH as theories rather than just evolution.

      Evolution is always open for question or debate. Its a scietific theory. You can try to find flaws in it all you want. Its actually desired that you try to prove any scientific theory as incorrect. Same with creationism. Is you prove either theory as wrong, you either give more credit to the other OR create a new theory.

    604. Re:Thank God! by kmak · · Score: 1

      I doubt it.

      --

      I'm not the devil.. just his advocate.
    605. Re:Thank God! by Opie812 · · Score: 0

      I believe evolution (the part that states all life formed from some primordial soup as well as we all evolved from apes) is ridiculous as best

      Clearly you don't understand evolution then. It doesn't say we evolved from apes. Also it doesn't say anything about the origins of life. (ie, the primoridal soup you talk about)

      --
      I'm not a nerd. Nerds are smart.
    606. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is not alternate views -- any good scientific presentation includes those, and tries to teach critical evaluation of all ideas. The problem is the singling out of only the theory of evolution in a biology textbook for special treatment.

      To be consistent, any physics textbook should contain a sticker saying that gravitation is "only a theory", that the atom is "only a theory", that quantum mechanics is "only a theory", and so on. All scientific interpretations have questions and criticms when you dig into them, and all of them have uncertainties in the current understanding, no matter how confident most scientists are about them. Sheesh, in physics and chemistry, teachers commonly begin by teaching students theories that we *know* to be wrong (or at least incomplete), such as Newtonian mechanics and the Bohr theory of the atom! Even for advanced ideas about gravitation, such as relativity, there are plenty of criticisms of the conventional scientific theories, yet when scientists talk about the "theory of relativity", they actually do so with a great deal of confidence.

      So, why not push to put such disclaimers in all science textbooks to respect the tentative nature of all scientific theories? It's obvious why not. Because the labels of these biology textbooks aren't motivated by a real scientific issue, that's just a facade. They are motivated by religion, and only a subset of the many religious believers out there -- only the ones who apparently can't stand the idea of their children or anyone else's being exposed to current scientific theories that happen to conflict with their own personal religious interpretations, without trying to confuse students with simplistic dictionary definitions of "fact" or "theory".

      If you watch an apple drop to the ground, saying gravity is responsible is still an interpretation open to scientific debate and criticism. Calling the interpretation a "fact" or "theory" does not change the situation. Likewise, even if you have a deeply-held belief that something else is responsible, it does not excuse physics teachers and textbooks from introducing the scientific theory that the majority of scientists accept, and they should teach students how to critically evaluate those ideas as much as anything else. Seletively adding a "disclaimer" only for certain theories and subjects does nothing to help this process, and it certainly isn't put there because of the science, or because of the laudable goal of motivating students to think critically. If it was, then the labels should be on *everything*.

    607. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, even THE POPE believes in evolution.

      If it isn't clear and obvious to you that we are animals on this earth just like apes and monkeys and others, then you're being wilfully blind.

      We are not separate from animals. We are animals ourselves.

      You're clinging to an old text as if it were fact, while accusing scientists of clinging to scientific facts. It kinda makes you look foolish at best.

    608. Re:Thank God! by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 1
      he got into his troubles for mocking the orthodoxy

      It was the hypocrisy and lack of humility and faith that he mostly mocked. People were not acting as they had been called to be by the prophets and other writings of the scriptures.

      telling people to make their spirituality an individual thing rather than kneeling in pews and chanting by rote.

      He told people that they needed God's forgiveness in order to have a personal relationship with him, rather than simply doing things by rote. And while their is a private aspect to that, there is also a public one, with calls for corporate worship of God and a commission to share the good news of people able to repent and receive forgiveness.

      hile on the subject, the committee that formed the whole of the religious canon of Christianity

      Actaully, the canon was already being used by many churches. The council merely confirmed what was already in use.

      did so from a narrow selection of letters

      Quiten a few letters along with 4 gospels and the book of Acts, actually.

      written by fanatical cult members

      You mean Peter, who was the leader of Jesus' handpicked disciples? OR James, Jesus' brother who was highly skeptical of Jesus until after the resurrection? Or Paul, an apostle, who killed Christians until his conversion? Or John, one of the closest friends of Jesus You mean the leaders of the early church? People who suffered a great deal, were tortured and eventually martyred for what they preached and beleived, knowing whether or not it was the truth?

      Christ's divinity was decided by a (non-unanimous) majority vote of the men present.

      Christ's divinity is clear the whole Bible and was widely proclaimed during his ministry and the ministry of the early church.

      Much of the body of the Bible was written in letters by a schizophrenic who was born a hundred years after Christ's death.

      Considering that most of the people comprises the OT, which was complete several hundred years before his birth and the rest is by contemporaries of Jesus, your claim is rather far off.

      Religion is one of the better examples of evolution around. They all interbreed and mutate to survive their environment.

      That was very much the problem with the Roman Catholic church, which is one of the reasons for the Reformation and its rallying call of 'sola scriptura,' directing people to go back to the Bible, get things from the source rather than from traditions and society.

      Stoned any gays lately? Or adulterers?

      There is a difference between law and state punishment. We are not the ancient state of Israel, therefore we are not obliged to use the same punishments as them. The law has also been fulfilled in Jesus, rendering obedience to ceremonial laws redundant. In fact, to obey them now would be to deny the work of the cross. Adultery and homosexual acts however are not ceremonial and are still very much offensive to God. But everyone has turned from God in their lives, no-one follows him perfectly, so people who do such things are in further beyond his love and offer of forgiveness that anyone else.

    609. Re:Thank God! by SithLordOfLanc · · Score: 0

      Koalas didn't teleport, they rode in the kangaroo's pouch.

    610. Re:Thank God! by M$Lackey · · Score: 1

      The problem is that even though it feels nice to fill the seeming holes of scientific theory with religious stuffing, it doesn't make it reasonable or scientifically sound to do so. The

      "where do we come from?"
      "why are we here?" and
      "where are we going?"

      questions have been asked by humans in many generations in all known cultures.

      IMHO those questions where the reason we as humans invented our multitude of different religions.

      I believe the answers to the questions to be:
      a) nowhere special (we are constituted by the atoms that are part of our cellular organism)
      b) no particular reason (other than to reproduce our DNA for future generations) and
      c) nowhere special (other than to have our biological material be decomposed or combusted)

      Now most people will say that this is a cynical, cold, uninspired and pessimistic view of life. Sure it is. But it is by far the most probable explanation. Why is it that when faced with a negative consequence of their logical reasoning so many minds go bluescreen and stop responding.

    611. Re:Thank God! by TheSync · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I'm in the minority, but I came to my faith, not early on in my childhood, but much later in adulthood.

      There is increasing evidence that religion is something that humans are predisposed to, along the lines of language. All humans have language, but acquire different languages. Similarly, most humans have religion, but acquire different ones. All human language is made from a finite group of phonemes and grammars, but each language chooses a slightly different group. Similarly, all human religions draw from a group of finite themes.

      There are certain brain regions which have been correlated with "mystical" feelings, and stimulation of these areas (with high powered magnetic fields, for instance) can induce the ability to feel "the infinite," "God", etc. The circuitry for religion is inside our brains.

      Religion is probably is an evolved behavior, like language or love. Religions often help to encourage personal behaviors for individual survival and interpersonal behaviors for group survival.

      I think as humans, we need to accept our spiritual tendencies, the way we accept our (often irrational) feelings of love, but not to be blinded by them to reality.

    612. Re:Thank God! by 0BoDy · · Score: 1

      I find it Ironic that you say "Thank God" and then call this ruling sense. I think you need to get yourself staightened out. If you believe God exists, then how can you believe he didn't create the universe?

      --
      Can I be a Luddite too?
    613. Re:Thank God! by Dreadknott · · Score: 1

      That was verry well stated, but christiandom is not in decline. Here in Texas, new churches are being built on every corner with tax money meant for the homeless, Sen. Jeff Wentworth tried to pass a law requiring one minute of silent prayer by every student in public school. The senator couldnt pass the law as prayer so he renamed it "silent reflection" Now all public schools in Texas must observe the US Pledge, the State Pledge, their individual school Pledge, and the minute of silent reflection. Homless wretches panhandle on every corner, churches are building huge congregations and houses to shelter them, prostletizing witnesses are sending children door to door instead of being in school. What I would like to know is, what is so important for any child between the ages of five and ten to "reflect silently" about for one minute . Christiandom is on the increase, ignorance, superstition, and racism continue to impede the social development of comunities here in the south. Throughout history, whenever things were at their worst, religion latched onto comunities like a blood sucking leach, America is no different today.

    614. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, no. That's a rather stupid statement.

      I don't reject god because religious people aren't perfect and religions aren't perfect. I reject "god" because it is so obviously a creation of man. It is used by some to explain what they don't know (aka "Hand-waving"), and it is used by others to control the weak (aka religion being the opiat of the masses and all that).

      I reject it because it doesn't even pass the sniff test, let alone any real evidence.

      I reject it because I'm educated in history and a critical thinker. I see the origins and evolution of gods and religions, and it's clear they're entirely man-made concepts and made up myths, fables, and stories.

      Nobody's perfect. And I do not reject god because people that believe in god or the religions that posit god's existence are imperfect. I reject it because it's just a plain old silly and and ignorant notion.

    615. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Christ was actually quite set against organized >religion; he got into his troubles for mocking the >orthodoxy and telling people to make their >spirituality an individual thing rather than >kneeling in pews and chanting by rote.

      This is ofcourse untrue Jesus was against
      Jews belief system. Nothing from his sayings
      indicate that he was against organized religion
      as a whole.

      True is that he didn't gave anyone the luxury
      of monopoly over him.

    616. Re:Thank God! by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      Well if you claim you are teaching science, then you should actually do that. If you alternatively want to teach religion, at least be honest about it. Sure you can teach alternative viewpoints - if they have any scientific merit. Failing that they should however not be taught as science, but as the religious views they are.

      I think it would be a dramatic failure of an education system, if it taught children that any hypothesis is equally valid.

    617. Re:Thank God! by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      When some one comes with proof that something "supernatural" pushed evolution in the "right" direction, then we will accept it.

      The supernatural pretty much by definition can't be proven. But that doesn't mean it isn't true. Provably true is a subset of truth, after all.

      Until then, its a wild guess with no substance.

      It's hard for me to see how saying that everything happened by mere coincidence is any better. It's a safe assumption, perhaps, but that certainly doesn't make it a true fact.

      By the way, can you prove that you were not dancing naked yesterday nite ? If not, you must have been dancing naked. Hows that sound ?

      I never used this type of logic. I'm merely expressing a healthy bit of skepticism toward the assertion that human life arose through random accident.

    618. Re:Thank God! by StyroCupMan · · Score: 1

      The idea that the Earth travels around the Sun is just part of the theory of Planetary Motion. Electrons are just part of Atomic Theory. If they don't exist, your computer doesn't work. Gravity is just a theory.

      I think you are the one misunderstanding the meaning of theory. Gravity is our theory to explain why things fall. That things fall nobody doubts. But what causes them to fall is science's current best guess based on the scientific method. Similarly with atomic theory. The principles of atomic theory are our best guess at explaining how things work and will most likely change over time. Just because it changes does not mean computers will stop working - just that our understanding of how computers work will be different.

      --
      If I may say so, life is a game, and there's so much to do and so few turns.
      -Reiner Knizia
    619. Re:Thank God! by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you have encountered The Species Problem! You know, the problem is that there actually is no 100% certain way to tell what is a Species.

      Yeah, it's easy to say that animals that can't interbreed are different species. If it only were that simple! In the Real World, we have individuals of different populations classified into their own species'. They live in different ecological niches, have different mating rituals etc etc, but if they tried, they would actually produce fertile offspring. So - what is a species, then? Nobody in the field of Biology accepts one one simple definition of a species. Ask some northern hemisphere seagulls - every now and then even they can't tell which gull belongs to their species and which one doesn't.

      Of course, this is all too complicated for the Creationists. If a population of a certain species has significantly altered its habits or changed its phenotype, Creationists still call the animal the same as before - because they know where it came from. And this is the Creationist Species Problem: when the Creationist species definition is like this, the result is that there cannot be any new species ever. Just like all those hominine fossils are always either apes or modern humans (funnily enough, the Creationists cant' agree which of these creatures are 'apes' and which are 'humans'). Therefore, by definition, a new species is impossible, according to Creationist logic.

      What would you call a new species? If one day a snake was born that had wings and that couldn't interbreed with its close relatives? Sorry, but that's not how evolution works. It isn't a series of impossible jumps, but instead reminiscent of a genetical gradient.

    620. Re:Thank God! by aborchers · · Score: 1

      I'd agree with you that in the case of these stickers, the fundies are on the attack and deserve to be handed their asses.

      I'm referring to a more general tendency of self-righteous atheists feeling it is their moral (?!) obligation to berate religous people.

      Your "crutch" assertion, for example. Somehow, anyone who has any religous inclination is a supersitous peasant and you are the enlightened philosopher king who must set them straight.

      Bullshit, I say. I'd much rather spend my days in the company of pleasant people than arrogant jackasses, regardless of the role of religion in their life.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    621. Re:Thank God! by schtum · · Score: 1

      You just answered your own question. Solar energy feeds plant life. Plant life feeds herbivores. Herbivores feed carnivores. In sickness and in death, all of the above feed fungi and bacteria. It's called the food chain. Look it up.

    622. Re:Thank God! by aborchers · · Score: 1

      Then, quite simply, the statement wasn't referring to you, and it stands.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    623. Re:Thank God! by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      The fact of the matter is, evolution can't possibly be synonymous with Darwin's theory of natural selection, because scientists had been actively trying to figure out how evolution works long before Darwin was on the scene.

      I'm not saying that every use of the term "evolution" refers to Darwin's theory of evolution. What I'm saying is that it seems the use of the term in this context does. Do you think Lamarckian Evolution is covered in this student textbook? I highly doubt it. "Darwin's theory of evolution" certainly is a synonym for "evolution".

      Let's sincerely hope that the law and the theory are separate entities, because otherwise we're going to have to come up with a new word.

      I'm not sure what you mean by "the law" and "the theory", but surely context needs to be used. In the context of this sticker, it's specifically saying that evolution is a theory, so it's clearly talking about the theory. Perhaps this is just using weasel words, and I don't like the sticker very much anyway, but using the term "evolution" as a synonym for "Darwin's theory of evolution" is a well accepted usage. I could bring out other dictionaries, if you'd like, or you could just look it up yourself.

    624. Re:Thank God! by legojenn · · Score: 1

      Well, they could put stickers on every bible in the county stating that "the bible is full of metaphors and is not actually the word of g!d". I'm sure that would go over well.

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    625. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, they've been able to create simple amnio acids with are the basis for proteins and thus cells from scratch using both electricity and extreme cold with atmospheric conditions scientists believe were prevalent 3.5 billion years ago on earth. So they've shown ways that life could start. Plus, no one says that complex multi-cellular life sprang spontaneously from nowhere, but amino acids could, thus eventually forming single cells leading to groups of cells etc...

      Also, I think the issue was that the sticker unfairly singled out evolution over other theories. Note that theory just means scientists dont completely understand its mechanisms yet. They're still learning about it. If it was just a hypothesis, then it'll be a different story. People seem to misunderstand what a theory exactly is. Note that Quantum mechanics is just a theory too, yet it forms a basis for all modern electronics and photonics, and we dont see religious people cry afoul about it.

    626. Re:Thank God! by snorklewacker · · Score: 1

      I'll give you a topic: the fact that a modicum of critical thought when applied to creationism and its various guises completely demolishes them as workable theories. Discuss.

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    627. Re:Thank God! by sbrown123 · · Score: 1


      It's kind of funny how they treat their theory like a religion.


      No, its kinda sad how people are so misguided with their religion that they try to make it a science. Throughout history, religion has been incorrectly used as a science (good example is how religion was used for medical purposes). True science has always prevailed and it made some look down upon religion because of this.

      Religion is not a science. Don't use it as one. Science is not a religion. Don't see it as one.

      They do not go "hand in hand". They also should never compete. If you find yourself doing so, your just wrong.

    628. Re:Thank God! by cherokee158 · · Score: 1

      What many people seem to forget in these endless debates about the "Theory" of Evolution is that science defines "Theory" as a working model of the universe...that is, it embraces the model as fact for all practical purposes until evidence to the contrary requires a rethinking of the model...at which time, scientists will cheerfully rework their findings and put forth a new theory. And all without placing a single sticker on anything.

      It is simply understood that science takes everything with a grain of salt. No sticker necessary.

      That is the difference between how religion and science consider the universe. Scientists are willing to explore new possibilities, and those who discover new ideas are lauded...not branded as heretics.

      It's the difference between discovering the universe, or just taking someone's "word" for it.

      I wonder how people would feel if someone insisted that they put warning stickers on the Bible?

    629. Re:Thank God! by Dreadknott · · Score: 1

      There is no reason for you being here, there is no " after life ", no one will ever know why the universe is here, you are as insignificant as one grain of sand on all the worlds beaches, but hey! if you cant handle that, GOD! WOW! that feels better!

    630. Re:Thank God! by Miraba · · Score: 1
      Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry? Where are the missing links? In this particular case, evolution, in my opinion, flies in the face of science by ignoring some of the obvious missing pieces of evidence.

      Did you know that we can make a chicken with teeth by simply switching on a gene that already exists in their genome?

      Here is the theory of Punctuated Equilibrium. Simply stated, the "missing links" that so many creationists demand (and then dismiss, asking for the one before that) are missing because they don't exist. Not all evolutionary changes are small ones. When there is a large change (such as switching a gene on or off, leading to a presence or lack of teeth), it can often be accomplished in a single generation. As a result, there are few intermediate species showing the progress of quantitative changes (macroevolution). Examples of qualitative changes (microevolution) are quite abundant, but I'm guessing that you'll say that doesn't count.

    631. Re:Thank God! by berbo · · Score: 1
      Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry?
      Try comparing DNA from humans and apes: >99% identical. Try comparing DNA from humans and bacteria for that matter.

      To me, it simply seems to impossible to think that the universe and all that's in it, including us, is the result of some random roll of the cosmic dice.
      Well, thats the way it seems to you. Not all of us are blinded by mysticism.
    632. Re:Thank God! by fruman · · Score: 1

      Gotta wonder how many of those textbooks are still using the Haeckel diagrams. He admitted fraud in 1909. As of my graduation in the mid-90's his fake diagrams were still in the textbooks. Microevolution is scientific fact. Macroevolution is scientific theory being taught as fact.

    633. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody thinks monkeys turned into humans. That's not part of the theory. Duh.

    634. Re:Thank God! by PeanutGallery · · Score: 1

      Good thing. If you don't stop this sort of thing right away, people start thinking they can say whatever they want, start thinking they can think whatever they want... in short, that "bill of rights" thing has got to go!

      --
      -- Just another unsolicited opinion... from the Peanut Gallery.
    635. Re:Thank God! by sarlen · · Score: 1
      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented.

      Because if we weren't Christian Creationism would be some fantastic unprovable idea. Why would we teach something in a science textbook that has not, as of yet, survived the scientific method? The very foundation of science is the discovery of idea through observable and sensical facts - Creationism's only primary source is a book no one can claim is near 100% consistant in any capacity.

      We're not talking about sociology class, we're talking about SCIENCE.

    636. Re:Thank God! by Decaff · · Score: 1

      Name a positive mutation in, for example, drosophila (fruit flies). These beasties have been bombarded with gamma radiation and any other mutagenic source for a lot of years.

      Mutation of a single gene has resulted in a doubling of life span. This is the 'I am not dead yet' gene!

    637. Re:Thank God! by PeanutGallery · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I say, if I agree with a person or not is one thing. Its this whole "thought police" junk that really torques me.

      --
      -- Just another unsolicited opinion... from the Peanut Gallery.
    638. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      While on the subject, the committee that formed the whole of the religious canon of Christianity did so from a narrow selection of letters written by fanatical cult members over three hundred years earlier. Christ's divinity was decided by a (non-unanimous) majority vote of the men present. Much of the body of the Bible was written in letters by a schizophrenic who was born a hundred years after Christ's death.

      Looks like somebody is using "The Da Vinci Code" as their source of church history. Remember, the "Code" is a work of fiction. There are many books out that refute each point the author claims as fact.

    639. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly you are misinformed about who wrote the Bible. The man you refer to when you describe him as a schizophrenic and who wrote "much of the body" of the Bible must be Paul (Saul of Tarsus). Unfortunately, you are sadly mistaken that he "was born a hundred years after Christ's death." Paul (Saul, at that time) was a contemporary of Jesus of Nazareth. He persecuted Christians during the time of Christ. He was a member of the High Priests. Many of his letters are widely believed by scholars to have been written between 40-50 AD, that's 8-18 years after Christ's death. All of his letters were written by 62 AD at which time he was put to death in Rome for his belief that Jesus was the Christ. So he was killed a scant 30 years after Jesus was crucified.

      And by what evidence do you label him a schizophrenic? Do you really label him that way because you don't like him and what he believed and preached?

    640. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's put this another way. Suppose the science-literate majority insisted that stickers be placed on bibles stating that the concept of a diety or "god" was an unproven and unprovable theory that is not supported by any observable phenomenon, and readers should attempt to keep an open mind with respect to the validity of the writings within. Would the religious be content with that? It's just a statement of fact, neither promoting nor denegrating any particular religion or religious practice.

      Cute analogy, but they don't force the Bible upon children in the U.S.'s public schools.

    641. Re:Thank God! by TWX · · Score: 1

      I see that you missed all of the qualifiers in my original post. You probably also missed the scientific definition of Theory and the mathematical relationship between distance, velocity, and time.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    642. Re:Thank God! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I agree that the reason the sticker is on the books is definitely biased but the message itself is fairly neutral and fully accurate so far as I can tell. If they had stated that the theory of evolution was false or had been proven incorrect then they would be inaccurate and the sticker defintely should be removed. As it stands it is just a statement of common sense that should be practiced by any scientist.

      If the sticker had just been a general informative statement that scientific theories != facts; No problem.

      BUT, it singled out one theory. It is clearly an attack on that one single theory. And therefore not a statement of common sense to be followed by all scientists. What does a phycisist care about that statement? It's directed at biology, not physics.

      It was worded to sound neutral, but it obviously isn't.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    643. Re:Thank God! by jbgeorge · · Score: 1

      Should physics textbooks carry a sticker that gravity is just a theory also?

      Actually how about we put those stickers on everyone s Bible.. to say that there are alternate ideas on how we came about on this earth.. not just by creation as this book would have you believe.

    644. Re:Thank God! by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      > The belief that there is no god is obviously a belief of a religious nature.

      Yes, but having no religious beliefs at all is not, and a great many 'atheists' fit this description.

      I do not say that god does not exist, only that I have seen no reason to believe that he does.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    645. Re:Thank God! by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

      It would take an omnipotent being to prove that ANY theory/hypothesis is a fact/law. Every postulation can never be proven, if only because we cannot observe the universe in its continuity.

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
    646. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the judge in this case ruled the stickers unconstitutional because an attack directed at evolution in this manner, to any reasonably intelligent person, is an endorsement of religion. This was simply christian fundamentalists trying to play fast and loose with the rules.

      If you question scientific theories, then you're endorsing religion? Doesn't anyone else see how stupid this argument is? You can't ignore what someone says just because they're religious, you know.

    647. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going a little off topic... let's look at how Christ lived his life. He hung out with hookers, lepers, and unclean women. That's pretty bold for a Jewish teacher in his day. He was a pacifist and lived in the moment. He didn't write anything down either. So it is inevitable that us dirty little humans would take advantage of his seeming nonchalance, promote him to figure head and then use some half-baked philosophical drivel to twist this new religion into an instrument of control.

      The Bible is largely a farse that has been perverted. The Old Testament proved this and Christ's actions confirmed it. Religion need only go as far as the individual, after that it is a cult. Christ lived like a Bhuddist: harmoneously with his environment. If we could even try to do that we wouldn't need the Bible, but we'd be a hell of a lot harder to control.

      As far as evolution goes, Darwin's theory was proven long ago. The only thing that keeps it from wider scale acceptance are the xenophobic little right-wing americans nervously clutching their bibles and guns.

    648. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      This whole discussion becomes pretty clear if we imagine the opposite situation: Creationism is the presented as the truth and the Bible is used in biology classes.

      You're trying to defend a violation of chuch and state by saying "lets imagine an even more severe violation of chuch and state"? LOL!

      The constitution guarantees us freedom of religion. Freedom from the government using force against us for religious purposes. To ensure that right of freedom of religion for everyone government power may not be imposed on us for religious purposes or to grant special favor to any particular religion. Separation of church and state.

      The school board's rule had no legitimate educational purpose, no legitimate scientific purpose, no legitimate government purpose at all. They established official government discreditation of one specifically targeted feild of science, and the sole purpose in doing so was as a grant of special favor on behalf of a particular religious belief.

      A constitutionally prohibited purpose.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    649. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      proof by induction? :) Base case - you burn your hand the first time, the Nth case you burned your hand the 999,999 - therefore must hold true for the Nth+1 case

    650. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All science is is theory. You can't "prove" anything. Why single out evolution or anything involving the origin of species?

      Not everything is a theory. Observable phenomena are considered facts, unless you're taking a philosophical argument.

    651. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take it from a lawyer.

      The problem is not "the sticker". It was that a school board is a government body. Government bodies are [generally] disallowed from respecting an establishment of religion. By pandering to the parents who needed a sticker in their book to the make the world safe, the school board took a position on religion. How so?

      As far as biological science is concerned evolution is an observed phenomenon. Does this make it stronger than theory? To a scientist, no. And every Bio textbook I've seen (only 3) titles that section "The THEORY of Evolution." There is no debate in the sciences as to whether it is a theory or an absolute fact.

      Given that context, the only reason "evolution is a theory, not a fact"-stickers were slapped into textbooks was because some parents wished for the school board to suggest that something other than evolution was absolute fact.

      It's not as strong as saying, "No Christians are allowed to attend public school." But it's still impermissible. If you want to send your children to public schools in the United States you must also accept that government bodies, such as school districts, are bound by the Constitution.

      What should the school district have done? Nodded its head and done absolutelyl nothing.

    652. Re:Thank God! by TylerTheGreat · · Score: 1

      A vat full of chemicals sitting in a lab is very different from, say, a samp in the real world. And, maybe, just maybe, theses things went from a state of dissorder to order, which seems to violate a law of thermodynamics or two. Actually, there are two cases when it would now: a. Temperature change, but that would only effectivly slow the movement. b. Applied intelligence, but that would promote some kind of all powerfull extraterrestial being, and God forbid we ever have that.

    653. Re:Thank God! by orpx · · Score: 1

      404

    654. Re:Thank God! by skrug · · Score: 1

      Sure but in the science community the term "Theory" means the accepted truth or fact as the evidence presents itself. Theories are well substantied and often contain laws, factes and tested hypotheses.

    655. Re:Thank God! by TylerTheGreat · · Score: 1

      I think we should slap sticker on to text books warning that gravity is just a theory. I just want to see the millions of physics teachers about the country foulder over their own tounges to come up with a better answer. Honestly though, this country could use some outward thinking like that.

    656. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but if their objection is based on their religion then you can and certainly should ignore them. Honestly, does anyone believe that the parents in this district object to the teaching of evolution because they researched the theory and noted all of the problems with it? Or is it more likely that they are against it because it isn't what the church teaches?

    657. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why no-one uses 'law' to describe new laws. It's seen as a holdover from the enlightenment. That doesn't change the definition of law as a mathematical relationship.

    658. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's interfering with science education at the behest of a religious entity. This alone makes it unconstitutional, but judges are perfectly allowed to look behind the curtain and note the real reason for the sticker and rule accordingly.

    659. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there must be a clear line drawn between the dark ages of thought and modern thought.

      Approaching the theory of evolution with an open mind means you are in the "dark ages of thought"? Why must everyone be so melodramatic? It's not like they're putting Bibles in front of the kids! They never even mentioned a deity or religion!

    660. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a common misconception. A law is not a special kind of theory that someone has decided is fundamental. A law as the grandparent poster describes is a mathematical relationship between two observed values. It has no explanatory power. There are laws of relativity (e=mc^2 is one of them), but Einstein also attempted an explanation for why these relationships hold. That's why we have a theory of relativity as well.

      The word law is rarely used these days for new observations because of the very confusion you've demonstrated.

    661. Re:Thank God! by Khomar · · Score: 1
      Much of the body of the Bible was written in letters by a schizophrenic who was born a hundred years after Christ's death.

      On what grounds are you making this claim? All of the authors of the New Testament were alive during the time of Christ, and all of the books were written within 70 years of the death of Jesus. The entire Old Testament was written at least four hundred years prior to the birth of Jesus. Regardless of whether or not you believe what they wrote or agree with the currently accepted Biblical canon, the historical evidence for authorship in the first century is very strong.

      Stoned any gays lately? Or adulterers?

      No, and the reason is quite simple. The Old Testament law was a list of civil laws that governed the nation of Israel. This was their constitution, if you will, and the laws were enforced by their government. We as individuals, however, do not have the right to execute justice reserved for the government. The Ten Commandments, on the other hand, are personal commandments. This is why we are told not to murder, but the nation of Israel is instructed to perform capital punishment. One is for the person; the other is for the individual. This is how it has always been, at least from a Biblical perspective.

      --

      I believe in de-evolution. God made the world perfect, man fell, and its been going downhill ever since!

    662. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Did VCRs also spontaneously arise out of the primordial soup?

      Fallacy of composition. Is that really your best argument?

      I mean hey, all you really have to do is tell people they're going to HELL if they believe in evolution. It's not like you have to use logic on the ignorant folks you're trying to convince, because you're never going to convince someone with more than three operational brain cells with lame arguments like the Watchmaker argument.

    663. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, that's like saying that Schroedinger's cat knows whether it's alive or not before the box is opened.

    664. Re:Thank God! by skittixch · · Score: 1

      personally, I'm along with the evolutionist majority here at slashdot, but I feel that celebrating this "victory" would come with the added cost of lowering ourselves to the ways of the soccermom evangelists who raise such a stink about the issue in the first place. It's all of our jobs and informed citizens to keep our minds open. Sure we may disagree with creationism, but to bar our children from seeing both sides of the debate would seem like a disservice to their growth more than anything.

    665. Re:Thank God! by Decaff · · Score: 1

      That is completely incorrect. Evolution says nothing about how life began, only what has happened to it since then.

      The problem with this statement is that it is very hard to define life.

      You can get evolution of replicating RNAs in the test tube - they can mutate because of reproduction errors into new forms that can be selected for. However, these are not really 'life' because we expect living things to be more self-contained, like cells.

      However, given enough time (millions of years), and the right environment, something like this could very likely end up as something we would recognise as living.

      So, evolution can certainly describe how pre-living mutating and replicating molecules can adapt and change until life appears.

    666. Re:Thank God! by evil_tandem · · Score: 1
      Wow. But you're comparing apples and oranges. If Saudi Arabia was a giant toxic waste dump, and the text book said "Saudi Arabia is a giant toxic waste dump", then what's the problem? the textbook is now fulfilling it's goal to educate the reader about what Saudi Arabia is.

      maybe you like toxic waste and disagree with this discription, not because it's untrue, but b/c it paints a picture in the average readers mind that you may not like. so you petition to have a sticker put on the front of the book that says something about how readers should be critical of all information in the book regarding Saudi Arabia.

      it doesn't change the facts one bit. but now it introduces as fact, to children, something that simply isn't true.

      worse, children educated elsewhere are now better prepared and educated. congratulations, you've managed to make professional success of your children inherently more difficult b/c of your own personal, irrational, bias.

    667. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that these fossils exist is not, in and of itself, proof they are part of an evolutionary chain. Assumptions are made based on similarities in skeletal structure and their relative time and geographical locations in the fossil record. An assumption is not proof positive. Could they be an evolutionary chain to modern humanity? Possibly. Are they, for a fact? Well, some have faith that this is so.

    668. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot to provide a link

    669. Re:Thank God! by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1

      A VCR is a far far simpler device than a self-reproducing automaton...

      I disagree, and not just because a VCR is macroscopic and needs a lot of structure just to hold itself together.

      --
      Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
    670. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off, evolution is not a theory. Natural Selection is the theory Darwin advanced to explain the observed FACT of evolution.

      How is anyone supposed to take your side seriously if you can't even frame your objections properly?

    671. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented. Do you realy think these children can only handle one view, or that thay are completely incapable of making there own desisions on who they are going to believe. I mean after all, if evolution is so obviously the only possible answer, they shouldn't the evidence be able to speek for itself, why should it be above question and debate?


      I dont want to criticise the author of the above, but I have to say that the statement is painful to the eyes. America, with slashdotters the happy exception, is a country of people with a low average knowledge of science and math. We get more than 50% of our Physics PhD candidates from abroad. We have to import all kinds of scientists from abroad (and outsource to them when that's not possible). Lots of our science is done with a critical mass of brains owned by people from smelly countries that aren't even Christian.

      Why are we still polluting science with religion and vice versa? It's not about a debate between forces of dark and light. Science is about writing down evidence, analyzing it, and putting together a logical framework that explains the evidence and predicts unseen behavior. Religion attempts to explain metaphysical things in a similar way. Religion and science are mental tools for different kinds of things and neither is applicable to the other's domain.

      I propose we have a worldwide seminar on creationism. Let us invite ALL the world's religions, the wiccans, pagans, animists, and satan worshippers. Then let us write up all the views on creation with equal time for every view. Let's insist that it be taught to all American children. Then let us see if that would meet the standards of those parents who want to see a sticker on the science books or will it just be that Creationism is the dogma of the poor and poorly educated Protestant?
    672. Re:Thank God! by skrug · · Score: 1

      Sure, but the point was that there was no constitutional fouling here. The ruling itself is biased and constitutionally foul. A lot of people on /. claim to liberals, is that true? It appears not, 2000 parents wanted the stickers 6, I repeat six did not (as far as the court case went). If you so called liberals were really liberal then you would favor the civil liberties of the majority not the minority. Just for the record, I do not believe in god (perhaps a higher power that can be explained with math), I do believe in Evolution.

    673. Re:Thank God! by Moofie · · Score: 1

      It's also called "the one that always gets skipped because teachers don't understand that it's the most important thing they will ever, ever, ever explain to their students."

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    674. Re:Thank God! by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1
      Should physics textbooks carry a sticker that gravity is just a theory also?

      Maybe someone should put a warning on the courtroom door, or on the door to the school board's meeting room: "The occupants herein may not necessarily consult a dictionary to determine the generally accepted meaning of a word before making decisions or statements that rely upon it."

      FWIW, my Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary (Merriam-Webster, Inc., 1988) does not have the same #1 definition, but rather:
      1: the analysis of a set of facts in their relation to one another
      It doesn't use the words "widely accepted" anywhere. The closest it comes is:
      5: a plausible or scientifically acceptable general principle or body of principles offered to explain phenomena

      It's kind of funny, and I haven't finished mulling this over, but dictionary definitions and spellings are based on the lexicographers' assessment of current general usage. They are not a canon issued by the Pope of Word Meanings. In other words, a dictionary definition is a theory of the word's meaning[s].

      I think that the bottom line is that kids need to be taught to critically consider the contents of all information presented to them, whether it's biology, physics, math, or history. The only exception, of course, should be Slashdot.

      BTW, I can accept the theory of gravity, but there's no way I'm buying that stuff about quarks. It's just too strange for me.

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
    675. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone here no matter what side of the issue they seem to be taking has one major flaw in their logic. They are all using human notions to try and give meaning to their life.

      Life is meaningless. We don't even have the purpose of passing on our genes. Do you think the universe cares about life on our planet at all.

      Right and wrong both are human constructs. Everyone should just try to maximize there own happiness. There is no advantage of rational over irrational thought in this pursuit.

      There is no true altruism. If you're happier when helping other people fine. If you happiest murdering the masses fine. It's not wrong if you don't consider it so and we're all going to die anyway. And if there is nobody left to recall an event did it even happen in the first place?

    676. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      OK, good response with some good questions. Here's how I answer:

      Part #1: You're describing something different than my definition of a fact. A fact is an observation, something which can be seen to be true. The point you bring up is a philosophical argument about whether we can trust our own eyes, and you described the basic problem very well. But, you get yourself twisted up with cases other than the one I described. I wasn't talking about hammers under electromagnets, which anyone would see as a different case. I think you realize this and perhaps were trying to be contrary there, which is commendable :-). In general, science has to be *pragmatic*, and that means that at some point you have to accept that hammers fall, and while there is always some chance that a released hammer would attain escape velocity, you'd never get anything done unless you just past that and moved on. It's not fatal to science, but nevertheless, it is interesting when studying the philosophy of science, so I'm pleased that you brought it up.

      Part #2: You're free to disagree that the change in genome can cause speciation, but it's been tested over a hundred years, and has been observed in the laboratory. There's not really much else to say about it. The origin of the species isn't a part of evolution, so don't conflate that in your thinking. Religious people who agree with evolution (the Pope for one) have a different opinion than I do about the origin of life, but we agree completely on the mechanism for how life changes over time.

      Remember this: The Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection that we use today defines evolution as the change in genetic sequences over time in response to environmental pressures. This is a VERY rigourous definition, and can be tested by merely sequencing the DNA of animals through progressive generations as they respond to environmental pressures. Thus, evolution is trivially testable. The theory of evolution is just a description of why those sequences change.

      Finally, we agree on something. You say "this doesn't make evolutionary theory a fact" and I agree with you 100%. If you re-read what I wrote, I specifically distinguished (I thought clearly) that "evolution" is a fact, and the "Theory of evolution by natural selection" is a theory. They are two separate things there.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    677. Re:Thank God! by peter_gzowski · · Score: 1

      This is not proof of evolution.

      Perhaps not, but it did refute your earlier statement:

      Evolution, for the longest time, was defined as change from one species to another (which has never been found).

      The poster gave you an example of observations of change from one species to another: ring species. You now have the additional requirement that evolution must add information to the DNA to be evolution in a 'true' sense. I am assuming that what you require for proof is an example of change from one species to another, where the new species is more complex than the original.

      --
      "Now gluttony and exploitation serves eight!" - TV's Frank
    678. Re:Thank God! by soxos · · Score: 0

      Agreed. You can have your sticker reminding me evolution is a theory. I get to put my sticker reminding you that belief in god has been a root cause of almost every war and has definitely led to more suffering, hatred, indifference, etc than anything else.

      As long as we're going to be honest with our kids, let's tell them everything.

    679. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Here's an excercise:

      * go find an activity that is completely pointless

      * create a mythos the gives meaning to the activity

      * Profit?

      It works for Scientology. ;-)

    680. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Change within a species is evolution by definition. The definition of evolution is very rigourous. It's the change in the genome of a species over time, and can be measured trivially with DNA sequencing.

      Also, it doesn't matter what evolution stated "for the longest time" since the age of an idea has no bearing on how correct it is. The only thing that matters is what evolution says right now, and how well it explains the facts (observations). It'll change in the future too, if someone figures out how to make it explain the facts better.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    681. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Did you know that the Earth revolving around the sun is a theory and not a law?

      The earth revolving around the sun is an observation, given the sun as a fixed point of reference. The universe has to go through some pretty heavy gyrations if we pick earth as a fixed point.

      I'd say it's more of a model that's about as irrefutable as the concept of an ellipse itself.

      I think one good outcome of this whole debate is that science teachers might start teaching kids what the word "theory" actually means in science -- i.e. that it doesn't mean "wild-assed guess"

    682. Re:Thank God! by autophile · · Score: 1
      For one, the theory is that humans evolved from apes. Apes aren't monkeys.

      That's for sure! Koko used a telephone to leave a "breather" message on an answering machine. Now if that isn't an ape struggling to become human, I don't know what is!

      --Rob

      --
      Towards the Singularity.
    683. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      So, if I had a dog named "Law" would you argue that since F=ma isn't a dog, my argument isn't valid?

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    684. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Perhaps you should go back and review scientific classifications. A "theory" is something which seems plausible yet cannot definitively be proven by the scientific method. A "law" is something that can be proven by the scientific method and can be easily repeated by following the procedures. That is why the concept of gravity is referred to as the Law of Gravity. Evolution is properly classified as a Theory. Therefore, the stickers are quite accurate. Since there is no mention of a higher power, creation, any religious organization, etc., I do not see how any individual or organization should be able to sue under the concept of separation of church and state.

      The law suit is ridiculous and people that play the "you're-shoving-religion-down-my-throat" card just because they have differing ideas are ridiculous too. If you read the article, you will see that 2000 parents complained that the biology textbook presented evolution as though it were a scientific law. They simply want a presentation that is fair and balanced. Six parents and the ACLU want evolution to be taught as though it were an accepted fact of life. It looks as if the ACLU is definitely not on the side of the people.

    685. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The belief that there is no god is obviously a belief of a religious nature. A religious belief."

      Not believing in a god has jack shit to do with believing in a god.

      The protection of atheism in the constitution is not freedom of religion, it is freedom FROM religion.

    686. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do not understand evolution and are correct to reject it based on that. You should read "River out of Eden" By Richard Dawkins. You don't have to believe it but at least you will know what 'it' is.

    687. Re:Thank God! by snorklewacker · · Score: 1

      > A dog has always been a dog

      So you're saying my mom's shih-tzu has been that way since time immemorial?

      Wow, I'm picturing packs of wild prehistoric shih-tzus roaming the land, the sounds of their fearsome snuffling can be heard for miles...

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    688. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But science *does* have an answer to the "Why am I here?" question: you're here because your ancestors were good at reproducing. Things that survive and reproduce continue to exist. Pretty simple, isn't it?

    689. Re:Thank God! by daijo78 · · Score: 1

      I agree. Critical thinking is always good. Instead of buying those stickers they should have sponsored a course in general critical thinking;)

    690. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > This is not proof of evolution. Ring species actually prove the Bible: Noah probably had one breed of each 'type' of animal, from which all other 'types' came

      And only four or five thousand years to do it in. Wow. Of course he had God. Whenever anything can't be explained, pull out God.

      I got a theory that's just as plausible. Magic unicorns roamed the land, and they all transmogrified into the species we know today.

    691. Re:Thank God! by blankgm · · Score: 1

      The real problem here is the misbelief by people about this whole 'separation of church and state'. The first ammendment has been watered down through the years and many people now apparently believe that it means there can be no religion in government and no government in religion. Thus, these silly lawsuits.

      What the first ammendment says is:

      "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

      The point here was to prohibit the establishment of a national religion (ie The Church of America), and to prohibit the government from stopping people from practicing their religion.

      So if students want to pray before class - it is clearly unconstitutional to pass a law, or for any government official (including school employees) to prohibit them from doing so. As long as the (public) school does not come down and say "All students must now pray to [insert diety here]" - or for that matter "No student may exercise any religion while in school" (see item 1 below) then all bets are off.

      Also then, if the school wishes to put a stick on a textbook which states that evolution is one of many theories regarding the origins of life - then they may legally do so.

      In fact, one could easily argue that forcing the school district to remove the sticker indeed violates the first ammedment on multiple levels

      1. It supports athiesm - a religion in itself and thus the government is forcing the beliefs of one religious sect on the entire nation, and prohibiting the religious exercise of all non-members of that sect. Thereby establishing a national government sponsored religion in violation of the first ammendment
      2. It violates the free speach rights of the educational institution (however it could further be argued that without authors allowance such a sticker may violate the publishers and authors free speech rights as well) .

      That being said - weapons free, flame away.

    692. Re:Thank God! by tbannist · · Score: 1

      It would have to be a pretty big sticker if we're going to put it on Georgia.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    693. Re:Thank God! by snorklewacker · · Score: 1

      > They don't have any proof of bacteria turning into a cat, Or a reptile into a bird.

      Yes they do. It just happened over a slightly longer time than your attention span.

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    694. Re:Thank God! by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      The disbelief of an all powerful being requires as much faith as the belief in one

      Says who? You? Why? More specifically, why can merely mundane beings (like unicorns, leprechauns, ghosts, Loch Ness monsters, souls, angels, demons, fire-breathing dragons, etc, etc, etc) be dismissed in the standard fashion with Occam's Razor and that pesky 'lack of evidence' thing, but disbelief in an all-powerful being requires active proof of nonexistence?

      Given that A) the only way to prove that something _doesn't_ exist is to find a contradiction in its definition and B) you religious types take such joy in defining your deities with so many nonsensical terms that they defy any sort of logical analysis, it sounds to me like you're trying to change the rules of the deductive process just to allow your favorite fantasy through.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    695. Re:Thank God! by fbjon · · Score: 1

      Scroll further down to Alsee's post on ring species. It may prove very useful.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    696. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Adultery and homosexual acts however are not ceremonial and are still very much offensive to God.

      Actually, I find you a great deal more offensive. So stop talking for me.

      --God

    697. Re:Thank God! by EnderWiggnz · · Score: 1

      creationism has a primary source? really? i wouldnt consider the bible more than an unsourced, secondary source.

      --
      ... hi bingo ...
    698. Re:Thank God! by bluekanoodle · · Score: 1

      And my point is that these original experiments are still being passed as proof in biology texts everywhere. So what you are saying is that we should expect our students to take for a fact ideas that have been discarded by the general scientific community? What does that teach our children?

    699. Re:Thank God! by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a theory, just as gravity and the behavior of atoms are theories. The problem is that people often mix up theory with hypothesis and speculation.

      When your average joe-six-pack thinks of a theory, he thinks of something which has little or no evidence backing it, and is mostly speculation and hypothesis. When a scientist thinks of a theory, he thinks of something which has much evidence backing it, is a solid explanation for the way an aspect of the world works, and has held up under close scrutiny by the scientific community.

      A scientific theory is closer to fact than a lay-man's theory. The issue comes from the fact that your average religious person doesn't really understand this.

    700. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "the laws of thermodynamics"

      Which is kind of an ironic example, since those laws are actually statistical tendencies. At small scales of space and time, they're "violated" all the time (except for the "energy being created or destroyed" bit, that one's quite solid).

    701. Re:Thank God! by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Maybe, I've never met Georgia, maybe she should exercise more.

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    702. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And since athiesm is just another religion, it must be protected, but it cannot be favored. All religious beliefs, even the ones that don't call themselves "religious", must be given equal rights."

      Atheism is not "just another religion". If anything, it is a "non-religion". You can't endorse it, support it, or suppress it in the same sense as any other religion, unless every time someone fails to mention religion it is automatically an endorsement of atheism. So, every time accountants or mechanics fail to incorporate a religious belief in their math or repairs, they are implicitly endorsing atheism. Is the way math is usually taught in school an endorsement of atheism?

      The only reason that book label was there was to placate the religious beliefs of some subset of religious people who don't like the scientific theory in question. If it was truly there for the scientific or educational reason claimed, then it would be applied to all scientific theories and all the sciences, because the same comments would legitimately apply to all of them. Instead, it was there to cast exceptional doubt on a specific scientific theory, in effective support of the religious beliefs that do not accept it (and alot of religions do).

      "The ruling was made as if the judge believed atheism to be the official religion of the state, to be promoted at the expense of others."

      Restoring a NULL endorsement does not equal endorsement of 0 or 1. Removing a label that was there only to cast special and specific doubt on a scientific theory was removing the attempt to support a particular religious belief. The judge made the right call, and it in no way is supporting or negating any religion. It is a religiously neutral decision.

    703. Re:Thank God! by tenaciousj · · Score: 1

      Yes, but you cannot pass on an injury. This would not cause the offspring to be born with a fused bones, or even a backache.

      Of course, you could argue that "Well after millions and billions of years the bones gradually fused together because it's evolution." This somehow never convinces me.

      I would debate the fact some more but I'm short on time can't seem to find any reference to the metioned bonobo, so I'll leave it at that.

    704. Re:Thank God! by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented. Do you realy think these children can only handle one view, or that thay are completely incapable of making there own desisions on who they are going to believe. I mean after all, if evolution is so obviously the only possible answer, they shouldn't the evidence be able to speek for itself, why should it be above question and debate?

      Studying the history of why a particular outmoded theory was abandoned by practicing scientists might be a task for a PhD student of the history of science. It is not a job for elementary or secondary school students. There are hundreds and hundreds of outmoded theories that have been discarded by practicing scientists. The evidence that led to their being discarded occupies thousands and thousands of pages of highly technical specialized journals. It is simply unreasonable and unfair to expect students to examine and understand all of this evidence in a basic, introductory class. And it is a waste of limited class time in a course that is intended to teach current scientific knowledge, not scientific history.

      There is no scientific reason to select one obsolete theory out of all of these and insist that students recapitulate the decades of study that led to it being abandoned, especially when much of this evidence cannot be properly understood without the background of advanced training in genetics, biochemistry, and mathematics.

    705. Re:Thank God! by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      Very true, but don't confuse evolution as we see it happen with evolution "proving" creation. Evolution as we see it happen is certainly fact. But evolution explianing creation is merely a theory, as is the creationists view.

      As a matter of fact, any attempt to define how man (or any creature, really) was created will remain a theory because anyone who was there when it happened is long since deceased.

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    706. Re:Thank God! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a fact in that we know it occurs and it has been seen occuring.

      Just to pick a nit, Evolution is not a fact. It is a theory that accounts for the observed evidence. Creationism and its half brother ID are not even theories, as you can't make meaningful predictions or falsify them.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    707. Re:Thank God! by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      OK, I'll bite.

      I take it taht you're referring to how all living things on Earth produce only "right handed" optical stereoisomers, whereas laboratory syntheses of substances which exhibit this property always produce an even mix of left and right handed optical stereoisomers. Living things based on right-handed optical stereoisomers furthermore cannot properly decompose left-handed optical stereoisomers.

      Now, we know from experience that right-handed favours right-handed; so let us assume that left-handed, if it actually existed anywhere, would favour left-handed. If, at some point in the Beginning of Life, there were even just ever so slightly more life forms based on right-handed optical stereoisomers than left-handed ones, then eventually the right-handed ones would come to dominate -- even though number was the only survival advantage they enjoyed.

      Organic chemistry sometimes favours certain bond formation processes. You might expect, from a casual glance, that the reaction product from propene and steam should be a 50:50 mix of propan-1-ol and propan-2-ol: when the double bond breaks, the oxygen should be equally likely to stick to the end or the middle carbon atom. In fact, you get much more propan-2-ol than propan-1-ol. Read your A-level chemistry textbook to see why.

      OK, you say, but there is no difference between the bond energies of optical stereoisomers as there is with the propanol isomers. But, according to collision theory, chemical reactions depend upon collisions between moving particles. A molecule doesn't need to break up completely to get involved in a reaction, and a chemical reaction proceeds stepwise. In the case of complex compounds, it seems logical that the reaction will favour a particular stereoisomer in the product simply because of the way in which potential collision sites are presented. 3-D models of reaction mechanisms ought to explain this better than words .....

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    708. Re:Thank God! by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      You've been listening to Jehovah's Witnesses. You should stop doing that. Trinitarian theology is very strongly rooted in the New Testament.

      Actually, I read "The Heathen's Guide To World Religions". An awesome book, but unfortunately out of print for the time being. Maybe it will come back in response to The Da Vinci Code movie.

    709. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1
      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    710. Re:Thank God! by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Please don't ever link to talkorigins.org when discussing open minds again.

      Is is a site notorious for exaggeration and plain misinformation about such topics.


      I can understand why creationists find links to talkorigins.org upsetting, because it is a rich source of citations of the original scientific literature that debunk the misleading and dishonest arguments favored by creationists.

    711. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      This sort of comment requires nothing but a great deal of heartly laughter.

      It also requires severe defensive measures. Keep your ignorance FAR FAR away from my kids.

      I know it's harsh, but it's for their own good.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    712. Re:Thank God! by neurojab · · Score: 1

      The attitude of most biologists I've met seems to be: A) Macro-evolution exists, B) There is no other mechanism by which we could come into being (i.e. there is no god), C) We exist.

      Of course you realize that explanation of anything via divine intervention is simply not science, therefore a biologist would never use that explanation. It's not that the biologist is an atheist, just that science involves observations and theories - they're trying to discover the mechanism by which things happen. They never try to answer such questions as "why are we here?", but in the same vein, they can never say "a miracle happens here" in a scientific theory. Otherwise, why bother trying to explain it at all? What if scientists had explained bird flight by a miracle? Do you think we would have air travel today?

    713. Re:Thank God! by grgyle · · Score: 1

      Um, no. All of the information is referenced back to the original peer-reviewed published scientific sources. Talkorigins does have an agenda in that they are intended as a single-source collection of information about evolution theory in general and are often the first cited place to refute creationism claims about evolution, but I have not seen any misinformation or exaggeration. Can you cite a specific example from talkorigins showing this misinformation or exagerration?

      --
      ----- And all that the Lorax left here in this mess was a small pile of rocks, with one word...UNLESS.
    714. Re:Thank God! by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      If you so called liberals were really liberal then you would favor the civil liberties of the majority not the minority

      That leads to what is called "The Tyranny of the Majority". If you can get 51% of the population to agree to reduce the other 49% to abject slavery, then by your logic, that's a-OK.

      The Legislative and Executive branches are there to represent the will of the majority. The Judicial branch in general, and the Supreme Court in particular, is there to make sure that no matter how many people want something, they cannot have it if it violates any of a few fundamental principles. Freedom of speech is one. Separation of church and state is another, which these religiously-grounded stickers violate.

      The government of the US is based on majority rule with protection of rights even for the minority. It's kind of a sad state of affairs when those not interested in a theocracy actually constitute a minority, but that does not give Christians any special power to put their delusions into public schools.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    715. Re:Thank God! by BrerBear · · Score: 1

      yeah ... wtf? I mean, telling kids to have an open mind and view something critically ... it's almost like we want them to think for themselves.

      Please get back to me when the same folks force this message onto all their Bibles.

      Signed,
      Survivor of a religious upbringing

    716. Re:Thank God! by Domo-Sun · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with this case is that it's an example of a judge ruling for a religion (the atheists), and not because there was anything wrong with the stickers.

      Obviously this is the work of the Christians, but the sticker is wrong because, the text of the sticker is using the shifting meaning of an ambiguous expression "Theory", which has multiple definitions, and by that, jumps to the conclusion that a theory is not a fact. It's misleading. Something can be a theory and a fact at the same time. In order for them to say that it "is not a fact", they must have proof against it.

    717. Re:Thank God! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      The purpose of the sticker was to pacify a couple hundred parents who complained about this textbook 2 years ago because it presented evolution as a proven fact.

      Why would that be an issue? High school textbooks present lots of shaky stuff as fact. If evolution is going to hack you off, surely some of the stuff that passes for history will, too.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    718. Re:Thank God! by king-manic · · Score: 1

      1. Change in the genetic composition of a population during successive generations, as a result of natural selection acting on the genetic variation among individuals, and resulting in the development of new species.

      Easily observable, a pop of mostly black fish -> pop of mostly red fish due to some selective factor.

      2. The historical development of a related group of organisms; phylogeny.

      Also observed, some pops split into two sepcies that cannot intterbreed.

      1. A continuing process of change from one state or condition to another or from one form to another.

      This vaguely emcompasses what evolution is. buti's more a definition of what the word means and not the process.

      2. The theory that groups of organisms change with passage of time, mainly as a result of natural selection, so that descendants differ morphologically and physiologically from their ancestors.

      Readily observed in bacteria where their metabolism changes or the cell structure changes after succesive generatiosn of a stress. IT also speeds up if their is a mutagen prsent.

      1 : a process of change in a certain direction (there has been much discussion as to ... the possible evolution of benign adenomas into invasive carcinoma --Journal of the American Medical Association)

      MEaningless, it's hand waving. It doesn't relate to the biological process just a old idea of what it meant. Evolution has no direction. It moves in all directions and lets selection generalize where. no Certain direction is required.

      2 a : the historical development of a biological group (as a race or species)

      End result of evolution, has been deduced through things liek fossils and phylogenetic trees as well as directly observed in short lived fast breeding species.

      b : a theory that the various types of animals and plants have their origin in other preexisting types and that the distinguishable differences are due to modifications in successive generations

      Again, again we have induced new traits in rapidly growing species such as fruit flies, all bacteria, ect...

      Those are great "dectionary" definitions. Mostly accurate and all observed. Dictionary definitions are always a simplification of somethign and reflect more on how the word is used then what it's describing. I'm sure loaded words such as "Christ" has a different common meaning (often used as a mild expleitive) then a real meaning (son of god, savior of manking).

      Evolution: Is the change in populations that lead to speciation. The core engine of this change is muation, substitution, mis translation, duplication, and recombination and rarly viral substitution. These result in new traits in a population and selection changes the frequency of these traits. Over times the collection of different traits makes one population un able to breed with a formly similiar pop. They are now two populations. Mutations cause new traits, selection changes the freq. of these traits n the pop. A drastic change in morphology require a change in the genome. The change in the genome can be small but the result is a change in a large pysical structure. (Think about how little change downs syndrome babies actually have in their genes and how different they are from us). If this change is hertitable (ie it's also changed in the sperm/ova) and it passes on, it gets introduced into the population. If it provides soem sort of benifit or a even just isn't really much of hindrance, it will grow to become some % of the pop.

      Speciation occurs because soem change that becomes a universal trait of all of a population makes it unable to breed and have fertile ofspring with another population that was formly the same species.

      We have observed all of this in many many many many case studies, try looking up evolution on www.nature.com (a august hournal). From bacteria to flies, many species we've fully sequenced end up with new sequences due

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    719. Re:Thank God! by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Semantics, vocabulary. Replace fact with observation.

      Observable events are the foundation of science, by definition without observation one cannot have science. BTW this is why mathematics are not a science. These collection of observations are popularly called facts. A fact is something that has indeed been observed. A fact and an observation are one and the same.

      By extention facts are loosely associated with extremely probable events like you describe, as in "it's a fact that the sun rises every morning", but this is not the definition that I'm using. For me it is a fact that the sun did rise yesterday.

      When an apple becomes ripe enough it has been observed that it falls from the tree in an extremely deterministic fashion (down). This is not theory, this is really what has happened (as far as reality exists).

      While quantum mechanic theory (for example) would predict that in extremely infrequent occurences the apple would in fact fall sideways due to tunnelling effects, in reality this has never been observed, and so it has never been a fact.

      However it is a fact that electrons do tunnel through junctions in semiconductors due to the same effect. Am I repeating myself too much here?

      Russell did not resolve the issues. He tackled them and so did many before him and after, see Plato,Descartes, Kant, Moore, etc.

    720. Re:Thank God! by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      The term macro and micro evolution are usually misrepresented like this. "Macro-evolution" is not under debate no matter how many times you repeat it.

      Your lack of understanding is evident as noone that understands the theories and laws behind evolution and natural selection would state that "we don't have proof of bacteria turning into a cat or a reptile into a bird."

      Well, I don't know where to start ... Birds DID EVOLVE from reptiles. Case in point is a transitional fossil record of Archaeopteryx. See this link:

      http://www-biol.paisley.ac.uk/courses/Tatner/bio me dia/units/bird3.htm ... and this link ...

      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/archaeopteryx/in fo .html ... which also explains other bird species found recently that support this particular path that evolution took-- Protoarchaeopteryx robusta and Caudipteryx zoui.

      So, I would mod the parent DOWN as NOT being insightful.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    721. Re:Thank God! by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      It's always nice to see moderation and insight on either side of the issue, but your post raises some questions on your beliefs that I'm interested to hear your views on. I am not intending to argue, just interested in how the religious mind and worldview differs from my own.

      Firstly, since you believe that randomness could not have created us, what do you believe created God? It strikes me as odd that if God is the highest being, she/he/it could have occured randomly, which seems to me the logical view. I guess I'm probably looking at this comlpetely the wrong way, but I'd like to see how you see the issue.

      Secondly, since you subscribe to a particular faith rather than just a belief that a higher being exists, what makes you believe that (assuming there is a higher being, which you define as 'God') God knows (or cares) who you are or whether you are a good person or not? To the ants in my garden I am a higher being with the ability to traverse vast distances and rain down fire from the sky, yet I do not know how or why they behave why they do - nor do I care. They are so different to humans that we seem like Gods compared to them but we know nothing about them and certainly have no intentional influence aside from occasionally killing them. Why would a being so much higher than us care if we live or die, let alone whether we worship him/her/it or not?

    722. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > No, I don't believe children are capable of making their own decisions. That's why they aren't allowed to vote or marry

      No, they can't make those decisions because you tell them that they can't. Children are perfectly capable of making decisions. Adults think that kids can't because the adults have more life experience and know how damned stupid they were at that age, so their kids must be too. Not really a bad assumption, as kids ARE stupid. But there's a big difference between "You can't decide" and "you don't have enough information and experience to make an informed decision."

      I mean, if the lack of information or experience was grounds to disallow voting, about half of the current voting public (I'm not claiming that half is on one political "side") would be barred from the polls.

    723. Re:Thank God! by dwheadon · · Score: 1

      Very good point.

      To think of it from a slightly different angle: What if the school board responded differently to the parental concern on the material? Instead of putting a sticker on the books, they decided to trash the book (albeit an expensive proposition) and buy new books that presented the same material except that the chapter on the theory of evolution was presented in a more critical light. Could the judge rule the new book unconstitutional and demand that the old book be reinstituted? Seems ludicrous to me particularily since the new book needn't make any reference whatsoever to religion.

    724. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At some point we must realize that nothing is truly fact and thar our entire world is built on assumption.

      Computer Science, for example, is derived from math, which comes from the assumption of value applied to symbols.

      Some people might tell you that 2+2=4 is a fact. Instead, it is an assumption that is held to be true by a signifcant majority (well, except http://http://www.thinkgeek.com/tshirts/generic/60 f5/)

      You have to realize too that science is assumption built upon assumption as well. We all deal with that, but it ensures that "facts" only exist in our imagination.

      The only thing really true is that evolution, creationism, intelligent design, whatever you believe in, it is only "fact" to those who believe in it.

    725. Re:Thank God! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Sure there is micro evolution ocurring. That is nothing more then adapting to an enviroment. evolution in the sense of it is how life began has stoped. We do not see macro evolution were there are actually species jumps in every day life. The problem is the amoutn of evolution that is needed to support the theory as an origon of life.

    726. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think a lot of people are missing the point of the sticker. It states that "Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things." It definately could have been worded more carefully, but the point of the sticker is as the Theory of Evolution as it pertains to "the origin of life" not evolution as mutation/survival of the fittest.

    727. Re:Thank God! by geomon · · Score: 1

      Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry?

      In your DNA. Chimps have 99%+ of the genes you do. You possess the same material in your fingernail that plankton use for their exoskeletons.

      Curious coincidences?

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    728. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please don't ever link to anything that criticises my religion again.

      They are sites notorious for exageration and plain misinformation about such topics.

    729. Re:Thank God! by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      I'm not even sure it should be limited to only Earth-like planets. Indeed. Consider some of the disgusting conditions simple lifeforms are willing to put up with here on earth: extremophiles tha thrive in boiling water, lithovores feeding on rock miles underground, bacteria that can withstand radiation dosages 1000's of tims of what would kill a human. Combined with evidence suggesting that chemical self-replication developed fast on early Earth, it seems that anywhere life _can_ form, it _will_ form. The only common requirement we've been able to ascertain so far is liquid water.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    730. Re:Thank God! by HogynCymraeg · · Score: 1

      Well, at least God gave us the ability to adapt! :)

    731. Re:Thank God! by geomon · · Score: 1

      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented.

      Not if the alternative has some basis in science.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    732. Re:Thank God! by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      The belief that there is no god is obviously a belief of a religious nature.

      I suppose if you're zealous about it then it would seem to be akin to a religious belief (and equally as annoying).

      However, there are a great many of us who simply don't give a damn about the question one way or another. I know that's hard for the pro-religion and anti-religion folk to accept, but it also happens to be true whether you like it or not.

      If you have trouble wrapping your brain around the concept, replace the word 'religion' with 'golf'. There are a great many people who love golf, and a smaller subset who think the game absolutely sucks. But then there are the people who simply don't give a shit about golf one way or another, never think of it, never ponder it, never spend any time or energy on it at all. And we really don't care to listen to people who like golf ramble on and on (and on and on...) about it, nor are we interested in hearing the people who hate golf do the same thing. Because WE DON'T CARE ABOUT GOLF.

      Some people find religion - pro, anti, whatever - to be dreadfully dull and of no interest. While that might make them atheists in the loosest sense of the word, that doesn't make their beliefs (or rather, lack thereof) religious in nature.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    733. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like science can't explain the pre-big bang universe, it also can't explain the "Why am I here question?".

      That's because the "why am I here" question in the context you are asking it makes it an abstract and personal question rather than a scientific one. Asking "why am I here" implies that someone or something put you here for a reason.

      If you feel that you are here to "do God's will", whatever that means, then by golly you go right ahead and do it. Science cannot tell you whether that is the correct answer. Your chosen religion may well seem to provide the "correct" answer, because it requires no proof; most religions are purely thoughts, beliefs, abstractions. Take away the religion and you are left with a question with no answer (in your view). For many, having an answer, no matter the validity or provability, is more comforting than not having one at all.

    734. Re:Thank God! by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      Meh, RNA is fantastically complex compared to what the ancestor self-replicator likely was. Possibly a lipid-bound peptide, 2 or 3 dozen amino acids long.

      The Abiogenesis FAQ

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    735. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      A vat full of chemicals sitting in a lab is very different from, say, a samp in the real world.

      Exactly. When you have an entire PLANET to work with you wind up with trillions of different microenviornments with different chemical makups and different temperatures and conditions, some of them feeding chemical products from one pool to another in a steady trickle or on an irregular basis (when it rains) on even better yet on a regular cycle (triggered by tides). In fact a regular cycle of chemicals from one reaction-pool into one with a different makeup is exactly the ideal sort of thing to trigger, feed, and regulate a replication cycle in that second pool.

      And with an entire planet as a laboratory you also wind up with about a billion times as long for the reactions to run and experiment and accumulate more and more different chemical products.

      So you're looking at about a billion-trillion times more variety and experimentation to stumble across an initial replicator. You'd probably hit it a few times with most of them dying out at random. But you only need one to hang on and run loose.

      Oh, and even better we aren't restricted to a single planet as a laboratory. In our solar system alone I'd say there were a minimum of four quality candidate bodies for these sorts of chemical experiments: Mars, Earth, Europa, Titan.

      And we're not restricted to our solar system as a laboratory. There are around a 100 billion starts in the Milky Way, and then there's some obscene number of other galaxies. So our "laboratory" is actually some mind-boggling number of planets each with a different set of conditions. And whichever one "worked" and produced life and produced us, well, by default that would be the planet we would have named Earth. That planet automaticaly becomes the planet we're on now.

      So yeah, that lab experiment if very different from the real world. It was incredibly smaller and more limited. One incredibly tiny speck of an experiment testing one single set of conditions and chemicals, and running for an insanely short period of time (what was it, a month? a year?). The fact that that pathetic little experiment produced all of the molecules needed to build life prooves it's insanely easy to wind up with a perfect soup for life to spring up.

      maybe, just maybe, theses things went from a state of dissorder to order, which seems to violate a law of thermodynamics or two.

      Groan. This is one of the most common and WORST abuses of genuine science from the creationist camp. The laws of thermodynamics you are referring to only apply to a closed system and only to the overall level of disorder. It does not apply to open systems or even to localized regions of a closed system.

      In fact it is quite common for energy flows to produce localized order in nature. Simple and clear proof: Water vapor in clouds is about as disordered as you can get. Yet that cloud commonly produces an increadible variety of different richly structured and highly ordered snowflakes. Order and structure from total disorder. Common.

      The only thing the "thermodynamics argument" prooves is that you're looking at a source of information that just does not understand the science and has no credibility on the subject.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    736. Re:Thank God! by Tonytheloony · · Score: 1

      Science and religion are not exclusive. They just have *NOTHING* to do with each other.

      --
      The quickest way to become an atheist is to study the Bible thoroughly.
    737. Re:Thank God! by Decaff · · Score: 1

      Not all evolutionary changes are small ones.

      Virtually all of them are.

      When there is a large change (such as switching a gene on or off, leading to a presence or lack of teeth), it can often be accomplished in a single generation.

      Yes, but almost all such changes are harmful. Evolution is a process of fine-tuning. A sudden change is extremely unlikely to result in a more optimal organism.

      As a result, there are few intermediate species showing the progress of quantitative changes (macroevolution).

      That is simply because new species probably arise in small isolated populations under stress (which is where there is selection pressure). This makes discovery of intermediate fossils very unlikely.

    738. Re:Thank God! by Anonym1ty · · Score: 1

      You may be able to prove Natural Selection or even controlled breeding, but you can not prove Evolution --That doesn't make evolution wrong, but it can not be elevated to the status of a fact either

      Many do not consider dogs and wolves to be seperate species. And for now, the creationists can still argue that cats begat cats and mice begat mice and so on. Many times I read or heard the phrase "and may be the same species" in regards to dogs and wolves.

      What, in science, makes anything seem possible -including creationism- is the wonders of Relativity, Quantum Mechanics and even String Theory (Again all theories and as they all stand now none of them is "all inclusive" either) but if Energy and Matter are as interchangeable as they seem to be, we could be in for a very big mess.

      As per another post God could have created all of this several thousand years ago and just made it look really old --- which would mean God has one hell of a sense of humor. Or things we believe are constants (such as radioactive decay or the speed of light) really aren't.

      One of the problems with science is when you base an idea on another unproven idea or set of ideas. And I think this is easily seen with the "junk" science of the day... Eat this, don't eat that... then 5 years later they say the exact oposite. or even global cooling -vs- global warming.... people freak out about either, yet both have been commonly thrown around with what is sometimes some very sloppy science. We have yet to understand how climate works, yet we're daft enough to take a miniscule sample of data and project vast assumptions.

      What should be taught is an understanding of how science works and why BEFORE we even start talking about Biology, Chemestry or Physics.

    739. Re:Thank God! by SteeldrivingJon · · Score: 1

      "More like, it was a reaction to England's persecution of minorities who didn't follow the Anglican schism from the Roman Catholic church. The English who didn't want to play along with the established religion had the choice of being harassed at home, or going elsewhere. Many of them went to America."

      And probably, to some extent, a reaction to France's persecution of Protestants, who were pretty much expelled less than 100 years before our revolution (ie, recent enough that grandparents could have been involved.)

      Also, pretty much nobody liked those damned Quakers and Anabaptists.

      The founders would, most likely, have been aware of the Wars of Religion, too.

      Aside:

      These days, too many "anti-separation" people seem to think "Christian" meant the same thing in 1776 as it does today. Whereas today the various denominations get along pretty easily, it was not so in 1776.

      Many Anglicans would probably have considered the Catholics to be "papists", not Christians. And many Catholics would have considered the Protestants to be heretics. And either group would not have had any qualms about insisting that these distinctions be codified into law. (Unlike today, where you pretty much have to read a Jack Chick pamphlet to see a Protestant calling the Pope the Anti-Christ.)

      Heck, in England, Roman Catholics couldn't even own property until 1778. An attempt in 1780 to give Catholics (gasp) the right to vote resulted in violent anti-Catholic riots in which 500 people died.

      I have to wonder - why do anti-Separation people, who think the US was founded as a Christian nation, believe the founders neglected to write that into the Constitution? What was stopping them, if they were a bunch of "Christians"? Today's evangelicals and fundamentalists and hardliners certainly wouldn't be so circumspect - it'd be right there in 720-point copperplate at the top. Elaborations of this as God's Own Country would have taken the place of the Bill of Rights.

      The best they can do is point to uses of "creator" or "god", though even thorough pagans like the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius used such terms (or, at least, they are used in modern translations of his Meditations).

      --
      September 2011: Looking for Cocoa/iOS work in Boston area Cocoa Programmer Quincy, MA
    740. Re:Thank God! by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      Ding Ding Ding Ding!!!! Creationist trying his inept hand at the "Violates the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics" argument! Since this has been busted up on every evolution forum, FAQ, and textboox ever written, it's safe bet that he learned all about evolution from bible school. Since he clearly can't be troubled to look the refutations up himself, I'll give him the short version: Is the Earth's surface a closed system, or is there significant amounts of energy being pumped into it from an external source, possibly in the form of electromagnetic radiation?

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    741. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you stupid piece of shit?

      Why don't you take your stamp collection, wrap your little dick in it, you motherfucking cocksucker, and stick it up your arse!! How's that? Convincing?

      Go suck a horse's shlong, dumb fuck!

    742. Re:Thank God! by miu · · Score: 1
      By Christendom I meant that branch of the Church that was based on the marriage of Christianity and the failing Roman Empire.

      You are right though that it means all of Christianity at this point, and with that meaning is certainly not under decline.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    743. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It amazes me that you people can get your history right. Everyone knows the swallows carried the animals where they needed to go.

    744. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      "Anyone who disagrees with me will spend eternity in hell" is NOT an "open mind."

    745. Re:Thank God! by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      How about another part of the First Amendment, the one covering freedom of speech? What we have is the government not letting students have access to books unless they are modified by said government to be more paletable to the powers that be. What if your government demanded that stickers be put on all boxes of Linux or BSD warning all purchasers that the writers of such software are communists?

    746. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > how is that unscientific in any way?

      It's not unscientific, but it's also not scientific. More importantly, it's not consistent. Give me one good reason that evolution is singled out.

    747. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      contrary to the religion imposed in the schools by the courts

      You have lost the ability to distinguish non-religion from religion? You think everything falls under the catagory of religion? Or perhaps you are simply using a different definition of "religion" than everyone else around you?

      This is certainly not freedom of religion.

      Separation of church and state - and this very ruling - is the very means of ensuring the constitutionally guaranteed freedom of religion. Of course there's no point in even attempting to explain that if you are unable to distinguish religion from non-religion, or if you are living in a different reality with an alien definition of religion.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    748. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      Stick your hand into a vat of sulfuric acid. You will be burned. That is a fact. Your statement is nonsense.

      No that is not a fact. The fact is that the last time you stuck your hands into a vat of sulfuric acid they were burned. And, the time before that, and the time before that. You cannot know 100% for sure that they will be burned the next time, therefore that is not a fact. But, given the facts from the past I have formulated the "Theory of Burned Hands when placed in Sulfuric Acid" that says whenever hands are placed in sulfuric acid they are burned, and an explanation of why this is.

      Now it is possible some one sticks there hands into sulfuric acid adn they do not burn and my theory doesn't cover that case. Perhaps I did not account for the existence of "Sulfuric Acid Proof Gloves" therefore I must alter my theory to account for "Sulfuric Acid Proof Gloves", but it is entirely likely thaat my theory is still correct for the conditions where no "Sulfuric Acid Proof Gloves" are worn.

      Relating this back to the sticker. If these creationists wanted a legal sticker put in the front it should give the scientific definition of theory. Which could include that theories are not facts. The only problem is that definition includes the statement that a theory is supported by the evidence and is not contradicted by the evidence. Therefore, putting that sticker in the books would actually be supportive of evolution.

    749. Re:Thank God! by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      As opposed the highly probably theory of Noah's ark being beached and somehow the Kangaroos and Koalas all flew to Australia, and only Australia

      Not to mention the rather incestuous relationships that must have taken place in order for Noah, his wife, their three sons and their son's wives to repopulate the entire world.

    750. Re:Thank God! by J05H · · Score: 1

      The old stories and Ways contain many truths, much of which gets hidden again by dogma. Question everything and you begin to scratch that surface. Blind faith never solves problems.

      Your epochs match the relation of Genesis to the Universe that one of my good friends advocates. Genesis explicitly states that god's time is not the same as man's. Religious literalists always seem to miss the subtlety that any holy book contains - there is much more than one level that they can be read at.

      I would argue that regardless of religious views, anything that departs from observable physics, cosmology and biology is wrong/incorrect until proven otherwise. Physics especially shows time and again that it is self-consistent and accurate, hence an accurate representation of the universe. "god embraced himself in that special way and let his waters run from his mouth and made the universe" (Egyptian Pta creator-diety) or "God made the universe in 7 days" (Christian) are equally invalid as accurate descriptions of the universe if taken literally. However, they also contain seeds (so to speak) of wisdom: the stuff of life does flow out from dying stars (along w/ a mystical connection to the Milky Way) and it is possible to divide the ages of the (anthropomorphic) universe into seven "days". Alternatively, the Hopi and Maya divided the epochs into 4 "worlds". There's a lot to learn without letting dogma interfere.

      So, do you use the Old Knowledge or abuse it?

      josh

      --
      gigantino.tv - Heavy but weighs nothing.
    751. Re:Thank God! by Bastian · · Score: 1

      But this vernacular concept of "the theory of evolution" paves the way for so many misconceptions of evolution. We need to make a distinction between dispute about the conflict between whether species do change over time or if all species are as they were when they were created (the law of evolution vs. pure creationism, or intelligent design), and the argument over the mechanism by which that happens (which isn't getting much dispute - if you believe that species do change, there aren't really many competing theories over how this happens), and the argument over this system's terminal point - i.e., was life created and then it evolved to produce humans, or did life slowly form out of the primordial ooze.

      And the problem is, this argument is very hard to handle in the public space, especially w/r/t what is being taught in schools, precisely because most people do not make a linguistic distinction, resulting in most people I know not really understanding the various sides and angles of the argument well enough to be intellectually capable of forming a reasoned opinion on it.

    752. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      Whereas your post presented a logical retort to his perfectly reasonable statements?

    753. Re:Thank God! by mdiep · · Score: 1
      I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.
      As opposed the highly probably theory of Noah's ark being beached and somehow the Kangaroos and Koalas all flew to Australia, and only Australia. Get real.
      Get some logic. Just because the other side is wrong doesn't mean that you're right. This is borderline ad hominem as well. +1 Funny for 2 logical fallacies in one sentence (I guess).
    754. Re:Thank God! by mikeg22 · · Score: 1
      I haven't read anything recently speaking to these claims
      Probably because you only read answersingenesis or other fundie garbage. They deliberately distort and cherry-pick what they report. If you are serious about learning the current state of this branch of science, I would suggest the journal "Palaeontology." If you don't want to pay for membership to the association (I think its $150 a year or something like that), here is a good online source.

      I and a large number of others see the evolutionists as the ones promoting irrational fantasies that can't be proven or reasonably trusted
      I and a large number of others see the evolutionists as the ones promoting irrational fantasies that can't be proven or reasonably trusted. Science doesn't deal with "proving" things. The point of the scientific method is to ensure that all ideas are given the chance to be disproven, so that the best, most likely ones come out on top. Right now Evolutionary Biology has a collection of theories which are considered "most likely." The question of whether evolution happens at all is not even a question anymore. We are well beyond that. Clearly evolution happens. We have fossils that show it happening and we have observed it in the laboratory. We have no other rational explaination for the observations we have made in allele change over time. 'God did it' isn't a rational explaination because it doesn't say or predict anything at all. Relying on a book written a few thousand years ago (Roughly 0.000008 percent of the history of the earth) by humans who believed people could live inside whales and thought the earth was a giant disk and was the center of the solar system is completely insane. Genesis makes absolutely no sense in light of carefully gathered observations and completely ignores the last two thousand years of scientific insight into the natural world. All I can say is, let it go.
    755. Re:Thank God! by vertinox · · Score: 1

      Creationism, as stated in the Bible, is very improbable. An all-powerful God could, of course, spontaneously create a Universe, complete with a history of dinosaurs, and complete with planets shooting away from each other as if there had once been a big bang; this suggests that, if the Universe is really only a few thousand years old, God has a great sense of humor.

      Actually, creationism makes sense if god were a computer and life was a simulated reality created by restoring from backup tape.

      Of course that would mean that history never really happened in our reality... Just someone elses reality that was created instantly in ours... Brains... Starting... To... Hurt...

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    756. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1
      The School Board is a political entity. When hundreds of parents complain about a text book, the politicians who comprise the board must do something or they won't be reelected to this or a higher office. So they compromised. They sticker was supposed to make the creationists happy without giving the atheists a reason to complain. Obviously, since the judge took the entire history of the dispute into consideration, the purpose of the sticker was more relevent to him than the words themselves.

      This morning, I found this insightful column by
      Andrew Cohen.
      "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

      Specifically, U.S. District Judge Clarence Cooper found that the first sentence of that sticker had the effect of endorsing religion in violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.

      The school board had originally worded it this other way, but changed on the advice of their lawyers.

      "This textbook contains material on evolution, a scientific theory, or explanation, for the nature and diversity of living things. Evolution is accepted by a majority of scientists, but questioned by some. All scientific theories should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

      Mr. Cohen concludes with this:

      So there you have it. Cobb County school officials tried to be progressive, had second thoughts when an organized group of parents chimed in, and will end up satisfying no one.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    757. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > faith in scientists and textbook editors is laziness.

      Assuming these highly-trained professionals are wrong is arrogance.

      Which is worse? Questioning whether someone is wrong or SAYING AS FACT that they are wrong because you don't like what they have to say?

    758. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry? Where are the missing links? In this particular case, evolution, in my opinion, flies in the face of science by ignoring some of the obvious missing pieces of evidence."

      The physical evidence is in the genome sequence of every organism on this planet. It is exquisitely detailed and enormously vast. Anyone who brings up "missing links" is obviously missing some links in their understanding of both evolution and the nature of the fossil record.

      Sadly, the record of the past provided by fossilization is extremely fragmentary, and therefore contains gaps. However, I would challenge you to provide any reasonable evidence that refutes evolution. Oh, there isn't any.... On the other hand, there is an incredible amount of evidence that refutes the biblical account of creation...

      "On the other hand, I see a certain parity between science and religion. I don't think they necessarily have to be mutually exclusive."

      I couldn't disaggree more. I know people like to shy away from this, but I see no way to reconcile a sincere belief in evolution and all it entails with a simultaneous belief in a supreme being who cares about or has a stake in our actions. The hardest part of facing the facts, is coming to grips with the answer to your question: why and I here?. The only rational answer: random chance. Sorry.

    759. Re:Thank God! by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      To me, it simply seems to impossible to think that the universe and all that's in it, including us, is the result of some random roll of the cosmic dice.

      Yes, a lot of religious folks seem to think like that: if I can't understand how this came to be, it must have been the work of God. And then for some reason they choose a particular faith, even though there is no proof whatsoever that that particular faith is any more valid than any of the other ones.

      As far as the "why am I here" question goes: what makes you think that there is a reason? We just are. There doesn't have to be a reason. Now, some people don't like that idea, and again they turn to religion, because they cannot bear the thought that there is no reason, no purpose.

    760. Re:Thank God! by SSectionEEight · · Score: 1
      Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented.

      The problem is that this is a science textbook. It should present the mainstream, consensus version of modern science. Evolution is accepted as part of mainstream biology because it has a vast amount of evidence supporting it - creationism has none.

      If creationists can find enough valid scientific data to support their view and prove evolutionary theory incorrect, then it will be eventually be accepted as part of mainstream biology (as it was a couple of centuries ago) and then it will belong in science textbooks.

      A lot of information in textbooks has someone with an "alternate view". For example:

      A growing number of holocaust deniers claim the Nazi holocaust never happened.

      A popular conspiracy theory claims that NASA faked the Apollo moon shots.

      Should we also discuss these as alternate views in public school textbooks?

    761. Re:Thank God! by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 1
      Going a little off topic... let's look at how Christ lived his life. He hung out with hookers, lepers, and unclean women. That's pretty bold for a Jewish teacher in his day.

      But perfectly in keeping with him being the Messiah. Isaiah 61 springs to mind.

      He was a pacifist

      Are you sure? He didn't directly comment on war in the gospels. He did however uphold the OT as the authoritative word of God and I wouldn't call it pacifistic.

      and lived in the moment.

      In what sense did he 'live in the moment'? His entire life was building up towards his death on the cross and eventual resurrection. He continually refers to it in the gospels and had a clear plan for his ministry prior to it.

      He didn't write anything down either.

      But there were plenty of witness to his words and deeds, enabling people such as Luke to accurately record what happened.

      So it is inevitable that us dirty little humans would take advantage of his seeming nonchalance,

      His nonchalance? The Jesus who upturned trading stalls in the temple? The same Jesus who loudly and publicly rebuked his own followers and the religious authorities? The same Jesus who frequently left his disciples terrified and bewildered?

      promote him to figure head

      He claimed to be able to forgive sins, said he was God, raised people from the dead, called men to follow him preached a powerful message of repentance and sent his disciples out with the same message. I'd say that that's fairly good self-promotion.

      then use some half-baked philosophical drivel

      Was there a particular doctrine you were thinking of?

      to twist this new religion

      Jesus and the early church preached from the OT. Christianity goes back to the creation of the world.

      into an instrument of control.

      When James and Stephen were martyred in the book of Acts, what control were they exerting over people? Or Paul and Peter in Rome? The greatest church leaders and preachers in the early church (and many since) were killed for preaching and believing Christiniaty. What ability to control people were they taking advantage when this happened? Why were they happy to do it?

      The Bible is largely a farse that has been perverted. The Old Testament proved this and Christ's actions confirmed it.

      How so? I don't follow your reasoning.

      Religion need only go as far as the individual, after that it is a cult.

      Why do you say that? Jesus preached to huge crowds and told everyone who trusted in him to go and tell others. In fact, if we have any love for others, we couldn't possibly not tell other people about the good news of the gospel.

      Christ lived like a Bhuddist: harmoneously with his environment.

      The Bible seems to disagree with that.

      If we could even try to do that we wouldn't need the Bible

      We need the Bible, otherwise how would we know Jesus? Without the Bible, we wouldn't know what we need to know in order to be saved.

      As far as evolution goes, Darwin's theory was proven long ago. The only thing that keeps it from wider scale acceptance are the xenophobic little right-wing americans nervously clutching their bibles and guns

      Interesting. I know quite a few xenophilic big and little left wing British/Irish biologists/chemists who don't like guns (though they do treasure their Bibles) and disagree with evolution. Natural selection has certainly been shown (but is a bit of a tautology - the member of the species most fit to survive will survive - no kidding!), but the creation of a new species, the creation of new genetic material through random mutation, is a very weak theory with an absurdly low probability of bringing about the world we see around us.

    762. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has nothing to do with atheism (which is not a religion) or atheists (who are not religious). A science textbook is supposed to present conclusions which represent a consensus of the scientific community based on the best available evidence and evaluation. If there is a genuine and significant disagreement among scientists, the textbook should reflect this. But if, as in the case of natural selection, there is overwhelming consensus among scientists that the evidence is very strong and unequivocal, then that is what the textbook should say.

      The stickers are there not because there is a leigimate body of scientific research that contradicts the theory of natural selection, but rather because the theory of natural selection, and even the observed fact of evolution itself, conflict with the personal religious beliefs of certain individuals. It doesn't matter that the name of the religion isn't specified (and it is not as though Christians are all creationists anyway): what matters is that an attempt is being made to call into question a particular scientific conclusion based on a particular article of faith.

      It would be sufficient to simply note to the students that many people have personal beliefs which conflict with both the observations made by scientists and the conclusions they draw from those observations, but that good science is based solely on the evidence and does not take articles of faith or the possibility of supernatural magic into consideration. To draw attention to specific theories and facts which are disputed by certain theologies is not neutral.

    763. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      Gotta wonder where you got the idea that he admitted fraud, as it is not true (well, at least not remotely verifiable, he could have said it to a close friend on his deathbed). Read claim #2.
      For someone claiming a scientific textbook is spreading information that was "admittedly false," you didn't look too hard. I just googled his name and found that within a minute.

    764. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      1)There's two parts to the "is evolution true" discussion: That species change over time, which is immutable fact. It's in the fossil record. Species change into other species. This is not a theory. The "theory" of evolution is about HOW species change over time.

      Not Fact. The fact is that there are fossils, and what the fossils look like.

      Then, based on known physical processes we theorize that these fossils were at one time living creatures, that lived during a certain time period. Then, from there we notice that fossils from farther in the past seem to develop into newer fossils that are quite different, but we can trace back the changes. But, this is all based on the theory that all physical processes worked the same in the past, for which there is considerable supporting evidence.

      So, be very careful what you call fact. The conclusion that fossils were once living creatures that died at a certain time is a conclusion arrived from observations of all available facts. Another conclusion is that the world was created 10 million years ago as a giant supper computer in order to find the ultimate question of life the universe and everything. The fossils were artificialy placed to look like they were much older, and we are descended from the crash landing of a ship full of hair dressers, agents, and manicurists. Of course there is no evidence to support this that does not equally support evolution. :)

    765. Re:Thank God! by tritium6 · · Score: 1

      You asked about how evolution works, and from the way you phrased your question, I think you may be looking at it from the wrong angle. It is natural to look back and say "there was some natural hardship, and species X developed a mutation to overcome it. How did it develop that mutation in order to pass it on and evolve?"

      My view of evolution is a little different. Instead of looking back at a situation where you know what the hardship is and what "mutation" allowed the species to survive, look forward. Instead of thinking about what "mutations" a species would need to overcome some hardship, think about what variations already exist between members of a species, and what type of hardships might arise that would favor members with that difference over other members of that species. In this light, you see that evolution is not really about a lucky "mutation", its about some pre-existing variance in a species, the importance of which does not become highlighted until the hardship creates a situation where some of that species will die out if they do not have the difference.

      The mechanism by which these differences come about is also much simpler and cleaner than proposing some type of "mutating xray beam." These variations are a normal part of sexual reproduction. When you combine the DNA of two creatures, the result is distinct from either creature. If we evolved by mutating radiation, sexual reproduction would actually seem to be a disadvantage - a creature who got "zapped" and had a beneficial mutation could just fertilize itself and produce a new generation of the evolved species.

      In the future, evolution may be driven by some difference between you and your neighbor that you fail to see because the importance of that difference has not yet been made clear to you by some hardship.

    766. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      God does not belong in the classroom.

      That's ok. Based on bible-science and other religious based evidece I don't think God has spent any time there anyway.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    767. Re:Thank God! by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Nah, that's like saying that Schroedinger's cat knows whether it's alive or not before the box is opened.

      Of course the cat's the first one to know. Either way, the wave function is collapsed for the cat before the box is opened, especially if it dies. You can think of death as the ultimate reaction to an external stimuli, and thus the ultimate perception. :)

    768. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      To summarize the AC post:
      You called me a name, I'll make a strawman then call you the same thing you called me.

      How about instead of making points that are of no consequence, tell him how he is wrong.

    769. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calling Atheism a religion is like calling bald a hair color. ;)

    770. Re:Thank God! by cardshark2001 · · Score: 1
      Well, there is the epitemological argument that nothing can be considered a fact, even in science. However, I am confident enough that nuclear theory is factual that I would not want to be next to an atom bomb when it explodes.

      Evolution is a fact. There are layers of sediment going back billions of years. In the lowest layers where life is found, you find only simple bacteria. As you travel upwards in the layers, you find more complex and more diverse organisms, which are comparable to the organisms from the layers beneath them. Never will you find a trilobyte in the upper layers, and never will you find a mammal in the lower ones.

      The theory of evolution is about how it happened, not about *whether* it happened. Numerous predictions have been made based on the theory which have been proven true. It is falsifiable, in that certain evidences could emerge which could prove it false. No such falsifying evidence has been found, but millions of validating evidences have been found.

      You may be correct in stating it's not a fact, from the philosophical viewpoint. However, the philosophical viewpoint doesn't allow you to use the vast knowledge which we have gained from our understanding of evolution. In fact, with that sort of viewpoint you couldn't make a computer or a bridge.

      Furthermore, if such a sticker is placed on biology textbooks, shouldn't another sticker be placed on which reads "Creationism is a belief which makes no testable predictions and is not falsifiable therefore cannot be considered a science, by the strict definition of the term"?

      --
      WWJD? JWRTFA!
    771. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Other than systems with chlorophyll in them, solar energy leads to decay. Check what happens to anything left in the sun long enough.

      Well, animals seem to thrive pretty well with some sun. Granted, not 100% sun, like the desert, but there are some animals that do.

      But that solar energy is converted by plants into useful energy. The plant energy is converted by animals to chemical energy. So directly, the sun decays, indirectly it grows.

    772. Re:Thank God! by Nate4D · · Score: 1

      I'd love to give you a lengthy post on this subject, because as you say, many modern churches have forgotten this part of traditional Christianity.

      But, now that I'm back in classes, I just don't have the time to go into the kind of depth it deserves.

      Biblical examples, related to some of the questions you ask: Israel bucking the local trend, and not offering child sacrifices (see Leviticus 20). The prophet Elijah, to the people of Israel, saying that they would have a test. If Baal fulfilled the conditions of the test, they should worship him as God; if the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob did so, they should worship Him (see 1st Kings 18). Jesus' fulfillment of the prophecies of the Messiah (far too complex to explain in the time I have before class; to understand this, you'd have to actually read Isaiah, Psalms, and Matthew).

      Historical examples: Augustine of Hippo, in his book The Confessions of Saint Augustine (not self-titled, of course; it was actually his private prayer journal, and was published later on), outlines in depth why he became a Christian, after holding Christianity to be wrong and ridiculous for many years. C.S. Lewis, a staunch atheist, who became a Christian not because of weakness or fear, but because he was convinced that atheism did not make sense. Martin Luther, the man who began the overthrow of the Roman Catholic Church's political power, by turning several incorrect points of Catholic theology on their head (his work is the foundation of all the non-Catholic Christian denominations today).

      No matter what you believe about life, the universe, and everything, no one's ever been able to explain the whole thing adequately. Every viewpoint fails to explain something. I am a Christian because Christianity provides a cohesive view of the world, and admits up front that there are things it can't explain perfectly. But overall, of all the ways of viewing the world, Christianity is the one I've found that seems most correct, and it's what I believe.

      Like I said, I don't have time right now to give a real, in-depth explanation of what I believe, and I don't expect to convince anybody here that my view is right. That's okay. But, if you want a good explanation of what I mentioned, the idea that Christianity insists on logical reasoning and a reason for believing, I'd recommend that you read Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis, and Creed or Chaos by Dorothy Sayers. Also, The Confessions of Saint Augustine are excellent in this regard, but they're quite heavy reading (not that the first two books mentioned are lightweights). Any decent library will have these books, and I really encourage you to read them. They provide a pretty solid outline of why Christians believe what they do. I've spent a lot of my life understanding the evolutionary viewpoint; I'd appreciate it if you all would at least take the time to understand where we come from.

      --
      "Oh, I like geeks way better than I like humans." - Mari Sarris
    773. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      I think you have to look at what it doesn't say anything about in order to realize it was a religious sticker. It does not mention that the Theory of General Relativity is not a fact, or Quantum Theory is not a fact, or Atomic theory, etc... By singling out evolution in particular the label became an obvious government endorsement of a particular religious view point. They probably could have gotten away with the same sticker about all scientific theories, but then the religious zealots wouldn't be telling the students exactly which theory they want them to ignore. Then, after being taught dozens of theories that coincide with what they observe in everyday life, they will have little reason to be skeptical of evolution.

    774. Re:Thank God! by cardshark2001 · · Score: 1
      Please don't ever link to talkorigins.org when discussing open minds again.

      Is is a site notorious for exaggeration and plain misinformation about such topics.

      Please don't make sweeping generalizations with not as much as a shred of evidence to back them up, when faced with an overwhelming amount of evidence which proves you incorrect. Please do not try to censor other posters because you are too intellectually lazy to recognize a valuable resource when you see it.

      --
      WWJD? JWRTFA!
    775. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The sticker was written very carefully and makes no mention of religion.

      The fact that you yourself state that it was written "carefully" to make no mention of religion shows even you know/admit that the regulation was created to serve a religious purpose. If it wasn't there would be no need to be "carefully" for it not to mention religion.

      And it is that very intent and purpose that triggers a violation of church and state.

      If you want to argue for this ruling to be overturned you'd have to (1) state a legitimate government purpose this sticker serves, and why it specifically targets a single feild of science, and (2) argue with a straight face that that was indeed the purpose the school board had intended.

      If you cannot do that then the only explanation for the regulation is the one currently on the table - that it was created to serve a constitutionally prohibited purpose.

      And even if you could provide an alternate explanation for the regulation, even if you could proove that that was indeed the intended purpose of the regulation, that the intent and purpose were constitutional, it would still likely be struck down and a violation of church and state because in practice the application of that regulation would inevitably cause the exact same (now unintentional) perceptions and effect.

      You can fail seperation of church and state either through prohibited intent or through it's de facto effect.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    776. Re:Thank God! by shic · · Score: 1

      I admit my post might have been seen as provocative - but (in my opinion) it wasn't without focus.

      In "Part #1" I was not attempting to raise the question of trusting the accuracy of observation, but rather to make a more substantial distinction between observation and fact. Facts are true for all time. It is a fact that many hammers have fallen - it is not a fact that hammers fall... it is, at best, only a theory. Note that while there are many interesting questions about the trustworthiness of human observations - this was not my objection. I hoped I had made a case that premature generalisation is wrong-thinking.

      In "part #2" - I was not intending to disagree that naturally occuring mutations of a genome _can_ cause speciation, but rather that it is far from _proven_ that this has been the mechanism by which our planet came to be populated by many species - or that it is the only mechanism possible. I contest your claim that "The" theory of evolution and the origin of species are separate... to my mind, the idea that all species arise gradually is the most important aspect of both. While I find most alternative hypotheses laughable at best, this doesn't mean I should accept as a fact that "evolution" as it is understood today has been the one and only mechanism of historic speciation. In my opinion evolution is a credible theory with substantial evidential support... but it is not a (known) fact.

      I disagree that the theory of evolution (i.e. that all species have arisen gradually) is reasonably testable. Your plan to track DNA in animals certainly promises to generate evidence, but it offers no proof that external factors have not played a part in speciation on earth. Even if you were to grow an animal of every known species from a soup of the right chemicals I would contest that you still haven't proven that this explains our history - only the history of those animals you grew and studied.

      While we're almost on the same page (where we draw a distinction between Evolution and a theory of evolution by naural selection) there are still differences of opinion. I remain convinced that it is reasonable to question evolution (by any mechanism) based upon the currently available evidence. I admit, however, that where we differ may be just in the subtleties of language... In order for me to be comfortable with the phrase "evolution is a fact" I would need to be convinced that the sole mechanism of speciation on earth has been gradual. I've seen no irrefutable evidence for this... while I've no evidence to the contrary either, this is why I insist evolution - irrespective of particular mechanism - can only be a theory.

      Scientists should be most proud of theories. A "theory" is a plausible explanation accompanied by a body of verifiable evidence which has withstood intellectual scrutiny. A "fact", to my mind at least, this has far less value. A stated "fact" is an appeal that I accept the potentially specious beliefs of another person. Maybe we should make the facetious suggestion that one of two labels be applied to all disputed reasoning - "X is a theory and not a fact" - or - "X is an unverifiable hypothesis and not a theory let alone a fact." [OK - I'm just trying to encourage the use of more sticky labels to enhance my dividends!]

    777. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      In fact, if you were to show that sticker to any person who knew nothing about the controversy here and that the opponents of evolution theory are religious, they wouldn't necessarily connect religion.

      The problem is that anyone with a lick of critical thinking would ask the question. "What about every other scientific theory?" "Why single out evolution?" The simple answer is because evolution offends a small group of religious zealots who think it contradicts the word of God. By singling out evolution the sticker proves it is religiously motivated.

    778. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      God wrote the laws of nature and God enforces the laws of nature. He rarely breaks the laws of nature.

      So what happens if you try to defy the Law of Gravity? It depends. If you are on the ground and start flapping your wings, we will laugh at you, but if you are on an airplane without a parachute and leap into the void, you will die and burn in hell.

      That is the facts that support my hypothesis that some day, all airplanes will burn in hell.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    779. Re:Thank God! by Miraba · · Score: 1
      Virtually all of them are.

      The mutations themselves may be small, but the implications can be enormous. See regulatory genes. Also, see various species of plants (hybrids and polyploids).

      Yes, but almost all such changes are harmful. Evolution is a process of fine-tuning. A sudden change is extremely unlikely to result in a more optimal organism.

      And if it doesn't work, the organism dies and it stops right there. I believe the current thought on numbers are 97% harmful, 2% neutral, 1% beneficial. Just because something is unlikely doesn't mean it never happens (see: winning the lottery).

      That is simply because new species probably arise in small isolated populations under stress (which is where there is selection pressure). This makes discovery of intermediate fossils very unlikely.
      That too, but let's not give them too much info to work with. After all, we have to continue hiding the truth so that our amoral experiments can continue.
    780. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Not much to disagree with, only some minor comments.

      I disagree that the theory of evolution (i.e. that all species have arisen gradually)

      This could be why you don't see how a DNA analysis would work. The definition you gave isn't the theory of evolution.

      but it offers no proof that external factors have not played a part in speciation on earth.

      The problem with this point is that nothing else shows that "external factors" (I can only guess at what you mean by this, but I am presuming supernatural) have played a part in life's development. Without a reason to hypothesize an external factor, you shouldn't. I have no evidence at all that life originated in the horn of a unicorn, so I will not hypothesize that either. My current theories can explain what I see without adding a unicorn to it.

      I remain convinced that it is reasonable to question evolution (by any mechanism) based upon the currently available evidence.

      You do not need to defend the reasonableness of questioning anything. Skepticism is equivalent to open-mindedness, and don't you let anyone tell you otherwise, unless they have some evidence.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    781. Re:Thank God! by Ra5pu7in · · Score: 1

      All fine and dandy, except that evolution is about more than simple natural selection which stays within a single species. The theory of evolution is supposed to show how things moved from a molecular soup to single-celled organisms to multi-celled organisms to all the many species we have today. Except it doesn't. It points to a skeleton of an Eophippus, a Mesophippus, a Miohippus, a Merychippus, a Pliohippus, and a modern horse and says they evolved over that sequence. However, every one of these evolutions is still catalogued as part of the horse species.

      If we limit evolution to only those changes that are based on pre-existing variance in a species, then we must call our selective breeding of dogs evolution in action and drop the claims that everything (all species) evolved from single-celled organisms.

      --
      I was taking one day at a time, but then several days got together and ambushed me. (from a Rhymes with Orange comic)
    782. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > evidence that religion is something that humans are predisposed to

      Are there no separated tribes/groups of people that live without religion? Is it possible that it's not religion that we are predisposed to but a need for understanding? Or maybe even stubbornness? Then, when we cannot explain something, we just attach an incredible cause instead of admitting that we just don't know. It seems more than interesting that atheism has become so much more prevalent (I don't any proof of this except for Republicans constantly whining that "the world is losing its morality") the more we explain things we did not previously understand? Maybe that feeling of "the infinite" is similar to the feeling you get when you finally grok something. Eureka! That can be pretty powerful.

      > All human language is made from a finite group of phonemes and grammars,

      Yes, limited to sounds that flow together well, and we are able to make easily. Makes sense to me. Why do some African tribes use clicks as part of their language, yet no modern language does? Do those not count because they are so remote?

      > Similarly, all human religions draw from a group of finite themes.

      I think that has more to do explaining historical events, merging of/borrowing from religions and different people asking similar questions in different places. Also, your use of the word "all" is an oversight, ignorant, or just plain wrong. There are religions out there that are very different from christainity.

      > as humans, we need to accept our spiritual tendencies, the way we accept our feelings of love,

      What about those that have never felt love(d)? Does that make them less human? If I've never had "spiritual feelings," am I somehow defective? I don't NEED to accept anything at all. I am highly suspicious of anyone claiming proof that humans need religion and "need" to consider it bullshit propaganda until I see some evidence or at the very least, skim a scientific study. I think it has more to do with most religious humans coming from common/close ancestors that were religious and that religiosity has just been passed down over generations and it has "evolved."

      Of course, I don't pretend to be an expert on any of this and could just be showing my own stubbornness in refusing to accept what may be the truth. Or, just maybe, I'm right on some of it. Wacky thought, I know.

    783. Re:Thank God! by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      What exactly is the "law of evolution"? I've never heard of it. Hasn't the fact that species change over time (microevolution) been directly observed? I can't imagine that's in serious dispute.

      As for the origin of life itself, that's really a completely separate question, isn't it?

    784. Re:Thank God! by Ra5pu7in · · Score: 1

      Don't get me wrong. I'm not Christian and have no belief in their God. However, I am not willing to blindly accept evolution as a fact. The two - being religious and not accepting evolution - are not identical. The fact that it was written carefully and that it was written by religious groups does not mean that religion is being injected into the field of science or the classroom. There is no attempt to force the teaching of religion - merely to state that evolution should not be taught as if it were infallible.

      why it specifically targets a single feild of science,

      Actually, I thought this very thing. Every branch of science contains much that is theoretical. What I learned in high school about elements is no longer accepted - even though it was taught as "fact". Even Einstein's General Relativity is still a theory. This could even be said to be true of other subjects. Huge chunks of ancient history are suppositions made based on archaeological discoveries. We aren't taught to be critical thinkers - we're taught to memorize important "facts" for later regurgitation.

      --
      I was taking one day at a time, but then several days got together and ambushed me. (from a Rhymes with Orange comic)
    785. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > why else are we the only species to be congnizant of our own mortality

      Wow, that explains why I've never seen animals become aggressive or run away from a threat to their life.

    786. Re:Thank God! by Ra5pu7in · · Score: 1

      As I just responded to another post, I think the question "What about every other scientific theory?" is wholly valid. We really should be teaching the distinction between facts and accepted theories. This applies even to other subjects besides science.

      because evolution offends a small group of religious zealots

      The interesting thing here is that there is also a small group of zealots who are so opposed to the concept that any higher intelligence could have had a part in life that they blindly accept evolution without pushing to find the cracks and either break it or fix it.

      --
      I was taking one day at a time, but then several days got together and ambushed me. (from a Rhymes with Orange comic)
    787. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Somehow, anyone who has any religous inclination is a supersitous peasant and you are the enlightened philosopher king who must set them straight.

      There are people with certain personality traits in every life setting. For instance, I can point to plenty of religious people who consider themselves morally superior to the ignorant nonbelievers and must "set them straight." That is one possible reason why he claims that religious people "attack" first.

    788. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      Do you think it looked like a crocodile?

    789. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > "science" tend not to burn people on the stake for their beliefs.

      No, they get mad and try to ruin their careers. While a far, far cry from burning at the stake, it's still a bit disturbing. Of course, most scientists who had their career ruined by unpopular ideas were deserving, while I have yet to find record of a justified stake-burning.

    790. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1
      Frankly, the discussion of evolution vs. creationism was/is a sticky point for me and my (somewhat) newfound faith in God. As I've mentioned in other posts, I came to faith in my adulthood as opposed to being raised that way as a child.

      In fact, my entire life I was raised to believe that evolution was the way it is. Quite honestly, I'm not entirely convinced it isn't -- I do believe in microevolution, which accurately describes the changes that we see in animals that have allowed them to adapt to their environment. But unlike other areas of science that I'm very interested in and which seem to have a much more quantifiable argument for their theories, such as astronomy, I see a lot of gaps in macro-evolution. Someone else here posted that there's no difference between the two -- they're one and the same. Maybe that is the case, I am not knowledgeable enough on the subject to say that it is or isn't. But for me, I'd really like stronger evidence. OK, I'll admit that DNA analysis is pretty darned strong evidence, but I'd sure like more in the fossil record.

      As for my belief in God (the God) as a higher power in the universe ... you ask where did God come from? Since I believe the Bible to be the word of God, I believe what it says. And that is that God is, was, and always will be; i.e., he's infinite. OK, that's pretty hard for my tiny brain to grasp, and the simple answer is I can't answer that. As for why he created us, again I refer to the Bible's answer for that...because it pleased Him to do so.

      While these answers are not probably what you're looking for, and while they are likely to enflame other secular readers here, they are the answers as best I know them. What I do know is that I "feel" God in my life. I am close to Him and I know when I pray He hears me. Many readers have said that people of faith have a weak mind or need a crutch. But frankly, it doesn't bother me to admit that I am nothing without God's help. As to whether I have a weak mind or not, well, I can say that I think for myself and that I'm not brainwashed by religion. By that I mean that all my life, one thing that always pushed me away from God was man's ability to screw things up -- look at all of the ridiculous things that different denominations of Christians argue about and dream up to add to the equation, when in fact the Bible says none of it or at least not in the way (IMHO) they say it does. I try to boil it down to its simplest terms -- God is the creator, he made me, he sent his Son Jesus to take away the sin that destroys my life, and that when it's all over for me here on earth, that I will go to Heaven and be with Him. The rest is man's additional baggage.

      Can God-fearing people also believe in theories such as evolution. Honestly, for many years, I've had a belief that He created it all before the Big Bang and just "let it happen". So what's to say that isn't the case? I've heard the argument "What's to say it is?" Nothing other than my faith in God.

      Peace to you...

    791. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

      I'd have to agree with that statement 100%. They each have diffeent goals: science to describe the observable universe; religion to describe the unobservable.

    792. Re:Thank God! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

      I meant it in "slightly" larger/longer terms, but obviously yes animals do realize their mortality. I guess I meant to say that we are able to think about the hereafter and what comes after this life.

    793. Re:Thank God! by dondelelcaro · · Score: 1
      RNA is fantastically complex compared to what the ancestor self-replicator likely was. Possibly a lipid-bound peptide, 2 or 3 dozen amino acids long.
      RNA actually isn't all that complex. Assuming you can get the four basic nucleotides to form, of course. Moreover, it has all of the information necessary for replication to occur located within itself. Unfortunatly, there is no known mechanism for protiens (or lipids) to self replicate that doesn't involve the use of RNA. So, unless there is some method for replication that has since been lost, you would need RNA molecules anyway to perform the structured assembly of proteins according to an information bearing template.
      --
      http://www.donarmstrong.com
    794. Re:Thank God! by sect0r0 · · Score: 1

      It is unfortunate you have no idea what you are talking about. Read Francis Schaeffer's How Now Should We Then Live, and understand that modern science came from a Christian view of the world, that a rational God made the universe for us to understand. He references two non-christian scientists that have written about this specifically, Alfred North Whitehead and J. Robert Oppenheimer. Without the basis of a rational God creating an understandable Universe, there is no epistemological base.

    795. Re:Thank God! by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Let's really analyze it by examining the premises provided:

      1. The poster wrote they believe in the bible per "Who on god's green earth statement"
      2. No one has seen monkeys turn into humans - very valid point which we know a priori.
      *3. Because of (2), the poster believes in observation to draw conclusions.
      *4. The poster has not seen Noah's arc, and has not seen a flood.
      I therefore conclude:
      5. The poster has uses his discretion in asserting when to apply the observation argument.

      6. We have empirical evidence to support the theory of evolution. (a priori)
      7. We have empirical evidence called carbon dating to prove the earth is over 6000 years old (a priori).
      I also conclude:
      9. The OP ignores empirical evidence, and choses to rely solely on observation to prove origins.
      and
      10. The OP has faith in the bible per (1), which itself is unprovable through observation.
      Therfore I finally conclude that:
      11. The OP is talking out his ass and selectively applies observation to refute premises.

      Before you get your tits in a knot and try to use the bible as an argument for observation of Noah's arc, just keep in mind that using the bible as a premise to prove believe is a circular argument, and you can find enough ciritical analysis of said argument online, so I'm not going to bother posting the inference drawn from using the bible as a premise to conclude anything.

      There is no ad-hominem attack. To use a term in accurately, as I've seemingly refuted means that you are pretentious and do not yourself understand the meaning of critical thinking, and are alse pretentious for using a term you learned in a first year philosophy class inappropriately.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    796. Re:Thank God! by DrackenFireBreather · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Just a few points about the prior posts:

      1) To consider that the Seperation of Church and State is a Constitutional fact is a huge mistake. Nowhere in the Constitution or any of it's 27 Ammendments does the proclimation of this Urban Myth hold true.

      Constitution: http://www.archives.gov/national_archives_experien ce/charters/constitution.html

      Bill of Rights: http://www.archives.gov/national_archives_experien ce/charters/bill_of_rights.html

      Ammendments 11-27: http://www.archives.gov/national_archives_experien ce/charters/constitution_amendments_11-27.html

      It turns out the idea of Seperation of Church and State was from a simple corrispondence letter by Thomas Jefferson and the concerns that endorsing a particular sect of the Christian Church could cause problems, as most of the colonies were created for religious reasons and persecution from the then indocrination of the Catholic and Angilican (Church of England) churches.

      Learn more here: http://www.noapathy.org/tracts/mythofseparation.ht ml

      2) There's also some things to note about the different opinions of Evolution. Most will argue the micro/macro evolution chain (if a small change can happen in a short time then a large change can happen in a long time) is a logical fallacy. It has been observed that a species can make small genetic changes within the genome, but there is no conclusive evidence to support large inter-species changes (paradoxies like the chicken and the egg) make this quite a chore for even the best of debaters (master debators?!), the geological record shows large jumps between species, but no interum species. Most genetic changes that have been observed are usually fatal to the species in question or have a detrimental impact instead of a positive impact.

      3) Any religious ideology requires a faith element to it (takes just as much faith to believe there is no God as to believe that there is a God), and by definition faith cannot be scientifically analyzed, however science can assist in the proof (or disproof) of historical references for that said faith.

      http://dict.die.net/faith/

      Keeping an open mind can be good, but too often it can be cluttered with inaccuricies and FUD, it's best to be skeptical with what you read/hear until you can cross-reference them with reliable sources.

    797. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I don't reject god because religious people aren't perfect and religions aren't perfect.
      > I'm educated in history and a critical thinker

      You are a "critical thinker?" I think you need to work on your Critical Reading. Hell, BASIC reading:

      > as deep as people who reject God because religious people aren't perfect, and religions aren't perfect

      Umm, that means, IMPLICITLY, that if you don't do that, it didn't refer you. DUUUUUUUUH.

    798. Re:Thank God! by lemaymd · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link to the journal, I appreciate it and will check it out! You are correct that I do not read much about this subject, and when I do read I tend towards books and articles that are not predisposed against creationism. Every individual and organization on this planet carries a bias, but some are more willing than others to bring that bias into the open. (That, incidentally, is why I think it was a mistake to suppress the freedom of speech of those who attached stickers to these textbooks. All they were trying to do is reveal the hidden bias of the textbooks to the students who use them and are unable to recognize that bias themselves.) I appreciate that organizations like Answers in Genesis are willing to reveal their bias and cut through the piles of papers produced on this topic (most of which are biased by their dedication to uncovering the "missing link") to reveal relevant information for those who are devoted to other areas of research and provide a counterbalance to the overwhelming tide of pro-evolution material that you don't even need to seek out. I would guess that evolution-minded individuals tend to avoid reading publications by research institutions like ICR, but saturate their minds with material from fundamentalist evolutionist publications instead, consciously or not. (although no fundamentalist evolutionist publications would label themselves as such) We're not so different in that respect.

      I agree that I mis-worded my statement about science "proving" things, simple slip of the fingers on the keyboard in a quick posting. There is a movement, as demonstrated by the very small act of putting a warning sticker on a textbook, to provide the fair chance for all ideas that you refer to as an ideal for science. I subscribe to that ideal just as you do.

      I agree, evolution undeniably does happen, but it does not provide bridges between vastly dissimilar organisms like fish and birds. There is no universally convincing evidence to support that position. (This is a point that we have already disputed, we will not reach an agreement on it.)

      The Bible says that God created an original set of creatures, and of course we know that they mutated and microevolved over time.

      Your comparison between the age of the Bible and the Earth is based upon your particular assumptions about the age of the Earth. It will not surprise you to learn that I believe the Earth is approximately 6000 years old. Radiometric dating has been proven to fail in many cases and relies upon the uniformitarian approach to world history, which likely is not correct. (we have measured a reduction even in the speed of light in our time)

      The writers of the Bible were uniquely inspired by God, so this was no ordinary literary project as you believe. "All scripture is given by inspiration of God" --- 2 Tim. 3:16 Many in ancient times suffered from their lack of knowledge regarding the arrangement of the cosmos, I don't see that as an indictment against the Bible, especially since it never explicitly deals with the matter in a literal sense.

      Creationism was the dominant ideology until the 20th century and was adhered to by the major scientists of that time that we now admire. It does not conflict with any modern scientific observations when they are properly interpreted. Interpretation is the key. It is what divides our viewpoints as well. ;-)

    799. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > this poor counting
      > actualy
      > in there book
      > actualy (again)
      > evidences (that word is a verb & does not work here)
      > concequences

      I'm not normally a pedant, but YOU are claiming that the school prevents them from thinking? Considering your grammar & spelling, that's pretty funny. Were you home schooled? I hope your religion wasn't taught to you by the same people who taught you English, or you might want to go back and reconsider both.

      > If we lose the ability to decide for them what is fact and what isn't the concequences could be disastrous!

      That is exactly what religion does.

    800. Re:Thank God! by shic · · Score: 1

      Darn, if you think I've not given you much to disagree with then you should start being more eccentric in your claims - damn-it! :-)

      I admitted that subtlety of language might explain some differences in opinion. When I look up evolution in my dictionary the most appropriate definition says "A gradual process in which something changes into a different and usually more complex or better form." I understand that ascribing to the theory of evolution requires a presumption that no substantial changes occur between successive generations throughout history.

      Suggesting "external" factors which may have influenced speciation does not require me to stoop so low as to suggest anything supernatural. For example, while I've no desire to suggest that I personally believe even this suggestion, what precludes the possibility that an irreproducible cosmic event scrambled DNA on earth giving rise to various species groups? For example, this sort of external event (or events) might explain puzzling gaps in the fossil record. Such a discovery could plausibly refute evolution as the primary explanation for the diversity of life on earth (which, lets face it, is what people hot under the collar are concerned about!) It is difficult to criticise your reluctance to hypothesise - and your caution against considering possibilities for which you've no experience or evidence... however, I would like to suggest that it is equally questionable to assume that every species on earth will arise gradually and naturally in any environment that will support life - we also have scant evidence for that.

      You made my own point wonderfully when you stated "My current theories can explain what I see without adding a unicorn to it." This tacitly admits that theories explain a subset of observations and that it is nigh impossible to move from interesting theories to facts. There is no benefit in presenting a theory as a fact - only in presenting hypotheses as theories... The sticker should be seen as a complement to scientific reasoning... however it was intended.

    801. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      There's a misconception that the earth is very old, and also that other creatures that existed at the same time as dinosaurs were 'prehistoric' (less developed, bigger, hairier, whatever). Why couldn't a shih-tzu appear the same now as it did 6000 years ago? The fossil record proves this out: the fossil record shows dinosaurs alongside the same creatures that we have today, with no or very little change. http://www.trueorigin.org/geocolumn.asp http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v20/i2/fo ssils.asp http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/re2/chap ter8.asp - very interesting http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v21/i2/po lly.asp

    802. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      Again, I ask, where is ANY proof of the earth being more than about 10000 years old? Everything we are taught in science/biology class is based on several assumptions. None of our methods used to date items are accurate (http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/faq/dat ing.asp) My proof of younger earth: the Bible, which has been upheld by science and archaeology many times.

    803. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rocks don't seem to be too upset about being left out in the sun.
      Sand isn't AFAIK unduely affected by solar radiation.

    804. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Oh my, you are the funniest man I've ever met! Keep it coming! I'm quite amused. How did you ever grow up without using your brain?

      Just stay away from my kids. They're too young to learn about mental illness.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    805. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't prove that I was not dancing naked last night. LAcking proof that I wasn't and your lacking proof that I was does not mean that I was not dancing naked last night. Regardless of the proof or the unsubstantiated belief, neither changes the truth of whether I was dancing naked last night. You may not believe it, and have no proof, but I may have.

    806. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you question scientific theories, then you're endorsing religion?

      No, considering that science itself is constantly questioning it's own theories!

      But more important, only a total moron (or someone who is being dishonest) thinks for a moment that these stickers aren't a prelude for something more. The goal of these creationists is very clear: get the sticker in the textbooks now as a prelude to teaching creationism equal time. That's not a conspiracy theory. That's what they say they want to do. Stop pretending the goal is to put stickers in textbooks. You know where this leads.

      You can't ignore what someone says just because they're religious, you know.

      Actually, you can. And the sooner more people do exactly that, the better off the planet will be.

    807. Re:Thank God! by Trixter · · Score: 1

      You're BOTH wrong. The Koalas merely rode on the Kangaroos' backs, of course!

    808. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      threatened when people are reminded that theory is theory and not fact?

      No, the problem is not the content of the sticker. The constitutional problem is that the school board acting as official agents of the government abused their power and imposed a regulation for an unconstitutional purpose.

      Had their purpose to been to 'reminded sutudents that theory is theory and not fact' then they could have had a generic instruction to that effect, or they could have mandated that sort of sticker for EVERY theory in the science book. Of course in that case the book would be plastered with about 100 absurd stickers like the following:

      This textbook contains material on gravity. Gravity is a theory, not a fact. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.

      Had they mandated the generic sticker for the purpose of aiding science education it would have been perfectly legal. Had they mandated stickers for every field of science then that would have been perfectly legal - including the evolution sticker.

      They did not do either of those things. They had absolutely no legitimate governmental purpose for using their power to impose that exact regulation strictly targeting evolution. If is quite clear that their purpose was strictly to officially discredit one particulat field of science, and that they did so strictly as a grant of government favor on behalf of a particular religious position. That is a constitutionally prohibited purpose for imposing the force of government power on the public. The government cannot grant favors or prefferential treatment for any religion.

      2000 people were offended that a theory is being used by textbook writers to impose a new religion on the kids. Seven were offended by the use of a sticker

      There is no right not to be offended.

      to bring a little balance into the discussion

      How does it bring BALANCE to target one specific feild of science for specific government discreditation? And how the hell is it balance to do so for strictly religious motivations? If it is permissable then every religious group gets the exact same "right to bring balance" to every subject. Every subject in every book will be slapped with "balance" stickers from 42 different religions. I'm sure the Scientologist stickers will be most amusing.

      The court sides with no balance in the discussion.

      The court doesn't give a rats-ass about balance. The court sides with enforcing the constitution.

      We are guaranteed the right to religious freedom. That means freedom from government FORCE being imposed against us for religious purposes. Any law or regulation with a religious intent and purpose is unconstitutional. The school board imposed this regulation with the intent of achieving a prohibited purpose.

      No looking beyond the science, kiddie-winks!

      Look beyond the science all you like. However if you are a government official you cannot ABUSE your government power to IMPOSE or even provide FAVOR to your preffered brand of religion. If you can drag your religious beliefs into the classroom and impose them on my kids, then *I* have the exactly same right to drag *MY* religious beliefs into the classroom and impose them on *YOUR* kids. I can spend all day lecturing them on how god lives in the same imaginary gingerbread house as santaclause and the easterbunny, and how your favorite bible is nothing but fiction and mythology made up by a bunch of random schmoes ages ago, and that some of those random authors were likely schizophrenic or otherwise nutzo.

      But I have a better idea. How about we respect the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion and you don't attempt to abuse the force of government power against me and my family for religious purposes, and I won't attempt to abuse the force of government power against you and your family for religious purposes.

      You have your religious freedom. I have my religiou

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    809. Re:Thank God! by TLSPRWR · · Score: 1

      "Evolution is a fact in that we know it occurs and it has been seen occuring."

      Microevolution is a fact, such as multiple species of dogs coming from one dog ancestor, but was still ultimately a dog, not another animal. Or perhaps birds adapting to the environment.

      Macroevolution is unproven as far as I know (but I'm open to reading about some evidence proving otherwise). I've yet to see real evidence that reptiles came from birds or a simple cell was randomly created from proteins floating around, and was somehow able to reproduce by itself.

    810. Re:Thank God! by AndyL · · Score: 1

      " Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry? "
      As everyone else already pointed out, there is a good deal of supporting evidence. None entirely conclusive, but I never said there was.

      I said "... if the leading scientific theory is proven wrong then it is no longer the leading scientific theory."

      Simply put, current evolutionary theory best supports the existing facts. Yes. There are gaps. But constantly demanding answers to those gaps does not constitute an argument. If you want to dispute evolutionary theory, A) Prove it Completely Wrong, or B) Come up with a theory that better matches the observable facts. Don't just keep screaming that evolutionary theory is not perfect. Because Science is not a religion imperfection, doubt, and uncertainty do not blow our minds, they are accepted as simply a natural part of the human condition.

      "[the scientific method] also can't explain the 'Why am I here' question?."
      Standard answer : You are here because your genes were more successful at surviving long enough to propagate themselves than competing genes were.
      Alternate, philosophical answer : No reason. You're just walking meat cursed with life and consciousness. Don't worry, those curses don't last long.

    811. Re:Thank God! by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      And dog, cow, human all use the same carrier for genetic material, DNA. The existence of such a carrier was predicted by evolutionary theory. Furthermore, evolutionary distance can now be quantified exactly. You have exactly 50% of the genes from your mom and 50% of your dad. You have more of your DNA in common with your monkey brother than with any other being except for your parents. 99.5% of your genes are shared with all humans on earth, 98% with the bonobo, our closest relative. Still a good 90% of your DNA is shared with all mammals, a good portion with reptiles, and so on and so on.

      Looking at the fossil record hoping to see evolution in action used to be necessary before we could actually look at the DNA itself. That has now changed, and evolution has shown to be right on the money for all its major predictions.

    812. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Why do some African tribes use clicks as part of their language, yet no modern language does?

      Whoops! I think you made a boo-boo! :D
      Presuming you are talking about an African tribe that is currently speaking that language, that is a modern langaue as well, is it not?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    813. Re:Thank God! by AndyL · · Score: 1
      "I'm referring to a more general tendency of self-righteous atheists feeling it is their moral (?!) obligation to berate religous people."
      Those show up in every group of people. It must be a common mental problem.
      • You see people who pounce on any innocuous mention of God and berate it as medieval superstition.
      • You see people who go out of their way to tell you that your problems all stem from not embracing Jesus.
      • You see people who go on tirades if you should dare question the Iraq War.
      • You see people who will strike a blow for freedom by vandalizing "Support our Troops" bumper stickers.
      • You get smokers who go out of their way to berate "anti-smoking Nazis" when they see a "no smoking" sign in a hospital or gas station.
      • You see people who are "anti-smoking Nazis".
      • You see people who will lecture you for hours if you should dare suggest that the energy fields of a crystal pyramid might not be the best way to sharpen a razor blade.
      • You see people who will cross a crowded room simply for the opportunity to make fun of someone wearing a crystal pendant.

      I'm sure we could play this game all day and come up with a giant compendium of jerks and losers. But my point is just to illustrate that self appointed philosophy professors are not limited to the religion/anti-religion sort.

      (Personally, I enjoy taunting vegetarians.)

    814. Re:Thank God! by mohaine · · Score: 1

      There's a misconception that the earth is very old

      Do you have any evidence to back this up?

      Just how do you explain that light can travel millions of light years in 6000 years?

      If God made the earth 6000 years ago and made it look older, is this a God you really want to follow?

      If God is all powerful, couldn't he have made the world billions of years ago and know what we would be here today in our current form?

      BTW, The last one is what the Catholic church teaches.

      --
      (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
    815. Re:Thank God! by lizardb0y · · Score: 1

      ...but the message itself is fairly neutral and fully accurate so far as I can tell.

      I think if the message read:

      Evolution is a theory, not a fact. Creationism is neither fact, theory, nor wild speculation, and is more accurately described as the occult ramblings of idiots and charlatans.
      it might be considered neutral and accurate. As written it implies that creationism has the same or similar standing as evolution which obviously it does not.
    816. Re:Thank God! by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      You didn't really need to comment on most of the definitions - I emphasized the ones I considered to be taking evolution from a biological perspective, and I agree the other ones are rather vague.

      Also observed, some pops split into two sepcies that cannot intterbreed.

      But when that happens, its no longer a case of evolution being simply "mostly red fish -> mostly black fish". I'm not arguing over the validity of evolution here (I've done that in other places), simply stating that evolution is more than a shift in the distribuation of an attribute across a population. That is part of evolution, but not the whole of it.

      I'd agree with your definition. Evolution is concerned with the introduction of new genetic data into a populations gene pool, and tracking the spread (or lack thereof) of the resultant trait.

      An example of evolution would be *all* red fish -> some black fish -> mostly black fish. A trait that did not previously exist, occuring through random chance, that is favourable to the species, and thus propogates. Mostly red fish -> mostly black fish is a result of natural selection - a mechanism necessary for evolution, but not evolution itself.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    817. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      You're just walking meat cursed with life and consciousness.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    818. Re:Thank God! by AndyL · · Score: 1

      Bad link.
      Here : http://www.terrybisson.com/meat.html

    819. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The neat thing about your "reason for existing" is that if it be suitable and pleasing to me, that I terminate your vessel then I am hppay to pursue that goal. Based on your supposition, You are no more important to me than the ants I killed last week and I am no more important to you as well. In fact if it were to please me that I prevent your genetic material from reproducing, then I am free to pursue that and you for me. Hows that sound?

      Sounds like chaos and anarchy. we are a far more "evolved" speciies than that, or are we?

    820. Re:Thank God! by mdiep · · Score: 1

      You don't understand: for all you've said, you still haven't answered the poster's original claim (You're confusing microevolution with macroevolution. I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.).

      You infer that said poster believes in the Bible from the phrase gods green earth. This is a common idiomatic expression that has nothing to do with the poster's beliefs. See also: "God dammit" and "Thank God!" (the title of this thread).

      From the poster's comment about observing evolution and his use of the word "god" (which may or may not be a false premise), you conclude that the the poster uses his discretion in asserting when to apply the observation argument.

      This is where the ad-hominem attack happens. Look carefully: the poster presents a claim and you dismiss it because [he] is talking out his ass - you dismiss his argument because you think he's an idiot.

      Furthermore, the OP's desire to see evolution tested by means of observation is perfectly valid science. Whether or not he chooses to apply this principle uniformly to all his beliefs is completely irrelevant to its validity in this instance.

      Next you state as a premise We have empirical evidence to support the theory of evolution. This is the very point the OP was calling into doubt. And now you're using it to refute him! THAT's a circular argument.

      A proper (read useful) response to the OP's comment would have been to provide links/references to this empirical evidence rather than dismiss it based on whatever else you think he believes.

      There's no need to get so heated. Insults aren't necessary (and you should really reread your last sentence: it doesn't seem to make sense).

    821. Re:Thank God! by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      so their presence on the books is a violation of separation of church and state regardless of what the stickers actually say.

      Here's this mythical "separation of church and state" again.

      The constitution says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;...". It does NOT say that religious beliefs must not be the motivation for saying something that it patently obvious.

      The sticker being discussed does nothing to establish any religion, nor does it prevent anyone from the free exercise of the religion of their choice. Thus, it falls well within constitutional limits, and certainly does not violate any fabricated "separation" requirement. In fact, I'd say that the sticker is mandatory, to help prevent the establishment of the religion known as Evolution -- which is not just "species change" as someone else wrote, but that "species change into other species and that is how humans came to exist". Yes, the latter "evolution" is just as much a religion as anything else, since nobody saw how humans came to exist and thus "faith in things not seen" is exactly what "evolutionists" have.

    822. Re:Thank God! by snorklewacker · · Score: 1

      There's a misconception that there isn't a rhinocerous in my living room. He's just very shy.

      Golly, you're a nut job. Thanks for making it obvious.

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    823. Re:Thank God! by AndyL · · Score: 1

      "
      During the time it has taken for many theories to be considered "proven wrong" the old theory was religiously clung to until the mass of ideas revolving around the new theory was so great there was not much choice other than to let go of the old.
      "
      Who came up with the mass of ideas revolving around the new theory if everyone was still religiously beliving the old theory? They didn't spring up out of the ground, did they?

      Anyway, everyone knows human nature isn't perfect. Nothing involving a large number of people is ever executed as smoothly as it should be. That's just life.

    824. Re:Thank God! by Macrolord · · Score: 1

      Great. Experts who think similarly about a topic. If they disagree then either the information is not yet proven or someone is wrong.

      Peer review is overrated and certainly not as trustworthy as it woudl seem to be.

    825. Re:Thank God! by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Actually, it goes a bit deeper than that. Darwinian evolution also predicted the existence of genes itself. Not their form or functioning, but it was a necessary part of the theory that there was a common carrier for inheritance of traits. So the actual key prediction of evolution was purely the existence of a DNA-like substance. This we take for granted nowadays, as its a fact, but scientist only started looking for it because of evolution theory. I think that since the discovery of this DNA, evolution theory has similar status as the theories of physics.

    826. Re:Thank God! by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Sorry for nitpicking, but don't confuse science with mathematics. 2+2=4 is provably true in for instance Paeno arithmetic. What is not provably true is that the addition operator holds in the physical world: if you have two sticks of wood and add two sticks of wood to that, you have four sticks of wood. Mathematics applied to physics. However, if you have two clouds and add two more clouds, you might simply end up with a single big cloud. Here the addition operation does not transport to the scientific discourse (even though the molecules do add up). This is what measurement theory is about: how to apply mathematical operations to physical phenomena. Interesting stuff.

    827. Re:Thank God! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      well actually the seperation of church and state is nothing more then an interopretation of the first amendment of the ocnstitution. The problem here arises when the theory of evolution has been use to discretit religious and other thoeries on the origin of life.

      We have the freedom from religion just as well as we have the freedom of religion. The state mandating that something which purpose is to discredit other theories or beliefs is one thing. The people behind it should not be taken into acount because a differing theory of creation doesn't have to be a religious experience. If you do take into acount that religion was a primary motive behind it, then i would claim that the purpose of including the thoery of evolution is nothign more then a state's attemp to discredit religion and that would violate the same seperation of church and state.

      Stating that somethign is a thoery and not fact is and should be perfectly exceptable. The people that are wanting it out are athiest wich is actualy a religion of it's own in the same sence that scientoligy and wika/pegan or catholoism is. If we look at the motive behind the people wanting it out then they are trying to impose thier religions beliefs that there is no god onto the people that have freedom of religion and wish to practice thier own set beliefs.

      This case is easily going to be overturned for the above reasons and the same reasons you have stated in your reply. Science has acnowledged the thoery and knows it isn't fact but use it because it lend to thier explainations of other theories and process they have observed.

      By your own reasoning, if i was to ask that the sticker be placed back on the books because as an athiest i believe evolution is a tool used by aliens to ensure our survival when they come back to havest us as food and slaves and that the beguining of life started in an alien peachtree dish instead of a spark of electricity in a mudpudles. Then because i am not religious, but have a competing thoery it would stand up to the seperation of church and state? Or is it just that we have suck a distaste for those that are religious we would do anyhting to hurt them if we thought we could?

      As for you comparision of humans and monkeys, take a look at how closer we are to pigs. yes, micro evolution exists but it is highly unlikley macro evolution does. In the ring species as you suggested, there are several different examples but none of them have actually made a species jump. And they are capable of breeding but chose not to breed kind of enforce the nature selection or selective breeding example but do not show macro evolution in the sence of a psecies jump. They don't interbreed but if they wanted to they can. Also unlike with mules, thier offspring can breed also. This has already been shown. As for it showing how enviromental changes effect a population of micro evolution it is a prime example. One would have to ask, in an inteligent design, (the aliens or god) would somethign like this be built in to ensure the survival of the crop? I strees that i'm not a religious person and consider myself to be athiest at best.

      Somethign that you cannot show me is an example of were a species made a jump in species. Selective breeding of horses won't produce a cow, just different types of hourse. Eventualy some of these housres will be indiferent to the sexual reproduction of other species if they can actually reproduce but they are still the same species. We have been doing this for thousands of years. The same goes with grain and dogs much like the current examples of humans. You will find genetic as well as biological differences in humans when tranpiring the ethnic apeaenrce in humans. they are all still human though. Some may be more suspectable to differing ilnesses as others might have better skills in certian areas.

      You ask me to define a macro difference in the brains between humans and monkeys. Well i can't. Not because there isn't one but because science doesn't fully understand the differences or the me

    828. Re:Thank God! by BeatlesForum.com · · Score: 1

      Clearly you don't understand evolution then. It doesn't say we evolved from apes. Also it doesn't say anything about the origins of life. (ie, the primoridal soup you talk about)

      What does it say, then? I'm curious. Really.

      --
      When millions disappear from earth, it's not aliens, it's the rapture.
    829. Re:Thank God! by James+Youngman · · Score: 1
      PM writes:
      Fact: Something that you observe to be true.
      fact #1: when you drop a hammer, it falls to the ground
      fact #2: a genetic sequence can change sufficiently to form a new species. Speciation has been observed more than once in the laboratory and in the wild, so this is a fact. Since we call this process 'evolution', that means evolution is a fact. Keep reading for more explanation of this.
      This is subtly wrong. You need to read some real books on philosophy or logic (for example, Bertrand Russel's History of Western Philosophy or some Karl Popper perhaps). Briefly, though:
      Fact: Something that you observe to be true.
      fact: when I dropped a hammer this morning, it appeared (from where I was observing it) to fall to the ground

      Theory: A prediction of future behaviour (usually on the basis of evidence)
      Theory #1: If I drop a hammer tomorrow, near the surface of the Earth, it will fall towards the Earth's centre.
      Theory #2: Objects having the property of "mass" are mutually attracted to each other. Further observation may reveal how the attractive force depends on the properties of those objects.
      My point is that even the law of gravitation is not a "fact", because it is a prediction of future behaviour based on the previous observation of the Universe. It is crucial that in important debates like this one that proponents of rantionalism and modern scientific orthodoxy are very careful to be clear on their terms. Muddying terms and ambiguous use of vocabulary are a very good way for people to present a well-established scientific position as being open to doubt and multiple interpretation.

      I'm no believer in Intelligent Design myself, but I find the arguments of the nerves in the giraffe's neck and other arguments to be more convincing than hairsplitting over "theory" versus "fact".

    830. Re:Thank God! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      hmm. tell me the simplefies version then. we go back as far as lightning stricking a mudpuddle somewere but what was before that and were did it come from?

      I guess i am showing my ignorance here because i never have heard were this cam from. sure there is the big band and it mistaricaly happened from what? again i'm showing me lack of education and ignorance here because i have never been told what caused the big bang or were that material cam from.

      Please enlightend one, tell me the cliffnotes version of how this happened so i can be as informed as you. And evolution as in species jumps have stoped. give one example of it going on today. Also i am interested in why it was hapening all the time and humans came form apes, why we are not finding at least examples of the missing link or human jump in our history. The therory of eveolution has been around the leasst amoutn of time compared to all the other therories and it has transfored into 3 or more different exceptable version that i know of because of the problems each other version had when trying to validate it. I'm not saying that the changes aren't warented or that it couldn't be corect either. I'm also not going to say that any other therory is any more corect.

    831. Re:Thank God! by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, the OP's desire to see evolution tested by means of observation is perfectly valid science. Whether or not he chooses to apply this principle uniformly to all his beliefs is completely irrelevant to its validity in this instance.

      Actually it is quite relevant, and bang on with my point. The ..."where are the half-monkey people" is always made by those who believe in creationism. And his choice of idiomatic expression is quite revlevant; I never refer to earth as "god's green earth". If you believe it to be god's, you are religious.

      So my point is quite valid,relevant, and not an ad-hominem, because I gave ample reason why he is talking out his ass :)

      Next you state as a premise We have empirical evidence to support the theory of evolution. This is the very point the OP was calling into doubt. And now you're using it to refute him! THAT's a circular argument.

      The empirical evidence is in fossils and carbon dating. If you don't agree with fossils, you also dismiss the existance of dinosaurs. How can one accept Dinosaurs but dismiss Cro-Magnon Man? The existance of dinosaurs is universally accepted. So should the existance of Cro-Magnon, Neanderthal, and the rest of it.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    832. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Many do not consider dogs and wolves to be seperate species. And for now, the creationists can still argue that cats begat cats and mice begat mice and so on. Many times I read or heard the phrase "and may be the same species" in regards to dogs and wolves.

      Good thing there's no evidence of evolution producing two species which couldn't interbreed. Oh wait! There is!

      http://www.santarosa.edu/lifesciences/ensatina.htm

    833. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I read Popper and Kuhn, possibly while you were still in diapers.

      If you read all the other things that I wrote, I did describe the problem of induction, though I didn't use that exact term. What it comes down to is this:

      1) You can observe things happen many times. The more you observe, the more certain you can be that's the way it behaves. Since you can't observe it infinitely many times, you can't be absolutely certain. Science cannot be absolutely certain, but we can be pretty damn sure!
      2) Science is practical. Instead of wasting time dropping the hammer one more time after we've seen it fall a billion times, we call it good enough and move on.

      Read what I wrote with the understanding that I am fully aware of the issues.

      BTW, you forgot Chalmers' _What is this thing called Science_ as one of the most approachable treatments of the philosophy of science. Absolutely recommended.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    834. Re:Thank God! by azzy · · Score: 1

      Indeed - to the extent that I threaten your ability to pass on your genes, you should consider removing that threat. But I share genes with my familiy, and it is in their best interests that they stop non-family members from killing me. It is this that causes families and clans to form, our very social nature a means for our genes to protect themselves. And it is this nature of ours to form social groups that has extrapolated itself and made so many of us supporters of our local sporting team, nationalist about those from the same country as ourselves, and so willing to fight the foreigner who certainly has far less genes in common than those from our own country - and when resources in our own country grow scarce, we degenerate into smaller groups and fight with the other groups around us. Yes, chaos and anarchy, did you really think humanity had anything better to offer than that?

    835. Re:Thank God! by almightyjustin · · Score: 1
      defined as change from one species to another (which has never been found)

      http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB910.html

      --

      Omnes arx vestrum sunt adiuncta nobis.

    836. Re:Thank God! by almightyjustin · · Score: 1
      Evolution would require that 'information' be added to DNA.

      http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB102.html

      --

      Omnes arx vestrum sunt adiuncta nobis.

    837. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      Suppose the science-literate majority insisted that stickers be placed on bibles stating that the concept of a diety or "god" was an unproven and unprovable theory

      If Bibles were handed out as textbooks in the Public Schools, this might make sense. Any place else is outside of the jurisdiction of the Public School Board.

      Personally, I think that nonreligous study of the Bible might make sense in the public school. It would be more like a philosophy course than a science course. I went to a private school, and it had a Religion and Philosophy Department, which was completely separate from the Science Department. In general, any course on critical thinking would be of benefit. This can be done without passing judgement on the correctness of the ideas being studied. But, somehow, public school doesn't seem to acknowledge the ability of teachers to teach or students to study ideas as concepts to be played with and not just as facts to be memorized and agreed with. This is indoctrination, not education, but it is what people expect of the public schools if you look past the labels and see what people really expect.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    838. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      The interesting thing here is that there is also a small group of zealots who are so opposed to the concept that any higher intelligence could have had a part in life that they blindly accept evolution without pushing to find the cracks and either break it or fix it.

      Every so called "proof" of evolution could just as easily disprove evolution. If the measurement or observation went the other way evolution would be disproved. Although these days with so much evidence for evolution any evidence against must be looked at skeptically, and analyzed thoroughly. This is like the Martian meteor that supposedly had signs of life, given all the other evidence against life on Mars. The results and conclulsions of those scientists were looked at skeptically, and in the end the consensus was that there evidence was inconclusive.

      There is also this misconception that evolution and scientific theories in general are these monolithic entities that fall apart when one little stone is removed. Just because General Relativity falls apart at a singularity doesn't make the rest of the theory any less meaningful, and therefore any new theory must be reduceable to General Relativity just as General Relativity reduces to Newtonian gravitation at lower strengths. The point of this is that opponents to evolution tend to nit pick at it little piece fo evidence is 100% positive proof, and there is a lot of error in this other measurement, and so on and so forth. But, taken together evolution fits the mountain of evidence, but we still have not figured out every mechanism. And, the creationists seem to figure that what we don't know disproves evolution.

      Additionally, trying to prove the existence of god scientifically is a fools errand, and just sets up a believer to have his/her beliefs dashed. Let's say some believer accepts some Creationist/ID writing that says the complexity of the eye is proof of intelligent design. Then, when real scientists show how the eye developed without intelligent design our original believer who said "Hey, I know god exists because an eye could not have developed without a god." would have his belief in god shaken, and solely because some idiot decided to misuse science in the pursuit of god.

      Basically, ID-ers seem to be misguided fools who are so insecure in their faith that they must look towards science to "prove" their faith. And, in the process are providing the tools to destroy their faith. It is rather sad.

    839. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1
      Cobb is a huge county, 2006 parents is a drop in the bucket.

      Cut and paste this into Google:
      site:www.cobb.k12.ga.us cobb county schools

      and you will see not only that:
      The Cobb County School District is the second largest school system
      in Georgia and among the 30 largest in the United States.

      but that they have written something about the recent court case and related news:
      For some time now, the Cobb County School District has been subject to scrutiny
      and criticism as we have made decisions concerning science instruction. ...

      Possibly the website has been /.ed, so if you don't take my word for it, try it again when the sysadmin gets back to work.
      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    840. Re:Thank God! by ddimas · · Score: 1

      You don't actually do science do you? Your argument is specious and is more about your agenda than the facts. Hand covered in sulphuric acid = PAIN. If you twist the English language to suit your arguments I will simply think poorly of you. People who make arguments like yours (well, that depends on what the meaning of is is) simply give sophistry a bad name.

    841. Re:Thank God! by almightyjustin · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you missed the joke.

      --

      Omnes arx vestrum sunt adiuncta nobis.

    842. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      I am however playing devils advocate and trying to show the lack of evidence to cliaim it as fact over another theory.

      You are right microevolution occurs (although scientists don't use the term, just creationists). The theory of evolution posits that lots of micro evolution equals a macroevolution (another creationist term). There is evidence for this in genetic analysis, fossils, mutation rates, and more that I cannot think of since I am not an expert in evolutionary biology. Because the consequences of evolution are that if life evolved from a common anscestor(s) then there should be genetic similarities. This is why evolution ranks with other theories it makes predictions about what we should observe and observations so far have fit the predictions.

      I am however playing devils advocate and trying to show the lack of evidence to cliaim it as fact over another theory. We could be the bastard children of drunken perverted aliens that screwed some other animals and dumped thier ofspring on earth to get rid of them. We could also be a science experiment for a race of giants that are so large, we are atomes in relation to thier size. or we are in a aquarium/electron accelerator and being developed as biological weapon to use against thie renemies.

      And, these could be possible, so what observations should be looked for given these theories that would differentiate the theories from evolution?

      I would also like to mention that evidence for the origin of life is not available. It appears life originated at least a billion years ago. The fossil evidence shows no times since then when there was no life. And, genetic evidence suggests relation between life that has been sequenced so far. Hypothetically, all life could have been destroyed and replaced with other life that was genetically similar, and also looked like evolved versions of the destroyed life. But, there is no evidence to support this over evolution. Aliens coudl have also periodically dropped engieered species off every once in a while, that were engineered from the same gene pools, but there is no evidence for this that excludes evolution.

    843. Re:Thank God! by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      modern science came from a Christian view of the world,

      so, chinese science and indian science is invalid and only came AFTER the west learned stuff.

      heh. don't think so.

      what a self-centered view, to think that xtian this or that matters THAT much to the world.

      its less than 50% of the population, you know.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    844. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      You don't actually do science do you? Your argument is specious and is more about your agenda than the facts. Hand covered in sulphuric acid = PAIN. If you twist the English language to suit your arguments I will simply think poorly of you. People who make arguments like yours (well, that depends on what the meaning of is is) simply give sophistry a bad name.

      I was exagerating to try to make a point.

      I think we are on the same side. And, I do have an agenda. I was just demonstrating a extreme case of how strong a scientific theory is compared to a theory in the common language. Of course, hand covered in sulphuric acid = PAIN, but you cannot call it a fact that it will happen next time. The observation has not been made, yet. Does every piece of evidence in the entire universe tell us this is exactly what will happen? Hell, yes. We also take away from the evidence that every other time this has happened even if we did not observe it, the exact same thing happened.

      My end point was this corelates with the theory of evolution. We have a whole bunch of facts, genetic similatities between species, fossils, etc... Analagous to the hands always getting burned by the acid everytime we observed it. We formulated a theory that explains these facts called the Theory of Evolution that also implies that evolution happened and will happen. Just as the Theory of Hands Burning in Acid explains why they burn and therefore that they will burn everytime in the future and the past.

    845. Re:Thank God! by srleffler · · Score: 1
      he sticker being discussed does nothing to establish any religion, nor does it prevent anyone from the free exercise of the religion of their choice. Thus, it falls well within constitutional limits, and certainly does not violate any fabricated "separation" requirement.

      You might be right here. The court apparently felt otherwise, but of course you are arguing that the court was wrong.

      In fact, I'd say that the sticker is mandatory, to help prevent the establishment of the religion known as Evolution -- which is not just "species change" as someone else wrote, but that "species change into other species and that is how humans came to exist". Yes, the latter "evolution" is just as much a religion as anything else, since nobody saw how humans came to exist and thus "faith in things not seen" is exactly what "evolutionists" have.

      Here I have to disagree. Evolution is simply not a religion so your argument does not apply. Besides this, though, a science textbook should explain currently accepted scientific theories, and nothing else. At present, evolution is the only scientific theory for the development of life on Earth, and therefore it is the only theory which should appear in a book which is to be used in a science classroom.

      Science does not necessarily depend on someone personally observing the effect described by the theory. We depend on all kinds of indirect evidence of things that we can never personally see. You can't see electricity flowing in a wire, but you can see the evidence that it is doing so when your light turns on. You can't 'see' gravity, but you can see its effect on a falling object and infer that it is the same force that compels the planets to move in their orbits. In the same way, we can observe the distributions of species in the natural world, the details of their genetic codes, and the fossil evidence of past species, and infer with some certainty that new species have evolved from previous ones. We also have observed several instances of new species appearing through evolution. The fact that species evolve from other species is not really disputable by any honest and intelligent person at this point. The details of how this occurs, of course, are still open to debate.

    846. Re:Thank God! by AthenaChristine · · Score: 1

      I'm glad you posted this because I'm sick of writing it. Every time the evolution vs. creationism comes up, I find myself explaining this. ONCE AND FOR ALL -- The layman's term "theory" is not the same as the scientific term "theory". The problem stems from the public's lack of knowledge of the most basic scientific word usage and a misunderstanding of scientific method in general. When I hear people say, "evolution is just a theory" it baffles me. A hypothesis becoming theory is not an easy process. Electricity is a theory. I don't see anyone rallying to put stickers on books reminding kids not to trust lighting fixtures. No one's arguing the theory of relativity either. Theory is as good as it gets in science. Law is a mathematical term and doesn't even apply to certain instances of scientific findings. In other words, no matter what evidence is available, there are some theories that can never be laws. It's apples and oranges. It's important to remember that science is a system of building knowledge based on what we know at the time. This is not the fault in science, but what makes science more reliable than faith. When new evidence is presented, studied, published, retested (again and again), etc. the new evidence is accepted. With faith, no matter what evidence is presented, the believer will not change his/her mind and by this method it is impossible to prove or disprove anything. The change in science is its strength, and its basic functioning premise, not a weakness or series of 'mistakes'. Mistakes are when you hold on to a belief in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. There is a preponderance of evidence to support evolution theory (otherwise, it wouldn't be a theory, it would be a hypothesis). I don't understand why people refuse to accept this. If you believe evolution is bunk, then argue it without bringing in the 'just a theory' stuff because it's a misuse of the terminology.

    847. Re:Thank God! by ddimas · · Score: 1

      That's fine, but please resist the temptation to err on the other side when making these cases. It's bad enough when people use stickers like that to tell chidren that "Evolution is just a Theory". Don't play into their hands by making ridiculous statements like "there is no such thing as a fact". By making such statements you are making the creationists look reasonable to an uninformed observer. A far more reasonable objection to creationism, and one that fights the creationists on their own ground is to conceed the literal truth of the creation given in Genisis, and to then ask why when everything else was corrupted by the fall of Adam, the course of time was left alone? After all, time is part of creation, made so that Humankind would have a place to exist. God himself as scripture often states is outside of time.

    848. Re:Thank God! by TWX · · Score: 1

      I'm 24 years old. I saw information on these experiments when I was ten or so. I remember some blurb about them in freshman Chemistry class, but no details ring through.

      Have you ever seen modern Chemistry and/or Biology and/or Biochem textbooks? I haven't cracked a book like that since I got out of high school. I don't know what's in them now. I do know, however, that they do revise them fairly frequently, so if the school or district updates its books then they'll have whatever's modern. These might simply be an interesting sidenote to the process.

      Any students who go on to high level sciences will get modern schooling on what's actually going on. If you're not going there then you don't have much to be concerned about anyway.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    849. Re:Thank God! by Luke-Jr · · Score: 1

      Actually, evolutionism (inclusive of the common stuff many people today now blindly accept as facts) *has* been proven wrong, a number of times...

      --
      Luke-Jr
    850. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's my deal (the guy from above is me, not jericho): Why is God "the one?" Why isn't Allah? Why isn't it Buddha? Or shiva? How can _you_ be sure that Kali will not open up a 4-armed can of whoopass on you for not believing in _her_ when you were presented with the truth?

    851. Re:Thank God! by rthille · · Score: 1

      1)There's two parts to the "is evolution true" discussion: That species change over time, which is immutable fact. It's in the fossil record. Species change into other species. This is not a theory.

      Well, the fact is that there have been discovered rocks which have particular patterns of minerals. There are theories which postulate that these patterns of minerals indicate that a previously live creature died in that location long ago and the minerals replaced the creature's body over time. That those mineral patterns are the evidence of previously existing creatures is a _theory_, not a fact.

      Not that I'm a creationist or that I disbelieve evolution, but you seemed to be pedantic only until you got to your conclusion.

      Also, I'm not sure that I feel the court should rule true statements as being unconstitutional (though I haven't read the article, much less the court briefs...)

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    852. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      I have only one physical piece of evidence, the Bible. There is zero scientific evidence. All ages given to the earth are speculation and guesses - prove me wrong. I'm not catholic and do not know what the catholic church teaches on this matter. I do know what the Bible says, and I believe it. And yes, God could definitely have made the earth as old as He wanted. However, the bible is clear on this matter: He made the earth approximately 8000 years ago, and made it in 6 days with Adam and Eve and various types of animals/fish/birds/etc. I believe He made the same types of animals that we see today (sure, they changed somewhat so we have different types of cats, dogs, horses, etc.), and that included dinosaurs and the other creatures that are now extinct. What I believe and what scientists believe are both religions based on faith. I place my faith in what God tells us through the bible. Scientists (in regards to evolution and the other things I mentioned), place their faith in what they speculate happened so many years ago. I believe a lot of science. There's nothing wrong with most of it. However, I don't for the life of me see where they get that the earth is millions or billions of years old. Nothing supports it.

    853. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      Let me clarify: by species, I mean that we have never observed an 'organism' changing from one type (say, a bird) to another (a fish). A salamander giving birth to a salamander with a slightly different skin pattern (or different body shape) is not an indicator of what most think evolution is. This will not get you to the point of a single-cell organism (originating from wherever), evolving over millions of years into humans. A salamander is still a salamander.

      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v21/i2/bi ters.asp

    854. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. Gravity is not a theory. its a scientific law. Planetary Motion is not a theory, its a law. Atomic "Theory" is not a theory. Its a law. Its things that have been proven time and time again. Those are called scientific laws. a theory is something that can be proved here and there, but not in all circumstances. Get your science terminology straight.

    855. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, I just have to ask... do you have a mental defect?
      If you even took junior high science, you would know that they are very closely related. Much like you and a chimp.

    856. Re:Thank God! by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
      "I choose theism because if you run the equation, I like the answer. I'm a believer because I want to be."

      The question, then, is is this truly belief, or merely self-delusion?

      "If you reply 'I don't know, and we can never tell' to everything, you won't get anywhere.

      Think of it like this: say I have a function on the plane, and I give you 10 random sample points with x values in the interval [0,1]. Now you might interpolate a polynomial through those points, and say you have found my function. But have you? Well, maybe, but there are a lot of other possible functions that also go through those points! In particular, even if I gave you all the values with x in the interval [0,1] and said my function was continuous, you still wouldn't have any idea what's going on outside of [-epsilon,1+epsilon] or so. This is what I think of when I see people trying to model a God based on their experiences. Thus, even if you do choose a particular model, you're going to "get there" with probability zero. So why not just acknowledge this instead of spinning your wheels and getting nowhere?

      "Atheists say 'There is no god.' and based on that assumption have made great advances in science."

      In science, we restrict our model to the observable world. Science does not require atheism.

      "Theists say 'There is a God.' and have made great advances in philosophy."

      I'm not familiar with the work to which you refer. The greatest advances I have seen in philosophy have been by agnostic logicians.

      "Agnostics say 'Maybe there is nothing, maybe I'm still asleep... mmm sleep I'm going to go sleep.' I doubt there are more than a handful of true Strong Agnostics, and there are far far too many weak agnostics 'Who cares I want a burger.'

      Heh, well, I do sleep a lot, and I don't eat burgers, but I think you're mischaracterizing agnosticism. Being an agnostic is really just about not extending your claims beyond what you can fairly and truthfully defend.

    857. Re:Thank God! by mohaine · · Score: 1

      The bible is not evidence. It may be what you base your beliefs on, but that does not make it evidence.

      How can you say nothing supports an old earth?

      Everyday evidence disproves a young earth. I personally have found fossilised coral 2000 miles from the sea, 800 feet above sea level. How did it get there?

      And you completely igored my first question:

      Just how do you explain that light can travel millions of light years in 6000 years? Or do you believe that the stars are painted on a glass roof to the world?

      I never understood Christian bible worship. Jesus said there is only one commandment, and it had nothing to do with the bible. Personally, I think he would be pissed.

      --
      (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
    858. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      Since this is a biology course, they do spend a lot of time on evolution and dependent topics such as genetics. However, the physics text and the chemistry text don't come with warning labels.

      FWIW, Here's the Cobb County Schools Homepagewhich indicates they will plan their future actions while continuing to provide a superior education and the syllabus for biology.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    859. Re:Thank God! by miu · · Score: 1
      Anti-Catholic sentiment stayed alive and somewhat mainstream in the US long for the enemies of Kennedy to claim that a Catholic president would breach the separation of church and state, as the president would be answerable to the Vatican. The actions of some American bishops could actually create a resurgence of such sentiment. At least one bishop sent letters to the effect that not only will they deny communion to politicians that support abortion, but to parishioners who vote for them as well.

      I personally think that any church that uses the pulpit or faith of the congregation to encourage its members to vote in any particular way should lose all tax exemptions. Such a move could do much to reduce the politicizing of religion in the US.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    860. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      Of course since the school board only has dominion over the public schools, the only bibles that would need these stickers are the ones that the public schools issue as textbooks. Surely the taxpayers could afford that expense.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    861. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets be serious people...the reason the stickers were put on there was because the (outspoken)majority wanted them there, knowing that they possibly infringed on the rights of a minority, or an unspoken majority.

      You can't do anything without offending a minority! Because of the cowardice of the people who know better in government, we will roll back and forth on the teeter-totter of social breakdown, and crash into a civil war, and there will be much bitter hatred from the adulterated minds of both sides, who have about as much respect(and tolerance) as a I do for annoying children(which isnt much).

      Isn't this just another failure of the system to protect everyones rights? If I don't want evolution to be taught as fact(which it was when I was in high school) then I am being trodded on. The judge was just treating the symptoms of a greater problem...thats all.

      Creation Science is as valid a study as evolution in a world where people have brains. Unfortunately, those of use with brains are DEFINETLY in the minority, no matter where we stand. FIGHT AGAINST STUPIDITY AND THE CLOSED MIND!!! haha

    862. Re:Thank God! by Blue_Nile · · Score: 1

      Ooo clever. You learn that trick in second grade? I like the whole denying what i said with a put down, but not actually giving anything as a rebuttal.

      --
      Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes
    863. Re:Thank God! by Lucidwray · · Score: 1

      Way to call me out AC. (Can't dispute his logic, but i'll get him on his english. ZING!...)

      Thanks for adding to the conversation.

      --
      My sig can beat up your sig.
    864. Re:Thank God! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      sure there is no evidence to support my other theories above the evedence in relation to eveolution. However i can offer some guesses to make circumstantial evidence that makes that therory sound more likley.

      First the hole existance of god and the gods talking to people directly or thru angels and such could be nothing more then aliens comunicating with us, observing and/or punishing us for not being good or doing what they said. The original meanings of thier message could have been lost in the translation. If we look into religion and the close relationships of them, we can find simularities that for one reason or another make us conclude this is possible. We can also look into the differences of fossils that show micro evolution but do not actualy bridge the gap of macro evolution. If somethign is living there should be simularities and maybe enough of them makes us believe they are cousins. The real question might be do we actually uunderstand enough about what makes a living being or plant alive and can we recreate it or c omprehend it enough to draw certanty from our observations. I think the answer is more or less "not at this point in time". We can draw lines that conect dots but that doesn't really mean we are seeing the corect picture. I guess it is what the popular belief is at the time. Like years ago the world was flat.

      Almost every religion was in one way or another developed to control people but what if it was actually the same message from the same gods wich are really aliens and the differences in the messages were nothing more then controls in the experiments. We have flying angels, chariots, dragons and much more in mytholigy why not attribute that to an actual being sent here to guide us in the desired path. Almost all religions also teach the same principles about how to exist in the most healthy state that provides a common defense.

      Definatly, a convinving argument can be made that support alot of other theories. The acuracy of the arguments rely on how much someone is willing to belive. Years ago i was told that there are geoligist working to explore oil and other mineral and they are using biblical references in thier research instead of the standard earth is billions of years old. Somethign that stuck out about this was that they were just as acurate in finding these rewards as regular geoligist using traditional standards when looking for minerals and fuels. This is a little outside evolution but shows that there can be more then one path to same results.

      As for aliens dropping off engineered species being evedence against evolution, well your corect except that it would limit the scope of how evolution exists and works to a micro level and maybe undermine the theory of alot of micro evolution actions creating a macro evolution event over a period of time. There is no more evidence of this happening than there is of man and ape being related so far as comming from each other. Another instersting theory being pushed around is that man acually evolved from a pig instead of a monkey and it is only coincidence that man resembles a monkey. It is said that a pig is a clser genetic match to man then monkeys are. This could be one reason alot of religions have taboo against eating pork (it could be almost canbalism) and why alot of canibal tribes called humans longpings.

      I'm not trying to convince you that anythign i said is true, just that the possibilities are there. When you think about it, the reasoning behind all oof them leaves a little to the imagination. Some say religion is nothign more then a way man tryed to explain thier origins and other thigns he couldn't comprehend. Evolution is much the same way.

    865. Re:Thank God! by Blue_Nile · · Score: 1

      SO BECAUSE YOU CAPITALIZE SOMETHING THAT MAKES IT TRUE?

      The first link doesn't work by the way.
      Couldn't even find any mention of it on google or the wayback machine. Yes I added the .html

      So your saying that everything didn't start out as bacteria/small measly gunk in a cosmic soup bowl? Then I guess you just threw evolution out the window then?
      Dude, I was just paraphrasing.

      ""Macro-evolution" is not under debate no matter how many times you repeat it."
      Says you?

      "Paleontologists have tried to turn Archaeopteryx into an earth-bound, feathered dinosaur," Feduccia says. "But it's not. It is a bird, a perching bird. And no amount of 'paleobabble' is going to change that."
      Allan Feduccia, Professor of biology at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "Archaeopteryx: Early Bird Catches a Can of Worms", Science, Vol. 259, 5 February 1993, p. 764

      The validity of all three is being questioned in scientific circles.

      http://www.angelfire.com/falcon/megaraptor/proto av is.htm
      Protoavis texensis, the Triassic Bird

      --
      Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes
    866. Re:Thank God! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      The answer to your question is... based on probability... Self Delusion. I recognize that the data is inconclusive, and the logical decision would be an agnostic. But I also recognize that one of the steps in scientific discovery is "Formulating a Hypothesis". If you follow purely in the Strong Agnostic Tradition, you skip this step, and conclude that no hypothesis can be made. Which I supposed could be argued is a hypothesis.

    867. Re:Thank God! by olewis · · Score: 1

      The bible is not evidence. It may be what you base your beliefs on, but that does not make it evidence.

      If the bible stood on its own, then that may be true. However, other historical documents bear it out, as do archaeological finds and other historical evidence. Many times, people have set out to disprove the Bible, only to find out it was true.
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v21/i2/je richo.asp

      Everyday evidence disproves a young earth. I personally have found fossilised coral 2000 miles from the sea, 800 feet above sea level. How did it get there?

      How did it get there? - two sparrows (african) carried it there on a line between them tucked under their dorsal feathers (just kidding, credit to Monty Python). This only proves the Bible. This is direct evidence of the global flood. I too have found fossil remains of shells and coral, where there is no large bodies of water for 100s of miles , and I highly doubt that someone carried them there (although they could have, certainly). Fossil remains that should be from the oceans can be found on top of mountains - proof of a global flood.
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v20/i3/bu rial.asp
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v24/i2/oy sters.asp
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v12/i2/no ah.asp
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/tj/v17/i3/paleosol s.asp

      And you completely igored my first question: Just how do you explain that light can travel millions of light years in 6000 years? Or do you believe that the stars are painted on a glass roof to the world?

      I've included the two links below that have various theories that others have proposed about this topic. It may be that light travelled at faster rates at the time of creation. God is God, and He did it however He did it. This isn't a scientific answer (see the links below for a scientific approach), but it's what I believe. Not every answer lies in science or numbers. Some things take faith. I will add, though, that the 'big bang' theory has a problem with this same topic: the universe is too big for the big bang theory. The light hasn't had enough time to travel for the big bang theory to be accurate. See the links for more information on this.
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v25/i4/li ghttravel.asp
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/tj/v15/i1/starligh t.asp

    868. Re:Thank God! by mohaine · · Score: 1

      Damn, I never thought a Noahs flood a the cause of sea fossils. Of course this it the stupidest thing I have ever heard. Coral doesn't wash around. Especally not up hill. Also, the flood wasn't supposted to have lasted long enough for the coral to grow there(thounsands of years at a min).

      If people with your belief system would just admit that "it doesn't make since, but that is what I believe" I could have some respect for your beliefs. The bible is not a science book, it is a book of philosophy. The science in the bible is all that the people of the time could understand.

      If you dare, read the following.

      Ring Species


      15 Answers to Creationist Nonsense

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    869. Re:Thank God! by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      We certainly didn't evolve from modern apes, but all evidence points to one of our distant ancestors being what we would call an ape.

    870. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I want to know who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      I did. And funny, I didn't see you there.

    871. Re:Thank God! by Wah · · Score: 1

      that's a heck of a .sig...for someone who never plays, or talk about, golf.

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    872. Re:Thank God! by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Actually, they have. Bacteria in the laboratory have been seen to evolve thanks to their extremely fast breeding cycle.

      Frankly, by ignoring the scientists, fundamentalists prove exactly what they are. God does not exist at odds with science -- Period. If God created the world then studying the world gives insight into God -- Period.

      The fact that science threatens some theists only says that those people don't have faith in God, and they're afraid.

      There's another word for people without faith in God, you know. Atheists.

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    873. Re:Thank God! by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I don't think they necessarily have to be mutually exclusive.

      A true religion cannot, and will not be at odds with science, because god created the world. Why would god create a world that proves he doesn't exist?

      When religion and science are at odds, it means that someone has been playing god and chagned the religion. Using science to understand god is like studying the mona lisa to understand leonardo davinci. If the unofficial biography says one thing and the mona lisa says another, then then mona lisa is right every time, because it was created by the man.

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    874. Re:Thank God! by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      There was that one time when we wanted to see how well humans burned, but that's another story altogether!

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    875. Re:Thank God! by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      You're right on, for the most part, but why do you think mentioning "evolution" made the sticker "religious". Is it a tacit recognition that "evolution" is a religion, itself, nowadays? Or that the zealous insistence it be taught as "fact" is a religious act (the attempt to banish a religion)?

      Of course, it would be entirely accurate to put in a similar sticker regarding gravity, relativity, the apparent expansion of the universe, quantum mechanics, muons and quarks and photons and electrons (even whether they are particles or wave forms or frequencies of "strings"), not to mention global warming, etc., etc. But the theory of evolution is the big one, the culturally important one, the religiously divisive one, and the only one that zealots on one side are always trying to obfuscate and insist is a "fact", and allow no other thoughts or opinions to even be mentioned or allowed. So, that sticker is the one of concern, and most needed. I would, however, as a scientist, be willing to allow those other stickers IF the text in the books is as dogmatic and unbalanced as the text on evolution usually is.

      One other minor point. Scientists don't "rely on some theories so much that they seem to be facts". Gravity is a fact but our theories about it are not, however much we assume one particular theory as "a fact" in a particular situation. Newton's theoretical paradigm works well in some situations, Einstein's in others, and in some areas of cosmology and physics, we are still trying to figure out or construct a theory that will work for describing and accounting for "gravity". Scientists are still working very hard to "prove" evolution, and neo-Darwinism is the best explanation for the life forms we find on earth in our time. Admittedly, many are working even harder trying to sell "evolution" as a fact in the culture and political wars, but surely that is a "jihad" against the alternative: creation.

      You know, there are but two choices: Intelligent Design, or Not. As for the Intelligent Designer, there are numerous possibilities. The Christian God is but one. Perhaps the best, but hardly the only. As for "Not", evolution is but one. Perhaps the best but not the only. Indeed, when Darwin first proposed it, we knew nothing of genetics. When we learned of genetics, Darwin's paradigm was morphed into "neoDarwinism". Within that broad category, there have been numerous alternatives: like micro versus macro, like whether it applies to the initial creation of life, or merely the "descent with modification" which is the only defined process in the neoDarwinist paradigm. So to insist only one of two possibilities is even possible, we've fenced ourselves off from 1/2 the possibility of ever knowing the truth. To insist neoDarwinist evolution is possible, we've painted ourselves into an even smaller corner of the full range of possibilities.

      By the way, I always wonder why some folks can accept and delight in the most extraordinary scifi ideas, and the most incredible movies about horror and the supernatural, but cannot abide the idea of a God or the supernatural which the Bible describes.

    876. Re:Thank God! by larsho · · Score: 1

      Is freedom of religion a right only for evolutionists? Doesn't the constitution guarrantee this right for creationists too?

      But evolution is a science, creationism a religion!

      Says who? Many scientists believe in creation. Evolution or creation is a matter of belief.

      But the majority believe in evolution.

      Right. The purpose of the constitution is to protect the rights of the minority.
      If the state is teaching children that the Bible is wrong, they are already violating the constitution.

    877. Re:Thank God! by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      I'm impressed by the work you've done, and the thoroughness of you analysis. But let me correct a few points, and perhaps add a comment or two.

      1. "We have observed evolution: that is a fact". Not true. We have seen a lot of evidence which can be construed or interpreted as evidence of "evolution", but we have only snapshots or single frames in a VERY LONG movie (a speciation complete, beginning to end), and "evolution" is at best implied or deduced.

      2. "We have oodles of historical information which suggests evolution occurred", Not true. Actually, you might get away with "prehistoric" information, ie a fossil and paleontological record, but evolution is admittedly a very slow process, and every species we see today has been here a long time before recorded history, not to mention scientific observation and records.

      3. "evidence that speciation by evolution *was* the dominant means for the creation of new species" Well, that's the choice you must make. The species are here. Why or how, that's the whole issue! Countless other species have gone extinct. That's true, but whether the survivors are now owning the whole earth because there's more opportunity to flourish, or they "evolved" out of those that perished (before their demise was complete) or if a Creator (like God) simply created them as replacements or to fit a longer term plan, is not anything we can prove. Consider, for instance, the hypothesis that birds evolved from dinosaurs. Could be. We can deduce or imply that from a fossil sequence. But the Bible (well, the Hebrew scriptures, not the translation you read in the KJV or NIV, etc.,) says God created dinosaurs, then created birds. The sequence aligns with the fossil record, too. So what you choose to believe is reasonable/logical either way: evolution or creation.

      4."if we see a few new species with much better adaptation" ... You won't. You might see an ascendency of new subpopulations/varieties/races of extant species, however. Every species has a wide range of variation, which is what Darwin started from, but IF speciation is to occur, that variation must accumulate in the surviving population from new survivable genetic errors accumulating to the point that the new population cannot reintegrate (should it meet again with the old pre-tsunami populations) by interbreeding. That is believed, by evolutionists, to take thousands of generations.

      5."Creationism by itself is *just* a hypothesis". Exactly. Believed by many - in fact, most the people on the planet. And some very good scientists. Which deserve at least a hearing, and NOT TOTAL exclusion from textbooks or education.

      6."Creationism, as stated in the Bible, is very improbable." WHY? It is quite possible. It was described 3500 years ago. And, if you should read the exact account, in an exact translation of the original Hebrew, and not the 400 year-old translation of the KJV (and the minor regurgitations of all subsequent versions) you'd find the "story" aligns in form, sequence and detail with what modern science has only recently come to believe is the history of life and its forms.

      "An all-powerful God could, of course, spontaneously create a Universe, complete with a history of dinosaurs, and complete with planets shooting away from each other as if there had once been a big bang;" Sure He could. But He actually gives no such suggestion, and indeed, describes something very different. Something very much like that picture, but stretched out over the billions of years, just as we believe it happened. Of course, your error here is taking the "young earth creationist" version of creationism as the only one out there, and as accurately reflecting the Bible. Truth is, there is NOTHING in the Bible about the earth, or the creation, being only a few thousands of years old. Fact is, the original language implies a creation history of immense time.

      "this suggests that, if the Universe is really only a few thousand years old, God has a great sense of humor." No, it would suggest we either ha

    878. Re:Thank God! by almightyjustin · · Score: 1
      If small changes are possible, what mechanism would stop those small changes from accumulating to the point where the organisms are of different types, however you define that? The process hasn't been directly observed because it's extremely slow and wouldn't be expected to occur in historical lengths of time. (Yes, I'm assuming an old earth, but that's even better substantiated than evolution is.)

      Also, with regards to your link, I'm not sure why evolutionists would be "astonished" by particularly rapid evolution; nothing in evolutionary theory says that changes *have* to be slow. Ever hear of punctuated equilibrium?

      http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB901_1.html
      http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB901_2.html
      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-age-of-earth.h tml
      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/punc-eq.html

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    879. Re:Thank God! by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      I'll only address the things you said about what the Bible says about creation. The rest of the stuff you said gets pretty well taken to task by others.

      1. "The Bible doesn't mention anything about God creating a bunch of new, drug-resistant bacteria ". No, it doesn't. And while it seems to tell us that life forms at the level of "kinds" (which may be species, or may be genera, or may be even higher classifications) will not evolve (kinds will reproduce true to themselves), it says no such thing about insects or lesser/lower forms of life. This is not apparent in the English translations you'll find in all modern versions, it is what it says in the Hebrew scriptures from which they are translated (that's something I've written about in my book, a retranslation of the Hebrew with a scientist's expertise). It doesn't say they will reproduce only their own kind.

      BUT, the emergence of antibiotic-resistant varieties of bacteria is still not a proof-positive of evolution. Such varieties may well have always existed in the gene pool and merely now show up and appear to be predominant because our antibiotics erased most of the others. In fact, if we take away the antibiotics, the old strain usually returns. Maybe antibiotic resistence is "expensive" in the environment, so that variation of the species is only successful when antibiotics give it a strong advantage.

      2."Of course, what little the Bible says about the subject is so abstract that it can twisted to survive scientific enlightenment". Actually, that's not true. Only the translation you read in modern Bibles is so imprecise (not "abstract") and general that it doesn't allow for much comparison or textual testing. That's because the creation account was translated in 1611 by the King James scholars, who knew nothing about dinosaurs and genes and bacteria, etc, and had no need, call, or ability to recognize the details or significance of scientifically significant details. My translation does. And the text that is revealed is quite exact and precise, and aligns astoundingly well with what science has learned and/or concluded now, 3500 years after the account was first recorded!

      3. "Maybe he set it all in motion by creating the big bang ". Maybe He did! Do you know, that until the Big Bang theory developed, many thought they had proved the Bible wrong because it says "In the beginning" and "God created". The accepted theory before Big Bang was that the universe is eternal, thus had no beginning, and had no "creation event". Atheists hated the Big Bang about as much as young-earth creationists hate "evolution". Big Bang says "in the beginning" something (a "singularity") created (exploded into being) the universe. That opened the door, and to the thought that God sounds more sensible than a "Big Bang", and intelligent design sounds more reasonable an explanation of the incredibly perfect and complex and lawful universe than the unpredicable chaos of a super explosion.

    880. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      God's lack of existence is as much of a wild guess as his existence. God can't be proven or disproven. That doesn't mean he doesn't exist, it simply means he exists outside of the domain of scientific study. Science is simply the discovery of the laws of nature. Why are there laws of nature and how did they come to exist? Is there a purpose for creation? This is not science and doesn't belong in a science text, but these are legitimate and popular questions that should be acknowledged by all educated people, even those who do not believe in the existance of things that can't be proven. It's a shame that the pubic schools can't figure out a good way to include philosophical and religous ideas without setting off either the fundamentalists or the atheists. Have you ever noticed that the mainstream doesn't mind? Mainstream Jews, Buddists, Christians, and Moslems never complain.

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    881. Re:Thank God! by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      The public school has a hard time touching close to religion without appearing to endorse religion. But by ignoring religion they appear to be endorsing atheism. If any disclaimer is needed, it should state that the existence of God is irrelevent to the study of science. Science neither proves nor disproves the existence of God or any other supernatural being or force, even Karma.

      IMO, the purpose of science is to understand the laws of nature. It doesn't matter whether God created the law or it just happened without purpose. What is true is that nature is not random, there is an order to it, and studying the laws of nature can be useful whether or not God exists.

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    882. Re:Thank God! by ezeri · · Score: 1

      Fist, no, I went through the public school system. And seccond, the fact that I made a number of grammar and spelling mistakes is not an argument, is flaming. If you want to argue the facts, but to flame me because I didn't run my post through a spelling/grammar checker is just stupid and won't get you anywhere. Like most others here (and rightfully so), spelling and grammar isn't something I've ever realy cared too much about, I'm far more interested in the substance behind what someone is saying rather than the presentation.

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    883. Re:Thank God! by the7cs · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's rather pitiful. The FACT is that there is ZERO provable evidence for EITHER macro evolution or creationism. BOTH are religious beliefs based on what people BELIEVE about the origins of the universe. (By the way... UNI = one, VERSE sentence. The very word universe at least demonstrates the once accepted view of things, i.e., the "God spoke" theory.) Darwinian evolution is provable so far as survival of the fittest goes (MICRO evolution), but MACRO evolution (fish becomes frog becomes bird becomes whatever) is completely without any evidence whatsoever (no half-fish/frog, no half frog/bird) and if you take Darwinian evolution's thought of survival of the fittest, if man evolved from apes, why do we still have apes? Simply stated, both require a stretch of the imagination and an embrace of something unprovable. Neither can be called undisputable fact. If the textbooks present EITHER side, they BOTH should be presented as THEORY, not FACT.

    884. Re:Thank God! by Roland · · Score: 1

      I like cheese, lots of cheese, at least 20 seconds worth for sure.

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    885. Re:Thank God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who on gods green earth OBSERVED monkeys turning into humans.

      If this response were a challenge to evolution, it would equally invalidate creationism and Christianity, since they are based on events which nobody alive today has witnessed.

      turning into humans.

    886. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Evolution would require that 'information' be added to DNA.

      You seem to be missing the source by which information which is "added" in evolution. Every inherited mutation implicitly carries new valuable information along with it. In particular that valuable information is "this mutation is non-fatal*". You may not think very much of that particular little tidbit of information, but I don't think even you can deny that it is NEW information THAT DID NOT EXIST BEFORE.

      It's not much yet, mere proof that some bit of information can be added. Have patients, it gets better as we go along :)

      Mutation is actually the least powerful operation going on in the evolution process. It is actually a huge mistake that everyone puts all of the focus here. The odds of any individual mutation being of any signifigant benefit are fairly remote. In fact I'll give you a freebie and assume that NONE of these mutations yeild a signifigant improvement! We're going to discover the improvements elsewhere!

      Mutation has the signifigant task of constantly searching out new variations to try, constantly increasing diversity. Diversity is itself an evolutionary advantage and valuable. The more difference there is the harder it is for an infection or parasite to feel "at home" and be able to exploit both it's current host and the host it is trying to spread to. Moreover, that disease or parasite is going to target and adapt to the most common host makeup. Naturally that means the most common "normal" or "perfect" genetic makup gets targeted. The mere fact of having a different gene makes you less susceptible to infections or parasites that target your species, it is an advantage even if that gene is "degraded" and partially harmful or broken.

      So "survival of the fittest" does not mean "best" or "more perfect". Having some "defective" genes actually increases fitness through infection and parasite resistance. Selection actually promotes errors and imperfections in the name of diversity.

      So while this increase in diversity may be merely "degredation", (1) it is valuable in itself, and (2) it carries an enormous information content because it is NOT purely random degredation and diversity - as my initial paragraph explained we only pass on non-fatal* diversity. And if you look at diversity across the entire population it makes up a big fat MAP of the non-fatal* variation-space. That map is actually a highly complex collective chunk of information. That information may be distributed across the entire population, but it IS new information, it was created by evolution, and we will make use of it later.

      As I said mutation was the weak operation going on in evolution. Now we get to the information powerhouses: selection and recombination.

      The simplistic view of selection is that good stuff survives and bad stuff dies. Actually it's far richer than that. The better a variation is the more likely it is to get passed on, and the percentage of individuals with that gene increases. The worse something is the less likely it is to be passed on and the lower the percentage of individuals with that gene.

      So the best existing gene and all of the harmless variations of it wind up at the highest percentage in the population. Numerous almost-as-good genes will tend to a somewhat lower but still signifigant percentages. Slightly harmful variations will tend to hang on at low frequencies, and very harmful but not quite fatal* variations will crop up and die out and in general float around at miniscule percentages.

      So now when you look at the population, we have not only a MAP of non-fatal* diversity, but that map now records the VALUE of every variation in the percentage distribution. AN ENTIRE VALUE MAP! That's a HUGE chunk of fairly complex information. Information which -did- -not- -exist- before.

      So even if we assume EVERYTHING thus far is "degradation", we are STILL CREATING INFORMATION. And some rather sophisticat

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    887. Re:Thank God! by Pooua · · Score: 1
      ...you are completely incapable of understanding the vast amounts of time that evolution naturally takes place in.

      Time by itself means nothing to evolution. Evolution takes place through generations of populations. The key fact are numbers of generations, not billions of years. And, as it happens, there have been more generations of fruit flies exposed to mutating lab experiments over the last 110 years than are supposed to exist between humans and their common ancestor with apes. If evolution had any significant effect, those fruit flies would be something noteably different than fruit flies.

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    888. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Yes, but having no religious beliefs at all is not, and a great many 'atheists' fit this description.

      The explicit term for lacking a belief either way is "agnostic".

      I think that including agnostic under the heading of atheist an acceptable, but uncommon and imprecise usuage. Google:define atheist seems to agree. (On the internet Google is God.) Most of those definitions equating atheism only with an active rejection of the existance of god. The two listings that extend atheism to include your usage both explicitly distinguish it as "soft atheism".

      And even agnostic might just qualify for religious status as well in some cases. While one "branch" of agnosticism is uncertainty or unconcern, another branch includes a very active belief that it is impossible for us to know either way. It seems there are some highly developed versions of that second branch, and I wouldn't be surprised if some of them very well qualified as religious. Chuckle.

      While I personally would like to see the plague of religions eliminated from the face of the planet, I am also a strong believer in the constitutional enforcement of freedom of religion. It is the best way to keep various religions off of each other's throats, and the best way to keep any of them from attempting to oppress me. So if someone wishes to claim their beliefs are of a religious nature then I'm inclined to err on the side of accepting any moderately credible claim.

      Of course the entire issue is moot unless someone actually WANTS to assert religious status for their atheism or agnosticism :)

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    889. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      However, there are a great many of us who simply don't give a damn about the question one way or another.

      I replied to the exact same issue a few moments ago.

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    890. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      There is nothing wrong with religious groups writing up a law, so long as the law is passed for a legitimate governmental purpose.

      There is nothing wrong with the evolution stickers themselves, had they been imposed for a legitimate purpose. Say in conjunction with other similar stickers for other areas of science.

      I agree with everything you said, with one possible exeception. And I'm not sure if it's actually a dissagreement or merely a clarification of a point you didn't quite address directly.

      The reason it was a violation of church and state is because was done strictly in service to a particular religion's ends. There was no legitimate governmental motivation behind it. The government is prohibited from imposing government power in service of a religious purpose.

      Just as BlueLaws prohibiting businesses from being open on sundays were created for a strictly religious purpose, and have been struck down on exactly those grounds. It does not matter that forcing businesses to be closed on sundays is not in itself imposing any religion. It was done to grant special favor or preffered status for one religious doctrine.

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    891. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      It appears life originated at least a billion years ago.

      Actually evidence says at least 3.5 billion years ago.

      The earth is around 4.5 billion years old, and was a molten ball of lava for most of that period. So life sprung up almost as soon as it was physically possible.

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    892. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      the seperation of church and state is nothing more then an interopretation of the first amendment of the ocnstitution

      Yep. Just like every other right in the constitution.

      Separation of church and state *is* the implementation of the guarantee of freedom of religion. If you attempt to chuck separation of church and state, well, you just threw out freedom of religion. Freedom of religion is freedom from the force of government being imposed on you for religious purposes. Which is exactlty what separation of church and state means. The government cannot use its powers against you or anyone else for religious ends or to favor any religion above any other.

      i would claim that the purpose of including the thoery of evolution is nothign more then a state's attemp to discredit religion

      You can claim it all you like. That doesn't make it true and it won't fly in court.

      Science courses are a routine and vital component of the educational system. Evolution is just another established and accepted field of science. And just because there are a large number of non-scientists objecting to it does not change the fact that it is as scientifically establisted and accepted as numerous other areas routinely covered in sciences courses.

      It was not included for any "anti-religion" purpose.

      Stating that somethign is a thoery and not fact is and should be perfectly exceptable.

      It is perfectly acceptable. Had they had the legitimate government purpose of "improving science education" they could have imposed such stickers for every field of science. It would have been stupid, but the evolution sticker and all of the other stickers would have been perfectly legal.

      What is not acceptable is the force of government being imposed for a religious purpose. And when the school board went before the judge they failed to present any credible legitimate governmental purpose for imposing the rule they tried to impose. The rule clearly targeted evolution for a religious purpose. The rule was created as a grant of special favor for the benefit of one particular religious group.

      The people that are wanting it out are athiest

      I haven't checked, but I'd wager they were not all atheist. Not that it's really signifigant.

      athiest wich is actualy a religion

      The belief that there is no god is certainly a religious belief.

      If we look at the motive behind the people wanting it out then they are trying to impose thier religions beliefs that there is no god onto the people

      First of all their motive, which was affirmed by a judge (most likely a religious judge) was to stike down an unconstitutional abuse of government power.

      Second of all, you make the bizzare implication that evolution somehow says that there is no god. Evolution says no such thing. Hell, even the POPE sees nothing in evolution that is anti-religion or anti-god.

      This case is easily going to be overturned for the above reasons and the same reasons you have stated in your reply.

      I'd be more than happy to wager with you on that. In fact it would be easy money for me because I doubt anyone will even bother trying to appeal it. It would be futile.

      Science has acnowledged the thoery and knows it isn't fact but use it because it lend to thier explainations of other theories and process they have observed.

      Essentially everything in science is theory. There is no such thing as the "law of gravity". Scientifically it is the "theory of gravity".

      And the very reason it WON'T be overturned is because the rule had absolutely no non-religious justification for exclusively targeting evolution while ignoring a hundred other theories in every science textbook.

      if i was to ask that the sticker be placed back on the books because as an athiest i believe evolution is a tool used by aliens... Then because i am not religious, but have a competing thoery it wo

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    893. Re:Thank God! by bechthros · · Score: 1

      What you need to understand is that this belief (which, incidentally, I share) doesn't give you or anybody else the right to subvert PUBLIC schools (sticker all you want in private ones) to any particular agenda, be it pro- or anti- religion. The loving God we both believe in gave us our brains because he wants us to use them. Ignoring the best conclusions of the best scientists we've ever had on Earth (evolution) is not an act of love towards God. In fact, it's a slap in God's face because it's us choosing to turn a blind eye to all the wonderous detail of the universe. I'll let you in on a little secret - God is not afraid of evolution. So why are you?

      Because men have told you to be?

      I forget where, but it's in the Bible that God WANTS US TO ASK QUESTIONS. And he wants us to listen to HIM, directly, through prayer and following the intrinsic math of right and wrong written inside our hearts, rather than getting all huffy and paranoid because of shitheads like Jerry Falwall and Pat Robertson. Is your God the God of love - or of fear?

    894. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Doesn't the constitution guarrantee this right for creationists too?

      Yep. Freedom of religion means freedom from government power being imposed on you for religious purposes. Which is exactly what separation of church and state means.

      But evolution is a science, creationism a religion! Says who?

      Perhaps you should check some dictionaries? Or how about reading some of the Pope's comments on the subject? HE has absolutely no problem telling the difference between science and religion. HE certainly acknowledges evolution is science and creation is religious doctrine. An HE sees absolutely no conflict at all between evolution and god, or between evolution and creation, or between evolution and the bible in any way.

      This difficulty distinguishing between science and religion seems to be peculiarly American phenomena. Puzzling.

      But the majority believe in evolution.

      I don't know that it matters that you say the majority believe evolution. It's not really relevant. Science is about proposing falsifiable theories and constantly attacking them and throwing out those that fail. It doesn't matter how many people believe something, if it's not testable it's not a scientific theory, and if it's testable and fails then it's nothing, it's invalid. Whatever is left standing is the best known scientific understanding and explanation of the physical universe.

      Perhaps you were referring to selecting what parts of science are to be included in a school scientific curriculum? Well yeah, in that case you turn to the scientific communition to see what the majority of scientists consider to have been rigorously tested and to have survived all of those tests to become the best supported and strongest explanation in its field. And students should be taught an overview of the best known understanding of science and the physical universe. And yeah, a proper science education really should point out that there is no such thing as the "Law of Gravity", that everything from gravity to evolution is scientific theory, and that EVERY area of science is subject to constant challenge and overturn as we search for better and more complete understandings and explanations. That todays textbook is merely the pinacle of today's scientific understanding.

      If the state is teaching children that the Bible is wrong, they are already violating the constitution.

      Hear hear! If you find a teacher teaching that the bible is wrong I'll be right up there in the front row with you demanding that teacher's head on a platter! No government employee should be targeting any religious text for attack while on the job! (Of course they have the religious freedom to attack whatever beliefs they like as off-duty private individuals.)

      Any public school teacher giving an evolution lesson should stick to the science and should NOT be throwing in his personal beliefs about god or attempting to interpret the bible or any other religious text.

      If this teacher thinks there's a conflict between evolution and the bible then that is his personal religious belief and he has no business using the classroom as a pulpit for that view. In fact most people, including the Pope, see absolutely no conflict between evolution and the bible. Neither view has any place being taught in a public classroom. Stick to the science and let the parents and preists comment on what the bible says or does not say and what relation and implications, if any, science has for their faith.

      A teacher should aviod raising any mention of god or religion or any bible in class and should excercise reasonable care when a student raises any such issue.

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    895. Re:Thank God! by vanners · · Score: 1

      Amendment to the definition of "Law"

      Law as observed in this case can also be defined as:
      "Something which the Judge bend at a whim to suit his own agenda"
      Nb. Not to be confused with Objectivity which is the ability to make decisions purely on the facts.

      Also, speciation as observed requires a rather broad definition of "species" in order to be validated, otherwise it is a tautology: If you change a gene sequence a gene sequence is changed. If a gene sequence with a change is copied a new gene sequence with the same change is produced.

      Species are differentiable by being unable to sustain reproduction with any other species. Any successfully created offspring of two species will be unable to reproduce.

      Any two species that can reproduce must be considered to be the same species with variation. Case in point Africans, Asians and Caucasians are all of the same species with variation.

      If this is the case then a new species, although possible is highly improbable in any complex system requiring sexual reproduction since it would require a male and female with the same mutation to find each other amongst the unmutated population and to reproduce. Were this to occur it would lead me to believe that there was manipulation from a more advanced being (which in some cases could be a scientist doing some experimentation on speciation in which case I fear for the species created!)

    896. Re:Thank God! by vanners · · Score: 1

      Have you looked into the religion that carries his name? "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints" I have it on good authority that Christ quite agrees with this religion. While you are correct, in most cases about the origin of the majority of christianity, this religion is neither protestant, nor mainstream but is based on restoration through revelation.

    897. Re:Thank God! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry?

      In DNA.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    898. Re:Thank God! by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      This is the problem. Species do differentiate into new species, and they somehow manage to find mating partners. How?

      The species differentiate over time, within a population. For example, the observed cases of speciation (link already given in another of my postings, but you can find it easily on the talk.origins website) were all in populations, not lone individuals. In other words, a population was isolated for a long time, and over time the two populations changed in response to their different environments so much that when they could not mate with an individual from the other population any more.

      This has been observed multiple times in the wild, and in the lab.

      Also, you seem to assume that a single change in genome is enough to make a new species. It definitely is not.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    899. Re:Thank God! by vanners · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I am wrong, but in the "Land of the Free" Creationism is banned from being taught in schools. (Ah, now know the origin for the word "oxymoron")

      As I understand it the separation of Church and State was intended to promote the freedom of religion by not endorsing a particular religion over another. In this case (and a number of others) I have to agree that the religion of Atheism has been endorsed above all others.

      Creationism is not a religion but an alternative to evolution which should be taught in schools. It does not violate church and state since it is not a tenet of a single religion or even just of christianity as a whole.

      I feel that the two concepts, though opposing should both be taught in state schools. I also believe that the theory of gravity, quantum theory and string theory should also be taught in schools despite their conflicting ideas.

      The sticker was merely pointing out a glaring omission in the textbook. I agree with the other stickers mentioned - when other theories are available, teaching one is depriving our students of the ability to make a choice through reasoning. This leaves us with very few creative thinkers, causing a decline in the use of creative intellect as a whole.

    900. Re:Thank God! by vanners · · Score: 1

      God is not religion, therefore you've just shot your own argument. If you want to make things equal for the Atheists, then the Grand Unified Theory of Everything is the Atheist's God, or perhaps money is, or power, or fame - it's pretty clear that any particular God doesn't need to be all powerful, have created anything or done anything for anyone (or even exist) in order for it to be called a God and then worshipped. When you think about it, Atheists probably have more Gods than most religions.

      That being the case, since Atheism is considerred a religion it cannot be favoured by the state to the exclusion of all others (since that would contravene separation of state and religion). i.e. the state's formal religion would be atheism - no, hold on, I thought only communist states (socialist states really, but who is splitting hairs) like the now defunked USSR sponsored atheism as the state religion - is that where the US is heading?

      What you are not realising is that just because there is no state religion does not proclude general religious beliefs. The US was founded on religious freedom, its in the constitution. However you try to twist it, the principal of religious belief IS tied to the state; it is the states job to protect it! The state just can't favour one religion over another.

      "In God we trust" is an expression of freedom from religious oppression, a tip of the hat to the founding fathers and a consession to the constitution.

      It never ceases to astound me how a country that prides itself on freedom of expression and freedom of religion seeks, when combining the two principals, to ban the right to express your religious belief freely just in case someone might have a differing opinion - I think it would take a very good lawyer indeed to twist logic past the breaking point to that conclusion.

    901. Re:Thank God! by Chrontius · · Score: 1

      Religion is one of the better examples of evolution around. They all interbreed and mutate to survive their environment. Stoned any gays lately? Or adulterers?

      I'm a college student. I'm sure I could find some stoned gays and adulterers if you're interested in talking to them about this. :)

    902. Re:Thank God! by vanners · · Score: 1

      If the state were pushing bibles you might have a point. As it is, complain to your parents if they pushed religion on you.

      If I may offer a few words of advice, don't knock what you don't understand, it just makes you look ignorant.

    903. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      First off, that is not what flame means, you fucking retard. That, my friend, is a flame (and a joke, BTW).

      My POINT was that you are telling us that you know what is best for a child's education, yet did not show any indication of having such an education yourself. How can you claim to know what to teach them when you can't be bothered to improve yourself?

    904. Re:Thank God! by sect0r0 · · Score: 1

      I said modern science. You have committed the strawman fallacy. I'm afraid I don't understand your last sentence of ...self-centered view...xtian this or that matters... Perhaps you could word it differently so I could understand your point. Did you read Francis Schaeffer's book that quick? If you're up to it, you might as well read CS Lewis' Miracles as well. He addresses the fallout of the Naturalist. One of the best quotes are "Thus strict materialism refutes itself for the reason given long ago by Professor Haldane: 'If my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain, I have no reason to suppose that my beliefs are true...and hence I have no reason for supposing my brain to be composed of atoms.' (Miracles, p.22) Interestingly enough, he was an atheist you know, up until around 26 or so. If all you have, however, are quick, reactionary responses, you have my permission to keep them to yourself.

    905. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Presuming you are talking about an African tribe that is currently speaking that language, that is a modern langaue as well, is it not?

      Okay, yes, but I believe there is a technical term "modern language" that refers to different languages, but I cannot fnd any proof for that.

    906. Re:Thank God! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I guess I meant to say that we are able to think about the hereafter and what comes after this life.

      Have you ever been a dolphin? How do you KNOW they don't have any concept of life after death?

      I'm no tree-hugging hippy or card-carrying member of PETA, but it's a bit arrogant to assume we are the only species that can think.

    907. Re:Thank God! by bluekanoodle · · Score: 1
      Textbooks are supposed to be updated frequently, however 2 things work against that Naive theory.

      1) Often the schools as a budget measure will not update those books with every edition. 2) Even with the revisions, this is still be passed as fact. They don't necessarily correct the information in those. My nephew's college leve biology textbook still contains information on this experiment as "proof."

    908. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      Good deal. Actually, I never said there is no such thing as a fact, I was just pointing out that facts should be in the past. Saying something will happen is a prediction. Saying it has happened is a fact.

    909. Re:Thank God! by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      Good deal! I was being overly conservative.

    910. Re:Thank God! by frekio · · Score: 1

      Your point is not entirely without reason but you are incorrectly lumping all atheists under one umbrella. There are two kinds:

      1. People who believe that there is no god.
      2. People who have a lack of belief about god.

      The first one might possibly be better described as Antitheism, while the second one is true atheism, a lack of religious belief. Your point applies correctly to the first, but not second definition of atheism, which is what atheism is really supposed to be.

    911. Re:Thank God! by jnaujok · · Score: 1

      Stage 1) A lizard is born with a small flap of skin connecting front arm to body. This lizard is from a group of climbing lizards. These lizards (like any 5 year old child and a tree) fall often. The one with skin flaps displaces more air as it falls and thus lands more softly, surviving more falls.

      Stage 2) These skin flaps become larger as the better surviving lizards breed with each other. Eventually the flaps become so large that the lizards can learn to glide from branch to branch.

      Stage 3) Lizards with large flaps of skin lose heat rapidly, those with a downy covering are better suited to retaining that heat. Basic feathers are born.

      Stage 4) Lizards with long tails begin to flatten those tails out to form an aerodynamic surface. This allows them to steer their glides in the air. Those that can glide more accurately can better pounce on and capture food.

      Stage 5) The feather covering becomes smoother as those lizards with smooth feathers have an aerodynamic advantage. Some learn that rapidly moving their forelimbs provides extra lift and allows them to flap/glide further or even briefly climb. This gives them access to a larger area and less need to climb slowly up a vertical surface, something which is becoming more difficult with their forelimbs/wings.

      Stage 6) With enhanced distance comes a need for enhanced vision. Their lizard eyes become sharper as those with sharper vision can out-compete those without.

      Stage 7) Since landing exposes the lizards to other predators, those that can swoop in and grasp with powerful hind legs and carry away their prey become more effective. Taloned, strong hind legs become the rule. Front limbs are used almost exclusively for flying.

      Stage 8) Since front leg walking is now damaging to feathers, those that can stand entirely on their back legs and grip perches have the advantage. Those that can maintain flight and climb in the air even more so. This stage would be considered the first true "bird" rather than a lizard.

      Funny that I don't see any "spontaneous mutations" in there. Just a population that grows to fill a niche in the environment and responds to survival pressures for food and away from predation.

      And as for your argument about mutations -- of course 99+% of them are harmful. In fact, let's say one in one million mutations are helpful. That means there are 6,000 humans walking around right now with a helpful mutation. Repeat for 4 billion years and see what happens... Somewhere there's an amoeba pointing at you saying, "That mutation wrote my entire PhD dissertation!"

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    912. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I bet you think the ACLU is anti-religion, right? Would it surprise you to learn that the ALCU has fought quite a few battles supporting religious freedom? One case in particular they fought for and won a case where a school tried to exclude a student's bible quote from the school yearbook. The ACLU fought for - and WON - that bible quote to be included in the yearbook.

      THAT is the side I am on! The side where the students religious expression is included in the yearbook!

      What is impermissable is for school officials to abuse their government power for religious purposes. In the above case they offered every student some text space in the yearbook to add individual blurbs. One or more students chose to use that space for religious expression. The school officials could not abuse their powers to suppress that religious expression.

      I am not some monster trying to suppress religion or religious expression. I am fighting in support of it. It's just the government which is prohibited from meddling in religion. That is the only possible way to ensure and enforce *our* right to religious freedom.

      A bit of warning is in order. In the following paragraphs I get a little heated at points. I fing it quite irritating when people spout nonsense and try to stuff it into my mouth. At least twice you claimed I said or argued things I which never said and never argued. If at times I get a bit heated, that's why. Hopefully by this point you better understand my position and can easily spot your offending statements and understand my irritation. Everything below was actually written first and everything above written last, I just rearranged it to try to steer the thread to productivity rather than flamage.

      God is not religion

      Correct.
      Faith relating to god(s) or some other supernatural or metaphysical being/power is religion.

      If you want to make things equal for the Atheists then the Grand Unified Theory of Everything is the Atheist's God, or perhaps money is, or power, or fame

      Nonsense. None of that is religion.

      Atheists believe there is no god. That is a religious belief. End of story. You have no right to pick something and ram it down someone else's throat saying it is their "god" and tag it as religion.

      I know! Mathematicians worship math! Yeah, that's the ticket! Math is religion! Now we can't teach addition or even counting in school! Weeee! Weeee! Weeee! :D

      Atheism [] cannot be favoured by the state

      Absolutely correct.

      The government cannot say there is no god. The government cannot do anything for the purpose of promoting the belief that there is no god. The government cannot do anything for the purpose of granting special favor for the belief that there is no god.

      What you are not realising is that just because there is no state religion does not proclude general religious beliefs.

      Straw man attack. You're making up an imaginary opponent to attack.
      I DID NOT PRECLUDE RELIGIOUS BELIEFS!

      The US was founded on religious freedom, its in the constitution.

      Exactly. Religious freedom means freedom from the government using it's powers against us for religious purposes. Read that last sentence carefully to or three times, that is the very definition of religious freedom! I defy you to come up with a better definition. Religious freedom means freedom from the government using it's powers against us for religious purposes. And that is exactly what seperation of church and state means. Religious freedom is exactly what I am defending.

      And yes, any intent to suppress a religion qualifies as a prohibited religious purpose. Yes, any intent to suppress a religious belief qualifies as a prohibited religious purpose. Yes, any intent to suppress religion in general or religious expression qualifies as a prohibited religious purpose. The government cannot do any of those things. The government cannot violate ou

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    913. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 1

      You're right about there being two catagories and two words for them, but the exact term for "absence of belief" is agnostic. An active "belief of absence" is atheism. Or at least that is the primary dictionary definition.

      I guess agnostic is a semi-obscure word so it's not unusal for people to blur "atheist" to cover both. Only some dictionaries acknowedge this usage.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    914. Re:Thank God! by frekio · · Score: 1

      There are also two groups of agnostics, one of which I consider myself a part of. The first kind is the theistic agnostic which leans towards believing in god or some deity. The second is the atheitistic agnostic which leans towards believing that there is no god.

      Agnostics are agnostics primarily because they do not believe there is enough information to decide definitively on the existence of god and be happy with ones decision. Being an agnostic, I believe I am in a class of people unique in that they are comfortable with not knowing. I do not believe we can answer the question of whether there is a god or not. I do not believe that the religions in the world today are correct, but I also do not rule out the possibility of something existing that is today considered supernatural. It is not comforting to not know, but I think it would help the world a lot if people simply went by what exists in the world around them.

      Back to the discussion at hand, Agnostics can fit your definition of absence of belief but I think that they do not properly cover the concept of true absence of consideration of a higher being that the word atheist provides.

    915. Re:Thank God! by vanners · · Score: 1

      Thankyou for your comments, I understand how you must feel about my statements, and perhaps some of the problem is that I am not clearly defining what is a critique on your previous comments and what is a general statement on the issue of government bodies becoming increasingly subjective in their decisions on this matter. I apologise for my lack of clarity.

      Now to your critique:

      If you want to make things equal for the Atheists then the Grand Unified Theory of Everything is the Atheist's God, or perhaps money is, or power, or fame

      Nonsense. None of that is religion.

      Yes none of that is religion, but I was referring to the term "God" it relates to religion in that a religious persons "God" should be the same as that person's religion's "God". However the term "God" can be applied to whatever is paramount in someone's life, not just to a being. That was the point I was trying to make. I think we are in agreement on this one too, once religious conotations are removed. So far as I know the Athiest position is that there is no all powerful being - a direct opposition to the Christian position. This may not be correct, but in my experience Atheists don't seem to directly oppose non-christian beliefs. I have listened to quite a number of Athiests and have drawn my conclusions from them (nothing that you have said, I don't even know if you are an Atheist)

      Since your next statement on banning Math was predicated on the notion I have just clarified it may be ignored for the same reasons.

      Your next couple of points hinge on a differentiation I was trying to make between general religion and a specific religion. The UK has a specific religion of state - "Anglican". The US has religion in general, protecting the rights of every belief. My concern in this case is not about you but about the government overcompensating to the point that that the pendulum has swung the other way; in much the same way that feminists a decade or two ago were attempting to be dominant over men, over compensating where the position that is now becoming dominant is true equality, no domination. Using that analogy the position that should be adopted for equality is allowing each religion to pray in schools, not none. Allowing religion to be discussed while ensuring that no religion is denegrated or oppressed in the discussion. Being open and accurate as each religion is discussed. Allowing such classes to be options in schools, not mandatory, available but not overt. I think you are with me on this one too, based on your prolog.

      This is a general comment: I believe that religious intollerance comes from a lack of understanding which is encouraged by the government because it is too difficult to tread the path I have just outlined. The fear of litigation is huge and real as seen in the article that prompted this discussion. That is what I am most annoyed at, not you. I believe more cases like these should be thrown out of court with the order "Get some common sense - All of you!". But if we did that, a lot of lawyers and judges would be out of work. ;)

      My next comment is on the "In God we Trust" section. Does the "we" actually refer to the American people? It could refer to the signers of the constitution or the declaration of independance, it could refer to the founding fathers. I notice an illuminati symbol on the bill, I don't think the American people all belong to the illuminati (sorry I am getting a bit facitious here but I couldn't help myself :) ).

      If it does refer to the whole of the American people, then it is having a bit of a go at atheists, unless the atheists adopt the position I outlined above and say "well yes, in my case I do put my trust in my [insert pride and joy here]".

      I don't think its having a go at native Americans since the tribes that I am aware of are mono-theistic. The few that are not can feel free to use the term to include their whole pantheon.

      Essentially, I fee

    916. Re:Thank God! by cortana · · Score: 1

      Strange, it works fine here. Try http://www-biol.paisley.ac.uk/courses/Tatner/biome dia/units/bird3.htm since the OP was unable to insert a link himself.

      I believe this document (http://talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/section1.html #pred4) gives a better overview anyway.

    917. Re:Thank God! by cortana · · Score: 1

      What translation of the Bibile are you reading? I'd be interested to read one that was done in modern times, from as close to the source material as possible.

    918. Re:Thank God! by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      in my experience Atheists don't seem to directly oppose non-christian beliefs

      There are actually very good reasons it tends to appear that way. In a democracy who has the power to (intentionally or inadvertantly) cross the line? The majority. Who is in the majority? Christians. In fact there is no minority strong enough to really even attempt to cross the line. Also any minority infringment against the majority would be blatantly obvious to everyone on both sides. The minority wouldn't it in the first place, and if they did try it would get shot down before it even became an issue.

      So when infringments crop up, it is de facto by the majority.

      On the other side, who is the largest minority to raise the objection? I beleive generally it's the atheists. I also think that when an infringment is specifically against another faith it is tends to be very clear and resolved quitely and quitely. Anything that targets Jews or Muslims just isn't going to survive long enough to be an issue.

      And then there's the nature of seperation of church and state, that to ensure individual freedom of religion the government must remain silent on the subject. It is easy to conflate government silence with advocacy of atheism.

      Or when someone hijacks the government as a megaphone for their religious agenda, and that megaphone gets switched off, they tend to take it as an attack on their personal speech and freedom. They have trouble seeing that the target was the megaphone, not them or their speech. That telling the government to "shut up" on religion is an attempt to shut up everyone on religion. I have several times seen people equate "public life" with the government.

      This cronic situtaion and appearance has also naturally led to the offenders claiming victimhood and doing everything they can to amplify that image. The propaganda is a mile thick. There are many christians who are absolutely convinced the American Civil Liberties Union is some sory of devilbeast hellbent of exterminating religion. You can show them a frikin' newspaper clippings of the ACLU fighting FOR religion in school and they will refuse to beleive it, that the ACLU is evil and would never do such a thing. They'll say the newspaper clipping is a fake before they'll accept that they have been decieved by propaganda. These sorts of court cases are generally very easy to distort and make for great propaganda. Just leave out the part about targeting the government and magically it becomes religion itself that's under attack.

      the position that should be adopted for equality is allowing each religion to pray in schools, not none

      That is a common "demand", but that is rarely what they actually mean. I'm not going to try to read anying into your saying it, I'll just cover how "they" make a conflict out of it. It's A perfect example of how these stories get distorted.

      Students ARE allowed to pray in school. Students can always engage in silent prayer at will. They can probably engage in non-disruptive prayer pretty much at will. They can certainly pray however they like during any free time. And I would expect that any reasonable special accomadations for prayer could be met.

      So if all they really want is to be allowed to pray in school, well, they already have it. No conflict. The battle is that that isn't really what they want. What they really want is official school establishment or endorsment of prayer. They want to take official time to halt the class and direct the students to pray.

      No.

      Government power cannot be used to further a religious purpose. The government cannot put you in prison for not praying, the government cannot order you to pray, the government cannot even suggest that you should pray. And of course the government cannot imprison you for praying, cannot order you not to pray, and cannot even suggest you should not pray. At least they cannot do so for religious purposes. If you sit down to pray in the middle of the road they can

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      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    919. Re:Thank God! by ACPosterChild · · Score: 1

      What school textbooks do you know of that advocate critical thinking about *any* of the subject matter? Kids aren't taught to question if 1+1 is really 2, or to do a double-blind study and see if exercise is actually good for you, or to go and find out that the founding fathers were largely womanizing elitists. History aside, the science classes teach the kids what others have THEORIZED about and that science as a whole has accepted as the best current model. EVERYTHING in science is a THEORY, because it's all open to be investigated and dismantled in the face of NEW and BETTER EVIDINCE. In fact, considering that EVERY biology book is based on science (yeah, I'm making assumptions here), they all have an underlying tone of "question what you see" because they are ALL based on the SCIENTIFIC METHOD.

      Once somebody has a better TESTABLE MODEL, so that the whole process resembles science is any way whatsoever (completely contrary to nearly all creationism today), then it can be added to the SCIENCE textbooks.

      What we really need is a bunch of people who don't take offense to being told that some ideas they hold don't match plain-as-day evidence (sounds like a mental illness to me; anyway...) to go into churches and put "God is just pretend" stickers on all the bibles. I mean, what right do these people have to be filling kid's heads with untestable fairy-tale hypothesis and THEORIES? Oh, I forgot, they don't have theories they're "simply right, because we feel it in our hearts". Heh, talk about an establishment that doesn't take to being critisized or questioned.

      [For anyone who cares: Go ahead and believe what you want, but don't go pushing ideas onto others or witholding information from kids. Faith cannot be true if it is all you are ever told. Unless you have seen and explored the multitude of options and picked out of them what resonates with your soul, you cannot be a true believer; you are only indoctrinated.]

    920. Re:Thank God! by vanners · · Score: 1

      I think we are on the same page here, although we got there by different routes.

      The way to teach about a religion is to invite a person of that religion who is knowledgeable of it to speak. Questions can be asked by students and there are multiple monitors from opposing, or independent religions - much the same way referees are chosen for sporting events. Rules of conduct are set out. Even with a system like that there would be problems, but are those problems worse than the misunderstanding between religions? What really is the Athiest position? What are the differences between the Christian religions? Are there similarities between Eastern and western religions?

      I guess the problem is that the subject becomes emotionally charged and objectivity breaks down unless someone really wants to understand, and like you said, most people would enter that forum with a barrow to push. Hence it is in the too hard basket. As a result we have religious intollerance, misunderstanding and accusation.

      With the information you have added about the change to the currency I agree with you. Motives, however noble do not justify the violation of the constitution. As for the additional rights, I remember a somewhat tongue-in-cheek paper called the bill of no rights which outlines some areas where people claim rights that obviously aren't theirs. Its worth a read, if I can tract down the URL I will post it.

      On a similar topic to the original, there has been a recent advert in Australia where a commercial was said to denegrate vegitarians because it said it was patriotic to eat lamb on Australia day.

      It seems the madness over interpreting what is not written is not limited to the US. I think a distinction should be made at the line of what was actually said.

      So far as I know, although there is an outcry the advert was not pulled from air.

      Back to your last post, I also agree that removing the balance of power is a dangerous thing. Very few who find themselves unopposed have the integrity to hold themselves in check. I think you may be right, but hope you are not.

    921. Re:Thank God! by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      Then you have to read mine. Every Bible version on the market today merely repeats, with some minor polishing of the language, the King James, done in 1611. And that one relied heavily on the traditional Jewish version from rabbinical times a 1000 years older. I did mine over a 2 year stretch about 5 years ago (well, only Genesis 1 & 2, and a few other verses)

      You can go to my blog website (www.alcaidecafe.com), and there link to a page that gives the results - a full translation of Genesis 1 & 2, or another that gives it with a commentary. They are actually pages on a website I put up about 4 years ago (www.in-this-place.com). BUT, at the moment it won't work because my host had an outdated email and I missed my annual payment, and it (in-this-place) was down for a day, and it is resisting my efforts to get it back up. Waiting now for the host's "support" to help. BUT, in a day or two, I expect it to be back. "Alcaide's Cafe" is working, but the link to the Genesis translation is not working.

      Also, via same system, is a book I wrote that takes you through the science, the linguistics and explains and justifies my translation. I sell it, myself, cheaper than book stores, Amazon, etc., but, of course, that link is also waiting on the website repair.

    922. Re:Thank God! by koekepeer · · Score: 1

      "However it is a fact that electrons do tunnel through junctions in semiconductors due to the same effect. Am I repeating myself too much here?"

      yes you are. did you ever see an electron? or did you just indirectly observe the effect of the model describing some made up particle called an 'electron' in a semiconductor?

      "Russell did not resolve the issues. He tackled them and so did many before him and after, see Plato,Descartes, Kant, Moore, etc."

      i was specifically referring to the religion-science barrier and the role truth and fact plays in distinguishing between the two. Russell wrote a book adressing this very issue (with the very creative title 'religion and science'). of course subjects like facts, truths, etc have been discussed by ancient Greek philosophers already... but this discussion (creationism related) led me to specifically use Russell as an example. Plato philosophised a few hundred years before Christ was even (alledgedly) born.

      if you are aware of the differences between "popular fact" and "scientific model", why do you choose to use the popular definition in a post where you state "Science is a process by which an explanation can be given for facts" (my emphasis)?

      to someone who is aware of the philosophical issues surrounding truth and such, your argumentation sounds like it is trying to impress someone less knowledgeable. i regret to inform you that i'm not the least impressed. and i'm not even *that* smart! *grin*

      anyway, this response comes too late and i wonder why i even bother. i guess i need to fill my late nights with some kind of silly activity *grin*

    923. Re:Thank God! by Kethinov · · Score: 1

      I think it's safe to say the people who create the sticker were the ones trying to push an agenda.

      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    924. Re:Thank God! by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I am wrong, but in the "Land of the Free" Creationism is banned from being taught in schools.

      You are wrong. Creationism is banned from being taught in public schools.

      In this case (and a number of others) I have to agree that the religion of Atheism has been endorsed above all others.

      For that to be true you would have to define "not endorsing atheism" as "endorsing theism". It is possible to not endorse either one. Science is not atheist, it's agnostic.

      It does not violate church and state since it is not a tenet of a single religion or even just of christianity as a whole.

      It is ridiculous to believe that any belief that is held by a plurality of religions does not violate the establishment clause. The Raelians are certainly the most popular religion to believe our origin is aliens creating us, but not the only one. Should aliens having created us be presented as an equally probable source of intelligent design?

      I also believe that the theory of gravity, quantum theory and string theory should also be taught in schools despite their conflicting ideas.

      Gravity and Quantum Theory have predictive value. Their conflict is truly a puzzle, but within the realm they are used they are very useful.

      String theory is interesting, but its predictive value is somewhat questionable. It's on the fringe. It may yet prove to be useful but for right now, it should stay as a studied curiousity outside of primary science curricula.

      Evolution also has predictive value. Genetic engineering is a product of our research on how species evolve.

      I agree with the other stickers mentioned - when other theories are available, teaching one is depriving our students of the ability to make a choice through reasoning.

      Your lack of respect for people is truly dismaying. If a student hears the scientific view at school and the theological view at church, how are they deprived of a choice through reasoning?

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    925. Re:Thank God! by vanners · · Score: 1

      Creationism is banned from being taught in public schools.

      C'mon, work with me here, we are talking about the public system aren't we?

      ..."not endorsing atheism" as "endorsing theism"

      "theism" is not a religion. However you are right, science' true position about God is much the same as its position about any theory; we don't know, but we want to find out. Science is a search for truth as much as religion is, the methodologies differ through.

      Should aliens having created us be presented as an equally probable source of intelligent design?

      SETI seems to think so, not that they created us per se, but that there may be intelligent extra-terrestrial life is a large part of the basis for their search, so it has to sit on the probability curve somewhere. What we are talking about here is theory, not fact and definitely not truth. If a theory is not sufficiently researched, to the point of breaking the theory, then it is still possible that the truth lies along that path; so the scientific community really can't afford to overlook any viable theory, just because there is a "better model" out there. Occam's razor is great for philosophy, but really sucks as discovering the truth and navigating mazes (why go left when there is a viable path directly in front heading more closely in the direction of the exit).

      String theory is interesting, but its predictive value is somewhat questionable.

      This is an example of what I am talking about. Quantum theory is like Copernicus' theory on the movement of planets; it is a good predictive model but has flaws, so it obviously isn't true. So we can either keep adding "epi-cycles" to a theory, or innovate and look for another explanation. String theory may turn out to be true, then again it may be just one more step towards the real truth. One thing is sure, until we hit the truth we aren't going to get a perfectly working model.

      Genetic engineering is a product of our research on how species evolve.

      It's a pretty big stretch to say that evolution was responsible for genetic engineering.

      If a student hears the scientific view at school and the theological view at church, how are they deprived of a choice through reasoning?

      Now we are back to the start; what people may or may not do out of school is not an excuse for what is or is not in the curriculum.

      e.g. Perhaps we should teach nothing in school at all because there are study groups that people can attend in their own time which discuss any subject which is taugt in schools, there are private schools and there are tutors. Since we have it all covered, there's really no need for public schools.

      Now obviously that is a bit extreme, but I am sure you get my point. There are some who will "go the extra mile" ;) but public schools should not be geared just for them. There is a study on the loss of creativity from western culture and a lot of it points to school and teaching methodology which encourage, even demand conformity. I am not an anarchist, but I do believe we need to teach creativity in every discipline at school, not just in the arts.

    926. Re:Thank God! by 955301 · · Score: 1


      You mean, "Belief in God is based on faith, not on fact". Yeah, you would piss monotheists off as much as this sticker does the scientifically minded.

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    927. Re:Thank God! by 955301 · · Score: 1

      No, not surely. Rather, try this out: The offspring got to a certain age where they were capable of walking upright and had enough of an inclination to mimic their mother (an earlier evolved trait, yes?) to stand up without an injury prompting them to (instead the trigger is Mom's example).

      So the evolved behavior required two steps: one where a member of the species tried it out to solve a problem (back injury) and the next where an existing behavior (learning from your parents) prompted others to adopt the new behavior.

      So after a few generations of this, assuming that the behavior isn't suppressed by the rest of the monkey's social group, the difference between these monkeys and those that walk on fours may pan out to an advantage.

      So the hypothesis is this: The motor skills change of a bonobo monkey resulting from trauma to the lower back and resulting in upright walking will be adopted by offspring and others in a social circle when the injured monkey's status in the circle is sufficient to influence the other members.

      And again, no evolution is not a fact. It's a theory with a body of subject matter experts using it as a tool and confirming it with facts.

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
  2. This deserves the [HERO] tag by WormholeFiend · · Score: 3, Funny

    oh wait, this is isn't Fark

    1. Re:This deserves the [HERO] tag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your dog wants to evolve.

      Seriously, speaking of dogs and evolution, it reminds me of channel surfing one fine Sunday morning many years ago. There was a televangelist sermonizing that evolution was false by giving the example that when two dogs mate, their offspring is always another dog.

      AFAIAC both evolution and design can coexist, but evolution doesn't presuppose faith.

    2. Re:This deserves the [HERO] tag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AFAIAC?

      As Far As I Am Christian?

    3. Re:This deserves the [HERO] tag by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Guess Bevets, walktingall and Mike_71 won't be showing up.

    4. Re:This deserves the [HERO] tag by envelope · · Score: 1

      But it does beg the question, what is the overlap in readership between fark and slashdot? And which of the populations started where. And which TF'ers are also Slashdot subscribers.
      Personally, I'm TF but not a slashdot subscriber. But I started hanging out here first. More boobies on fark, I guess.

      --

      appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars
    5. Re:This deserves the [HERO] tag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regarding your sig, if you were a real Farker you would know it's spelt "Moran". Get a brain.

    6. Re:This deserves the [HERO] tag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      What is TF?
      Personally, I've never been to fark.
      My 3 page boredom link opens slashdot, ehowa, and penny-arcade

    7. Re:This deserves the [HERO] tag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the hell does this judge deserve a hero tag, you moron?

      The creationists don't want creationism taught as "a possible theory". They want it taught as "almighty lord jesus' perfect plan" and are inching their way toward that. Their intent is proven by the fact that they're up in arms over someone pointing out "creationism is a theory and not a fact".

      These people don't want science taught in school. They want it replaced with "on on the sixth day...".

      Fuck that. Keep your religious bullshit in your own home.

    8. Re:This deserves the [HERO] tag by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      ' oh wait, this is isn't Fark"

      Not that you'd know from some of the recent articles posted lately.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  3. Interesting... by crumbz · · Score: 0, Troll

    but the ruling does not change the fact that evolutionary theory is exactly that... a theory. So is Intelligent Design, which is gaining creedance as an alternative theory.

    1. Re:Interesting... by lordkuri · · Score: 2, Informative

      theory Audio pronunciation of "theory" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (th-r, thîr)
      n. pl. theories

      1. A set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena.


      where are your test results? I'd like to see em'

    2. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > So is Intelligent Design, which is gaining creedance [sic] as an
      > alternative theory.

      Not much of a theory, because it's assumptions aren't falsifiable. It's an idea, but it's not science.

      That said, evolution IS just a theory - but so is everything else in a science book, whether or not it isn't well stomached by fundies.

    3. Re:Interesting... by kusanagi374 · · Score: 1

      Anyway, that doesn't mean creationism isn't just a theory as well. That's all we have, theories. Anyone saying evolutionism or creationism or whatever is a fact shouldn't be taken seriously.

    4. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So is Intelligent Design, which is gaining creedance ( sic ) as an alternative theory."

      Obviously the theory above doesn't apply to you.

      Or maybe people who can't spell were designed on a Monday ?

    5. Re:Interesting... by SnapShot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, evolution is a theory. Gravity is a theory. The big bang is a theory. Intelligent design isn't a theory; it's a story. There's a difference.

      --
      Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    6. Re:Interesting... by lucabrasi999 · · Score: 1
      o is Intelligent Design, which is gaining creedance as an alternative theory.

      Really? Not in the scientific community. They use something called the "Scientific Method" to test and confirm hypotheses. As I recall, ID does not use the method.

    7. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So is gravity. Seemed to be pretty accurate last time I dropped something...

    8. Re:Interesting... by jimhill · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This space doesn't permit the degree of mockery your post deserves, alas.

      The difference between evolution as a scientific theory and ID as a "We're a theory, too, really!" is that evolution derives from observation and application of the scientific method and will be changed as more data becomes available. ID, on the other hand, is derived from a book written with the advice of an invisible friend in the sky and will resist with all its might new data -- like observed evolution.

      --
      Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
    9. Re:Interesting... by artakka · · Score: 1

      And gravity is a theory too.
      /Jumps from the window/
      Ouch!

    10. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      What is it then? It is called the Theory of Evolution, yet it does not fit the definition for a theory? WTF? Oh wait, here's a more complete definition.

    11. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but the ruling does not change the fact that evolutionary theory is exactly that... a theory.

      So is relativity. What's your point.

      So is Intelligent Design

      Maybe in some non-scientific sense of the word "theory". News flash: A theory that can be neither be tested or proved wrong is not a scientific theory.

      which is gaining creedance as an alternative theory.

      Only in the illiterate American Bible Belt. BTW, WTF is creedance? LOL

    12. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I beg to disagree. Intelligent design, or creationism, is not a theory. It can be considered a religious myth or a fairy tale, but definitely not a theory.

      Any fifth-grader can tell you that a theory is something based on observation or experimental data, and that theories are scientifically tested. It is hardly possible to test Creationism.

    13. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In case you haven't noticed, *all* of science is a theory. It so happens that many of those theories are also facts. Saying that evolution, for which BTW there is a heck of a lot of evidence, is not a fact is disinformation.

    14. Re:Interesting... by k4_pacific · · Score: 4, Funny

      Creationism works like this. God is infinite. Therefore, to represent God, we will use an infinite series:
      0 + 0 + 0 + 0 + .... = 0

      1 - 1 = 0, so logically it follows that:
      (1 - 1) + (1 - 1) + ... = 0

      Removing the parentheses:
      1 - 1 + 1 - 1 + .... = 0

      Adding new parentheses:
      1 + ( -1 + 1) + (-1 + 1) + ... = 0

      Simplifying:
      1 = 0

      Thus, God can create the universe out of nothing.

      QED

      God could not be reached for comment.

      --
      Unknown host pong.
    15. Re:Interesting... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I think the disticntion is really scientific theory (falsifiable) and just random therory.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    16. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Wrong.

      Creationism is a theory that is unprovable except by the appearance of a "supreme being," which is documented only by ancient and contradictory sources. It is speculation.

      Evolution is testable. Carbon-dating, empirical observation, archaeology, and genetics all indicate that evolution has taken place from more primitive forms of life to those seen today. It is a theory.

      The term theory has been coopted by religious fundamentalists, and twisted it to mean something it's not. Good science is based on weeding viable theories from speculation.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    17. Re:Interesting... by mr.+marbles · · Score: 1

      yes, thank you. And to follow up, my work on creationism has revealled not only how to prove reproducibly that god created the universe in 7 days, but what brand of underwear he was wearing at the time.

    18. Re:Interesting... by grub · · Score: 1


      So is Intelligent Design, which is gaining creedance as an alternative theory.

      And the Young Earth theory is gaining creedance... among kooks. I'd like to see hard facts supporting ID.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    19. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intelligent Design is for all practical purposes the same as Creationism, slightly dressed in the clothing of science.

    20. Re:Interesting... by XorNand · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh Jeez... not this shit again. "Theory", as used in science, is not the same thing as "wild ass guess" (as the word is used in common usage). The difference between a theory and a law is that a law can be absolutely proven, a theory cannot. But just because evolution cannot be proven with absolute certainity, does not mean it is scientifically solid.

      --
      Entrepreneur : (noun), French for "unemployed"
    21. Re:Interesting... by mr.+marbles · · Score: 5, Funny

      "I refuse to prove that I exist," says God, "for proof denies faith, and without faith I am nothing."

      "But," says Man, "the Babel fish is a dead giveaway, isn't it? It could not have evolved by chance. It proves you exist, and so therefore, by your own arguments, you don't. QED."

      "Oh dear," says God, "I hadn't thought of that," and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic.

      "Oh, that was easy," says Man, and for an encore goes on to prove that black is white and gets himself killed at the next zebra crossing.

    22. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intelligent design: the idea that because a complex system exists it must have been designed by someone or something, totally ignoring the fact that the more complex a system's design, the less likely it is to function correctly (introduce infallible super-being at this point for the theory to stand).

      Its just creationism given pseudoscientific terminology, the same way people pretend astrology is somehow relevant.

    23. Re:Interesting... by DAldredge · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Modern Science uses the MODIFIED Scientific Method where a new first step has been added that check to see it what they are checking can take away their funding. If they get a yes on this portion they ignore the rest of the SM and say the idea will never work...

    24. Re:Interesting... by mark-t · · Score: 1
      Well, unless the person who's saying it is God. I presume if that were the case, most people might be inclined to do just a tad more than merely "take him seriously".

      :)

    25. Re:Interesting... by OldSchoolNapster · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between a scientific theory and other theories. A theory can only be scientific if it has not been disproven. As such, evolution remains a scientific theory, but an earth centered universe does not. By the creationists logic, my donut-shaped universe theory is just as valid as Einstein's theory of relativity.

      What we have here is a word "theory" which means different things in different contexts. Like with so many other things, psuedoscience creationists have sought to confuse the true in-context meaning of words in a way that "proves" their point.

    26. Re:Interesting... by Ubergrendle · · Score: 1

      Intelligent design cannot be subjected to any elements of the scientific method; it is a totalogy, a truisim, it is all based on faith w/o evidence.

      For this reason, it cannot be considered an alternative theory to evolution. Evolution is a theory, yes -- but creationism is not.

      Here in Ontario at least we keep science out of the religion classes, and religion out of the science classes -- its like keeping geography out of gym, or mathematics out of english literature. Separate fields of study.

      --
      John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
    27. Re:Interesting... by vitamine73 · · Score: 1

      This is only partly insightful:

      True : The theory of evolution is a theory. But do not forget that a scientific theory is a complex set of hypotheses that have not been falsified and that have been corroborated by multiple independent observations. "Theory" is not a negative term in science!

      False : The so-called intelligent design "theory" and all forms of creationnism are NOT scientific theories. A scientific theory must have one quality that is often forgotten: it must be possible to prove that it (or any of the hypothesis that it contains) is wrong, to falsify it. Since it is impossible to prove that God (or any other supreme being) does not exist, it is also impossible to prove that creationnism is wrong within a scientific framework.

      This is a thus a pointless debate because evolutionnary biologists are talking about science, while creationnists are talking about faith. Science and faith should be clearly separated. end of story.

    28. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it means creationism is NOT a theory, it's not a fact, it's a religious rant, without proof, without testing, without common acceptance. Creationism is NOT a theory, and a theory is a powerful thing in science, it's not the equivilant of a hunch which people use it as. "I have a hunch" != "I have a theory".

    29. Re:Interesting... by rob_squared · · Score: 1

      You *really* need to watch this show:
      http://www.sho.com/site/ptbs/topics.do?topi c=c

      Saying it's only a theory is like saying gravity is only a theory. Evolution just happens to be the *only* theory that fits the facts, and yes, there are more facts than I have space to mention which will lend credence to the theory.

      On a lighter side, maybe they should teach the Hitchhiker's guide theory of the earth, after all, all theories are on equal footing? Right?!?!

      --
      I don't get it.
    30. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      kinda funny how many people there are like you that know so little about intelligent design theories. You act like ID has no scientific work behind it, and that couldn't be farther from the truth. It sounds like you're the one who resists with all their might any new data or ideas.

      Scientific study of creation is actually relativly new.

      Tell me, how long did the grand canyon take to be carved? It couldn't have taken millenia because steep vertical walls on a canyon indicate rapid erosion due to large amounts of water travelling at high speeds. This is scientific fact, its observable, testable, and repeatable. The Grand Canyon formed rapidly, its geology indicates that. This is a piece of scientific FACT that is used to support the biblical world flood. Does it prove it? no, but does it show it could have happened? yes.

      There are literally tens of millions of pages of information that supports ID. In fact a careful UNBIASED review of such information would be quite enlightening to you I believe.

      But, you know, you don't think ID has any scientific basis because you think ID says "the bible is all we need", which is not true. The bible provides a blueprint, but the science backs it up, and careful critique of evolutionary theory using pure scientific method without and agenda quit often results in evolutionary theory looking quite foolish.

      Evolutionary theory requires certain assumptions be made, such as the amount of radioactive elements in newly formed rock is constant worldwide (not true) and that radioactive dating is based upon either a predefined constant amount or predefined zero amount in mater. Yet we can take things known to be age 0 or close to, measure those and find out that they have widely varying results. The lava released by Mt. St. Helens has been cooled and exposed to the atmosphere for 6 million years according to radio dating methods (I believe argon, don't quote me there), yet we knew they had only been there for a matter of years.

      Evolutionary theory is a house of cards if you really ever care to investigate it unbiasedly.

    31. Re:Interesting... by mark-t · · Score: 1
      You are confusing ID with creationism.

      Creationism stipulates that *EVERYTHING*, human beings, animals, plants, matter, space, and even time itself were created by a supreme being.

      ID stipulates that the human race was designed by someone else, most likely by manipulating the genes of a sampling of creatures on this planet to produce new species for some unknown purpose.

    32. Re:Interesting... by BlueCup · · Score: 1

      So is Intelligent Design,

      Err Wrong. Intelligent Design had credence as a theory, until someone came and showed a simpler theory, that still explained everything... one that had things that could actual be tested for (although not as easily as some other theory's like gravity) Intelligent Design is not a scientific theory, rather it is a philosophy... the difference is, one can be tested, and has been, and has never been disproven, where as the other can't be tested, but people believe it anyway, because their parents told them to.

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
    33. Re:Interesting... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "I'd like to see hard facts supporting [Intelligent Design]"

      Until someone fronts up with the CVS repository its really hard to tell if theres been any intelligent design.

      I mean, take MS Windows for example.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    34. Re:Interesting... by DShard · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or more interesting what is the hypothesis that we can test? We have yet to see anything out of the "evolution didn't happen" camp to even test.

      The continuing problem with religous conviction is that it presupposes fact. Science, on the other hand, assumes denial. If you come up with the hypothesis "God's tears cause thunder." you need to prove God. You may be able to (as possibilty may allow) but you need to be smarter than _many_ that have come before you.

      If we reduce the argument to "Variation of life on earth couldn't exist without a guiding ${THING}". Then presumption is that ${THING} is god, but you can't do that because your hypothesis didn't include that. Change the hypothesis to include God and you are stuck with the proof-of-god conundrum again.

      At some point you have to include assumption which isn't science, rather subjective reality. You can not prove it objectively, therefore we can't agree on it and it is not testable.

    35. Re:Interesting... by kusanagi374 · · Score: 1

      Wow! Underwear too? I need to know the brand, since it resisted days of intense heat when all volcanoes around the world were spitting lava, and then intense humidity when God made that super duper rain to fill the oceans! Plus, was it still intact when he stopped to rest at the 7th day?

    36. Re:Interesting... by lucabrasi999 · · Score: 1
      Modern Science uses the MODIFIED Scientific Method where a new first step has been added that check to see it what they are checking can take away their funding

      And, you base this accusation on what? Your personal beliefs? Or, do you see it occur on a weekly/monthly basis during your time as a physicist, biochemist, biologist, or geologist?

    37. Re:Interesting... by drmarcj · · Score: 1

      There's something about the implication of calling it "just a theory" thatis more than a bit insulting. Let's put it this way: do churches want me coming in and putting stickers in the bible saying "The existence of God is just a theory"? How is this any different?

    38. Re:Interesting... by shanen · · Score: 1
      Bullshit. You're playing word games with "theory". The scientific usage of the term does not mean "untrue" or "fantastic", any more than "liberal" means "enemy of the fatherland". Oh wait, that was somewhere else. Now it's supposed to mean "enemy of the homeland".

      A scientific theory is an internally consistent model that explains the connections between various facts and evidence. The fundamental trait is that it is subject to test and refinement, and it *MUST* take all evidence into consideration. No fair dismissing awkward facts by just saying "That's merely the work of the Devil seeking to confound us!"

      The fundamental problem with faith-based reasoning starting from a literal interpretation of the Bible is that you're saying your God is an idiot. The Bible is badly written, including plenty of internal inconsistencies. If your Bible-limited God was not an idiot, then He would have been aware of information theory even when He was causing the Bible to be written (though we poor and limited humans have only developed the necessary mathematics in the last century), and He would have taken it into account and even used it to "encode" His message in a way that would resist confusion and distortions.

      It is *NOT* a coincidence that the religious fundamentalists are most concentrated in monolingual countries (like the US and certain Arab countries). People who are fluent in more than one language will (of course) be especially troubled by the inconsistencies between the translations. (Again, an area where an understanding of information theory could have helped out.)

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    39. Re:Interesting... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Umm no. Not all theory is scientific theory.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    40. Re:Interesting... by Atrax · · Score: 1

      ID stipulates that the human race was designed by someone else

      You mean like what the Raelians think? That Aliens did it?

      fucking nutjobs.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    41. Re:Interesting... by hmniq · · Score: 0

      Technically you couldn't do that since expanding each 0 into (1-1) gives an 'even' number of both +1 and -1. I put even in parentheses because we're talking about infinities of things. So in the end you'd still be 'left with' a -1 and you've still got 0=0.

      So you've actually proven that you can't reorganize in the way that you did, since you ended up with a contradiction. :)

    42. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot to state a theorem(if any) that states that you can remove the parenthesis and reorder them, among other things. This proof is obviously flawed.

    43. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to be pedantic, but a series of 1+1-1+1-1+1-1+1-1... to infinity gives a result of indeterminate. Oh wait, I was pedantic.

    44. Re:Interesting... by Nexus7 · · Score: 1

      >> There are literally tens of millions of pages of information that supports ID. In fact a careful UNBIASED review of such information would be quite enlightening to you I believe.

      Well I was at the bookstore the other day and was taken aback by the sheer thickness of the Lord of the Rings books. I believe that your statements apply equally well to JR Tolkien too. Of course, that doesn't make the whole thing true.

    45. Re:Interesting... by BlueCup · · Score: 1

      Awesome sir, awesome =)

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
    46. Re:Interesting... by myowntrueself · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "The difference between a theory and a law is that a law can be absolutely proven, a theory cannot."

      I don't think so; a 'Law' in science is most usually an axiom (because it cannot be proven but seems self evident).

      Take Newtons umpteenth law of motion "Every action has an equal and opposite reaction"

      Try to construct an experiment which would disprove it.

      Its logically impossible because the structure of the statement is of the form;

      "For every X there exists some Y such that P(X,Y)"
      where X is a predicate on X and Y.

      which is not disprovable without exhaustive testing case by case.

      It follows the exact same pattern as Freuds "Every dream is a neurotic symptom".

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    47. Re:Interesting... by sg3000 · · Score: 1

      > but the ruling does not change the fact that evolutionary
      > theory is exactly that... a theory. So is Intelligent Design,
      > which is gaining creedance as an alternative theory.

      Intelligent Design is not a scientific theory, while Evolution is*. You're using "theory" in two different senses in the same sentence. In fact, this is about as close to a logical fallacy as one can get outside of the wild. Gather 'round kids! I recommend you read this book for more insight.

      Other examples you could have used with equal credibility are:

      1. If you believe in the miracles of science, then you must believe in the miracles of the Bible.

      2. Of course they didn't have electricity in the past. In order to have electricity you must have current, which means present day.

      Switching to a different definition of the word mid sentence is not just disorienting, but silly.

      "Theory" in the vernacular may mean "guess", but in scientific jargon it means roughly a battle-tested hypothesis that describes well-established facts.

      I'm annoyed that the MSNBC article didn't make this more clear.

      *I've also read some who suggest that Evolution is a fact, but Natural Selection is an example of a theory.

      --
      Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    48. Re:Interesting... by TiredGamer · · Score: 1

      The Christian god is a theory too, and if you're saying this god is telling you and others to "take him serious" I know of a few good men in white coats who can help you.

      --
      No penguins were harmed in the making of this post.
    49. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "String Theory" is also unprovable. Yet it is still called a 'theory'

    50. Re:Interesting... by mark-t · · Score: 1
      Why do so many people assume that ID=Creationism?

      It doesn't.

      ID is most roperly somewhere in the middle...

      Creationism addresses how _everything_ got here.

      ID addresses just how _WE_ got here... just us - Human Beings. Not plants, fish, birds, or anything else... just us.

    51. Re:Interesting... by KingEomer · · Score: 1

      That's beside the point. Assuming what you say is true, then the scientific method, if it passes that first step, should still be valid. Also, ID should be able to be able to pass this step, as I'm sure the various Churches would be willing to support it.
      The fact, which you so nicely tried to sidestep with your straw man, still remains that ID does not use scientific method.

    52. Re:Interesting... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      First, if my first step passes they IGNORE THE REST of the SM.

      Second, I didn't talk about ID I was talking about the SM.

      Please learn to read.

    53. Re:Interesting... by BlueCup · · Score: 1

      I apologize, I did not realize that. And while I still believe the idea is crap, I don't believe it is as much crap. In other words, I still want to club the people who believe it with a bat, but I wont do a full swing.

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
    54. Re:Interesting... by Mr2cents · · Score: 1

      I think the orriginal poster is confusing 'the thruth' with 'a theory'. Indeed, evolution is testable, but it could still be proven wrong, or incomplete, in the future. A theory is just an assumption, and if it leads to a contradiction, or if an experiment doesn't fit into the theory, that theory WILL be removed, and replaced with a better one.

      In dogmatic religion, if reality doesn't fit the dogma, they just ignore it or twist the facts until it fits the dogma. That's a big difference between science and (dogmatic) religion: the way they treat criticism and fallibility.

      --
      "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
    55. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Theory, We Do Not Exist. It is not Possible.

      In The Beginning There Was Nothing, Then It Exploded.

      Within the bounds of Time, We Can Not Exist.

      Explain That!!!

    56. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1

      Perhaps not in every discussion. But in this case we're talking about placing "intelligent design" on a par with evolution for the purposes of science. Hence this terminology does apply.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    57. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Language is often the first casualty in these types of struggle (ie: Copyright infringement = theft), and it is no different with the 'Intelligent Design' argument.

      Words in the academic & scientific communities aren't always the same words the rest of us use.

      When a scientist uses the word 'Theory', as in the 'Theory of gravity', a lay person can usually take this as the 'Law of Gravity'. I mean who goes around breaking this theory?

      When a scientist uses the word 'Hypothesis', then the lay person can usually take this to mean what he/she thinks of as a theory.

      The 'Theory of Evolution' can be considered a natural law to the same extent that the thoery of gravity can.

      Unfortunately the forces of darkness, be they creationists or industry associations, know that winning the battle of language is most of the fight.

    58. Re:Interesting... by Facekhan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ID is just creationism with a new label to make it more palatable to the general public and not just fundamentalist lunatics. The only "scientists" working on ID are fundamentalist wack jobs whose PHD's were funded by Sun Moon (famous Cult leader) and others like him in an attempt to build support for ID by getting people with letters after their name say they agree with it even though those people are not actually involved in any "scientific" research, just fundamentalist lunacy.

    59. Re:Interesting... by mark-t · · Score: 1
      That's one version of ID.

      It's not the only one.

      But the overall concept is similar.

    60. Re:Interesting... by at_slashdot · · Score: 1

      So God created the universe by mistake...

      --
      "It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." -- Prof. Dumbledore
    61. Re:Interesting... by lucabrasi999 · · Score: 1
      The Grand Canyon formed rapidly, its geology indicates that.

      By rapidly, do you mean 5 to 6 million years? Here is at least one discussion that reviews the geology of the Grand Canyon. And here is another, by the National Park Service. They use professional geologists to test their theories.

      And, please, the next time you plan to rant about Noah's flood, please feel free to post with a user ID.

    62. Re:Interesting... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Well that's obvious, anything that involves God (who is by definition not invalidatable) can not be scientific theory.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    63. Re:Interesting... by Atrax · · Score: 1

      was it still intact when he stopped to rest at the 7th day?

      Nah. On the seventh day, God went Commando!

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    64. Re:Interesting... by KingEomer · · Score: 1

      Hrm. True. I had assumed that you were promoting ID by attacking the SM. Meh.

    65. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      Buhahahaha!!! There's nothing like "coopting" language when claiming others have "coopted" it, is there?

      Theory is speculation. Theory is not fact. This thread uses the written English language and, as such, must adhere to actual definitions of words.

      Neither creation nor macro evolution (as opposed to micro evolution which is similar to creating breeds of animals or the classic experiment of breeding fruit flys) can be "proven" through documentation nor through duplication.

      "Empirical observation" WTF is that? That would be speculative assignment of causational relationship in the absense of direct observation, wouldn't it? That would mean it's...speculation, a guess based on some observed data.

      Both creationism and evolution are conjecture whose proponents cite various facts, observations, and probablilities to promote the supposed legitimacy of their claims.

      Your post is intellectually dishonest.

    66. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Fair enough, but ID and Creationism both require the existence of a god or gods to function. Which gods? Zeus? Thor? Odin? Ohhh... wait, you mean that new Christian God "God"

      Today's Religions are Tommorrow's Mythologies. I should put that in my sig.

    67. Re:Interesting... by Bodysurf · · Score: 1

      Carbon-dating, empirical observation, archaeology, and genetics all indicate that evolution has taken place from more primitive forms of life to those seen today.

      No they don't.

      Carbon dating works by the guess that decay rate of C-14 decay is known for things thousands of years ago. It isn't.

      Expirical observation, archaeology and genetics show that the universe came into being via creationism. It's obvious. It's only the misinterpretation of the data and the steadfast stubborn refusal to accept that creation was possible that evolution becomes plausible.

      Sorry, you've been brainwashed to think otherwise

    68. Re:Interesting... by DaemonGem · · Score: 1

      Both creationism and evolution are conjecture whose proponents cite various facts, observations, and probablilities to promote the supposed legitimacy of their claims. Excuse me, but what facts do creationists call upon to promote their claims? Evolutionists have scientifically proven data whereby they can show that evolution is a sound explanation for the natural world. Creationists cannot.

      --
      "Alle reden vom wetter. Wir nicht." - SDS Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund.
      j00 4r3 3n73r1ng l337 w0r1d.
    69. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      "Intelligent Design" is a lie to placate weak minds. The universe couldn't give half a shit about you, me, or your silly superstitions.

    70. Re:Interesting... by tom's+a-cold · · Score: 1

      You are using theory to mean two different things.

      1. An explanation of observations that, in a Popperian sense, could be falsified (this is the sense you mean when you refer to evolution); and

      2. Inane, superstitious bullshit spoonfed to credulous sister-humping semiliterates to make them believe that they, too, have descended from the trees. This is the sense you use when speaking of Intelligent Design.

      --
      Get your teeth into a small slice: the cake of liberty
    71. Re:Interesting... by LucidBeast · · Score: 1

      Well that would again guide us wrong about the meaning of the word "theory". Perhaps the sticker could say "The existence of God can't be made into theory"?

    72. Re:Interesting... by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      Actually, relativity has showed that Newton's "laws" are, in fact, not true in an absolute sense, yet they're still called "laws". This shows pretty clearly that the usage of "law" vs. "theory" isn't what the ID people would have you believe.

      However, as to your assertions about logic, you're wrong. You don't need exhaustive testing to disprove a statement like Newton's 3rd law, you just need to find one action, somewhere in the universe, which doesn't have an equal and opposite reaction.

      To definitely prove a statement containing the universal qualifier is, on the other hand, pretty much logically impossible. Empirical knowledge is necessarily based on inductive reasoning, which can't be used to definitively prove anything the way you can prove things in formal logic or mathematics (even math proofs using the Axiom of Induction are deductive proofs; the name is misleading.)

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    73. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a piece of scientific FACT that is used to support the biblical world flood.

      Okay, just to point out: science doesn't deal in FACT, really. Scientists make observations. These are facts, except that with a good scientist they will be heavily qualified (it becomes: I tried to produce situation X and I observed Y, which supports my theory Z.) Predictions made based on observations are hypothesis. When well studied, they may become theories. Nobody can say as a fact how the Grand Canyon was formed, because nobody observed it. Current theories may support a rapid formation, which would indicate a large amount of water moving by. This may support theories about a large flood, I haven't studied the subject (Where did the water come from?).

      You seem to make the false assumption that evolution is dependant on radioactive dating. Radioactive dating is one piece of evidence that fits with current theory. If it is shown to be inaccurate, the theory will adjust. The fossil record exists, even if our dates are wrong. Microevolution can be directly observed. DNA tends to show relationships that support (and provide a mechanism for) macroevolution. No lab has successfully secured the 10-million year grant to conduct a study.

      Evolutionary theory is a house of cards if you really ever care to investigate it unbiasedly.

      Everything looks like a house of cards if you don't believe in it. There is no truely unbiased human in existance, so nobody can investigate it unbiasedly. I guess we won't know until we die. (And if those who don't belive in an afterlife are correct, we won't even know then. Sad.)

      I am glad that the religious on Slashdot use science to support their belief, instead of thinking that science is an opposing religion. The faithful who attack science seem woefully ignorant . (Attack a theory using science. Don't attack the method.)

    74. Re:Interesting... by randalware · · Score: 1

      So "micro" evolution is not enough to prove macro evolution.
      It sounds like at least the first step in a proof.

      But any discussion that requires "faith" belong in the realm of philosophy not science.

      Language word games are for arguing about nothing. (see lawyer joke threads)

      Science comes closer to math.

      --
      This is my opinion based on what little I know and understand of the rumors and lies Thanks, Randal
    75. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1
      I'm not saying theory is fact. I'm saying theory is something that can be tested. Evolution is continually tested in the fields of endeavor that I described.

      "Documentation and duplication" are, admittedly, hard over geological time. The evidence of evolution is still there, and many genetic phenomena we observe (humans' genetic similarity to monkeys, etc.) suggest that this theory is correct.

      Evolution has massive bodies of evidence in its favor, and has shown itself to be resilient in the face of newly discovered facts. Although I will grant you that it is not the provable truth, it is nevertheless an eminently viable scientific theory.

      Equating proponents of evolution with a group of dogmatists who hold to a far-fetched idea in the face of (1) the absence of positive evidence of the truth of their particular worldview, and (2) the ongoing resolution of issues they raised to discredit their competition is "intellectual dishonesty."

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    76. Re:Interesting... by j.bellone · · Score: 1

      More like God took a shit; and we're what's on the toilet paper. We're slowly getting flushed into his septic tank while he's going back to get some more tequila and mexican food.

      Round two.

      --
      I'm f#$king magic!
    77. Re:Interesting... by TouchOfRed · · Score: 1

      not to mention, all of the theories and methods of evolution,which date back to the darwinian times, like patheology or comparative anatomy have physical evidence. Where i sit on the fence is, the common ancestor is ... god himself. He created man in his image, which supports both sides of the theories here, just in different cases. This could go on for pages and pages, but just something to think about.

    78. Re:Interesting... by LucidBeast · · Score: 1
      I don't think the translations are the cause of concentration of fundamentalist thinking. Humans have evolved to disregard need for clear understanding of nature and go with what we "know". We accept dogma very easily. Hell, I have no idea what equations string theory is based on, but I believe that those guys are onto something.

      Fundamentalism feeds from two sources. First what I mentioned: disregard for actual understanding and need for easy solutions. Second source is the need to belong. Watch a bunch of sports fans supporting their team. The group forms around the somewhat (ok completely) absurd idea that supporting same team or sport should somehow unite bunch of complete strangers.

      Creationism is perfect "sport" in this aspect. It actually reduces the amount of information that is needed to comprehend where did we come from and also brings you into comfortable group of like minded thinkers. Additionally, belief in creationism has very little negative impact on your everyday life. Only in some circles do people think you are bit off your rocker, in others it actually is a proof of faith and considered a positive thing.

    79. Re:Interesting... by mbourgon · · Score: 1

      Carbon-dating, empirical observation, archaeology, and genetics all indicate that evolution has taken place from more primitive forms of life to those seen today.

      Remind me to bring you along next time I talk to my former co-worker Joe. He had great stuff regarding how inaccurate carbon-dating was. Not that he's right, but I'd like someone else to pummel him with logic this time.

      --
      "Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
    80. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1
      Read this for information on carbon-dating. Carbon absorption due to atmospheric phenomena is a problem, so there is some variability; however, reasonably accurate estimates can still be made. Carbon-dating is still valid, since radioactive decay has been observed in nature many times.

      "Expirical observation," etc. show nothing of the sort. Our genes are messy and inefficient, with many areas being simply rubble from the process of transposition and adjustment that produced our current genome. Archaeologists have unearthed skeletons of animals whose similarities are strong evidence for evolutionary progression.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    81. Re:Interesting... by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Read this for information on carbon-dating.

      God set up the isotopes in their particular states when he created the earth. Didn't you know that?

      No, seriously, as I scientist I recognize that this is a possibility.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    82. Re:Interesting... by theDunedan · · Score: 1
      God could not be reached for comment.

      But if he could have been reached for comment, how would anyone else know it was really him?

      Man, has this been a flamebait (read 'useless') article/thread.

    83. Re:Interesting... by eh2o · · Score: 2, Informative

      the mathematical definition of an infinite series is one which is defined for any arbitrarily large, finite number of terms. proofs of limits, continuity, etc all work the same way - by induction on a unbounded sequence of increasing finite representations.

      so, you are correct in that for any finite number of terms there will be a -1 at the end of the series and therefore 1 = 0 does not follow.

      however the original post is not a proof by contradiction because its really not a mathematically sound construction at all. it is, however, amusing. :)

    84. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The above post is taken from Douglas Adams' (argueably) best book. Ever. The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

      Since the parent poster couldn't seem to cite his source correctly! Such actions are punishable by VOGON POETRY!

      Of course any /.er that doesn't know where that quote is from should be summarily shot.

    85. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1

      As a scientist, I do too. But everything's possible; the goal of science is to determine what, given the evidence we have, has the greatest likelihood of being true.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    86. Re:Interesting... by aspx · · Score: 1

      I have yet to see any evidence of intelligent design. And I'm a software engineer!

    87. Re:Interesting... by Paralizer · · Score: 1
      1 - 1 + 1 - 1 + .... = 0


      That series diverges, it doesn't converge to zero.
    88. Re:Interesting... by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
      However, as to your assertions about logic, you're wrong. You don't need exhaustive testing to disprove a statement like Newton's 3rd law, you just need to find one action, somewhere in the universe, which doesn't have an equal and opposite reaction.

      I think the parent poster meant that you need to enumerate all the candidate re-actions throughout the universe to show that they are not equal and opposite to ehat one action you claim to have found. If you want to be strict about it, you cannot assume symmetry, continuity, etc. throughout the universe as shortcuts unless you have first proven that... going back to your next point.

      To definitely prove a statement containing the universal qualifier is, on the other hand, pretty much logically impossible. Empirical knowledge is necessarily based on inductive reasoning, which can't be used to definitively prove anything the way you can prove things in formal logic or mathematics (even math proofs using the Axiom of Induction are deductive proofs; the name is misleading.)

    89. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell me, how long did the grand canyon take to be carved? It couldn't have taken millenia because steep vertical walls on a canyon indicate rapid erosion due to large amounts of water travelling at high speeds. This is scientific fact, its observable, testable, and repeatable. The Grand Canyon formed rapidly, its geology indicates that. This is a piece of scientific FACT that is used to support the biblical world flood.

      um, NO.

      http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CH/CH581.html

    90. Re:Interesting... by xquark · · Score: 1

      Does that mean for something to have an avenue of comprehension within this so-called
      "scientific frame-work" you mention, there must also exist an avenue of disproving
      its correctness?

      --
      Arash Partow's Philosophy: Be a person who knows what they don't know, and not a person who doesn't know.
    91. Re:Interesting... by randallpowell · · Score: 1
      The difference between a theory and a law is that a law can be absolutely proven, a theory cannot.

      Most laws started out as a theory. Newton's laws were theories and someday Einstein's theories will be law..

    92. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite. It has 2 limit points +1 and 0. The series doesn't diverge. It just doesn't converge to a unique limit point

    93. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Carbon dating works by the guess that decay rate of C-14 decay is known for things thousands of years ago. It isn't.

      According to everything we know about atomic theory, rates of decay are predictable. So your argument is that the laws of physics have somehow changed in recent history.

      ...and genetics show that the universe came into being via creationism

      False. Genome sequencing of multiple organisms has shown exactly what evolution predicted...that you're more genetically similar to a chimp than to a mouse and even less so to a fruitfly. It's also shown how random garbage (pseudogenes and integrated viruses) have accumlated over time and changed along with the genome itself in a timescale that eliminates creationism.

    94. Re:Interesting... by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 0
      The mathematics of it are pretty self-consistant, however. String theory isn't completely unprovable, it is only unprovable given the current level of technology. That is to say that in the future with bigger particle accelerators we may just catch a glimpse of hitherto unseen but already predicted particles or events that are accounted for in String theory (and particles have already been observed that until their observation had only been predicted in theory).

      String theory is called a theory because of the evidence to back it up, which is for the most part mathematical. String theory may ultimately be wrong, in which case all those maths behind it are just a very interesting intellectual exercise, but at the moment the evidence points pretty strongly in its favor.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    95. Re:Interesting... by Sebastopol · · Score: 1

      When you regrouped the parenthesis, you did not account for even pairng, so there will always be a trailing -1 :

      1 + (-1 + 1) + (-1 + 1) ... -1 = 0
      1 - 1 = 0

      nice try!

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    96. Re:Interesting... by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
      however the original post is not a proof by contradiction because its really not a mathematically sound construction at all. it is, however, amusing. :)
      It's only amusing if you enjoy seeing that sort of bastardized and incorrect mathematical reasoning.
    97. Re:Interesting... by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 0
      Parent obviously fails to recognize that words may have more than one definition, and that those definitions can vary depending on the context the word is used.

      "theory" in everyday conversation = guess, speculation

      "theory" in scientific context = "hypothesis supported by a number of facts"

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    98. Re:Interesting... by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      The difference between a theory and a law is that a law can be absolutely proven, a theory cannot.

      A "law" is just an obsolete term for a theory that everybody believes. These days, science is progressing fast enough that scientists are hesitant to call anything a law. An ironic consequence of this is that many of the principles called "Laws" are now known to be wrong, or at least not entirely correct. For example, Newton's "Laws of motion" have been superseded by Einstein's equations of relativistic motion.

    99. Re:Interesting... by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 0
      Please cite your proof. "Obviousness" of something is not valid as proof anymore than it's "obvious" that the world is flat when I look outside.

      It's only the misinterpretation of the data that creationist are able to fit "facts" into their little story. The theory of evolution is in no way dependant on belief or not belief of creationism in that it stands on it's own supported by evidence.

      C-14 is only one of the elements used for dating. It's only good for certain time lengths, and other elements are only good for their particular time lengths.

      Unfortunately, you haven't been brainwashed, you're just an idiot.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    100. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      You obviously haven't researched this that much.

      There are classic examples like the structure of the eyeball and also replications of strata after volcanic eruptions.

      To be fair, the word "creationist" involves so many possible meanings that it's almost impossible to answer your question.

      My assumption is you are asking a serious question, not trolling. Regardless, your choice of words shows you aren't open to an alternative view. Your sentence "Evolutionists have scientifically proven data..." is ludicrous. How do you propose to scientifically prove events which are purported to have happened over millenia? Scientific proof requires replication. There is a huge difference between causation and correllation.

      Macro evolution would require the negation of the second law (I think it's the second, don't remember right now) which holds that entropy increases. Just how would living creatures increase in complexity so as to take advantage of future enivronmental circumstances? Answer, they wouldn't. Porcupine quills serve as a protection against predators. Why then haven't mice or rats developed quills? They're also eaten by predators.

      It's one thing to put together collections of physical specimens which show a morphing of physical characteristics and quite another to PROVE anticipatory change or genetic structure.

      There's a whole body of written works which are chock full of examples to illustrate purposeful design. If you really want to find out, you have to go beyond pseudo-academic biological sources and get to core aspects of matter. I don't remember the name of the group right now but you should be able to find works from a group of physicists and astrophysicists which discuss such things as the unique aspect of the betn water molecule and its relationship to carbon-based life and also unique aspects of carbon.

      Recently, Discovery Times channel had a re-broadcast of a show which discussed the Ten Plagues in Egypt and discussed how a small change in the enivronment could have led to all of them happening. I missed part of it but recall the basic premise was a remote volcano could have caused a bacterial explosion in the water which led to red bloom which chased frogs out of the water and there was also something about the practice of grain eaten only by the first-born sons being stored close enough to the river such that the bacteria could have contaminated it and the Hebrews didn't have access to that grain, etc.

      That's certainly a far more plausible scenario, given that it would have God making a minor change in the ecological balance which would have led to a sequence of events. Granted, if you start with the premise that God exists and is omnipotent, he COULD turn water totally into blood but that would violate the physical laws in which He has placed us.

      To return to your statement, no, there is NO scientific proof that evolution has happened. There is only an annecdotal collection of hypotheses with an attendant philosophical belief.

    101. Re:Interesting... by Black+Acid · · Score: 1
      a Not quite. It has 2 limit points +1 and 0. The series doesn't diverge. It just doesn't converge to a unique limit point.
      Exactly. The series is conditionally convergent, (the sum of the absolute values of each term does not converge, but the series converges). The terms can be rearranged to add up to any value whatsoever.
    102. Re:Interesting... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      "Theory" is not speculation. In science, you start with a speculation, which is used to frame an initial hypothesis. Once this hypothesis has passed numerous attempts at disproof, then scientists start treating it as though it were likely to be correct. Only then does it become a theory in the sense that scientists use the word. No amount of further confirmation will elevate the idea any higher than "theory".

      "Empirical observations" are where scientific laws come in. A law describes an apparent systematic, repeatable observation. For example, "The Law of Gravity" says that masses consistently attract each other. A Theory of Gravity might try to explain the law as the action of gravitons, or depressions in the fabric of space-time.

      You say "empirical observation" means "speculative assignment of causational relationship in the absence of direct observation", which I would attempt to refute if only the statement didn't leave me confused and doubtful of your rationality.

      Trying to claim equivalence between creationism and evolution is silly. Evolution has millions of observations across billions of years, while Creationism has a dusty old book and a few tired arguments based on misconceptions of evolution. Men wrote the Bible, God wrote the rocks. You choose.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    103. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He bases it on the fact that he makes up "facts" all the time and then demands that everyone else posts links backing up their claims.

    104. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just ignore DAldredge, it has "issues."

    105. Re:Interesting... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      While you cannot disprove the possibility, it's impossible to do science unless you assume that conjecture is false.

      No point in even doing science, if there's a meddlesome, omnipotent creator who has demonstrated a perfect willingness to mess with your test tubes. You can never be sure that the results of a given experiment are the result of natural laws, if you leave open the possibility that God is breaking in and introducing systematic errors to get you to draw wrong conclusions.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    106. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      Uh...no. Read what you typed initially.

      Granted, one weakness, if you will, of this type of forum is the inability to revise a post.

      You're still missing the point. Look what you typed in this post: "The evidence of evolution is still there.." What do you mean by "evidence"? You're assigning causation in a situation in which none can be proven. Thus, you're mixing an ideology into "science."

      Your next statement does the same thing. "humans' genetic similarity to monkeys, etc. suggest" Suggest? So now it's "suggest" as opposed to "fact." The top of my head is roughly a half-sphere which is quite similar in shape and size to a basketball. Does that "suggest" a common genetic ancestor between a basketball and my head? That's a ludicrous example, of course, but it's used to illustrate the point. You're taking similarity to the level of suggestion which you previously assigned to proof.

      The main disagreement, I think, is you are looking at primarily one collection of interpretations of observations and treating it with near certainty while discounting contradictory interpretations. That's certainly allowable, but it's not PROOF.

      Creation has massive bodies of evidence in its favor, wether you are aware of them or not. It's just as resilient in the face of discovery as evolutionary theory.

      Your last comment is a straw man. You are assigning to me comments I did not make which making them yourself. I never claimed either of the points you stated. You are assigning them to creationism out of your own ignorance. There are massive bodies of evidence which can most easily be interpreted to indicate purposeful design.

      Your intellectual dishonesty was assigning the conept of PROOF to a theory which you prefer while discounting contrary indications simply because of your own pernicious whim.

    107. Re:Interesting... by Toloc · · Score: 1

      I've often thought if you flipped that around - 'and man created God in his own image' - that it explains so, so much about religion.

    108. Re:Interesting... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      I ask again - please post links to my /. posts where I get something wrong. Before you do, please lookup the difference between fact and opinion.

    109. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      Show me one, just ONE verifiable observation of evolution which is a billion years old.

      You can't.

      At most, you could show some fossil which could be interpreted to mean something, but you can't show causation.

      Even so, you're comments show you chose not to think in a scientific manner, you chose one view and refuse to contemplate any possibility.

      I will agree with your statement that "Trying to claim equivalence between creationisma nd evolution is silly." in that they could be viewed as mutually exclusive. I don't agree with the rest of that paragraph at all. You've chosen to embrace one possible interpretation while excluding others.

      You don't seem to be able to separate the "validity" of your belief in one interpretation of observations from your philosophical viewpoint. If you were, you'd understand just how transparent your post is.

    110. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where did the water come from?

      DUH! God! Nevermind the physical problems of introducing that much mass out of thin air. All things are possible with God! Even those that make no sense from the perspective of anything we've ever observed in the history of everything. Ever.

    111. Re:Interesting... by Elvis77 · · Score: 1

      That's ridiculous... God's tears cause rain not thunder... Thor's hammer causes thunder and lightning...

      --

      The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed (SK)
    112. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1
      As to your "factual" objections I won't restate Scientific American's elegant refutation of most of them here; here's a link instead.

      As to the special properties of certain atoms, molecules, and universal constants that permit life as we know it to exist, that argument is cyclical. We're here, so life exists; hence there must be some way for it to exist. Perhaps one day we'll find out how the universal constants got that way, until then you can merrily claim that a God did it for all I care.

      Finally, as to the Ten Plagues, the only evidence of them I could turn up after some Googling are the "Admonitions of Ipuwer," which describe political turmoil in Egypt and a foreign invasion. The colorful language used in the papyrus does suggest rivers of blood, apparently, but then again wars are pretty bloody.

      You equate "evolution" with "anticipatory change," revealing a lack of understanding of the principles of evolution as laid out by Charles Darwin. The principles are random mutations and gradual spread of beneficial mutations due to the increased viability of individuals possessing them.

      There is only an annecdotal [sic] collection of hypotheses with an attendant philosophical belief.
      In some places in the world, religious people are respected for their wisdom, because their philosophy makes them happy in this world. Are you so dissatisfied with your own religion that you have to resort to loud, desperate, and myopic assertions that everyone else is living a lie?
      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    113. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but it sounds as if you are the one with the very narrow mind and a reluctance to accept anything. I'm guessing you might just be an engineer as they have trouble committing to things being black and white (with them, there's always some gray and absolutely no commitment). While it's true that a divine being could have set life into motion and could have altered our "science" so that we'd believe such things as carbon dating, fossil remains, observed micro-eveolution, "survival of the most fit", etc; it seems unlikely. As to evolution, I can see inanimate objects becoming more chaotic, but that's what separates living organisms from non-living... their ability to cope with environmental changes secondary to a survival "instinct". A rock will not go looking for food, but even bacteria have chemosensitive attractors that could be considered a food-searching mechanism (not to be too anthropomorphic).

    114. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Carbon dating works by the guess that decay rate of C-14 decay is known for things thousands of years ago. It isn't.

      You obviously don't understand the carbon dating process. Please educate yourself. For this process to be in error would require the current laws of physics to be in error--not an impossibility, but very unlikely in this regard.

    115. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I couldn't have summarized this entire thread any better than you just did. Congratulations! If I had proverbial points, I'd give them to you.

    116. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      This is true. No doubt about it. If God exists, he either plays by the rules He created or he doesn't.

      What if God isn't meddlesome? If we start with the concept of a capricious God, then, yes, it's a horrible situation in which most rational people would not want to participate. It could lead to a situation in which they could be morally superior to God which leads to ciruclar impossibilities (He can't be inferior and superior...)

      Could it be that the projection of being "meddlesome" is a projection which is more related to human frailties than anything else? Sure. People with lunatic ideas about themselves and God create problems, just as lunatic "scientists" create problems. Think, Piltdown Man or the study of how bumps on your head determined where your life would lead you. Copernicus was almost killed for claiming hte Earth rotated around the Sun. "Scientists" of that time were just as blinded as many people today who have mixed their philosophies and hopes of reality into evolution.

      There are people on both extremes of the debate who give simple illustrations of their views. Jerry Falwell is certainly quite controversial, and maybe even dangerous, but he has a wonderful example. He says believing in evolution is similar to throwing a handful fo metal into the air expecting that at some point a pocket watch will fall down. It's an elegant argument. Would it be any different if a handful of mixed cells were thrown into the air an infinite number of times in the belief a tree frog would fall back down? Of course not, it's silly.

      IOW, why is it so hard for people to accept the possibility that creationism doesn't mean some kind of magic words and *poof*, such and such exists. Yes, I know, Genesis has passages that say, "God said, 'Let there be light.' and it was so..." Well, how many people here know enough about ancient recorded language to know if that was poetic language? Was it a summary?

      If you read the score of a football game was 21-11, does that mean it just instantly became the reality or was there a sequence of events which caused it to happen?

      If there is a God who created the physical environment in which we live, that would also mean He created the inter-relationships within that environment. That would mean "science", which is essentially an organized method of observation from within the system, is entirely dependent upon the realities which He created, it could not exist in their absence.

      So many of the replies in this thread are evolution-only-no-God-you're-stupid-you-have-no-pr oof. "Scientific" thoughts from people who don't accept contrary observations...

    117. Re:Interesting... by catwh0re · · Score: 1

      Ahh garbage mathematics at it's best...
      follow this pattern for me sometime
      1/9 = 0.1111..
      2/9 = 0.2222..
      .
      .
      8/9 = 0.8888..
      so 9/9 must equal 0.9999....
      wait hold on.
      therefore 0.0000..0001 is equal to zero, yet greater than zero..

    118. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1
      The OED defines "evidence" as "Grounds for belief; testimony or facts tending to prove or disprove any conclusion." They tend to prove it; however close the statement may come to being true, it will never be undeniable.

      Evidence in the archaeological record, coupled with modern experimentation and observation, indicate that evolution is a good explanation, and quite probably occurred. That is not to say that it undeniably did.

      I never mentioned causation, on the other hand. Let's swat down that straw man right now.

      If a basketball had cells with genes similar to mine, and I saw basketballs being born and passing on their genes, I would be inclined to believe there was a common ancestor. You're singling out a particular aspect of the issue and examining it in a vacuum - fun in debates, fatal in scientific endeavor.

      Creation has massive bodies of evidence in its favor, wether [sic] you are aware of them or not.
      I call bullshit. Every 'intelligent design' discussion I've ever seen has said "Oh, here's a problem with evolution, there must be a God!" Even were we to suppose that evolution wasn't responsible for whatever phenomenon the theists seized on, automatically assuming intelligent design is invalid.

      As to your claims of a straw man on my part, I was addressing the general issue being discussed here, which is "Does 'intelligent design' deserve equal treatment with Evolution?" And until 'intelligent design' advocates get a lot better at giving positive evidence, intelligent design will continue to be far-fetched.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    119. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      No, I do understand the concept of gradual mutation. That's exactly what makes the theory so untenable. Darwin mentioned the eye, didn't he? What did he state about it? All the parts have to be there for it to work, don't they? So...a mess of unusable sub-structures of eyes just happened to randomly mutate on a multitude of creatures, consuming resources until *poof* all of a sudden they had a complete eye? That's nuts.

      Yes, I know it's a circular argument, that was part of my point. There are things which are unprovable. Thus, claims that evolution is right and creationism is wrong can't be proven one way or the other. It comes down to a philosophical viewpoint, not a scientific certainty. It's perfectly fine with me if you don't believe in God. If you place a zealous belief that your existance is due to minute probability in an infinite physical realm, it just means you believe in another god, that of random chance.

      Google is a search engine for web pages. It's not an exhaustive reference for archaeological information.

      Your last sentence really seems like you describing yourself. It certainly doesn't describe me. If you are "living a lie", that's for you to realize, it's doesn't affect me one way or the other.

    120. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Arrogant and wrong! Your skills in producing bull and flamebait astound me, sir.

      There are classic examples like the structure of the eyeball and also replications of strata after volcanic eruptions.

      Which classically fall apart as soon as any semblance of critical thinking is applied.

      How do you propose to scientifically prove events which are purported to have happened over millenia?

      To use your own words, you obviously haven't researched this (scientific method) much. The answer is this: you don't "prove" events which have happened over millenia. You examine the data left by these events and work from the top down to devise the best fitting model to explain this data. You then work back from the bottom up to test whether the explanation holds up. If it does, congratulations, you've formed a real theory. If not, you ammend, re-evaluate, or scrap. Science 101.

      Macro evolution would require the negation of the second law (I think it's the second, don't remember right now) which holds that entropy increases.

      Failure to comprehend the second law of thermodynamics and entropy. No such paradox arises, except in creationist indoctrination camps (see: southern schools). A short run through: first of all, the law only applies to closed systems, which the Earth is not. We are constantly being bombarded with excess energy from the sun, which allows for the buildup of complex organic molecules whose energy is distributed through the ecosystem. Second, and following this, entropy is still increasing even though complexity is as well. Again, no paradox. Entropy is just the increase in free energy over time. While energy goes into building complexity in life, more of it is lost by heat during the reactions than is "gained" by the complexity.

      Just how would living creatures increase in complexity so as to take advantage of future enivronmental circumstances? ...? They don't. They increase in complexity as per the demands of the current environment, in the way that best ensures survival. If this were not so, we'd never have been born, as life never would have made it past the introduction of an oxygen atmosphere.

      Porcupine quills serve as a protection against predators. Why then haven't mice or rats developed quills? They're also eaten by predators.

      If anything this is a perfect argument for evolution and against ID. If God designed all creatures, why was he so unfair to the mice or rats? A more reasonable answer is that porcupines and mice/rats diverged and mutated different traits for survival. They didn't wind up with the same mutations -- mice are tiny and fast, porcupines have spines. That's evolution. Random mutation followed by nonrandom selection.

      I don't remember the name of the group right now but you should be able to find works from a group of physicists and astrophysicists which discuss such things as the unique aspect of the betn water molecule and its relationship to carbon-based life and also unique aspects of carbon.

      Which make it perfectly suited for life. It's called the anthropic principle, and on the surface it appears to be a convincing argument for ID. That's a simple error of perspective. In reality, it's common sense. Life would not exist if the properties weren't just right, and we wouldn't be here to notice it.

      That's certainly a far more plausible scenario, given that it would have God making a minor change in the ecological balance which would have led to a sequence of events.

      An objective universe knows no such thing as inherent scale (nothing is by nature "minor" or "major"), and any tinkering by some magical external being would be equally absurd, whether it be Allah wrapping the universe up into nonexistence in an instant (see: Muslim end times), or ID God (distinctly different from the orthodox God of Christianity, I might add) knocking an O2 molecule out of place and relying on the butterfly e

    121. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I think you mistyped that statement. I am therefore correcting it.

      "I have yet to see any evidence of intelligent design because I'm a software engineer!"

      - From another Software Engineer.

    122. Re: Interesting... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > So is Intelligent Design, which is gaining creedance as an alternative theory.

      ID isn't a theory; it's a collection of half-assed armchair arguments against evolution (or, often as not, against a misrepresentation of evolution), attached to the non sequitur conclusion "therefore an intelligent designer must have done it".

      Also, for some strange reason it's only "gaining credence" among creationists... and a few stray Raelians.

      ID is nothing but an attempt to sneak creationism into the public school curriculum. Its authors learned from the failure of the Creation Science movement a generation ago: the overt creationism brought it into conflict with the Establishment Clause, and the tangible claims were falsified. ID attempts to skirt both those problems, by substituting cryptocreationism for overt creationism, and by eliminating the science altogether. I.e., ID is Creation Science without the intellectual honesty.

      Many scientists have pointed out the folly of ID as "science", and now at least one judge has spotted the cryptocreationism.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    123. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      People ridicule that which they don't understand and that which threatens them.

      The theory (not FACT) of evolution doens't threaten me. Why does the theory of creation threaten you so much?

      I addressed the mixture of philosophy and theory combined with dogmatic derision of a competing theory. You attack personally.

      Guess that makes you the person who's got a weak foundation, doesn't it? Yup.

    124. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the parts have to be there for it to work, don't they? So...a mess of unusable sub-structures of eyes just happened to randomly mutate on a multitude of creatures, consuming resources until *poof* all of a sudden they had a complete eye? That's nuts.

      Notice that simpler creatures extant today contain simpler, complete eye structures. Notice that evolution says a certain trait will be refined and adapted through increasing complexity to better suit its environment over time. Add 1 + 1, and you get 2. Creationists are using pretty funny math when their 1 + 1 = 0, but I guess that's what happens when God dictates your system of logical analysis.

    125. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1
      All right, Fred, it's come down to this.

      Science is about more than the "possibility" of things. Scientists don't deny that any explanation that fits the facts could be true. They try to find an explanation that fits the facts and is most useful in planning for the future.

      If you state that there is a God who set up everything so that we'd find the world the way it is, nobody can refute you. But your statement becomes meaningless to scientists, as science seeks to predict based on the past. As such, science isn't a search for absolute "truth," it's a search for rules that, backed up by past experience, predict future developments. That is not to say that we predict the future completely; probability still plays a role. However, we can characterize future developments in a way that is useful to people.

      If you choose to argue about the nature of Absolute Truth, you have an uphill battle, as Buddhists, Taoists, Shintoists, Hindus, Muslims, Jews, etc. each lay similar claims, and there is no way to argue about whether God created Heaven and Earth, whether the universe is an expression of Buddha-mind, whether it is a flow of Ch'i, whether all atoms are their own tiny gods, whether it is made and broken by the wheel of Karma, whether Allah called it into being, or what. Have fun.

      If you choose the scientific path instead, then you have to get off your high horse and start trying to make predictions with us scientists. We've been embracing systematic, predictable systems of development throughout our training; you'd get pretty humble pretty quick.

      The purpose of a science book is to teach people the skills of prediction based on experience. Hence the teaching of evolution, a predictive theory based on past experience, is quite reasonable. Teaching that God made everything the way it is, so He could break it just as easily, doesn't help anyone, it just makes Christians feel good.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    126. Re: Interesting... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Nah. On the seventh day, God went Commando!

      Pretty bold, for a guy with ten commandments!

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    127. Re:Interesting... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      You can't really test evolution either, due to the massive times over which it is supposed to be happening.

      Another problem is that people coming from a scientific background continually try and derive religion. That is the scientific way, after all. Start assuming nothing, look around, see what you have, start connecting it together and see what you end up with. But Protestant Christianity (the only religion I am really familiar with doctrinally; I assume other modern religions make similar claims in this respect) expressly says that it is not possible to derive it from the surrounding world. (The Bible says that the natural world is sufficient to demonstrate the existance of a God, but not to understand His nature).

      Christianity claims that it can only be understood on the basis of a revelation from God (ie: the Bible). If you accept that as an assumption, it all makes sense. If you don't, it will all look weird and dis-jointed. Jesus explicitly says that none of the people hearing him are going to understand what he's really saying. It is only later when they accept Jesus as the Son of God that they look back and think "In the light of what I know now, it all makes sense.".

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    128. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      Uh...no. You're examples starts with "2", not "1". The theory of evolution has a starting point, doesn't it? Even those "simpler, complete eye structures" have to evolve from...nothing...which means they start as...what? Unfunctioning extra tissue which consumes resources and returns...nothing.

    129. Re:Interesting... by Degrees · · Score: 1
      You asked for the hypothesis that can be tested: that would be Intelligent Design.

      Specifically, three points: 1) Build models of the chemical changes that occur inside an organism (or even just a cell). 2) Look for processes of favorable mutation that rely on interlocking / synchronized adaptation. 3) Use the mathematics of statistics to determine whether these interlocking / synchronized adaptations are likely the result of chance, or fall outside the realm of chance.

      An example is blood clotting - there is a very narrow range in which clotting agents prevent bleeding to death yet do not kill by thrombosis. Another example is hormone regulation. The quantities of actual hormones are exceptionally small, yet their effects are quite large.

      What you are looking for is Archimedes' screw in the prairie. Not a creek in the side of a hill which moves stuff during spring runoff. You are looking for something complex that provides an advantage to some other portion of the organism, without which the organism would suffer.

      To be fair, this is still one-sided research: if you find that, indeed, a biological process has irreducible complexity, you then prove intelligent design. But if you don't find that, then all you have for it is a better understanding of biological processes. ;-)

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    130. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1
      There are classic examples like the structure of the eyeball and also replications of strata after volcanic eruptions.

      Which classically fall apart as soon as any semblance of critical thinking is applied.
      Again, how would an eyeball evolve? That would require extra, unneeded tissue which consumes resources. If you know so much about Darwin's theories, why don't you know his own crtiques of them? Since you can't offer an explanation, you descend into unsubstantiated insults and personal attacks.
      No, but there is a whole load of supporting evidence and a grand total of zero credible falsifying evidences,
      Zero? Well, I'm certainly not going to accuse you of letting facts get in the way of your dogma.

      no matter what your Baptist academy may have lead you to believe.
      What was that I typed a little while ago? People ridicule that which they don't understand and that which they fear. Amazingly predictable.
    131. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1
      Your last sentence really seems like you describing yourself. It certainly doesn't describe me. If you are "living a lie", that's for you to realize, it's doesn't affect me one way or the other.
      Good point. Why do scientists get so worked up when other people act in ways we consider stupid?

      Try this on for size: Scientists don't dream of telling people what church they can worship at, or what prayers they may say. If people choose not to reap the fruits of scientific progress, more power to them (I will grant that Christian Scientists who want to let their kids die are an exception here).

      But Christians, based on a belief that God despises certain things, tell gay people they can't marry, scientists that they don't get to work with embryos, and teens that they can't watch porn.

      Scientists point to the global warming problem, which will bring untold harm on our descendants if left unchecked. But since it's possible that the increase in temperature is just a fluke (just like it's possible that God arranged for animals to appear in the order they did), the leader of the free world decides it's better to give polluters free rein and bring in some more revenue.

      I wouldn't mind if there were a colony on the Moon I could go off to, and leave Christians and their lackeys to make the world into whatever they want. But I'm stuck here, so I try to help people realize that viewpoints like yours are so much fruitless BS.

      And don't worry; I don't lose sleep worrying if there's a lake of fire waiting for me at the bitter end.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    132. Re:Interesting... by Spyffe · · Score: 1
      Science has shown that brain cells of certain animals (including humans, I believe) are sensitive to light. The thought that neurons, evolved for a different purpose, might by accident become photosensitive, is not too far-fetched, particularly considering the close relationship between light and electricity.

      From there to specialization, and the formation of lenses to make them more acute, is just a matter of gradual steps. Hence one might well say 1 (neurons) + 1 (specialization) = 2 (eyes), without starting at a highly improbable 2.

      --
      Sigmentation fault - core dumped
    133. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      Evidence in the archaeological record, coupled with modern experimentation and observation, indicate that evolution is a good explanation, and quite probably occurred. That is not to say that it undeniably did.

      I agree with you completely. Your initial post discounted the possibility of creation. It can't be both ways. It can't be both possible and impossible.

      I never mentioned causation, on the other hand. Let's swat down that straw man right now.

      At this point, I'm not sure what I was trying to express except it must have been related to the assumption that such-and-such creature was an evolution of such-and-such other creature. That implies a linkage. What I was trying to point out there isn't a way to replicate. Each premise is built on another. "Causation" was not the most appropriate word to use.

      Creation has massive bodies of evidence in its favor, wether [sic] you are aware of them or not.

      I call bullshit. Every 'intelligent design' discussion I've ever seen

      Don't you reinforce my statement? Unless you, yourself, have performed exhaustive study of all the literature and thoughts, how could you experience be considered authoritative? Think about that for a moment. It's not an attack on you. I said "wether you are aware of it or not." to which you replied "Every...I've ever seen."

      has said "Oh, here's a problem with evolution, there must be a God!" Even were we to suppose that evolution wasn't responsible for whatever phenomenon the theists seized on, automatically assuming intelligent design is invalid.

      That illustrates my point. Your comment starts with the presumption of evolution being valid, doesn't it? Yes, it does. I've read plenty of works by well-educatedk, highly-accomplished professionals who don't agree with the theory of evolution, not because they're subhuman dolts brainwashed by a hypnotic preacher figure but because of their analysis of facts. Your statement shows me you haven't read any of them. Does that mean they don't exist? No, it does not.

      If you and I see the same phenomenon and you ascribe random chance and I ascribe intelligent design, what makes your views more valid than mine? Does my spiritual belief automatically make me incapable of scientific thought? Does it mean my beliefs are identical to those of the crackpot-of-the-month club and I'm incapable of critical thought? Does it make me a blind automatan as the attacks on me have claimed? Does it mean I'm a simpleton? Of course, not. If you think the best flavor of ice cream is vanilla and I like chocolate the best, am I a simpleton lunatic because I have a different viewpoint? No. Where the learned men of science wrong about bleeding people as a method of healing? Yes. Why is it ok for them to grow and adapt their viewpoints as discoveries and knowledge emerge yet religious people cannot? If there is a God who created the environment in which we live, he created the laws which guide it, right? Yes. Where does the idea that He wouldn't want us to discover all the little inter-relationships come from? Why can't both exist? Where does the idea that religion and science are antagonists come from? (I think it comes from ego problems but that's a whole different topic.) If only one viewpoint is possibly "correct", it is not a "theory", which, by definition, can be incorrect, it is absolutely correct. This is where it transfers into closed-minded dogma.

      As to your claims of a straw man on my part, I was addressing the general issue being discussed here, which is "Does 'intelligent design' deserve equal treatment with Evolution?" And until 'intelligent design' advocates get a lot better at giving positive evidence, intelligent design will continue to be far-fetched.

      That's your personal bias. What you describe as acceptable practice is little more than indoctrination. You chose to NOT see inter-relations

    134. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      Oh, puhlease (see, I can use overblown melodrama, too), drop the "us scientists" vs. "you Christian idiot" insults. You know nothing of my scholastic or professional background, whatsoever.

      "The purpose of a science book is to teach people the skills of prediction based on experience."

      No, science books don't teach "skills of prediction", whatever that is. Well, I guess it's possible trend or actuarial analysis is taught in some advanced math classes but that's not what you meant.

      You really are a small person.

    135. Re:Interesting... by FredThompson · · Score: 1

      You truly believe Christians are incapable of understanding science?

      You're a bigot.

    136. Re:Interesting... by cL0h · · Score: 1

      Lay off the bong buddy. It's turning you into a troll !!!

      --
      cL0h
    137. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is immediately obvious, but for brevity, the fourth step should actually be:

      1 + (-1 + 1) + (-1 + 1) + ... - 1 = 0

      Simplifying:
      1 - 1 = 0
      0 = 0

      QED = Quizzically Eclipsed Digit?

    138. Re:Interesting... by Sique · · Score: 1
      Take Newtons umpteenth law of motion "Every action has an equal and opposite reaction"

      Try to construct an experiment which would disprove it.


      No, your are misinterpreting something. Newtons Laws are a definition what 'force' is. You can't disprove definitions (except you find a contradiction inside the definition itself). With the law 'actio equals reactio' Newton states that force can be measured either at the acting or at the reacting point and it's meaningless to try to define which side the 'actio' is on and which side the 'reactio', because it defines 'force' in a way, that in a closed inertial system the sum of all forces is zero. This creates the scientific term 'force' rather than take the already existing term 'force' and state an additional property.

      Energy is a similar scientific term that gets defined in a similar way. No, you can't prove that the sum of all energies in a closed system is constant. Rather you postulate that if at different points in time you measure different amounts for special types of energy, that the missing part has to be a different type of energy you didn't measure yet.

      That's why the Laws of Thermodynamics are called 'laws'. They actually define, what Energy is.
      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    139. Re:Interesting... by batemanm · · Score: 1

      My mother used to tell me that thunder was angels moving furniture around.

    140. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      therefore 0.0000..0001 is equal to zero, yet greater than zero..

      I don't know if you were flaming the OP or just joining in with deliberately bad math, but that conclusion of yours is fundamentally wrong

    141. Re:Interesting... by Phisbut · · Score: 1
      I was born from catholic parents, I was baptised as a catholic, I was raised as a catholic, I went to a catholic private high-school etc, and I have a very scientific mind.

      I cannot be 100% certain that there is no god at all, but what I am 100% certain of is that the "catholic god" does not exist (ironic, isn't it?). Here's the reasoning.

      God is supposed to have created everything in 7 days, earth and sky, light and darkness, animals and humans. He would have made the humans "intelligent" and make them look like him, so we should expect God to stand on 2 feet, have 2 arms, 10 fingers, etc.

      Evolution is indeed just a theory, so we can't use it to refute the creationist theory. But we can look at the facts on which the evolution theory is based. We today are Homo Sapiens Sapiens (not a typo, it's really a double-Sapiens), and we would believe that the catholic god looks like a Homo Sapiens Sapiens himself, since we look like him. However, millions of years ago, there were no Homo Sapiens Sapiens, there were Neaderthals. Let's not assume we evolve from them, since we're not allowed to use the evolution theory. So, either the catholic god wasn't there "from the start" and created the Homo Sapiens Sapiens after the Neanderthals, or the catholic god looks like a Neanderthal, created the Neanderthals, and Homo Sapiens Sapiens evolved from there (a mix of both theories).

      BUT , long before the Neanderthals walk the Earth, there were dinosaurs. At the time of dinosaurs, there were no Homo spieces, there were monkeys. So either the catholic god wasn't there "from the start" and created the Homo spieces (and sub-spieces) after the dinosaurs and the monkeys, or the catholic god looks like either a dinosaur or a monkey, and we evolved from there.

      And it keeps going like that until we reach the real beginning of time.

      So, even without the theory of evolution, we know for a fact that animals and dinosaurs have been walking on this Earth long before the first human being. Whichever way you look at it, the book of Genesis is just plain wrong. Either god didn't create everything from the beginning, or he didn't do it in 7 days (it took millions of years for Homo Sapiens Sapiens to be here), or he doesn't look like a human being at all.

      I don't know enough about other variations of Christianity or about other religions to know if the same kind of reasoning applies, but in my mind, there is no god.

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    142. Re:Interesting... by Cyn · · Score: 1

      so wait - what are the two sides of that equation?

      I it as "Infinite god equals zero" then it reduces to "One god equals zero" which can be restated as "god is nothing".

      --
      cyn, free software and *nix operating systems enthusiast.
    143. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You can't really test evolution either, due to the massive times over which it is supposed to be happening.

      Bullshit. Take a look in a petri dish sometime. Bacteria and other microbes reproduce like crazy and can go through many generations in a short amount of time. Granted that isn't the same watching human evolution but if the theory is solid then it should apply to any organism as well as it does to bacteria.

      Another problem is that people coming from a scientific background continually try and derive religion. That is the scientific way, after all. Start assuming nothing, look around, see what you have, start connecting it together and see what you end up with. But Protestant Christianity (the only religion I am really familiar with doctrinally; I assume other modern religions make similar claims in this respect) expressly says that it is not possible to derive it from the surrounding world. (The Bible says that the natural world is sufficient to demonstrate the existance of a God, but not to understand His nature).

      Wrong. People from a scientific background generally prefer to ignore religion and its claims as something that cannot be proven or disproven. This has worked pretty well for a long time but in the last century the issue has been forced on them by activist Christians who feel compelled to jump into the scientific arena and try to prove the truth of God and the Bible. Of course, once they do that they are forced to play by the rules of science. No other scientist gets to ignore the scientific principal, why should they?

      Christianity claims that it can only be understood on the basis of a revelation from God (ie: the Bible). If you accept that as an assumption, it all makes sense.

      True, but then it isn't really science. A hypothesis has to be testable, repeatable, and independantly verifiable. Revelation from God really doesn't fit any of that.

      The best thing to do for all involved is for Christians to go back to teaching faith in church and not try to mix it with science. It just doesn't work.

    144. Re:Interesting... by Schnapple · · Score: 1

      Also worth mentioning that Douglas Adams was an atheist. Not that it makes too much difference but it does put the joke in a slightly different context.

    145. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Again!? I've never responded to one of your posts in my life. It is just a fairly obvious fact that that is what you do on a regular basis. Do you have some sort of persecution complex? As for the second sentence in your post; Yes you should do that.

    146. Re:Interesting... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "No, your are misinterpreting something. Newtons Laws are a definition what 'force' is."

      No, you are misinterpreting something.

      In fact you make the exact point that I was trying to make; that these 'laws' are not provable in the sense of a scientific theory.

      They are axioms not testable theories like evolution, for example.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    147. Re:Interesting... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Wrong. People from a scientific background generally prefer to ignore religion and its claims as something that cannot be proven or disproven. This has worked pretty well for a long time but in the last century the issue has been forced on them by activist Christians who feel compelled to jump into the scientific arena and try to prove the truth of God and the Bible. Of course, once they do that they are forced to play by the rules of science. No other scientist gets to ignore the scientific principal, why should they?

      Wrong. People from a scientific background are just as likely to have religious opinions as the next person. Just because science has nothing to say about religion doesn't mean scientists don't.

      True, but then it isn't really science. A hypothesis has to be testable, repeatable, and independantly verifiable.

      Yes, religion isn't science. But there are many truths that cannot be verified scientifically. As I have commented on other threads, no historical data, for example, can be verified scientifically. You cannot look to science as the only test of truth. It is a good test for certain classes of things (as you said, those that can be tested, repeated and verified) but if anything falls outside that range, science can't comment on it. That's not saying science says it's wrong, just that science cannot verify it one way or another.

      Most of the people I've heard of who are "mixing Christianity with science" are looking at scientific phenomena and seeing if they correspond with the Bible. That's not trying to prove the Bible scientifically, its seeing if science says the Bible is feasible (not true, but feasible). For example, the Bible says there was a worldwide flood. You can look at the scientific evidence, and see if that holds true. You can never prove the Bible scientifically that way - but you can prove that the Bible and science are not mutually exclusive.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    148. Re:Interesting... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Please check out all the AC posts that follow my recent /. posts. Posts, strangly like yours, follow most of them.

    149. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also see in your posting history a lot of non-AC posts calling you out as a liar or charging that you selectively present "facts" to make your case. What makes you so sure there is only one AC?

    150. Re:Interesting... by DShard · · Score: 1

      Ignoring for a moment that this is a disproof of natural selection and not a proof of creationism...

      Hypothesis: "blood clotting needs to be so precise that it cannot haven happened by chance"

      Data: the chance that blood clotting would have happened through random mutation and enviromental selection is 1 in some in insanely large number.

      conclusion: There is a chance and this hypothesis fails observable data.

      Now you can say that is unfair because the hypothesis was written to not include "severly unlikely" but I have no way to gauge that or agree with others that what that possibility would be. A hypothesis requires that it's foundations are not subject to interpretation.

      Again I implore any ID propenent to give me a testable hypothesis.

    151. Re:Interesting... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Because I hope that it is only one person who has that much time on their hands. It being a group of people would just me a complete and total waste of their time. :)

    152. Re:Interesting... by Degrees · · Score: 1
      The testing comes from setting up a narrower hypothesis.

      I am not a mathematics genius, but as I understand it, there are people who know how to model complexity. What little I remember of my calculus classes, there are big infinities and little infinities. One can take seemingly chaotic data and find the fundamental equations underneath - and can even deal with insanely large numbers.

      To counter your example, look at this hypothesis:

      Hypothesis: "Archimedes screw is so complex that it cannot have happened by chance."

      Data: The chance that an Archimedes screw would have been carved by wind and rain is 1 in some insanely large number.

      Conclusion: There is a chance, therefore this hypothesis fails.

      Except... no one, in their right mind, would claim that the wind and rain and sun's heat and lightning and (any other non-intelligent force) could have etched away sandstone or a tree or (anything) to carve an Archimedes screw into existance.

      At some point, the complexity of an Archimedes screw is a mathematically identifiable attribute. Tubes are simple geometric devices. I assume that an auger could even be called simple. But a (mostly - there are brackets) free floating auger inside a tube, that fits tight enough to not lose too much liquid, that, when rotational energy is applied, moves liquid, is not simple.

      Additionally, the use of an Archimedes screw alters its environment, to some benefit.

      What we have is a structure that is complex, and drives a process that is non-random*.

      The hypothesis then, must be: an Archimedes screw is so complex that its structure defies simplicity (mathematically speaking**) and its operation increases order.***

      Hypothesis: "Blood clotting needs to be so precise that its process defies simplicity and its operation increases order."

      Hypothesis: "Protein folding is so complex that its scaffolding defies simplicity and its operation increases order."

      These hypothesis are testable, if you believe simplicity can be defined.

      Admittedly, simplicity is observed - you could argue that a 3,000th order equation is 'simple'. I don't think I'd want to be on the side sticking up for that assertion though. Might as well claim that an insanely large number is as small as 1, compared to a really insanely large number. At some point 'reasonble chance' changes into 'absurdly improbable chance'. Relying on large numbers means relying on a moving target.

      If this foundation of Intelligent Design is questionable, then why wouldn't the foundation of Evolution be equally as questionable? Both have foundations based on an assumption: possibilities of truth, due to large numbers.

      Therefore, there isn't really any reason for Intelligent Design to be less probable than Evolution.

      So, to sum up, these hypothesis are testable, and require no more faith than required for Evolution, to consider them for testing. They may not pan out. But they are as valid as others based on Evolution from scientific basis.



      *Archimedes screws were used to pull water out of the Nile and irrigate. However, if they had been rigged to a constant power source (always on), they would have flooded and drowned the plants being irrigated. The operation of them was non-random, and driven for specific benefit.

      **The geometry of the structure cannot be described by a simple first or second order equation. A whole series of equations is required to describe the structure, which if strung together would be nineteenth or twentieth order equations. Or higher****.

      ***At the heart of ID is the quest to find the spark of life - unburning the candle, if you will. Except that candles are extremely simple compared to mitosis and adenosine triphosphate.

      **** Each ATP molecule is over 500 atomic mass units (500 AMUs). The complex contains the number of subatomic parts equivalent to over 500 hydrogen atoms. And then, you have the macromolecules that use ATP.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    153. Re:Interesting... by DShard · · Score: 1

      Hypothesis: "Blood clotting needs to be so precise that its process defies simplicity and its operation increases order."

      Are you serious? What part of this has anything to do with evolution or "ID". Your hypothesis simply tests if blood clotting is simple (it's not) and that works counter to entropy (as any biological process ultimately does). Not only are you not trying to show ID as a legimate theory, you are restating well accepted data.

      Again any coherent testable ID hypothesis needs to be more than mathematical masterbation. Probabilities of the kind you are talking about don't occur on a timescale of 6,000 years and a world the size the moon (much that antiquity thought of the world when the bible was written). you are talking about an engine of change and adaption that you obviously have a problem wrapping your head around. The fact that the earth is over a billion years old may cross you but it is no less a fact.

    154. Re:Interesting... by Degrees · · Score: 1
      In the GGP you asked for a hypothesis to test ID. I provided. Intelligent Design means that an intelligent designer built biological processes. The concept being tested is irreducible complexity. If irreducible complexity is found to be built into the biological processes, then, Intelligent Design follows.

      You don't have to get offensive when an answer is presented to you - even when it supports an alternative theory. I don't believe I mocked Evolution or any of its devotees.

      ...that you obviously have a problem wrapping your head around.
      Do you really think that you can insult someone into agreeing with you?

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    155. Re:Interesting... by DShard · · Score: 1

      Do you really think that you can insult someone into agreeing with you?

      Nor do I think there is anyway I could provide enough data that you would accept as supporting evolution. I honestly think that none of that matters to the keepers of the faith and no amount of discourse will change the willfull ignorance creationist show. It was over the top but it is still true.

      I would like to have a testable hypothesis. irriducible complexity has been shown to be flawed so often that I will just be repeating myself. If you want to now why irrudicible complexity as you define it is flawed, there is mountains of discourse on why your hypothesis is biased, flawed and cannot be disproven (which any theory based on this hypothesis would require of it).

      So you either don't understand the scientific method or are being ignorant of it. I do appreciate your attempt. Please feel free to investigate the theories involved and I will gladly discuss anything and test anything that will forward creationism as a theory supplanting evolution.

  4. ........ What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The statement on the front of the book, whether motivated by religion or not, is completley true. Evolution IS a theory, and not a fact.

    I don't know which side of the debate is dumber. The state, the evolutionists, the judges, or the creatonists.

  5. Evolution at work by Brakz0rz · · Score: 1, Funny

    Glad to see this ridiculous disclaimer get darwinned.

    --
    "Man will never be free until the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest." - Denis Diderot
  6. Re:goddamned fundamentalists.. by mOoZik · · Score: 1

    Your post's subject answers that correctly. After all, this is Georgia we are talking about here.

  7. the same for creationism then by PetrusMagnusII · · Score: 1

    creationism is also just a theory, not a fact. not saying it isn't true eitherway, but it's impossible to prove wrong, or correct. so it will remain a theory forever...

    1. Re:the same for creationism then by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      Creationism isn't a theory, it's no more than a wild guess based on blind faith.

      To be a theory, there needs to be empirical, independently-verifiable evidence, that point directly to that theory.

      With creationism, all you have are blind and often ludicrous assertions of causation based on nothing more than mere coincidence, or positive assertions based soley on the inability for the other side to prove you 100% wrong.

      "You can't prove that I'm not god, therefore I am god!" Nonsesne like that.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    2. Re:the same for creationism then by Joe+Random · · Score: 1
      creationism is also just a theory, not a fact.
      Actually, it's both. The theory is the framework that explains how the evolutionary process (which can be observed) operates. This is much like the theory of gravitation explaining how the fact of gravity works.
    3. Re:the same for creationism then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how does evolution compare in it's proof of being wrong or correct?

    4. Re:the same for creationism then by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      If it can't be proven wrong or correct, how can it be a theory and not a method for force feed religion?

    5. Re:the same for creationism then by JavaTenor · · Score: 1

      Creation, however (at least, a strict reading of biblical creation), is pretty easily falsifiable by the preponderance of scientific evidence. Thus far, evolution has held up pretty well.

      The reason this sticker is problematic: most people don't know the scientific definition of the word "theory".

    6. Re:the same for creationism then by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      creationism is also just a theory, not a fact. not saying it isn't true eitherway, but it's impossible to prove wrong,

      If "creationism" cannot ever be proven wrong, then it is not a theory. All theories must, by definition, be hypothetically falsifiable.

      Creationism is not, despite the ranting of religious nutcases who have no understanding of the scientific method whatsoever, a "theory".

    7. Re:the same for creationism then by The_reformant · · Score: 1

      i would prefer to classify creationism as a myth rather than a theory.

      Most scientists particularly in experimental science tend to observe the evidence and formualte a theory based on the evidence.

      But wait..maybe I'm being hasty, perhaps creationism is a theory..well theres as much evidence that my arse created the universe so me and 2000 buddys are gonna get a sticker slapped on textbooks which indirectly supports arseism.

      --
      I have discovered a truly remarkable sig which this post is too small to contain.
    8. Re:the same for creationism then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes, but these sticker are a prime example of FUD. They are trying the blur the line of credibility so that ID can gain greater acceptability.

      People who believe in ID don't need to convince the scientific community but the job blogs who buy the books and except the statement on face value, which would be an easy thing to do.

      Now that the seeds have been planted and the voting public has been eschewed to the master plan the puritanical can gain power with impunity and shall govern in perpetuity.

    9. Re:the same for creationism then by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1

      Depends on what you mean by Creationism. Flood-geology Creationism is bullshit, and will forever remain bullshit. Gods starting the Big Bang, or playing with Evolution's dice is implausible, but not impossible.

      --
      Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
    10. Re:the same for creationism then by j.bellone · · Score: 1

      But it can't be proven either; therefore it is not a fact. What is left for it to be then? Either a theory or a simple lie; I'll let you choose, I'm choosing the latter. A lie created by man, to control other men. Sounds a lot like a medieval form of government.

      --
      I'm f#$king magic!
    11. Re:the same for creationism then by KingPunk · · Score: 0

      i think you and i are the only two people here with 1/2 of a brain or better, that actually get it.

      they're both theroies. nobody can prove to me that GOD exists. thats why its called FAITH.
      but even being a scientist myself, i cant see teaching something that CANNOT be proven as fact either. and they do.

      but the only reason why this judge smacked down the whole textbook sticker thing, is because the creationists backed it.
      if a totally neutral group backed it, it'd be fine i bet.
      better yet, what if the textbooks mfg's themselves took it into their own hands, to actually put a little balance to this equation?

    12. Re:the same for creationism then by Sancho · · Score: 1

      It's an idea, which is the popular definition of a theory. Most people are spouting the scientific definition of a theory, which relies on observable facts and the ability to be proven false.

    13. Re:the same for creationism then by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      But it can't be proven either; therefore it is not a fact. What is left for it to be then? Either a theory or a simple lie;

      False dichotomy. "Theory" and "true statement" are not synonyms, therefore not all statements that are not theories are not lies.

  8. How does this happen? by EvilCabbage · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    How the hell do such unbalanced people get into a position of power where they can approve these labels in the first place?

    Get the jerk-offs out of office. Remember it's your tax dollars that get wasted on their zealous religious efforts.

    1. Re:How does this happen? by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      For the same reason dumbasses like Dubya get elected president. ... they stick together, support and spread their own flavour of stupidity, then they get to force it on everyone else despite any supposed freedoms guaranteed by law.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    2. Re:How does this happen? by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      This is Cobb County, Georgia we're talking about here. Certainly doesn't suprise me that ignorant people who rely on their polyester suit-clad highschool dropout clergy to provide their "facts" might decide that passing their ignorance on to their children was a good idea.

      Stupid is as stupid does.

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    3. Re:How does this happen? by artakka · · Score: 1

      Do you really think that Creationism was invented by George W.?

    4. Re:How does this happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, we know that evolution was invented by Al Gore, so it seems logical that creationism was invented by George W. Bush, no? (Don't even waste your mod points on me)

    5. Re:How does this happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but it sure was exploited by him...

    6. Re:How does this happen? by marcushnk · · Score: 1

      it's bureaucracy mate.. in that sort of climate if you give _anyone_ the chance to officiate themselves they're going to use it regardless of if its needed or not.

      For me the real question is what the hell is "denigrating" and how is it said?? :-P

      Main Entry: denigrate
      Pronunciation: 'de-ni-"grAt
      Function: transitive verb
      Inflected Form(s): -grated; -grating
      Etymology: Latin denigratus, past participle of denigrare, from de- + nigrare to blacken, from nigr-, niger black
      1 : to cast aspersions on : DEFAME
      2 : to deny the importance or validity of : BELITTLE

      --
      "Consider how lucky you are that life has been good to you so far. Alternatively, if life hasn't been good to you so far
    7. Re:How does this happen? by Arch-out · · Score: 1

      Exactly! How do these stupid judges, who supposedly know how to read, find a place in the constitution where it says 'no government agency can put a sticker on a book that tells the truth.' I also agree that we should get these jerk offs out of office or in this case the bench. They apparently have no life or they so little a case load that they can lessen to these stupid cases.

    8. Re:How does this happen? by lumpenprole · · Score: 1

      I dunno, man. I go to my school board elections and talk to my local councilmen/women to see who I'm going to vote for. Don't you?

      No?

      Question answered.

      --
      Disclaimer: MINAA (Mummy! I'm Not An Animal!)
    9. Re:How does this happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently "The stickers were added after more than 2,000 parents complained that the textbooks presented evolution as fact..." so it was people pressuring them into doing it. IIRC the FTC had something like 90% of all TV indecency complaints come from one organization, so maybe it was a similar situation here as well.

    10. Re:How does this happen? by BooRadley · · Score: 1

      Actually, Cobb County is one of the wealthier counties around Atlanta. Problem is, Georgia is what's known as a "Jacksonian Democracy," meaning "Ruled by illiterate rednecks who spit tobacco juice on the living room carpet."

      Cobb County is home to mainly soccer moms and NASCAR dads, Hummers, houseboats, McMansions, and Southern Baptists. These folks have plenty of money, little reason to back down, and a knack for being a pain in the ass to the rest of their neighboring Georgians. They will take this to SCOTUS if they can.

      --

      -- lk t lv ll th vwls t f wrds. T svs lts f tm t wrt bt ts pn n th ss t rd nd mks m lk lk cmplt dpsht.

    11. Re:How does this happen? by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      yet again, the ignorant mark the truth as flamebait.

      three cheers for ignorance!

      horaah!
      horaah!
      horaah!

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    12. Re:How does this happen? by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      do you really think creationism was created by christians?

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    13. Re:How does this happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I think all religions that I know of have a similar element in their systems of believe.

    14. Re:How does this happen? by Cymage · · Score: 1

      Living in Atlanta, I can tell you that Cobb County is very conservative, and has made headlines in the past for an anti-gay resolution. I know lots of people in Atlanta that refuse to move there because of the politics.

  9. what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most creationists can't read anyway, so why bother?

    1. Re: What? by Theatetus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, when they put similar notices in Physics textbooks that gravity is a theory, not a proven fact, I'll stop complaining.

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    2. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a large difference. Gravity is accepted by probably about 99.9999999999% of the world. Evolution is accepted by a minority of the world.

      Not to imply that we should teach creationism, it's just the government tends to accept it as fact, where it is not.
      (This is the parent, BTW)

    3. Re: What? by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The statement on the front of the book, whether motivated by religion or not, is completley true. Evolution IS a theory, and not a fact.

      Then I want a sticker in all bibles: "God is a myth, not a fact", and that statement is also completely true.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    4. Re: What? by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear. I would be much happier seeing a large banner in a science room stating something similar - though not evolution targeted - than to see it on specific books. To single out individual subjects in this manner is preferential and inappropriate.

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    5. Re: What? by Theatetus · · Score: 5, Funny
      Gravity is accepted by probably about 99.9999999999% of the world. Evolution is accepted by a minority of the world.

      Oh, science is a democracy now? I'm supposed to let the mouth-breathing, troglodytic masses who can't be bothered to learn what an allele is have a say in the science education in public schools? Why does the fact that a large portion of the world is too stupid / lazy / superstitious to learn about evolution matter to you?

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    6. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any good Physics student knows that gravity is a theory, not a fact. Most people blindly believe that evolution (or creationism) is a fact.

    7. Re: What? by LucidBeast · · Score: 1

      I don't want to accept gravity. It's such a downer.

    8. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the bibles are ever taught in the schools, I'm sure the christians would be glad to comply.

    9. Re: What? by deflin39 · · Score: 1

      MOD PARENT UP!!!! If your afraid science is going to teach your childred the truth (or at least an observable theory) then take them to private school. You have that right, and I have the right to keep your mind-controlling retarded beliefs out of public schools. deflin39

    10. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are incorrect. Evolution is a theory (in the scientific sense, which differs significantly from the lesser "common" use you're confusing it with). It is also fact. There isn't any sort of false dichotomy here.

      Sometimes I think the biggest problem that creationists have is that they don't actually understand the scientific terminology, and thus have basic comprehension problems that lead to statements like this.

      Please - crack open a book sometime. Learning is fun.

    11. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, and a minority should decide what the majority wants their kids to learn in schools their taxes fund?

      Get real, you think even history classes teach fact concerning the Vietnam War, or World War II, or the Gulf War. Society decides what kids learn in school - if the majority prefer evolution is taught as a theory, not a fact, then so be it.

    12. Re: What? by tunakermit · · Score: 1

      Isn't gravity a law, not a theory?

    13. Re: What? by Theatetus · · Score: 4, Informative
      Oh, and a minority should decide what the majority wants their kids to learn in schools their taxes fund?

      A minority of people in this country understand the Calculus. They should be the ones who decide what everyone's kids learn in school. So, yes, exactly: a minority should decide what the majority's kids learn in schools everyone's taxes fund. That's because the minority is often smarter.

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    14. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're missing the point completely. This subject has been singled out because public opinion is divided. Living in a democracy is about taking all opinions into account. Public opinion isn't divided on mathematics, or physics, etc.

    15. Re: What? by Theatetus · · Score: 1, Troll

      Laws are a type of theory: the type that can be easily expressed in a simple equation.

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    16. Re: What? by EMH_Mark3 · · Score: 1

      You better laugh when you say that.

      --
      Burn the land and boil the sea, you can't take the sky from me
    17. Re: What? by belmolis · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Evolution is accepted by a minority of the world.

      Really? My impression is that a rather large part of the world's population, quite probably a majority, accept evolution. Let's start with the Chinese, who comprise about a quarter. Add most Europeans and a large percentage of Americans and most Canadians. The only groups that I know of that are generally opposed to evolution are fundamentalist Protestants (Catholics and non-fundamentalist protestants accept evolution - I'm not sure about the Orthodox and monophysite churches) conservative Muslims, and some Hindus. And those Hindus who do not accept evolution have quite a different version of creationism from the Christians and Muslims.

    18. Re: What? by QuantumG · · Score: 1
      If the bibles are ever taught in the schools, I'm sure the christians would be glad to comply.

      They're taught in Catholic schools, I'll start printing em up eh?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    19. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a ridiculous comment. People aren't in disagreement over laws of physics, they are in disagreement over evolution. Duh.

    20. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prove it. Oh, that's right, you can't.

      Had you said "God is a theory, not a fact", though, you'd be correct.

    21. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It follows from the definition.

      From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

      myth
      n : a traditional story accepted as history; serves to explain
      the world view of a people

    22. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Theorys are supposed to have supporting evidence. God is a (false) hypothesis.

    23. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "observable theory" :)

      Yeah, right. I've seen heaps of stuff evolve. I am of course, very very very very old.

    24. Re: What? by hmniq · · Score: 0

      Theories provide predictions that can be proven wrong.

    25. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not understanding something is completely different to not agreeing with it. People don't understand calculus, but they have no problem with their kids being taught it. People don't like thier kids being taught something they don't believe to be true themselves ... whether it's Evolution, or anything else for that matter.

    26. Re: What? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      A minority of people in this country understand the Calculus. They should be the ones who decide what everyone's kids learn in school. So, yes, exactly: a minority should decide what the majority's kids learn in schools everyone's taxes fund. That's because the minority is often smarter.

      It's no wonder I get trolled when I state that the tax system is a pyramid scheme. The vast majority of the population understands calculus (or diffeq) to the point where they can see the similarity. Yet they're allowed to vote.

      I suppose I'm the only one who sees anything wrong with this.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    27. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a large difference. Gravity is accepted by probably about 99.9999999999% of the world. Evolution is accepted by a minority of the world.

      A "minority" of the world believes that women should be treated the same as men.

      A "minority" of the world is not racially/ethnically prejudiced.

      By the way .. you are wrong .. a majority of the world believes in evolution. The USA is the only country where you have whacko corrupt power hungry fake satanic religion exploiters that try to make you believe that evolution is incompatible with being a Christian or believing in God.

      Anyone who listens to the religious whackos instead of following logical reasoning is headed straight for hell. In my opinion.

    28. Re: What? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      They're taught in Catholic schools, I'll start printing em up eh?

      Catholic schools aren't taxpayer dollars. Oh wait... *THAT'S* why all the liberals want school credits and vouchers: so they can start reaping the profits from lucrative book printing deals.

      I saw this ages ago...

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    29. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can dislike it all they want; it doesn't make it Contitutional any more then disliking Integration made Segretation OK.

      If parents want their children taught in a religious manner, there are many private schools which are happy to do this.

    30. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you'll find people who send their kids to a Catholic school know about the whole Bible thing before they sign up. Public schools are a little different - lots of competing belief systems.

    31. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people blindly believe that Newtonian gravity is a fact, too. Meanwhile, every good Biology students know evolution is a theory.

      You're comparing apples to oranges.

    32. Re: What? by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hey now! I breath through my mouth due to a nose problem, and I live in a cave ... but I know what an allele is!

      Its time to fight against the predjudice towards cave dwelling people with overgrown nasal septa!

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    33. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not what makes a law. Take the third law of thermodynamics or Lenz's Law.

      Laws are theories, as you say, or at least peices of theories. Their not really formally defined, but they're usually simple little beasts, equations or verbal statements.

    34. Re: What? by geoffspear · · Score: 1

      In the US you can't even get a book or movie called "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" out with that title; you expect our schools to start teaching the philosophy of science?

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    35. Re: What? by Minwee · · Score: 1
      I'm supposed to let the mouth-breathing, troglodytic masses who can't be bothered to learn what an allele is have a say in the science education in public schools?

      Why not? They already selected your government.

    36. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then I want a sticker in all bibles: "God is a myth, not a fact"

      When the state starts mandating the teaching of The Bible to all children, then you can have your wish.

      Want to make that deal? Schools teach about God and we'll put stickers on The Bible and other books in that class for you?

    37. Re: What? by lack1uster · · Score: 0

      You scare me.

    38. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's funny, because there's more evidence against the theory of evolution than there is evidence against the existance of God! Evolution is a weak theory that's never been proven. Maybe if you'd get outside more and see the wonders of the universe you live in, you'd realize that you're wrong.

    39. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, it's Bush and his cronies who want vouchers, not liberals. And thanks to guys like Bush, private schools *do* get a fair bit of taxpayer funding, although much less than public schools.

      When you figure out what you're talking about, come on back and we'll talk.

    40. Re: What? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Uh, it's Bush and his cronies who want vouchers

      Federal level.

      When you figure out what you're talking about, come on back and we'll talk.

      You're an AC and, in the midwest, it's the liberals and democrats who keep whining that they don't have enough access to private schools.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    41. Re: What? by covertlaw · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      I think you'll find that more people in this world, including myself, have had a divine experience with the Creator than have ever had with witnessing real evolution.

      Bashing religious people, especially Christians, is easy. What's difficult is treating people with respect who will never understand why you believe the way you do because they are afraid of your beliefs.

      God is with all of us, even if you choose not to listen to his words. One day, you will know him, and you will know what it feels like to be truly loved.

    42. Re: What? by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1
      Just checking here, but are you saying that the members of the above mentioned religions accept the entire theory (single cells up to mankind) or just the idea that evolution takes place (organisms adapt over time by way of natural selection)?

      Because, I'm pretty sure if you ask a pretty serious Catholic or non-fundamentalist Protestant if they believe all life evolved from single cell organisms up to it's current state, they wouldn't agree. Something about God having a hand in things or the other....

      I would say the statement that the majority of the world accepts that evolution takes place, things adapt over time, is true. But, I would say the majority of the world would not agree that the world, and all life on it, came about because of cosmic chance.

      On the other hand, I doubt either of us know for sure.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    43. Re: What? by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Yeah, right. I've seen heaps of stuff evolve. I am of course, very very very very old.

      Not everything lives and breeds on the same timescale as humans. Evolution has been observed in a variety of creatures - naturally mostly those with very short breeding cycles such as insects and bacteria.

      Jedidiah.

    44. Re: What? by DanielJH · · Score: 1

      Ok, I'm serious. No one has ever proved it without taking "God is a myth" as a base statement. So I challenge you. Prove it. Do a detailed, complete and honest search. Look diligently through all known information, look at every side. Prove it, completely.

      You will be rich and famous if you suceed and a changed person if you fail.

    45. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Public acceptance is meaningless. The whole of the "known world" belived that the sun was a god driving his chariot across the sky, that the world was flat, that the Earth was created by a snake, that the Emperor was divine, that the whole universe revolved around the Earth. The Universe laughs at democracy and does whatever it wants regardless of public consensus.

      Not to imply that we should teach creationism, it's just the government tends to accept it as fact, where it is not.

      Yeah, President Bush does things like that.

    46. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does god have to do with the bible?

    47. Re: What? by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      What a ridiculous comment. People aren't in disagreement over laws of physics, they are in disagreement over evolution. Duh.

      Tell that to the Flat Earth Society. They're pretty certain our "laws of physics" which are taught as fact are "just a theory" and probably shouldn't be taught in schools.

      Jedidiah.

    48. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "The World" generally means "The part of the US I live in".

    49. Re: What? by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Funny

      Bashing religious people, especially Christians, is easy.

      Yup, all you need is a good club. Especially real christians: they turn the other cheek.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    50. Re: What? by jfengel · · Score: 1

      I don't know why I'm feeding the trolls, but it's late and I'm tired, so I'll bite.

      Can I ask what your evidence for God is? I assume you're talking about a single entity that is responsible for the Bible and creating the universe.

      Just citing the existence of the universe doesn't count as evidence, wondrous as it might be, because that doesn't necessarily tie in to the Biblical representations of God. It may be, and it may not be. If you have any evidence supporting the contention I'd love to see it; I'm not aware of any myself.

    51. Re: What? by Peyna · · Score: 1

      What part of the midwest are you from? In Indiana and Ohio it is the conservatives that want vouchers for their schools.

      It's one of the few economic related issues you'll see liberarians and liberals agreeing on.

      Also, why would a conservative want the federal government getting involved in education? That seems to be about as anti-federalist you can get.

      --
      What?
    52. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What's difficult is treating people with respect who will never understand why you believe the way you do because they are afraid of your beliefs."

      "God is with all of us, even if you choose not to listen to his words. One day, you will know him, and you will know what it feels like to be truly loved."

      Actually, *that* is why it's easy to bash religious people - the hypocracy. Respect doesn't include smug and arrogant proclamations that you are right, and everybody else is absolutely wrong.

      Not for Religion, not for Linux, not for Emacs. Not even for Vi.

    53. Re: What? by LordNor · · Score: 1

      Bashing religious people, especially Christians, is easy. What's difficult is treating people with respect who will never understand why you believe the way you do because they are afraid of your beliefs.

      You could also say this:

      Bashing non-religous people, especially non-Christians, is easy. What's difficult is treating people with respect who will never understand why you believe the way you do becayse they are afraid of your beliefs.

      I've had many Christians snap at me because I don't believe the same way they do. You need to take a second and think about what you're saying. Either side is treated badly by certain people of the other side. Trying to lay a blanket statement that one is treated worse than the other is not only unfair, but very incorrect.

    54. Re: What? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Ok, I'm serious. No one has ever proved it without taking "God is a myth" as a base statement.

      You might be serious, but you're not coherent.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    55. Re: What? by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Want to make that deal? Schools teach about God and we'll put stickers on The Bible and other books in that class for you?

      I take it then that you're all for altering the pledge of allegiance to:

      "...One nation unde God, which is a mythical entity, not a fact, indivisible..."

      These arguments are all so silly.

      Jedidiah.

    56. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which Midwest states are you talking about? Not the one I'm from.

    57. Re: What? by anakin876 · · Score: 1

      you let these same troglodytes vote in elections too. If they are really that dumb, how come their vote counts just as much as yours in an election?

    58. Re: What? by BlueFashoo · · Score: 1

      Actually, I have to disagree. Only a small percentage of Americans (13%) accept the standard theory of evolution. The majority believe in creationism and the rest some sort of guided evolution. Fortunately, two thirds of Americans want evolution taught in school.

      An older poll from 1991 indicates that the percentage of people believing in creationism is on the rise. The same goes for those accepting naturalistic evolution.

      I didn't find any numbers for the rest of the world.

      The link goes to an article about a Nov 2004 CBS poll that explains in more detail, and I've included the poll results below.

      http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/11/22/opinio n/ polls/main657083.shtml
      VIEWS ON EVOLUTION/CREATIONISM

      God created humans in present form
      All Americans
      55%
      Kerry voters
      47%
      Bush voters
      67%

      Humans evolved, God guided the process
      All Americans
      27%
      Kerry voters
      28%
      Bush voters
      22%

      Humans evolved, God did not guide process
      All Americans
      13%
      Kerry voters
      21%
      Bush voters
      6%

      Another interesting article.
      http://www.religioustolerance.org/ev_pub li.htm

      --
      Nice Marmot
    59. Re: What? by Loonacy · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the Mormons.
      (I live in Utah.)

    60. Re: What? by ars · · Score: 1

      Quess what? They do, it's right in the text. In fact proving and disproving theories is how they teach physics.

      Did you ever study physics?

      --
      -Ariel
    61. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention a wonderful fossil record, the properties of species observed by Darwin (of course he was basing the theory on observations; he had a lot of evidence before he dared publish his theory), and the biochemical evidence we've been assembling recently.

    62. Re: What? by belmolis · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I believe that the official Roman Catholic view is that evolution took place as scientists believe. They add the claim that at the point at which humans became human, God infused them with souls. This isn't really inconsistent with biological theory since biology doesn't have anything to say about souls. Effectively, the official view is biology + infusion of the soul.

      I agree that those Christians who believe in evolution would not agree that life evolved purely as a result of cosmic chance, but evolution in and of itself doesn't require that. A purely materialist scientist sees no need to appeal to anything other than chance, but one can hold a perfectly orthodox view of evolution and at the same time believe that a Supreme Being set the whole thing in motion.

    63. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hehe, very funny. Would you care to outline exactly what this divine experience entailed? Seriously. If you can show some evidence that gods exist then there's a lot of people who'd like to talk to you. We can _observe_ evolution take place.

    64. Re: What? by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Amen! I have trouble breathing through my nose because of a nasal defect. It's just plain simpler for some people to breath through their mouth.

    65. Re: What? by Chemical · · Score: 1
      "One day, you will know him, and you will know what it feels like to be truly loved."

      Right before he sends you to hell to suffer for not believing that his son was real. Thanks God. What a guy.

    66. Re: What? by Theatetus · · Score: 1

      I think that's more because we don't use the phrase "Philosopher's Stone" in American English than any ideological bent

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    67. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Retard. People believe things that are demonstrably false all the time. You're right about one thing. It is easy to bash Christians, and it's fun too.

      I am not afraid of your beliefs, just some of the consequences of them: ignorance, wars, oppression and death. I have always liked the quote: "Never trust a Christian, because you never know when his God will tell him to fuck you".

      I too have seen god, but I tend to discount that experience due to the mushrooms....

    68. Re: What? by belmolis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, to begin with I was talking about the world as a whole. Even if only a minority of Americans believe in evolution, Americans only make up 4.6% of the world's population. And indeed the same site that parent cites makes the point that:

      Belief in creation science seems to be largely a U.S. phenomenon.

      As to the US, yes, it is true that only a small minority accept a purely materialist view of evolution. However, evolutionists of some sort outnumber evolutionists, 49% to 44%. The question is what to make of the "theistic evolution" category. I would still include these people in the evolutionary camp. Without more detailed data one can't be sure, but this category presumably includes the official Roman Catholic view, on which evolution proceeded in essentially the way that materialist biologists believe it did, but God infused humans with souls at the point at which human beings evolved. So, although creationism is pretty common in the United States, belief in something like biblical creation is less common than belief in evolution.

    69. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What evidence do you have against the theory of evolution? I can give evidence against quite a few versions of "God". (Although not all; most modern religions have weakened the way they express their believe to the point where it's pure faith. At that point, they aren't speculatin on scientific theories and science has nothing to say bout their faith. AS it should be.)

      Evolution will never be proven because it's science. Science means always being ready to be wrong. However, there are heaps of data supporting evolution. Anyone saying otherwise is either ignorant or lying.

    70. Re: What? by joshmccormack · · Score: 1

      Then I want a sticker in all bibles: "God is a myth, not a fact", and that statement is also completely true.

      The sticker is not in all science books, just the ones that are required to be used at a public school in a particular area. And it's not saying anything is completely true or false. The parents would just like their beliefs to be respected. That seems very reasonable.

    71. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because our government was forged on blind idealism, and that's how these folks seem to like it.

    72. Re: What? by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 1


      Gravity is accepted by probably about 99.9999999999% of the world. Evolution is accepted by a minority of the world.

      Interesting point. It might interest you to realize that Christianity is not believed in by a majority of the world, either. I suppose we should put a warning label on churches.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_world_religions ;

      Christians are the largest single segment, but still represent a minority at about 30%.

      --

      --
      $tar -xvf .sig.tar
    73. Re: What? by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      In point of fact, gravity is a law (note definition 6). General Relativity and Special Relativity are theories (note definition 5). A crude explanation of the difference between a law and a theory, in scientific parlance, is: Laws describe what is happening, theories attempt to describe why. Those attempts, after the initial few tries, are generally very good. Even the ones I don't agree with are generally well thought out.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    74. Re: What? by randallpowell · · Score: 1
      Bashing religious people, especially Christians, is easy.

      I'm a Buddhist and I only get bashed by Christians since I'm not oneof them. Everyone else is fine with me. Then again, Bush et al made religion = Christianity so I'm not religious.

    75. Re: What? by pi_rules · · Score: 1
      Then I want a sticker in all bibles: "God is a myth, not a fact", and that statement is also completely true.
      Replace 'myth' with 'theory' and I'll grant you that wish as soon as we start handing out Bibles in science classes.
    76. Re: What? by balster+neb · · Score: 1

      Do you realise that talking about the percentage of the general population that accepts a theory is completely irrelevant?

      Once upon a time, a majority of people in some place probably believed that the world was a flat disc resting on the back of a giant turtle. That doesn't make the belief valid.

      Not so long ago in Europe, the majority believed that the Sun and the rest of the universe revolved around the earth. Was the theory any more right because of the high percentage of (uninformed) believers among the general population?

      The general concept of evolution is supported by 99.9999999999% of scientists.

    77. Re: What? by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      There is a large difference. Gravity is accepted by probably about 99.9999999999% of the world. Evolution is accepted by a minority of the world.

      Science is decided by scientists, not by a vote of the general population. Biologists who don't accept evolution are about as common as astronomers who don't accept gravity.

      The real reason scientists resent such stickers is that it is an attempt to lie to students about our profession. The fact is that evolution is absolutely fundamental to biology. There is no meaningful scientific debate about whether life evolved, only about the details of the mechanism, comparable to the debates of physicists about the subtleties of quantum gravity.

    78. Re: What? by tgibbs · · Score: 2

      Oh, and a minority should decide what the majority wants their kids to learn in schools their taxes fund?

      In a science class? Absolutely. Only a minority of people are scientists, and the job of a science class is to teach what that minority of specialists think. One could, I suppose, decide that children shouldn't learn science. But to teach something else and label it "science" is dishonest.

    79. Re: What? by DanielJH · · Score: 1

      The evidence is in a field of study called apologetics. It is dominated by atheists who are now Christians. It is the logical study of God without an emotional or religious base. Some of the best works are "The Evidence That Demands a Verdict" and "More Than A Carpenter" by Josh McDowell, "Mere Christianity" by C.S. Lewis, "The Case for a Creator" by Lee Strobel, and "I Don't Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist" by Norman Geisler. McDowell was an Atheist who attempted to prove there was no God based on all available evidence. Lewis was also an Atheist. All 5 of these books` are available at Amazon.

    80. Re: What? by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      In point of fact, gravity is a law (note definition 6) [webster.com]. General Relativity and Special Relativity are theories (note definition 5) [webster.com]. A crude explanation of the difference between a law and a theory, in scientific parlance, is: Laws describe what is happening, theories attempt to describe why. Those attempts, after the initial few tries, are generally very good. Even the ones I don't agree with are generally well thought out.

      In science, a "law" is just a simply stated theory that is generally accepted. The term is pretty much obsolete. Science progresses fast enough these days that hardly anybody has the confidence to label a theory a law. But the term is sometimes still used for older theories. Ironically, many of these are now known to be not quite right. For example Newton's "Laws" of motion and gravity have been proved to be less accurate than Einstein's theories of relativity and gravitation.

    81. Re: What? by IdahoEv · · Score: 1

      Except that God doesn't even remotely meet the scientific definition of "theory", and so the sticker wouldn't be remotely correct, even if we did hand out Bibles in science classse.

      I think you mean "hypothesis"; to become a scientific theory, a hypothesis must be testable and falsifiable and then successfully predict the results of a great number of careful experiments and/or observations. Examples of theories include gravity, the atomic structure of matter, and electromagnetic wave propagation, all of which have stood up to numerous tests and observations.

      The existence of god has only a single book translated many times, and is not testable. Sorry - even to those who believe, god does not qualify as "theory" in the scientific sense.

      --
      I stole this sig from someone cleverer than me.
    82. Re: What? by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      LOL.

      Evolution is not accepted by a minority in the world. evolution of man kind i shard to swallow by theists, but it's no less true.

      And I must retort that science is not a democratic process. More votes doesn't make something more true.

      At the time the holy scriptures of most major religions were made, the people who wrote them had the average education of a 6 year old today. That's not that they were dumb people at all-- it's just they didn't have the baisc understandings of science that we have now.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    83. Re: What? by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1
      Well, nuts. I didn't know that. You would seem to be correct on that point. Google is your friend.

      On your second point, that's the short form of what I personally believe.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    84. Re: What? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I want a sticker in all bibles: "God is a myth, not a fact", and that statement is also completely true.

      Replace 'myth' with 'theory'


      No:

      Main Entry: myth
      Pronunciation: 'mith
      Function: noun
      Etymology: Greek mythos
      1 a : a usually traditional story of ostensibly historical events that serves to unfold part of the world view of a people or explain a practice, belief, or natural phenomenon b : PARABLE, ALLEGORY
      2 a : a popular belief or tradition that has grown up around something or someone; especially : one embodying the ideals and institutions of a society or segment of society b : an unfounded or false notion
      3 : a person or thing having only an imaginary or unverifiable existence
      4 : the whole body of myths

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    85. Re: What? by belmolis · · Score: 1

      From what I can tell, the Mormon church appears to have no real official position on evolution. Individual Mormons have diverse views.

    86. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Utah and try to forget them everyday!!

    87. Re: What? by shanen · · Score: 1
      Evolution is accepted by a minority of the world.

      Got a source for that?

      Didn't think so, since it's almost certainly wrong. Depends on whether or not you can manage to redefine the majority "of the world" as being limited to the people as ignorant as you.

      Unless it was supposed to be a joke. In which case it fell quite flat.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    88. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of my friends is actually descended from the founder of the Mormon religion and from what he said, their family disowner him, not only for that, but for being a lying horse thief. Great religion you got there, better practice on your horse stealing you bigot.

    89. Re: What? by Theatetus · · Score: 1

      Meh.

      I stand by my definition. A law is a theory that is short enough to be expressed simply in an equation (or sentence, I suppose) and basic enough that other theories are built on it. Like, for instance, Newton's Laws of Motion or Maxwells Laws of Electrodynamics (both of which, incidentally, are factually disproven now but match the data closely enough that it's not embarassing to teach them).

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    90. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No, you're wrong C.S. Lewis was a strong christian. Have you ever read "Mere Christianity"? The sum of C.S. Lewis' works deal with character and spirituality.


      "From the moment a creature becomes aware of God as God and of itself as self, the terrible alternative of choosing God or self for the centre is opened to it."

      --The Problem of Pain
    91. Re: What? by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Uh, thanks. A quite cogent reply. I'll make time to read a few of these. I have to admit I doubt it'll change my mind (I've read other things by C.S. Lewis and I don't find his arguments convincing, and I'm not talking about Narnia), but I'll give it a try. At the very least it'll give me a better ground on which to frame my argument.

      I'm particularly interested in the McDowell book, because I particularly doubt one is likely to derive Christianity from first principles. That is, going from being an atheist to a Christian (as implied by the title of the book), as opposed to arriving at some other religion. But if he can, it would be a neat trick. I'll have to see if my local library has it.

    92. Re: What? by jonabbey · · Score: 1

      Philosophical argumentation is not evidence, sorry. 150 years of research by 100's of thousands of researchers, comprising the entirety of modern biology, has provided abundant evidence for evolution.

      Jesus.

    93. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can not cite an opinion poll and derive any reliable conclusion. Ha, look at presidential election "polls" for an example.

    94. Re: What? by Novous · · Score: 1

      >Then I want a sticker in all bibles: "God is a myth, not a fact", and that statement is also completely true.

      That's a flawed comparison. A _correct_ one would be "not all material in this book has been proven." There are quite a few things in the bible that have been proven. Besides, anyone who blatently goes around yelling "God doesn't exist" is more close-minded than a stereo-typical southern baptist. Have you ever even bothered to think "what if"? Or are you too afraid of what you might find? Creepy, eh?

    95. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I grew up in a christian family, I've witnessed many lives changed for good. I've witnessed change in my own life as well as friends. All from spiritual experience with God a.k.a. being reborn, a.k.a. converted to christianity. I've personally had prayers answered, that's enough evidence for me, albeit, not very scientific, but when has spirituality and mysticsm crossed over into the realm of science.

      I would dare you to put your faith in God and believe. It's not easy to do in this world we live in, but it will give you something to live for. Just be glad that you've been blessed with freedom of choice.

    96. Re: What? by 808140 · · Score: 1

      If you don't understand something, how much weight should your disagreement with it carry?

      How can you be sure that you actually disagree with it, if you don't understand it?

      Case in point; the vast majority of people commenting on this story in favor of creationism are repeating ID/Creationist "talking points" which are often, at their core, based on misinformation, or at least a (hopefully unintentional) misunderstanding of some core principle or other.

      This is because evolution, not unlike calculus, requires a fair amount of effort to understand. But when a laymen asks what Calculus is good for, he'll be told something like, "It provides the mathematical machinery needed to study rates of change, which allows people who have studied it to apply it to widely diverse fields like economics, finance, and physics." And he'll think, "Oh, that doesn't sound too bad. I want my kid to understand that."

      But with evolution, he's told "It explains the process whereby one species becomes another species, and under what circumstances those changes occur," and he thinks, "What does that mean? What spieces becomes another species?" and he's then told, good naturedly, something like, "Oh, you know, like monkeys evolving into men."

      Which clashes with his religious understanding, and so he rejects it. He doesn't understand it -- he doesn't understand the evidence for it. Furthermore, he doesn't want to. Do you know what this would do to his safe, secure world view? Science is scary in this respect -- dogma is never supported for long. Just look at the luminiferous aether. Michaelson and Morely both never truly accepted the results of their now famous experiment. But the rest of the world did, science required it.

      That kind of stuff is scary.

      But so is women's lib, and anti-segregation, and all that. You can't let an uneducated group, even an uneducated majority, make decisions in education, at least not public education. Private education, well, that's a different story.

    97. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is the likelyhood you're confusing brain chemistry, chance, and probability, with God?

    98. Re: What? by Slinky+Saves+the+Wor · · Score: 1

      Evolution is with us also, even if you choose not to accept it.

      I propose a simple test for you. (Once I managed to do something like this by accident) Grab a bunch of bananas, make dessert or something from the fruit and leave the peels to rot in a biowaste container. Wait for some time. Fruit flies will appear.

      As they are swarming, you can easily kill off the slowest ones and those which just sit still. Do so. What you are left are the fastest ones who move in very random trajectories. Since those are not so easy to kill, leave them be.

      After a little while, those fruit flies will breed. Soon you will have more fruit flies. Again, kill off the slowest ones, those which are easiest to kill.

      Now, repeat this procedure a couple of times.

      And guess what? Those fast-flying randomly flying ones which are hard to kill will become a majority.

      If this is not evolution, what is?

      Everyone is entitled to their beliefs, but matters of belief are not matters of science. If someone needs Creationism as "evidence" to justify a Divine Creator to themselves, maybe they have not found their Divine Creator after all.

      --
      I do not moderate.
    99. Re: What? by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Many many people are descended from the founders of the Mormon church. Honestly, check how many wives, and how many children they had - some of them had as many as 50 children (via 20 or so wives). Do that for a few of generations while polygamy is still acceptable and you could end up with over 100,000 descendants...

      Jedidiah.

    100. Re: What? by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      So among silly people who answer badly-worded questionaires, there's a high percentage who give an ambiguous answer which can be misinterpreted to mean whatever the hell you want. I applaud reservedly. Congratulations.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    101. Re: What? by wass · · Score: 1

      You bring up a VERY good point. Why, of the subset of all scientific theories do they focus on evolution, and not much else? Take for example the inverse square force between two charges. It's taught in schools as fact that F~(r^-2), but only in graduate study of E&M (Jackson) was it mentioned that the best experiments (which people occasionally re-do when they have sensors that can improve on the results) have only limited it to something like r^(-n) where n=2.0000000+/- 0.0000003 (I'm making up these numbers, but IIRC they're not that far off).

      --

      make world, not war

    102. Re: What? by JNighthawk · · Score: 1

      That's right. All those who attack the other side without any respect for their position are assholes. They both deserve to be slapped around. That doesn't mean that the religious are right or the non-religious are right, it just means that you need to treat your fellow man with respect.

      I don't talk about my beliefs much, but I mentioned in passing to one of my friends something about God and he get extremely hostile towards me because I believe in Him. He was just an asshole about it, and it didn't matter whether he was right or wrong, he still shouldn't have don eit.

      --
      Wheel in the sky keeps on turnin'.
    103. Re: What? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      No, Newton's Laws of Motion match data at a given scale. At smaller scales, Quantum Mechanics rule. At larger scales (i.e., intergalactic distances), we're still not sure, but assuming that Newtonian mechanics scales up when it does not also scale down is probably not a safe assumption...

      In my QM class, we talked about the deBroglie wavelength of a human-sized object. it's 10^-38 meters or something. Sure, there is a probability that you or I could walk through a wall via quantum tunnelling. But it is *exceedingly* small.

    104. Re: What? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      but this category presumably includes the official Roman Catholic view,

      This is a rather recent view by the RCC, btw.

      A cynic would see that it's just another "embrace-and-extend" action by the Pope to help keep Catholicism slightly relevant by more and more people.

    105. Re: What? by The+Cydonian · · Score: 1
      And those Hindus who do not accept evolution have quite a different version of creationism from the Christians and Muslims.
      Well, there are many Hindus who believe that Hindu mythology "follows" Darwinian modes of evolution. Lord Vishnu, you see, in his 10 avatars, was a fish, tortoise, pig, lion before taking a human form.

      Frankly, I find even this abhorrent; it kinda gives science a hidden, all-pervasive, "divine" message, if you will, something that's against the scientific spirit of enquiry. It's also a crazy back-handed way of "validating" Hindu mythology in pseudo-scientific terms, something that I think my modes of spirituality can do without.

      Then there's also this small problem of a pig being closer to humans in evolutionary terms (?) than a lion, which of course kinda screws up the concept in real, logical terms.

    106. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because YOU use and understand Calculus doesn't mean the other 99% of the people in the country will need it. I've NEVER used Calculus outside of college. It's all academic mumbo-jumbo. Quit acting all high-and-mighty about it. I have far more respect for plumbers than mathematicians.

    107. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The phrase 'Philosophers Stone' to mean a mythical object that can 'transmute base metals into gold' predates Harry Potter by centuries. In fact I first read about it in a Disney comic in the late 60's.

    108. Re: What? by bdbolton · · Score: 1

      From what I learned in Catholic high school science class:

      God used Evolution as his tool to create humans. Nothing was by chance. Evolution happened and it was God that made sure it happened that way. Humans just didn't appear and God said, "lets give them souls".

    109. Re: What? by Brian+Quinlan · · Score: 1

      There is a large difference. Gravity is accepted by probably about 99.9999999999% of the world. Evolution is accepted by a minority of the world.

      As other will certainly point out, science is not a democracy. So I'll just dispute your claim that the theory of gravitation is universily accepted. I'm sure that most people would accept the observation that they tend not to float away from the Earth but do you really believe that everyone knows (and believes) that the phenomena is caused by attraction between masses?

    110. Re: What? by cev · · Score: 1

      I don't know which side of the debate is dumber. The state, the evolutionists, the judges, or the creatonists.
      The creationists are dumber. A scientific theory is the highest level of conjecture about a natural phenomenon. A theory has a great body of evidence supporting it, and no counter-evidence disproving it. By pointing out that evolution is a theory, creationists have accidentally lent evolution theory great support.
      The judges are to be commended for recognizing that the intent of the sticker was to support a religious belief. My personal feeling is that the greatest harm done by the sticker is to teach children that the terms "scientific theory" and "conjecture" are synonyms.
      CV, a cobb co. resident

    111. Re: What? by dalutong · · Score: 1

      Actually, it isn't an issue of majority/minority. Our constitution very clearly indicates the separation of church and state. Would the grandparent like it if satanists happened to be the majority in his county and decided that satanism was to be taught in his kid's school?

      the point is that school is for learning. the home and church is for religion.

      --

      What comes first, finding a teacher or becoming a student?
    112. Re: What? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1
      >Then I want a sticker in all bibles: "God is a myth, not a fact", and that statement is also completely true.

      That's a flawed comparison. A _correct_ one would be "not all material in this book has been proven." There are quite a few things in the bible that have been proven. Besides, anyone who blatently goes around yelling "God doesn't exist" is more close-minded than a stereo-typical southern baptist. Have you ever even bothered to think "what if"? Or are you too afraid of what you might find? Creepy, eh?


      I said, and you quoted, "God is a myth, not a fact".
      YOU say I said "God doesn't exist".

      So firts off, STFU and don't put words in my mouth, you words are dirty.

      Secondly, god is a myth:

      Main Entry: myth
      Pronunciation: 'mith
      Function: noun
      Etymology: Greek mythos
      1 a : a usually traditional story of ostensibly historical events that serves to unfold part of the world view of a people or explain a practice, belief, or natural phenomenon b : PARABLE, ALLEGORY
      2 a : a popular belief or tradition that has grown up around something or someone; especially : one embodying the ideals and institutions of a society or segment of society b : an unfounded or false notion
      3 : a person or thing having only an imaginary or unverifiable existence
      4 : the whole body of myths

      So until you can prove that your god exists, deal with the fact that it's a myth.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    113. Re: What? by RedK · · Score: 1

      McDowell was an Atheist who attempted to prove there was no God based on all available evidence.

      So, because he couldn't prove the non-existence of god, he went from atheist to christian ? Maybe someone should have just pointed out to him that you simply can't prove a negative and he wouldn't have needed to convert.

      --
      "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
      Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
    114. Re: What? by TylerTheGreat · · Score: 1

      Maybe we should place a warning label on your shirt as well: Caution, due to certain quantum theories, this person may or may not exsist. Please keep an open mind and use caution not to accept his existsence blindly.

    115. Re: What? by Phillup · · Score: 1

      Make up your mind.

      Is the sticker an issue of "fact" or "acceptance".

      You say one thing and mean the other.

      That is why removing it was the right thing to do. The words used were "technically" correct, and gave a completely different meaning in context.

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    116. Re: What? by arevos · · Score: 1

      I've NEVER used Calculus outside of college. It's all academic mumbo-jumbo. Quit acting all high-and-mighty about it. I have far more respect for plumbers than mathematicians.

      You do realise that the engineers that designed the circuits in that computer you're using, could not have done their job without that "academic mumbo-jumbo" that is calculus.

      And, of course, computers, or indeed any electrical technology more advanced than a lightbulb, could not have been designed without mathematics and mathematicians.

      However, I do realise you're an ignorant troll, so I doubt my words will have much effect.

    117. Re: What? by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't read the definitions. A law is an observation of the natural world, usually (if not always) described in mathematics. Thoeries are attempts to explain why the natural world behaves as it does, and usually consist of a number of laws or mathematical formulas. The theory of relativity, for instance, has e=mc^2, as well as the gravity formulas (that are incredibly close to Newton's in a non-relativistic scope). Also, laws have a context, like Newton's being for non-quantum, non-relativistic bodies, and Einstein's, which were applicable to our observable universe (you don't expect it to work in another one without tweaking, do you?)

      Oh, and BTW, the people who hand out Nobel prizes seem to have concluded that Einstein discovered a few laws, too, and used them to develop his theory of relativity. Note the last chapter, and how laws and theories relate.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    118. Re: What? by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      Why and how are two vastly different things, both of which have their uses. Note also that the definition of law includes context. Newton's laws are still quite valid in their context, non-quantum bodies at non-relativistic speeds. Do you honestly think people who calculate how much fuel it takes to fly from LA to NY use Einstein's laws rather than Newton's? I really doubt 1 cup (or less, I'm not going to bother doing the math, twice) really matters to them, especially when they include their safety margin.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    119. Re: What? by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't read the definitions. A law is an observation of the natural world, usually (if not always) described in mathematics. Thoeries are attempts to explain why the natural world behaves as it does, and usually consist of a number of laws or mathematical formulas. The theory of relativity, for instance, has e=mc^2, as well as the gravity formulas (that are incredibly close to Newton's in a non-relativistic scope). Also, laws have a context, like Newton's being for non-quantum, non-relativistic bodies, and Einstein's, which were applicable to our observable universe (you don't expect it to work in another one without tweaking, do you?)

      Observations are singular. For example, "On January 3rd, 2005, an object of weight two grams falling in an evacuated cylinder was observed to accelerate at 9.8 meters/sec^2 plus or minus 5%." When a set of observations are generalized so that they make predictions about events not yet observed (e.g. F = ma), they constitute a theory. If the theory is very simple and seems very reliable, people used to sometimes call it a "law," although the term is virtually obsolete these days.

      laws have a context, like Newton's being for non-quantum, non-relativistic bodies, and Einstein's, which were applicable to our observable universe

      No, Newton placed no restrictions on his Laws. He and everybody else at the time treated them as generally true at all velocities. Subsequent research showed that his "Laws" were not quite accurate, and that corrections were required at all velocities, becoming large at high velocities. But we still call them "Laws" for purely historical reasons.

    120. Re: What? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > People don't understand calculus

      And creationists don't understand evolution (or are just too stubborn to accept it).

      > People don't like thier kids being taught something they don't believe to be true themselves

      I don't believe in Calculus. Therefore, since I am an idiot, NO ONE should be able to learn about Calculus. That argument falls flat on its face.

    121. Re: What? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      >I'm pretty sure if you ask a pretty serious Catholic or non-fundamentalist Protestant if they believe all life evolved from single cell organisms up to it's current state, they wouldn't agree

      Whew, good thing that's not what evolution says! Evolution is not a story with a beginning and end, it is a process. Your post is called a straw man argument. Now, there are some people who take evolution and come to the conclusion that there must be one source of all life. I don't necessarily believe that, but I still believe evolution is a fact. Maybe not Darwinism, which is more like what you describe.

    122. Re: What? by covertlaw · · Score: 1
      Actually, I took several minutes before writing what I wrote. I never said that I did not respect the position of those who do not believe or choose to believe in something else. Nor did I accuse ONLY one side of being disrespectful. Maybe you should "take a second" and realize that YOU jumped to a conclusion that I was bashing non-religious persons.

      What I stated was a simple point: More people have witnessed the divine than have EVER witnessed evolution. You can choose to either believe in one or the other. I don't believe that believing in evolution will condemn anyone to hell, because quite honestly, I don't believe in a God that would condemn anyone to eternal damnation.

    123. Re: What? by covertlaw · · Score: 1
      I propose a simple test for you. Give your heart and mind to Jesus and you will feel his presence as he guides your life. He is always with you, whether you deny his existence or not, and he will always love you and guide you, no matter how you try to deny him or test his existence.

      BTW, the evolution of behavior is NOT the same as evolution and transformation of one species into another.

    124. Re: What? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Living in a democracy is about taking all opinions into account

      FACTS DON'T CHANGE WITH OPINION!

    125. Re: What? by frozencaveman · · Score: 1

      You condescending bastard.

    126. Re: What? by mink · · Score: 1

      Vishnu taking forms has little to do with creation.
      Vishnu creates Bhrama who creates all other life (this is really stripped down) and possibly exclusive to a particular branch of hinduism.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    127. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's an easy one, I know in my heart, from the very depth of my soul.

      Let's make one thing clear though, the whole purpose of science is to come up with real and tangible evidence in how the universe works. I respect science and enjoy learning how things work, but I won't tolerate the exclusion of God, because of my beliefs. I don't mean any disrespect to those that believe otherwise and I wish that there wasn't such hatred towards those who believe in God.

    128. Re: What? by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

      Not quite a straw man argument, however, I will concede that evolution is a process. On the other hand, surely you must concede as well that to believe in the entire theory, one must accept that life started as single cell organisms, and evolved, through many branches, to more or less it's current state. Is that statement not generally true and as accurate as such a short statement can be?

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    129. Re: What? by The+Cydonian · · Score: 1

      Was just quoting a theological notion that is becoming popular among many educated Hindus lately. This is a part of our post-modernist science outreach programme, not part of the regular mythology discourse.

    130. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your respect obviously means nothing then.

    131. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't prove a negative... That's your problem here.

      It's like me saying "Pink elephants exist. Prove me wrong" and then saying that you haven't proven me wrong just because nobody in history has actually seen one. They're out there, you just haven't seen one yet.

    132. Re: What? by Slinky+Saves+the+Wor · · Score: 1

      I propose a simple test for you. Give your heart and mind to Jesus and you will feel his presence as he guides your life. He is always with you, whether you deny his existence or not, and he will always love you and guide you, no matter how you try to deny him or test his existence.

      Why?

      I mean it, please answer that question first. Surely there must be a reason why you advice me to do that kind of thing.

      You seem to imply that I would get "good things" (love and guidance) out of it. Isn't it impure to devote yourself to something spiritual only in the hope of some kind of rewards?

      BTW, the evolution of behavior is NOT the same as evolution and transformation of one species into another.

      Clearly not, but the same evolutionary mechanism is at work. Fruit flies are simple beings. They are not intelligent enough to build schools and teach their offspring on how to behave in a certain way. Thus their behavior has to mirror their physical abilities.

      There is some variance on the physical capabilities of an individual fly. If you kill off those which are slowest (due to some reason), you end up with those which are fast. And they are likely to get more and more faster, if you always kill off the slower ones. The "fastness" as a quality comes from many things, perhaps the wing structure. Eventually the whole population would have the gene(s) which makes e.g. the wing structure suitable for very fast flight. And then this "evolution of behavior" is in fact evolution of the entire species, with a millionth of a baby-step.

      As for observing the evolution into another species, unfortunately the human lifespan is a maximum of about 126 years or so, which is too little a time to spot any such evolutionary changes, i.e. to see one species starting to transform into another species, no matter how hard you look. There just isn't enough time.

      You have to rely on something which lasts longer than human lifetime, i.e. recorded history. And things like fossils.

      Evolution into another species is not a discrete jump, as in "today a monkey, tomorrow a human". It's a gradual, very, very, very slow process of transformation. Think of a plant growing. If you keep on staring at a young palm, you would say "it's not growing, it is as it is". But in reality it's growing all the time. If you were to compare the palm now and 30 years from now, you would clearly see the difference. Yet at first you would say that nothing is changing.

      PS. If I were to devote myself fully to something, it would be the ideas expressed by a man, but not the man itself.

      --
      I do not moderate.
    133. Re: What? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Maybe we should place a warning label on your shirt as well: Caution, due to certain quantum theories, this person may or may not exsist. Please keep an open mind and use caution not to accept his existsence blindly.

      Then they would collapse the probability waveform by reading it.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    134. Re: What? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1
      Nor did I accuse ONLY one side of being disrespectful. Maybe you should "take a second" and realize that YOU jumped to a conclusion that I was bashing non-religious persons.

      Bashing religious people, especially Christians, is easy. What's difficult is treating people with respect who will never understand why you believe the way you do because they are afraid of your beliefs.


      Where's the part where you accuse the other side?
      You only accuse non-religious people of bashing and cowardice: Not a word on the other side of the medal.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    135. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a Catholic. I attended a Catholic primary school (don't know what order the ministry were), Jesuit high school, and Jesuit university.

      God was never mentioned during science classes at any of these private academic establishments (where it would have been perfectly legal even if the teachers did mention His name). That was always left to Religion class. But yes, the general understanding was more along the lines of intelligent design, not "Oh, these humans are kooky and fun, I will give them souls."

      Still, I do not like the way the Fundamentalist Protestants want to infuse religious thinking into the public school system. There is a difference between being an apostolic Christian and being a PITA. Their sticker was harmless enough given the literal meaning message, but really, it's just overboard.

    136. Re: What? by runderwo · · Score: 1

      I think you're confused. Calculus is mathematics; it is irrefutable. The scientific theory of evolution is not nearly as solid.

    137. Re: What? by Theatetus · · Score: 1
      I think you're confused. Calculus is mathematics; it is irrefutable.

      Ha! Tell that to Berkeley or Hilbert some time.

      And actually, the assumptions underlying even simple differential calculus are hardly axiomatic, and could easily be questioned.

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    138. Re: What? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Is that statement not generally true and as accurate as such a short statement can be?

      Admittedly, you are true about "generally," but IMO that is because the majority of people "don't get it" and just think of Darwinism. Of course, my opinion holds no sway over reality.

      A problem, though, is that Evolution does not specifically exclude the possibility of multiple "starting points." I don't think Evolution can be extrapolated back past what fossil evidence we have. We can guess, but that's about the extent of it, and I don't think fossil records of few-celled organisms are very prevalent.

    139. Re: What? by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1
      So far as I know, they aren't. There is a knee jerk reaction among some to the word "Evolution". They tend to jump straight to things like the "missing link" and "chimps into man".

      Myself, I believe in God, in creation, and all that. But, on the other hand I also believe that evolution of creatures takes place, and that the earth is a very old place indeed. It is always interesting reconciling these two things. I think I'm pretty successful at it.

      It is in my view no more strange to believe that God has always been here, and created the universe, than it is to believe that the universe either sprang out of nothingness or has always been. Either one must be taken on faith, you can't really prove how the universe came to be. You can only come up with theories about it. And, I'd rather believe and be wrong, then not believe and be right. How that would truly be depressing for all of life to be just these few years between birth and death. And then you're dust.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    140. Re: What? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      One thing about "Missing Links." There have been a few found, but every time (and inconsistently, I have heard) one is found, the Creationists just say "Oh that is a man/ape, not in-between." The inability to cope with discoveries in science and reality is my #1 problem with many religions, I just have the most experience with christians.

      > I believe in God, in creation, and all that. But, on the other hand I also believe that evolution [takes place]
      > the earth is a very old place indeed

      That's good, and in a way, I envy you. The ones I have the REAL problem with are the Creationists who cannot accept that there was time other than the accounts in the bible. The Earth is way more than 10,000 years old.

      Sometimes I assume (probably incorrectly) that people are Young-Earth Creationists and not just regular-ole-christians, but To be really christian, I think one MUST be a creationist. Otherwise, you are saying "the stuff about creation is a story, but the God stuff is real." I don't like people cherrypicking from the bible what is "true" or not.

      > It is in my view no more strange to believe that God has always been here

      Waitasec... You are saying that given the two choices:
      1) The universe goes back infinitely since there must be something before something else
      2) An ageless being snapped his fingers and "everything" popped into existence, yet somehow he existed beforehand

      And you say #2 is just as sound as the other? I'm not blaming you for believing, but that just sounds... incredible.

      > How that would truly be depressing for all of life to be just these few years between birth and death

      No, it's not my lifespan that depresses me, it's what has happened during it. Life is what you make of it, I think it's silly to need a god to not be depressed. Do you have to do everything "In God's Name" to not feel bad about it? How can you wash your dishes without praising him and the food he put on them (well, you helped a bit, having a job & all)?

      Do you think animals "know" God? If not, do you think they are depressed? Or do we get depressed just because we are "God's Children," straying from His Word? Supposedly, animals can become depressed too. I've seen all sorts of other emotions (or maybe I'm anthropomorphizing)...

    141. Re: What? by mink · · Score: 1

      Sorry for the delayed resonse.
      I was unaware of this new theological view. I think I will have a look into it as I havent been paying much attention to religion over the last ten years.
      Anything out there I might want to look at in specific?

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  10. Alright! by abstraxion · · Score: 0

    Penn and Teller's "Bullshit" wins again!

  11. One in the eye for religious dumbarses! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A tiny bit more fact pokes up above the mire of religious oppression. Yay!

  12. Oh, this is going to get messy. by FireballX301 · · Score: 0

    The situation: Creationists say that evolutionists are just another form of a religious cult. Same vice versa. The courts are literally stuck depending on their interpretation of the constitution article banning the interaction between church and state.

    Will this go down in history as another Scopes Monkey Trial? No. But it's sure as hell going to reignite the debate (wasn't the last uproar a few years back, in Kansas?).

    Personally, the only thing I would see that would pacify both sides would be a complete omission of any theory regarding how we came to be. While politically correct, it would be a massive disservice to the students. Either way, the government really cannot handle this through the judicial.

    1. Re:Oh, this is going to get messy. by TRIEventHorizon · · Score: 0

      it is no issue at all, what we have here are freedom hating power loving judges (other's freedom)

      seperation of church and state applys to 'government sponsored religions'

      it is not government sponsored if it's a private school

      this ruling to ban this statement is totally unconstitutional and a violation to the first amendment, but like that really needed saying.

      --
      "And so the Trekkies were executed in the mannor most befitting virgins - thrown into volcanoes" - Futurama
    2. Re:Oh, this is going to get messy. by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1
      Personally, the only thing I would see that would pacify both sides would be a complete omission of any theory regarding how we came to be. While politically correct, it would be a massive disservice to the students
      Simple, have a second textbook just for "how we came to be here" theories and knock it all out of the normal textbooks. Parents could then keep their children out lessons where these heretic textbooks were being used and everyone's happy. Except the children.
      --
      FGD 135
    3. Re:Oh, this is going to get messy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile, outside of America, countries ignore the "debate" going on in places like Texas, and actually concentrate on scientific progress.

      Ah, well - America had a good run as a first world country. It'll probably still be a good tourist spot in a hundred years or so, so there's that to look forward to :)

    4. Re:Oh, this is going to get messy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, the only thing I would see that would pacify both sides would be a complete omission of any theory regarding how we came to be.

      Don't you think the generation of ignorant kids you would be breeding would drag down the country? It would sure put a dent in the Biotech industry!

      So, no, leaving it out would definitely not pacify the evolution supporters.

    5. Re:Oh, this is going to get messy. by putaro · · Score: 1

      Retard did you Read The Fine Article? This ruling was with respect to the Cobb County Board of Education, the body in charge of the PUBLIC, GOVERNMENT FUNDED, schools in Cobb County, GA.

  13. While it can be proven..... by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Evolution can be proven, in a way, it just can't be proof enough that it would be enough to say that evolution is a law. Evolution is a theory....the sticker is right.....and the court was wrong, in my humble opinion. This is not over by any means.

    --

    Gorkman

    1. Re:While it can be proven..... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      well, there wouldn't be any problem with saying evolution is a theory..

      if all bibles they provided were slanted with a "creationism is a hunch" sticker(or at least, that it can't be proven either, and more than that, there's proof that would make you doubt it and if you started from a clean table you wouldn't come to that conclusion by any means at all).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:While it can be proven..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No. If you ever took any science class beyond High School, you'd know a theory never becomes a law. For 1 simple reason. A theory covers a complex system (Evolution, which is comprised of many ideas, Relativity, which is almost assuredly true, but covers a great deal of information), and a law covers a single thing (3 Laws of Gravity, Thermodynamics).

      So, no. If anyone ever even calls evolution a law, they get a big idiot sticker in my book.

    3. Re:While it can be proven..... by ikkonoishi · · Score: 1

      Bibles aren't supposedly objective textbook

    4. Re:While it can be proven..... by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Contrary to popular opinion, a law is not a popular theory. It's usually a mechanistic rule regarding a particular phenomenon. Some rules aren't even theories -- they're postulates, sometimes impossible to prove.
      The issue with the sticker is that it's inaccurate. It says evolution is a theory, which is false -- evolution is an observed phenomenon with a number of theories describing its mechanisms. It contrasts "theory" with "fact" in a scientifically wrong manner -- a theory and a fact are on completely different spectra. Facts are used to formulate and prove theories, but a theory doesn't become a fact when well-proven.

    5. Re:While it can be proven..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      aside from mathematical theorems (which are quite different from "scientific theories"), *nothing* in science is ever proven...evidence to support one theory or another is accumulated.

      of course, you probably already knew this, and just simply misspoke (mistyped?)...i'm just pointing it out for the benefit of others who are slightly more misguided than the rest of us.

      --kw

    6. Re:While it can be proven..... by eggnet · · Score: 1

      Bibles aren't supposedly objective textbook.

      That is correct. The Holy Bible is supposedly the unquestionable
      (or eternal damnation ensues) word of God, not an objective textbook.

      Apparently certain religious parents were worried that textbooks might make it more difficult to keep their children from questioning The Holy Bible.

      Hence, the (imo pointless) stickers.

    7. Re:While it can be proven..... by TiredGamer · · Score: 1

      Actually the Jewish-Christian bible was (and still is by many) used as a textbook.

      --
      No penguins were harmed in the making of this post.
    8. Re:While it can be proven..... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      as others have pointed out the bible is widely used as _THE_ textbook, the one and only book with the unquestionable truth(how do you think creationists got taught their views?).

      for anyone taking a '3rd person' view to the book, sure, it is a very old novel with historical stories and myths that have been mixed from a whole lot of other myths during the passing of time.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    9. Re:While it can be proven..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That is correct. The Holy Bible is supposedly the unquestionable
      (or eternal damnation ensues) word of God, not an objective textbook.



      But ... Jesus died for our sins, so how can the sin of not believing in God/Jesus/poof-bang-world-in-6-days be punishable by eternal damnation?

      Oh wait, that was the church in Europe trying to scare its followers in the dark and middle ages by stealing the Norse myth of Hel and modifying it to suit its own purposes.

      Evolution is a theory, sure. A theory based upon the viewing of a massive amount of evidence. That is the meaning of a scientific theory, and what differentiates it from a crackpot theory. A crackpot theory is: "6000 years ago, aliens came and fought a war in our solar system. The resulting radiation altered the material of Earth and created life as we know it today". It isn't a fact in science because a fact needs undisputable proof. Things aren't known about how evolution works (constant change? jumpy change?) but the more evidence that piles up (evolution can be seen in action in bacteria and viruses, for example, as they have incredibly fast generational cycles). How else can they adapt to previously deadly chemicals/pesticides/etc? The strongest survive. That's the whole point of evolution, it's not 100% fact, it probably will never be, but it is 99% fact.

      Compared to that, creationism is laughable. There's no proof, no evidence, no nothing. There are some writings that have been distorted by time an incredible amount. But of course, it is all faith.

      I think that scientists should just say that their faith is in evolution. Because the creationists argument is that you can't disprove creationism (they'll move the goalposts, or say that dinosaurs, etc, everything, was put there to test people's faith, etc). You can't win scientifically against these people, they have faith, poor sad deluded people. It isn't their fault except they are so closeminded as to not think that there is any other truth.

    10. Re:While it can be proven..... by endx7 · · Score: 1

      Just because it's a theory doesn't mean it can't be a "fact" too.

      After all, not knowing about something doesn't mean it can't be a fact.

      And remember, evolution is based on (factual) evidence.

    11. Re:While it can be proven..... by Sloppy · · Score: 1
      Evolution can be proven, in a way, it just can't be proof enough that it would be enough to say that evolution is a law. Evolution is a theory....the sticker is right...
      The inability to prove evolution to the extent that you can call it a "law", applies to everything else in science too. Gravity and electrons haven't been proven. Science doesn't prove things. If you want proofs, close your science book and open a math book.

      But evolution is on as solid ground as anything else in science. It's just as likely that electrons and gravity will be struck down by a new observation that doesn't fit the model, as evolution will be.

      If these people had chosen to put warning labels on all science books and had tried to undermine science in general, then maybe no one would have seen through their transparent agenda. Tell kids to approach all science "with an open mind" and you just might get away with it. But they just happened to pick this one tiny area of science to try to discredit with their bizarre "is a theory, not a fact" innuendo.

      Here's your chance to be a scientist. The question is: What possible reason might someone want to put that sticker on schoolbooks? What is the sticker's purpose?

      One piece of data that may be useful to you, is the observation that the people who are pushing for this sticker, happen to be creationists. Another interesting piece of data, is that it appears that the only people who bitch about evolution, are creationists. Use or ignore this data as you see fit.

      Now go ahead and make up some theories about the purpose of the sticker. I think you'll end up with one theory that fits the observations way, way better than everything else.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    12. Re:While it can be proven..... by NaCl · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a theory....the sticker is right.....and the court was wrong

      The problem with the sticker is that it has a implicit religion statement, justifying the court decision.

      --
      I shot the sheriff
    13. Re:While it can be proven..... by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      Evolution can be proven

      Nothing can be proven. Science is a method, a progression where a theory exists and some believe it some don't, yet that theory maintains support until disproved. Science is dependent on negation.

      If evolution could be proven, then the sticker is wrong. It would say "Evolution is a fact, not a theory".

      To my knowledge, Descartes' "Cognito ergo sum" is the only fact. Without a shadow of a doubt I know that I am a thinking thing. What I think about and what I believe is always subject to change, and error before and after.

    14. Re:While it can be proven..... by Eivind · · Score: 1
      You didn't read the article.

      The complainers claimed that the sticker unfairly singled out evolution among literally thousands of other scientific theories that are equally much "just a theory".

      This is perfectly true. Evolution is no less proven than most other scientific theories. Infact evolution has seen an *enormous* amount of time and energy spent trying to discredit it, without success. That's the best any scientific theory can hope for.

      Noone claims that evolution, or any other scientific theory is "absolute proven truth", all we can claim is that these are theories which match all observed evidence better than any other theory we where able to think of.

  14. Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by earthforce_1 · · Score: 3, Funny


    In the name of plano-terrestrialists everywhere, I demand that all globes, maps and atlases include a disclaimer stating that the idea of a round earth is only one of many possible theories.

    Furthermore, we demand equal time in the classroom to discuss our alternative theories of geography.

    --
    My rights don't need management.
    1. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Artraze · · Score: 1

      In the name of plano-terrestrialists everywhere, I demand that all globes, maps and atlases include a disclaimer stating that the idea of a round earth is only one of many possible theories.

      Certainly. As soon as you prove the Earth isn't 'round' (read: spherical).

    2. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it may be a plane. Depends on the space geometry (or how space is warped).

    3. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by MarkTina · · Score: 1

      But then it's been proven that the world is round ... just keep walking in a straight line (making sure to learn how to walk on water and up vertical surfaces) and you can see for yourself.

      Alternativly jump up really really high and look down.

    4. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by mvdw · · Score: 1

      I believe in the Pizza Theory: the earth is both round *and* flat...

    5. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by JanneM · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But then it's been proven that the world is round ... just keep walking in a straight line (making sure to learn how to walk on water and up vertical surfaces) and you can see for yourself.

      Invisible magical blue-scaled lizard midgets. When anybody comes close to the edge, they will magically put them to sleep and run them to the opposite side of the disc in their secret network of extradimensional tunnels. once there, they reposition the person in exactly the same way they were, and wake them up.

      Now, this is at least as convincing a theory as ID, with just as much evidence and falsifiability, and deserves all the same repsect and classroom time.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    6. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by The_reformant · · Score: 1

      My group already modelled this but apparently the kids don't have the geometric background to fully grasp a 4 dimensional torus.

      I even suggested we could break 'em in gently with the harmonic time cube

      --
      I have discovered a truly remarkable sig which this post is too small to contain.
    7. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by makeyourself · · Score: 0

      you talking about this?
      in that case i demand american children also have a dedicated hour a week to study even more hilarious this

    8. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, exactly. That was his point.

    9. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by MarkTina · · Score: 1

      Damn ... didn't think of that! Hold on though ... how do you know they are blue-scaled lizard midgets if they are invisible ? And how do they know what they look like ? and how do they pick things up if they are invisible surely it must be bloody hard trying to pick up something you can see with something you can't ? And why does no-one else notice when someone else dissappears ? Could there plan be foiled if we all formed into a giant line and watched each others back ? ;-)

    10. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by earthforce_1 · · Score: 4, Funny


      Oh, forgot one:

      "And he made a molten sea, ten cubits from the one rim to the other it was round all about, and...a line of thirty cubits did compass it round about....And it was an hand breadth thick...." -- First Kings, chapter 7, verses 23, 26

      Here is biblical proof that pi is in fact exactly 3, which should be given equal time in high school math classes.

      --
      My rights don't need management.
    11. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by tricops · · Score: 1

      I demand that children be taught the dangers of dihyrogen monoxide! Its effects can be catastrophic! Go here and read for yourself! Spread the word! Only you can help us break the barriers and help inform the populace of this terrible threat....

      --
      (\(\
      (^v^)
      (")")
      This is the cute vorpal bunny virus, copy to your sig or runaway, runaway in fear!
    12. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      I'd like to see you make a perfectly spherical object (or even round), and have it have a circumference to diameter ratio of exactly pi, I think you'd find that 3 is close enough. These aren't precise measurements, especially in biblical times.

    13. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by victor_the_cleaner · · Score: 3, Funny

      Actually I heard a story about a school district (in Georgia I think) that had a board member that said PI should be 3, since that is what the bible says.

    14. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by ars · · Score: 1

      You're trying to be funny, but you're equating the level of knowledge of the shape of the earth, with the level of knowledge of evolution.

      It's not even close.

      It's quite obvious you know nothing at all about evolution, or you wouldn't even think of this joke. So as far as you are concerned it might as well be religion - you're just taking it on faith.

      --
      -Ariel
    15. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by ars · · Score: 3, Informative

      Um, you may not know this, but stuff that's made by man, even if described in the bible doesn't have anywhere near the reliability of stuff made by god.

      There's a reason why this passage describes who made this.

      And BTW for the clueless, you do imagine that someone actually measured this pot right? And recorded what he measured - it's not prophecy after all. The reason these measurements are recorded is that the pot was very think. One measurement was an inner measurement, and the other was an outer measurement.

      Do the math, go look up how much a hand breadth is, and figure the inner diameter was 10 cubits minus a hand breadth. Then see how 30 cubits compares with what you calculate for the inner circumference - you'll find it's quite accurate.

      --
      -Ariel
    16. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The incorporation of a colour for an invisible being is intentional :)

      It's similar to the "invisible pink unicorn" that has been posited as an alternative to God... part of the joke against religious people. When they respond with "how do you know it is pink if it is invisible?", we can answer the way they usually do about God - this is mysterious and not meant to be understood by man :)

    17. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Except that there are a significant number of people who do not believe in evolution. The number in the millions. The members of the Flat Earth Society (who actually believe the Earth to be flat, as opposed to those members who joined as a joke) number in the low dozens.

      Sidenote: Of course, this whole controversy could be cleared up if we had a separation of school and state...

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    18. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Why would a map need a sticker? It's already planar.

    19. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      I should probably have pointed out that the 314 in my name was there for a reason, namely because I enjoy the number pi in all its glory.

    20. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by BillyBlaze · · Score: 2, Insightful
      All you need is a printer, some staples, and duct tape, and you could put that post in a book, an honest-to-goodness book! How can you question it then? It's in a book!!! It's even been blessed by DUCT TAPE!

      Honestly, it's plain as day: JanneM 1:1 -- Invisible magical blue-scaled lizard midgets. How can you not believe the book? It was written by the lizard-midgets themselves.

    21. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      The larger question is, how do you decide what should be taken literally and what shouldn't? One way, blasphemous as it is, is to compare what the Bible says with observable facts, such as pi != 3, and when they are at odds, go with with the observations. Which is the core of the issue - some people greatly convolute their worldview to not contradict the Bible, when it would make so much more sense to just accept that while the Bible is great for moral guidance, it's rather backwards when it comes to things like precise definitions of constants and, dare I say, the history of life.

    22. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know you are but what am I?

    23. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by madprof · · Score: 1

      Be that as it may, creationists are the nearest thing to flat earth types we have in this modern day and age.
      Ignorant, poorly-argued and downright sad science passionately pursued by those only with a religious agenda, or some perverse hatred of mainstream science.
      Creation "science" is the Lyndon La Rouche of the science world.

    24. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do this to my students. I think it teaches them to think for themselves a bit. I pull the same thing...list all the horrible things that DHO can do or is associated with and ask them if they think it should be banned or at least regulated. Most say yes.

    25. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Let's not forget that the earth is actually the center of the solar system. After all, the universe revolves around us :)

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    26. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by fredrikj · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      while the Bible is great for moral guidance

      Unfortunately, it isn't even that. First, the moral values expressed in the Bible are outdated at best. Second, its inconsistencies and vagueness provide room for the most bizarre interpretations. One could easily express in one page or less all the moral guidelines you'd need -- explicitly and without internal inconsistencies or contradictions with science.

    27. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by stephenhawking · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's also been proven that evolution takes place, and is responsible for biodiversity on the planet earth.

      Much like gravity, there are theories to describe evolution, and there's also the fact of evolution. Just as the effect of gravity is not in dispute, the process of evolution is not in dispute. There are multiple theories describing gravity, relativity, quantum mechanics, etc., but apples will not stop falling to the earth while we decide which one is the most accurate.

      Evolution has been observed, and the evidence in support of it is overwhelming. Modern biologists do not really debate whether evolution occurs or not, but are instead concerned with the mechanisms by which it does occur. Evolution is a SCIENTIFIC theory, which means it is testable, can make predictions etc. In this regard, even scientific theories which are known to be wrong can still be useful. For instance, even though we know that Newton's theory of gravity is inferior to later theories, it is still accurate enough in it's predictions to guide spacecraft to Jupiter and beyond, and is very useful in these areas. So downplaying the importance of a MAJOR SCIENTIFIC theory like evolution is misleading to average people who apparently often have little understanding of how science works.

      Creationism, on the other hand, is not a scientific theory. It starts by assuming that there is a creator, and in making such an assumption goes against the fundamental tenets of science. To suggest to our children that this psuedo-science garbage is a worthy alternative to evolution does them an incredible disservice.

    28. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      no, you see, god is just transporting you instantaneously to another edge.... and he does it with the light too.

      I win!

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    29. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by ooze · · Score: 1

      Actually - this is sort of true. Earth is in the center of the observable universe. And by strict scientific standards, this is the only universe that matters. The problem with this, is, we might never have the means to change our perspective in this.

      --
      Just because I can imagine doing a hippopotamus, doesn't mean I'd like to do it.
    30. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by mpe · · Score: 1

      Be that as it may, creationists are the nearest thing to flat earth types we have in this modern day and age.

      That would be a flat fixed Earth around which the universe orbits :)

    31. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by mpe · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Except that there are a significant number of people who do not believe in evolution. The number in the millions. The members of the Flat Earth Society (who actually believe the Earth to be flat, as opposed to those members who joined as a joke) number in the low dozens.

      Just because a large number of people believe in something does not make it fact. Plenty of people, especially in the USA, believe in Iraqi WMDs. Similarly lots of people believe that UFOs are alien spacecraft.

    32. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by mysticwhiskey · · Score: 1

      And if God dropped it, would it land topping-side down? :)

      --

      Stuck down a hole! In the middle of the night! With an owl!

    33. Re: Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Here is biblical proof that pi is in fact exactly 3, which should be given equal time in high school math classes.

      IMO this is a silly criticism of biblical literalism. What if the cauldron was 30.40 cubits in circumference and 9.676 cubits in diameter, and you were describing it to friends as "a big cauldron" rather than a math problem?

      If you want to point out biblical idiocy, use the stock-breeding yarn in Genesis XXX, talking serpents and donkeys, a boat big enough to save the whole world's ecosystem for over a year, an omniscient god who often doesn't know what's going on, an omnipotent god who fails in his attempt to stamp out evil in the world, a loving god who has schoolkiddies mauled by bears after they tease a prophet for being bald, etc, etc, etc.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    34. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Simon+Brooke · · Score: 2, Insightful
      And BTW for the clueless, you do imagine that someone actually measured this pot right? And recorded what he measured - it's not prophecy after all. The reason these measurements are recorded is that the pot was very think. One measurement was an inner measurement, and the other was an outer measurement.
      Do the math, go look up how much a hand breadth is, and figure the inner diameter was 10 cubits minus a hand breadth. Then see how 30 cubits compares with what you calculate for the inner circumference - you'll find it's quite accurate.

      Ye Gods!

      The scary thing is I don't think that's meant to be a joke, do you?

      Let's get this straight. What we're dealing with here may be a 'puff' piece - a bit of political spin - telling people how rich and powerful Solomon was. If so, it may have been written down at the time - but it is written by someone trying to impress. It probably isn't written by the architect; it was probably written by Solomon's equivalent of a PR department, and you don't expect precise technical accuracy from a PR department. If it was written down at the time, it's probably just not very precise.

      But the second thing is, Solomon was the Israeli's Golden Age. He was the most powerful king they ever had. This passage may have been written down two or three generations later, when Solomon's palace was ruined or redeveloped. It could be old mens' memories of what their grandfather's said. It may be highly exaggerated.

      And let's face it, Solomon was rich and powerful, but the amount of energy to maintain 32 cubic metres of some unspecified (but by implication not normally molten) substance in a molten state would be very high. Yes, ancient kings did indulge in huge spectaular showpieces, but nevertheless I think it's more likely that this detail is either a huge exaggeration or just untrue.

      Either way it can't be taken as 'proving' that either the contemporary Jews or their God thought that the diameter of a circle of exactly thirty cubits perimeter was exactly ten cubits. After all, to the degree of accuracy needed by either a PR piece or an old man's story telling, the diameter of a roughly thirty cubit circle is roughly ten cubits: you're investing these statements with a degree of accuracy that the author never intended.

      --
      I'm old enough to remember when discussions on Slashdot were well informed.
    35. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 1

      But, physically speaking, Earth cannot possibly be the centre of the universe. To be so, much of the universe would be orbiting at a speed faster than the speed of light.

    36. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by erlando · · Score: 1

      What do you mean if? :P

      --
      Remember, there are no stupid questions. But there are a lot of inquisitive idiots.
    37. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by LetterJ · · Score: 1

      Sorry, my bad. I declared the diameter as an int and not as a float.

      While I'm a Deist who doesn't defend the Bible, this one is just a stupid criticism. Given that a "cubit" is the length of a man's forearm from finger to elbow, we're not exactly talking about a uniform measurement. I pretty much guarantee that the difference between "cubits" renders the decimal rounding moot.

      It's not like decimal math exists in the Bible or most non-mathematical documents from the era.

      If you're going to criticize a document, at least attack it's biggest flaws first. This one's so far down on the list as to be pointless to even bring up.

    38. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by untaken_name · · Score: 1

      You didn't understand the post you replied to. He clearly stated that it was the center of the observable universe. It's all a matter of your frame of reference. It's like, all relative, or something.

    39. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by untaken_name · · Score: 1

      You're wrong. It had NOTHING to do with the Bible. It was proposed in order to 'simplify' math for those poor kids. It's too hard for them to learn pi so we need to change pi to make it easier. I fucking HATE federalized education. That's a fucking oxymoron, if you ask me.

    40. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 1

      If you go stand on the moon, the moon becomes the centre of your observable universe. In some cases, it's a useful model, in others, it's not.

    41. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by KilobyteKnight · · Score: 1
      Honestly, it's plain as day: JanneM 1:1 -- Invisible magical blue-scaled lizard midgets. How can you not believe the book? It was written by the lizard-midgets themselves.

      We who worship the invisible magical muave-scaled lizard midgets are sick and tired of the obvious bias expressed here on Slashdot in favor of invisible magical blue-scaled lizard midgets. Your theories are obviously all wrong and the hatred you constantly express towards us muaves will not be tolerated!
      --
      When will Windows be ready for the desktop?
    42. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by ndogg · · Score: 1

      But you're not the kind of people we criticize. In fact, we hold people such as you near to our hearts. It's the fundamentalists that refuse to believe that the Bible has any flaws.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    43. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Except it isn't.

      ID is based off the idea that things appar to be designed. That is, existence is an order of magnitude more complex than could conceiveably be random. Unless there were some sort of guiding force (whether it be a fundamental law of physics we haven't discovered yet which is directly contrary to entropy), or there was something bigger than this existence - something outside this existence - which designed it. Even if you consider all the laws of physics and biology, it still leaves a whole realm of metaphysical elements to life which can't yet be explained.

      My formal teaching tells me that things simply can't exist from nothing within this model of physical representation. Maybe there are parallel or higher planes with different laws for time, space, and matter - I don't know. What I do know is that it takes less faith for me to believe in an intelligent designer than it does for me to believe in the random creation of matter or energy. Since such randomness doesn't adhere to our laws of physics, there's really only one choice for someone with half a mind.

      As for your blue-scaled lizard midgets? What motivation do I have to believe in that? What significance does it have? And furthermore, what correlary scientific evidence is there to support it? None, unlikelyhood that there was a creating force in our existence. Unless, of course, you've discovered a new correlary to the world of physics that nobody yet knows of.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    44. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by LetterJ · · Score: 1

      Right. However, if you're going to attack the fundamentalists, do so with the *real* flaws in the Bible, not this nitpicky stuff.

      If you were to criticize government spending, you'd aim for the biggest wastes, not the fact that the guy at your local town hall triple staples everything. Is triple stapling technically a waste of spending? Yes. Is it a useful cricicism in the face of multi-million dollar wastes? Absolutely not.

      The whole pi = 3 thing is just stupid since *most* ancient documents didn't exactly use decimal precision in their math.

    45. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by antic · · Score: 1

      But surely by believing in a creator, you are putting faith in exactly what you refuse to believe, i.e., the alternative.

      Who or what created your ID?

      --
      'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
    46. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      Plano-terrestialism is based on the idea that the earth appears to be flat. That is, roundness is an order of magnitude more complex than flatness. Wouldn't you fall off if you were on the bottom side of the "globe"?

      And yes, there is a kind of guiding force to evolution, even though it doesn't actually exist as such: individuals with genes that give them better chances for survival tends to survive longer and produce more offspring, hence these genes will become more common in the next generations.

      You claim that life began from "nothing", according to the evolutionary theories.

      You don't seem to appreciate exactly how big the primordial oceans were, and how long umphteen million years is, and how many "random" interactions there must have been among the zillions of complex organic molecules that can be formed by natural events such as lightning, sunlight, volcanic eruptions, et cetera.

      Even if only 0.0000000001% of these molecules had some kind of property that had the effect of it reproducing itself, over time, those molecules would become more common, and thus engage in more interaction with other molecules.

      So yes, I find it plausible that over the course of millions of years, this huge "soup" of all kinds of molecules would have produced lifeforms. That people haven't been able to reproduce much of this in test tubes over a couple of weeks doesn't surprise me much.

      About your last paragraph. Obviously you think those blue-scaled lizard midgets were just made up. I agree with that. But there is a point to this. Isn't it possible that God was just made up too, by someone, but the people who heard the story believed it and it kind of got out of hand from there, with people killing eachother over differing opinions on the details of the stories?

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    47. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by fredrikj · · Score: 1

      Flamebait, huh? No, I'm right, and I motivated why in as plain language as possible. If you think I'm wrong, why don't you reply and tell me why?

    48. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by CheshireCatCO · · Score: 1

      Are you thinking of the state of Indiana, which (through a fairly long, convoluted bill which kept defining pi in different ways) tried to pass legislation that would acknowledge some nut's theory and get the state free use of pi? See: http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a3_341.html

      As for religious motivations for legislating pi, that's a legend: http://www.snopes.com/religion/pi.htm

    49. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      It's also been proven that evolution takes place, and is responsible for biodiversity on the planet earth.

      No, it hasn't been. It's been observed, after the fact, and it's postulated that evolution is responsible for the biodiversity on earth. Sure, we can make fruit flies immune to pesticides and various other toxins. Sure, we can cross-breed flowers. These things are "proof". But they're not proof of the broad earthly diversity.

      Proof of such diversity would be the transversal from one species to something completely different without any in-betweens. Why no in-between micro-changes? Because there's no evidence -for- such changes in the fossil records, at all. There is absolutely no "evidence" for the biological diversity on Earth when using the Evolutionary method.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    50. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ok, you're seeing the numbers here, not the picture, i'll draw an interpretation of the picture and give you new numbers. (HB is a hand bredth)
      [--------------- 10 Cubits ------------]
      [HB][------------- 30/Pi ----------][HB]
      10 cubits from one brim to the other, and a handbredth wide, the 30 cubits about represents the internal dimensions of the molten sea, so... 30/Pi=~9.549 so one HB (hand bredth) =(10-30/Pi)/2=~0.226 cubits and, tho you may look funny while checking, you'll see that you have roughly four hand bredths in your cubit... so this is a more accurate representation of Pi than the "3" of your interpretation.
    51. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And your comment is proof that at least one person on Slashdot makes comments about what they have no comprehension of and use it to "prove" their point.

      A cubit is not an exact measurement, and was used, especially for measurements larger than a few cubits, to convey the sense of size. A cubit was the length from the elbow to the tip of the middle finger. It was never intended to be exact.

      Every manuscript ever written was/is/will be written in the context of that culture and language. Pure math falls into similar context as well. You could write it as a series of dots representing numbers and even group the dots with symbols in a series, to explain the symbols (whether they are operators or more convenient symbols to represent a quantitiy of dots), and then show proofs using this system. Just about anyone could then read this language, given a bit of thought. But true understanding may be harder, especially for those tribal groups whose language only include the equivalents of one, two, and many. So even this attempt at writing a culture-neutral, universally understood manuscript has limitations.

      Commenting on most of the rest of what I've read here:

      Almost everyone posting needs to know a science book, not dictionary, definition of theory, fact, and scientific law. I will not provide these. That's what science books are for.

      Most posts have no validity whatsoever because they are based on faulty premises, and very bad logic on top of that. Most have much misinformation.

      Since there is so much "proof" abounding here I will throw some opinions into the fray. Read the second law of thermodynamics. How does evolution fit in (that's always been my question)?

      For those who want to know about how science relates to religion, try Lee Strobel's "The Case for a Creator," and/or http://www.answersingenesis.org/. For those who want the to know about evolution, try http://www.literature.org/authors/darwin-charles/t he-origin-of-species/ for the research that started it all. For an ongoing debate about the subject, try http://www.talkorigins.org/. For a balanced view, try all the above, plus more. Each of these contain lengthy reads, and great opposition. Keep an open mind, flip back and forth between all of them, and you will probably still end up taking a side. The important thing is, that if done properly, the side will be yours.

      Happy Thinking!

      Finally, a few quotes attributed to "Mark Twain" to shed some absurd insight on all this (disclaimer: these are his own opinions, not to be construed as fact, theory, law, or anything otherwise, though some might be):

      Education: that which reveals to the wise, and conceals from the stupid, the vast limits of their knowledge.

      I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.

      Facts are stubborn things, but statistics are more pliable.

      Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please.

      In religion and politics, people's beliefs and convictions are in almost every case gotten at second hand, and without examination.

      The trouble with the world is not that people know too little, but that they know so many things that ain't so.

      -JDS

    52. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Maybe this is just me, but I never could figure out why people think the number "thirty cubits" was supposed to have infinite precision (which we know would be required to give the 'exact' value of Pi). Looks to me like it has one significant digit.

      Honestly, it's when people take Biblical literalism to such retarded extremes -- and I'm talking about the people who really think the Bible says Pi = 3.00 repeating -- that I get pissed off at my fellow Christian.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    53. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Tonytheloony · · Score: 1

      Wow, and you dare call others clueless. Why religious garbage like this gets modded up is amazing.

      --
      The quickest way to become an atheist is to study the Bible thoroughly.
    54. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      My personal belief is that my "intelligent designer" exists outside what we deem "existence"- outside our linear time stream. I believe that time is simply another entity, like gravity, that can be manipulated or controlled. Quantum physics type shit. I don't really understand it, but that's what I "believe".

      I believe that our universe and all the physical laws that it contains are, in very grotesque summary, like the "galaxy" trinket that was the focus of the Men in Black movie. It's just kind of a groundless postulation, but it allows for such physical law boundaries. It would allow for a universe where things are entirely different - where principles such as time, matter, and gravity, and such might not even exist.

      Anyway, that's what I Believe, in a fairly crude nutshell. Back to work. :)

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    55. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by lxw56 · · Score: 1

      That was a rounding error. With pi, it's impossible to eliminate. If those verses implied that pi was 3.14, would you complain that it is wrong, since it didn't give the figure of 3.14159?

    56. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Neo's+Nemesis · · Score: 1
      I demand that all globes, maps and atlases include a disclaimer stating that the idea of a round earth is only one of many possible theories.

      haha you fool. if earth was reeeeealy round Australians would all fall out. now let me continue writing my letter to the Society of Physics relating to this.

    57. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Just because a large number of people believe in something does not make it fact.

      I wasn't talking about "fact". I was talking about who does or does not get to use the bully pulpit of the government school system. While we all wish
      "fact" would be taught in the government schools, evolution isn't necessarily "fact". While it has a preponderance of evidence behind it, and is useful theory to apply to the science of biology, it has not been demonstrably proven.

      This case in point is about teaching creationism in schools, but about NOT telling children that evolution is undisputed "fact". There is a difference. Not everyone who distrusts evolution is a Christian creationist. Some are Jewish or Islamic creationists. Others aren't creationists at all but merely think there might be a third mechanism. Still others think evolution to be the most probably mechanism, but aren't willing to place their complete trust in it.

      Sidenote: the only reason this controversy exists is because there is no separation of School and State. If there were, then you could send your kid to a school that did teach evolution to be undeniably true if you so wished. That other people would send their children elsewhere would be none of your concern. But as long as we have a one-size-fits-all education system, it unfortunately has to be a lowest-common-denominator system run by politicians and bureaucrats.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    58. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by he-sk · · Score: 1
      About your last paragraph. Obviously you think those blue-scaled lizard midgets were just made up. I agree with that. But there is a point to this. Isn't it possible that God was just made up too, by someone, but the people who heard the story believed it and it kind of got out of hand from there, with people killing eachother over differing opinions on the details of the stories?


      You nailed it! Evolution in Religion. Religion as a meme.
      --
      Free Manning, jail Obama.
    59. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "ID is based off the idea that things appar to be designed. That is, existence is an order of magnitude more complex than could conceiveably be random."

      They do not!

      Why would God suck so much at making creatures? Bats, dogs, humans and whales all have the same sort of forearm/leg/wing/flipper bone structure doing completely different tasks. How could that be even possible if we all didn't have the same ancestor?

    60. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny how many people have dogs as pets. And different breeds of dogs _really_ look different to one another. And dog breeding has only been around for perhaps some thousands of years, atleast the more active kind.

      So in a few thousand years we go from rip-your-asaphogus-out wolf to buy-some-tacos chihuahuas and then some religious nut comes along and says all creatures were created immediately and that its impossible for animals to be so different to one another.

    61. Re:Equal time for plano-terrestrialism by untaken_name · · Score: 1

      what, you mean it's all relative? Hyuk hyuk!

  15. no it's not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    evolution is not a theory, it is a principle reproduced and observed in the labratory and is applicable to more than just biological systems. they need to clarify what they really mean by evolution, but then that would be exposing their true religious robot nature.

    1. Re:no it's not by Le+Marteau · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's a long way from saying, "Oh look. The color of the moth changes in lab tests depending on it's predator and environment" to "Oh, look. Our lab tests just that life came about because of natural selection."

      --
      Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    2. Re:no it's not by Joe+Random · · Score: 1
      It's a long way from saying, "Oh look. The color of the moth changes in lab tests depending on it's predator and environment" to "Oh, look. Our lab tests just that life came about because of natural selection."
      Except that evolution doesn't touch on how life came about at all. The origins of life are completely outside evolution's scope.
    3. Re:no it's not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I swear. No one understands what a theory is. Evolution cannot be a fact. Have you ever heard of something in science referred to as a fact? The FACT of gravity? The FACT of thermodynamics?

      No, theory just implies that it's a scientific idea, regardless of validity, the covers a wide range of subjects.

    4. Re:no it's not by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      I kicked you in the nuts. There's a fact. You fell on the ground. There's a fact. From there you can make useful hypotheses such as "when you kick someone in the nuts, they fall to the ground." You can then try to prove that hypothesis, making it a theory. Perhaps some people don't fall to the ground; instead they just howl in pain and hop around. Eventually, you'll come to a reproducible process like "kicking someone in the nuts causes them to react violently." You can then make theories as to the cause of this reaction: "Kicking someone in the nuts causes them physical discomfort and pain." "Kicking someone in the nuts causes invisible gremlins to push them around." Etc.

  16. Buncha jackasses by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1

    ... on both sides of the issue. All this is not going to make a bit of difference in anyones mind, least of all the little knucklheads who have to read those textbooks. It's all posturing and symbolism and a big waste of time.

    --
    Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
  17. It creeps me out... by Weaselmancer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Courts lately keep doing the right thing.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:It creeps me out... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Wait till it gets to the supreme court. Then you'll see that trend reverse itself.

      --
      evil is as evil does
  18. Creationist? by PuppiesOnAcid · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm not defending either side here...but how exactly does one call this a "creationist textbook sticker?" I've heard many evolutionists declare evolution as only theory and not fact as well...

    1. Re:Creationist? by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Insightful

      how exactly does one call this a "creationist textbook sticker?"

      It is a disclaimer designed to discredit the content of the textbook by it's very presence.

      It was carefully worded in a way to be sneaky enough to get pass the likes of you, but the intent is still clear: It's a baby step on the way towards obscurantism.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Creationist? by rokzy · · Score: 1

      because why should a school board single out evolution?

      why not stickers on every single book?

      quantum theory is a theory...
      string theory is a theory...
      general relativity is a theory...

      don't pretend that this is as simple as saying something that is true.

      it is true that all kinds of people commit crimes. what if I demanded the school board put stickers on books saying "books have been stolen by black people. keep yours safe."?

      that is perfectly true. but it's not about truth. truth does not exclude flamebait.

    3. Re:Creationist? by bani · · Score: 1

      it was lobbied for by creationists and serves a purely creationist agenda, and no other.

      it has no place being in biology textbooks any more than a sticker saying a round earth is only a theory belongs in astronomy textbooks.

    4. Re:Creationist? by Dimensio · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The motive is transparent by virtue of the fact that no one is asking for similar disclaimers for other theories, such as atomic theory, gravitational theory or germ theory.

      If that weren't enough, a look at the groups behind the disclaimers should remove all doubt of motive.

    5. Re:Creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, that would be incorrect. If they weren't pointing out that evolution is both fact and theory, and that it is established by means of the scientific method with attention paid to repeated observations and experiments, then...

      They were probably trying to mislead you, or don't fully understand the concept.

    6. Re:Creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the 3 theories you list, anyone who is knows enough to read and fully understand them indeeds know that they are just theories.

      Evolution, on the other hand, is widely taught as blind fact.

    7. Re:Creationist? by Comatose51 · · Score: 1

      Obviously it was put in there to appease the Creationists. Do we put stickers like that for relativity? There are so many things in science that are just "theories", yet they had to single out evolution. Why? If they put a sticker on those books for every scientific theory taught then fine, go ahead. But when you single out one theory that is obviously going against what some religion believes, then you have to question the motivation for that.

      --
      EvilCON - Made Famous by /.
    8. Re:Creationist? by IrresponsibleUseOfFr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It is a "creationist textbook sticker" because Intelligent Design is just a secular telling of creationism. It supposes an intelligent creator which we have no scientific evidence for except circularly ourselves and our surroundings which is at best specious. Secondly, it has a huge flaw with "first cause" since everything must come from something more intelligent so supposedly "The Creator" was created from a more intelligent "Creator" and so forth. Third, it is wrong, because it is easy for us to concieve of cases where we muddle with our DNA to create more intelligent human beings (which I believe to be just a matter of time). This goes directly against the notion of intelligent design where beings can only create things less intelligent.

      Evolution is a theory, but there is lots of evidence supporting it. We've observed "micro-evolution." What we haven't observed is "macro-evolution" but I guarantee that we'll know it when we see it. There is of course a problem with "first cause" but we exist so it has to be resolvable.

      Evolution is a theory in the sense that relativity is a theory or the theory of an atom. We don't preface the theory of the atom with a sticker and we shouldn't do evolution either. Students should think critically about it, but evolution does not deserve any special doubt just because it happens to disagree with certain religious texts. But, what I'm really tired of is people trying to return us to the dark ages.

      --
      Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true! -Homer Simpson
    9. Re:Creationist? by BroncoInCalifornia · · Score: 1
      Why are these religionists so dishonest?

      They package religion as science but say they are not doing this.

      I think these religionists just do not have enough faith to do the right thing.

      --

      Religion is the main cause of atheism.

    10. Re:Creationist? by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

      String theory is a 'theory' in the non-scientific sense. The other two, like evolution, are scientific fact - they are so well proved, that advances will be elaborations on them, not overthrowing. (As general relativity is an elaboration of classical Newtonian gravity - classical gravitation theory is only wrong in extreme cases of relativistic velocities or very large gravitational fields.)

      You have no conception of how much modern technology relies on quantum mechanics.

      --
      Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    11. Re:Creationist? by j.bellone · · Score: 1

      As is most religion; which is less of a fact than evolution. Because at least some points of evolution can be proven; religion on the other hand is all but a bunch of speculation.

      --
      I'm f#$king magic!
    12. Re:Creationist? by mdiep · · Score: 1
      The motive is transparent by virtue of the fact that no one is asking for similar disclaimers for other theories, such as atomic theory, gravitational theory or germ theory.
      You're forgetting the major underlying difference: while atomic theory, gravitational theory, and germ theory can be tested, evolutionary theory cannot. If we were unable to observe and test gravity, there would be reason to support disclaimers for that as well. When a new species has been observed to have evolved, you can remove the stickers (we're discussing only macro-evolution).
      If that weren't enough, a look at the groups behind the disclaimers should remove all doubt of motive.
      Oh, and an ad hominem argument is very nice as well. "Examine what is said, not who speaks."
    13. Re:Creationist? by shark72 · · Score: 1

      " I've heard many evolutionists declare evolution as only theory and not fact as well..."

      You have made the mistake -- as have many, many people -- of misunderstanding the definition of "theory" as it is used in the phrase "theory of evolution."

      These are the definitios of theory (from dictionary.com) that you're probably thinking of:

      An assumption based on limited information or knowledge; a conjecture.

      Abstract reasoning; speculation

      When in fact, this is the definition of theory that is used in the phrase "theory of evolution" :

      "A set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena."

      No worries. Wander into any /. discussion about P2P and you'll find that many Slashdotters are similarly confused about the multiple definitions of the word "piracy."

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    14. Re: Creationist? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > I'm not defending either side here...but how exactly does one call this a "creationist textbook sticker?"

      Maybe because it was put there for the sole purpose of pleasing creationists?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    15. Re:Creationist? by grammar+fascist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If that weren't enough, a look at the groups behind the disclaimers should remove all doubt of motive.

      The problem is that both sides of this debate muddy the waters.

      First, it seems that most biology textbooks never claim that their conjectures on the origin of life (not origin of species, which evolution claims) are only conjectures. They also never talk about how, as theories go, evolution (as the origin of species) is pretty weak. It does a decent job at explaining things, but has anyone seen it make a real prediction? Hmm... And some, in their haste to tell "their side," never mention unresolved issues with evolution, such as fossil record biases and the homochirality of certain molecules...

      Then, the other side won't entertain any idea that doesn't jive with their interpretation of the Bible. And when they discover an unresolved issue with evolution, they attack it with glee. They escalate the problem up to lawyers and politicians, who generally couldn't tell a proof from a theory from a fact from a conjecture...and you get crap attempts at compromise like the sticker in the front of the book.

      Personally, I'd just like to see more intellectual honesty in the textbooks - but too many scientists unfortunately have an agenda as much as the religionists do.

      --
      I got my Linux laptop at System76.
    16. Re:Creationist? by TheOldFart · · Score: 1


      why not stickers on every single book?

      quantum theory is a theory...
      string theory is a theory...
      general relativity is a theory...

      This is "Cobb County, Georgia". Quant'hm what?
    17. Re:Creationist? by Yunzil · · Score: 2, Informative

      while atomic theory, gravitational theory, and germ theory can be tested, evolutionary theory cannot.

      Yes, it can, and has. If we found human remains in Precambrian strata, or if human DNA wasn't similar to the DNA of the other great apes, or if a cat ever gave birth to a dog, then evolution would be in trouble.

      So far, it's passed all the tests.

      When a new species has been observed to have evolved, you can remove the stickers (we're discussing only macro-evolution).

      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.htm l
      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/speciation.html

    18. Re:Creationist? by kherrick · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Here is a dictionary defition of "theory", http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=theory Look at definitions 1-6 and you may possibly apply those to gravity, atoms and germs... but 7 is best used for evolution. Evolution is a laughing stock and the only reason people defend it so much is their tradition. They were raised that way.

    19. Re:Creationist? by PureCreditor · · Score: 1

      Facts are the ones that can be mathematically or scientifically proven. When no one can prove or disprove an idea, but it is the most logical conclusion given observed data, then it's a "theory." Evolution IS a theory. Newtons laws are facts because those are hard proven. Creationism is the least proven item.

      It is a cycle. You need to have "faith" to believe the Bible, then you will believe in Creationism. But how can you have a faith in a system to start with where the system doesn't prove?

      Christian : Creationism is true
      Atheist : Prove that
      Christian : Because the Bible says it
      Atheist : Can you prove the Bible is true
      Christian : It must be because God said it
      Atheist : Prove God exists
      Christian : I have faith in God, therefore I don't need to prove it to you

    20. Re:Creationist? by krenner · · Score: 2, Interesting
      How religious is your evolution? While I have Creationist leanings, I realize that religious theories probably do not belong in public schools. But Evolution is just as religious as creationism but in an athiestic sense. Consider my foolish thoughts below:
      • The chance of a beneficial genetic mutation is close to zero. It's much less likely than a tossed deck of cards landing neatly stacked in an order that conveys meaning. (if you didn't like that one, then go with the classic "monkeys with typewriters" comparison)
      • Evolutionists keep expanding the time frame of events to explain away the infinitesimal chance of beneficial mutations occuring.
      • They dig up fossils of several creatures and decide that there was some sort of evolutionary relationship between them. Why can't there just have existed distinct creatures that may or may not have similar traits, but no ancestorial relationships?
      • Evolutionists have an agenda. They want to explain the world in a way that is acceptable to their athiest views. I know that creationists also have an agenda, but my point is that evolutionists are not unbiased observers.
      I guess my point is that evolution is as religious as creationism is. What little observable science there is can't prove or disprove either theory. Maybe a thousand years from now, scientists will observe how much we have "evolved" between now and then, and have some scientific data to back up those observations. But a thousand years is a drop in the ocean to evolution, so it probably wont prove much of anything.
    21. Re:Creationist? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      They also never talk about how, as theories go, evolution (as the origin of species) is pretty weak.

      Only to those who don't understand it and who have not studied it.

      It does a decent job at explaining things, but has anyone seen it make a real prediction?

      No rabbit fossils will ever be found in precambrian strata.

      If a transposon is found in both whales and cows, it will also be found in hippos.

      Both are predictions of evolution theory. Should a contradictory observation be made for either one, it would cause great problems for the theory.

      Then, the other side won't entertain any idea that doesn't jive with their interpretation of the Bible.

      The problem is that they have defined anything that contradicts what they think happened as "a lie", even if it happens to be observed reality that they are denying. Moreover, a frightening number of them actually think that there is a real conspiracy of biologists to destroy Christianity; that evolution is some deliberate attempt to undermine Christian teachings. This kind of paranoia isn't easily countered -- they're just too irrational to reason.

      And when they discover an unresolved issue with evolution, they attack it with glee.

      You mean "perceived unresolved issue with evolution". There are a number of creationists who still think that the second law of thermodynamics says that evolution is impossible.

      They escalate the problem up to lawyers and politicians, who generally couldn't tell a proof from a theory from a fact from a conjecture...and you get crap attempts at compromise like the sticker in the front of the book.

      Funny you should mention lawyers. One of the "greats" in the creationist movement is a man who wrote a book called Darwin on Trial where he uses his expert knowledge to point out the flaws in Darwin's theory. This man's field of expertise that clearly renders him qualified to speak on matters fundamental to biology? He's a trial lawyer!

      It's hard to discuss science when the opposing side clearly has no interest in science whatsoever.

      And some, in their haste to tell "their side," never mention unresolved issues with evolution, such as fossil record biases and the homochirality of certain molecules...

      Perhaps you could explain this?

    22. Re:Creationist? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Actually, within the context of science, a "theory" must meet specific criteria. While you are clearly fundamentally ignorant on evolution, it is a fact that the theory of evolution meets the requirements to be called a "theory" within the context of science.

      Evolution is a laughing stock

      Yes, I know that many creationists like to "laugh" at evolution because of various "problems" that are actually a result of a fundamental lack of understanding of the theory, but please understand that the entire field of biology is not laughing with you, they are laughing at you.

    23. Re:Creationist? by Unordained · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ... and then I read stories from space.com (through my handy-dandy slashdot sidebar) and every single article quotes some scientist or other (and sometimes several) making a point of saying that whatever was just said is only a "lead" or "partial evidence" or "theory" ...

      People just need to be more honest in general, really. The problem is that science is, by definition, only about theories -- that's just how it works. If we want to be "fair", then every textbook that tries to tackle the history of anything will have to include every single point of view, including swords being dipped into pre-existing seas to form islands. And there's no truly objective way for us to pick just a few and drop the rest of these "theories".

      The distinctive factor in science is self-testing. If you find out your theory doesn't fit the facts, then it doesn't fit the facts and you need to start over or adjust. You may come out with some really nasty functions by the end, but so long as they fit the facts (past/present/future,) they're as good as any other theory. We just prefer simpler ones, by custom. Science is about making models that fit the facts, and revising those models when they're obviously wrong (which does depend on observation, which admittedly is a gray area.) Religion doesn't change to match available data points; it simply declares them wrong/invalid/misinterpreted until you can't prove religion wrong.

      My brother, my girlfriend, and I went to a baptist church meeting in oklahoma one weekday night to hear a talk to the local congregation about evolution. We'd gotten the flyer, figured it could be fun -- and we were pretty much unemployed with nothing better to do than get free entertainment. The guy was attempting to prove the science was always false because it sometimes changed its mind to fit the facts -- because it couldn't guarantee it was true from the get-go, it was forever wrong. Somehow, that didn't keep him from using pseudo-scientific evidence to prove his other points (about how the T-Rex could never have existed because he would have tripped and killed himself the moment he tried to walk) and asked the congregation to give him money so he could rescue dinosaur skeletons from museums to add to his collection (end purpose unknown.)

      Why do we pick current scientific sources only for schools? Because it's the only self-correcting source of theories available. We can even present multiple scientific theories simultaneously in the classroom -- the point isn't that they're different and therefore cover all "beliefs" without offending anyone, but that they're more-or-less equally-valid (though rarely perfect) interpretations of available facts presented within the context of peer review. It's a given that they're all theories -- and that's precisely why they're in textbooks for schools, and religious beliefs aren't. It's a lot like the arguments for open-source: it's not that it's perfect or absolutely true, it's that it's in a context that lets it evolve toward perfection rather than dogmatic dictatorship. Change and uncertainty are good things; we need to be honest about it, yes, absolutely, but we need to recognize a good thing when we see it too.

    24. Re:Creationist? by Lulu+of+the+Lotus-Ea · · Score: 1

      Of course, in REAL LIFE, no evolutionist--nor any biologist in general--has ever called evolution "only theory and not fact." At least not for well over a hundred and fifty years.

      These idiot fundamentalist christian anti-science types sometimes try to play on those areas within evolutionary theory that are still open to try to create the illusion that the fact of evolution itself is less than certain. For example, reasonable opinions differ on the importance of genetic drift, regulatory genes, genomic acquisition via viral insertions, group-level selective mechanisms, and various other things.

      Yeah, some issues are open within evolution. And some issues are open within quantum physics. And some issues are open within crystal dynamics. And what not. The basic principles of scientific fields--at the level laypeople understand them--aren't in question.

    25. Re:Creationist? by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

      Over the years I have actually argued with Creationists who insist that Quantum Mechanics and Relativity (SR & GR) are false. As usual with those morons (sorry but it is true) they never ever acknowledge any evidence or shift their positions on an issue when the evidence against them is immense and will trot out the same incorrect stuff even after it has been shown to be false. You see it is a matter of faith not reason, so arguing with them does no good. Don't feed the trolls.

      --
      Bitter and proud of it.
    26. Re:Creationist? by EEBaum · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Philosophically, we don't know anything is truly fact unless we're the ones who set the original rules. (a la 1+1=2 in our symbolic numbering system)

      While it has no scientific basis and is incredibly, extremely, stupidly unlikely, it is possible that what we describe as general relativity is actually caused by tiny mystical invisible wooden garden gnomes who wind magical clocks 1/10^50 times smaller than a proton.

      General relativity is, however, supported by a breadth of scientific research that confirms trends and common occurrences, and is therefore accepted. However, it cannot be philosophically declared as truly fact.

      If tomorrow the speed of light slowed to 5 m/s, and gravity stopped working on compact discs, we would have to reevaluate our best held theories to account for the possibility that general relatively simply happened to fit very well until now. A forthcoming emmissary from the mystical garden gnomes may lend support to an alternate theory.

      You may say "But the speed of light won't slow down tomorrow, and compact discs won't stop paying attention to gravity, silly fool!" I would likely agree with you. However, I ask, "How do we know for sure?" Technically, we're working entirely on observations.

      My extremely roundabout and probably poorly-worded point is this: We are working entirely on observations in an open system. Science allows us to come up with theories that are "as good as" fact, and may in fact hold true for 100% of our experiments. Those explanations that work consistently are kept, and the inconsistent ones are tossed.

      Consider the extremely remote possibility that the world was actually created in 1823 by hyperintelligent shades of the color blue. Consider that history books, dinosaur bones, Prague, and John Quincy Adams are all originated from phenomenally good simulations. Stupidly improbable, and I agree it's an idiotic theory, but hey, you weren't there to know!

      The real issue, in my opinion, is an obsession with language. The word "fact," meaning that it is and always will be completely and utterly THE WAY THINGS ARE, is bandied about very freely, when philosophically it almost never applies. "We're 99.99999999999999999999999% confident that it's a fact" would be more appropriate, but I suppose it's considerably more cumbersome to write.

      --
      -- I prefer the term "karma escort."
    27. Re:Creationist? by KontinMonet · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The chance of a beneficial genetic mutation is close to zero
      Wrong: Evidence

      Evolutionists keep expanding the time frame of events
      Evidence?

      They dig up fossils of several creatures and decide that there was some sort of evolutionary relationship between them. Why can't there just have existed distinct creatures that may or may not have similar traits, but no ancestorial relationships?
      They assume neither and both. The evidence (age, traits etc.etc.) determines one or the other based on previous evidence/conclusions.

      Evolutionists have an agenda
      Based on testable theories. Creationists have no testable theories.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    28. Re:Creationist? by maligor · · Score: 1

      Following the comparison of the atom. If you were an atom and saw a fellow atom floating around, could you imagine he was a part of a consistent whole called a rock?

      Ofcourse I think theory of evolution is quite probable and extrapolating bacterial evolution (if this is the micro evolution you mention) is a good guess, but all creatures are made from millions of specialized cells. If there was no other evidence like apparent bones of earlier stages of evolution, I'm not sure I'd put that much weight on it.

    29. Re: Creationist? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > It is a "creationist textbook sticker" because Intelligent Design is just a secular telling of creationism.

      For a compelling demonstration that ID really isn't about what it pretends to be about, try to see the ABC clip where a reporter tries to get one of the Dover board members to explain what ID is. She doesn't have the faintest fucking clue - can't even answer his question in complete sentences - and yet she voted to require exposure to ID as an alternative to evolution in the school's biology classes.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    30. Re:Creationist? by flynns · · Score: 1

      what we describe as general relativity is actually caused by tiny mystical invisible wooden garden gnomes who wind magical clocks 1/10^50 times smaller than a proton.

      1/10^50 times smaller? soo...we're talking, like..10^50 times BIGGER...

      ...anyone else seeing the Garden Gnomes from Hell?

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
    31. Re:Creationist? by caudron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      it has a huge flaw with "first cause" since everything must come from something more intelligent so supposedly "The Creator" was created from a more intelligent "Creator" and so forth.

      Well, don't take this as disagreement, becuase I agree with you that, while still a theory, evolution is the best one we have to explain the facts in hand and it shouldn't be singled out as particularly suspect, but... ...The Intelllgent Design people aren't that easy to dismiss. The idea behind intelligent design (heck, behind many claims of God entirely!) is not that there is an infinite track of more intelligent causes to the effects we see in the world around us, but rather they take the basic scientificly accepted principle that effects have causes and follow that logic to it's end. To wit:

      1) Effects have causes
      2) No effect can cause itself
      3) Every effect, therefore is caused by something other than itself
      4) A causal chain cannot stretch back infinitely in time
      5) There must, therefore be a First Cause that, itself, had no preceding cause
      6) God uniquely answers the cosmological question by being the Uncaused First Cause
      7) God, therefore, exists and created all that is.

      That logic is valid, so long as we accept two things. First, that they are naming the first cause "God", and second that the underlying assumption is that there is not a causal chain that stretches back infinitely in time.

      We cannot deny them their first choice (to call the first cause "God") because it isn't like we have a better name for it. And if we deny them their second assumption, then we are still left with a substantial question:

      Why is there something instead of nothing?

      If the universe can be said to stretch back infinitely in time, then we should ask why the universe need exist at all. There is still a substantial "Why?" left to explain.

      If we follow that train of logic, then God's role is not as initiator of the universe, but as sustainer and creator in a sense that we simply cannot understand. We assume a creation time when we speak of creation, but if the universe stretches back infinitely and God created it, then there is no "When?" question we can ask, but we are left with a timeless, spiritual act of creation that is incomprehensible to me...not incredulous, just incomprehensible.

      In short, the Intelligent Design people have not set themselves up to fall quite so easily. While misguided, their argument is not so ridiculous as the media would like it to be...unlike strict Creationists, whose claims are patently ridiculous and disprovable with the scant evidence we already have in hand.

      Disclaimer: I am one of those Christians (i.e., most of us) who thinks that evolution seems like a solid theory and doesn't see how it shakes our religious foundation to allow science to do it's job.

      --
      -Tom
    32. Re:Creationist? by sg3000 · · Score: 1

      > 10^50 times BIGGER...
      > ...anyone else seeing the Garden Gnomes from Hell?

      Oh my God! This enormous Garden Gnome will devour us all! Ahhhh!

      *jumps into water*

      --
      Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    33. Re:Creationist? by minkwe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I wish I had mod points to give the parent.

      Additionally, I'm a scientist and a Christian as well and the fact that this debate (evolution vs creationism) is even going on in the first place is only evidence of the level of naivity out there.

      Evolution and creationism are not mutually exclusive concepts. Creationist who claim otherwise are indirectly claiming that they know exactly what steps God took to form Man from 'dust' which is overly presumptuous since the bible does not go into details. Evolutionist who claim otherwise are equally naive because evolution presupposes that you have a certain environment is available with the right conditions and selective pressure for evolution to take place. However, this environment can not be formed by evolution itself. For example no evolutionist has ever dared to answer how the atom was formed.

      The way I see it, it is possible for God to have created the world both living and non-living in a way that will manifest to us as evolution, without.

      BTW, I wonder why those evolutionist who believe the book of Genesis is literal don't claim that Jesus Christ was a vine, or bread or rock. Maybe literature should be compulsory education.

      --
      "Fighting terrorists with millitary might is like killing a mosquitor on your Dad's forehead with a rifle."
    34. Re:Creationist? by bamberg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There are, of course, numerous flaws with the ID argument.

      1) Effects have causes

      Error: They are assuming that life is an "effect", in other words assuming their conclusion, that it has a cause.

      2) No effect can cause itself

      Error: This is a definitional question. If "effect" is defined as "something that is caused by something else" then this is trivially true, but unimportant. Also, the IDers contradict this point later.

      3) Every effect, therefore is caused by something other than itself

      If 2 were true, this would be true. However....

      4) A causal chain cannot stretch back infinitely in time

      Error: This is nothing more than an assumption (as you pointed out in your message).

      5) There must, therefore be a First Cause that, itself, had no preceding cause

      Error: This contradicts point 2.

      6) God uniquely answers the cosmological question by being the Uncaused First Cause

      Error: Only for a sufficiently broad (i.e. defective) definition of "God". I don't know many religionists who would claim their god has no consciousness, intelligence or will. But there's nothing saying that a "first cause" has to be conscious, intelligent or willful.

      7) God, therefore, exists and created all that is.

      This is stated as the final conclusion but the real final conclusion that the overwhelming majority of IDers hold is that this "God" is the christian god and the universe was created as described in the bible. The IDers just gloss over that bit even though they have no way at all to make that connection.

      In short, the Intelligent Design people have not set themselves up to fall quite so easily. While misguided, their argument is not so ridiculous as the media would like it to be...unlike strict Creationists, whose claims are patently ridiculous and disprovable with the scant evidence we already have in hand.

      I would say that they still fall pretty easily. But the main reason that ID isn't taught in science classes is that it isn't science. There's no disprovable theory being made here. No observations are made, no experiments run. It's just fantasy. And in the U.S. it's just creationism by another name.

      Disclaimer: I am one of those Christians (i.e., most of us) who thinks that evolution seems like a solid theory and doesn't see how it shakes our religious foundation to allow science to do it's job.

      This is not an unreasonable position for a christian to take since the Theory of Evolution doesn't say that the process couldn't have been kicked off by some entity. The Theory contradicts a literal interpretation of the bible but there are so many problems with a literal interpetation of the bible that Evolution is the least of an inerrantist's worries.

    35. Re:Creationist? by nnnneedles · · Score: 1

      What religious freaks seem to misunderstand is that EVERYTHING in science is a theory.

      always. There is nothing else.

      So saying "it's only a theory" does not make much sense.

      There is however plenty of proof for evolution, just as there is plenty of proof for the earth being round.

      --
      Will code a sig generator for food
    36. Re:Creationist? by kherrick · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      It is nearly beyond my comprehension that someone who trusts in evolution, can then say that the "entire" field of biology is in agreement with this "theory." Especially macroevolution. To say that we, as human beings, were not created as such... that we evolved from some lower life form is ridiculous.

      BTW, I admit my spelling error with "laughing stock" as it is one word.

      http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=2&q=laugh ingstock

    37. Re:Creationist? by caudron · · Score: 1

      They are assuming that life is an "effect", in other words assuming their conclusion, that it has a cause.

      Well, actually, science has long since assumed this, because in science the cause/effect principle is core and ubiquitous to all things. Life came about as an effect from some cause. The ID people, however misguided in their intent, have only built on top of science in this respect.

      But there's nothing saying that a "first cause" has to be conscious, intelligent or willful.

      And nothing saying it isn't either. The ID people argue that it is, with no proof of the fact, while atheists argue the opposite with equally little evidence.

      The Theory contradicts a literal interpretation of the bible but there are so many problems with a literal interpetation of the bible that Evolution is the least of an inerrantist's worries.

      I totally agree.

      --
      -Tom
    38. Re:Creationist? by TGK · · Score: 1

      Try this... you can order the supplies from your favorite biological supply company.

      1 - Culture e.coli in, say, 1000 petri dishes.
      2 - Divide the dishes into two groups, test and control
      3 - Introduce low levels of antibiotic into the test group of petri dishes, call it five test groups of increasing dosage.
      4 - After each antibiotic introduction, allow the bacteria colony to grow back to full size before dosing again. Repeat 10 times.
      5 - After all doses have been administered, dose all 1000 dishes with antibiotics, use the dose size used in the highest dosed colony.

      Hypothesis: The antibiotics will kill bacteria in all groups equally because evolution does not occur.

      Outcome 1: Fail to reject hypothesis -- All groups suffered the same death rate when exposed to antibiotics. We thus fail to reject the hypothesis that evolution does not occur.

      Outcome 2: Reject hypothesis -- Groups suffered different death rates with the highest death rates occurring in the control group. Groups with higher previous doses of antibiotics faired best, while lower doses faired worse.

      Having preformed this experiment myself, I can tell you that you will witness evolution in progress. In the literally thousands of generations of bacteria since you started the test, a new strain has emerged which is resistant to the antibiotics you are testing with. This is distinct from the strain you started with [the control group].

      That said, I'm all for teaching creationism in public schools. It doesn't belong in Science class, because it fundamentally isn't Science. Give me an experiment to prove or disprove creationism and then you'll be a lot closer to the subject area. Until that time, creationism belongs in Social Studies, along with all the other creation myths.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    39. Re:Creationist? by daVinci1980 · · Score: 1

      Evolution and creationism are not mutually exclusive concepts.

      To your average Christian who reads the bible and interprets it as an allegory you are correct. However, there are sects of Christians (in particular Southern Baptists), who read the bible and state that the bible should be interpreted literally.

      For them, there cannot be an evolution because it challenges their beliefs directly. To accept evolution would mean that there was a flaw in the bible, but to accept a flaw in the bible (to them) would mean that the entire book was invalid.

      Of course evolution is a theory. Anyone who has studied it knows it's a theory. But theory doesn't mean to scientists what it means to the lay person; a theory isn't a casual thought about how something might work. A theory is something that has been rigorously examined, studied, poked prodded, and still stands as 'the best explanation that we have.' But unlike religion, theory can be altered and adjusted for new evidence. Whereas (strict) religion chokes when presented with evidence that conflicts with the bible, theory thrives on it. We tweak the incorrect bits and represent the full picture.

      And yes, there are theories that cannot be tested in a laboratory. This does not necessarily make them less valid. Everything we study in astronomy is also based on theory. We observe events, try to make our best guess about how they work, and we test it against other parts of the universe. Lather, rinse, repeat.

      And yes, sometimes the evidence presented in a high school text book doesn't seem to make them out to be that credible. But why is that surprising? It's a high school text book. It's not supposed to be authoritative. How many peer-reviewed journals did you have to read for high school biology? How many things did you learn in college that demonstrated that what you were taught in high school was a dramatic over-simplification of the truth?

      But the same is true for mathematics... If I believed that my high school algebra book contained the end-all be-all of mathematics, and refused to accept that math was capable of doing more wonderful things, and was capable of evolving, I certainly wouldn't be a graphics programmer today.

      --
      I currently have no clever signature witicism to add here.
    40. Re:Creationist? by bamberg · · Score: 1

      >But there's nothing saying that a "first cause" has to be conscious, intelligent or willful.

      And nothing saying it isn't either. The ID people argue that it is, with no proof of the fact,


      And that's the problem. The IDers are claiming as fact that only an intelligent designer could have created life. It's in the actual name of their movement. The unproven nature of this premise invalidates their claims.

      while atheists argue the opposite with equally little evidence.

      Atheism is merely the lack of belief in any god. Very few atheists would argue that life couldn't have been created by an intelligent designer, only that there is no evidence that this is the case and that in the lack of any evidence it doesn't make sense to believe.

      The Theory of Evolution makes no claim whatsoever about how life started. It only describes the ways in which life has changed over millions of years.

    41. Re:Creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are still arguing that Darwin was wrong. Of course he was "wrong" so was Newton. The Creationists never notice that the current theory of evolution is different from Darwin's (sexual selection for example).

    42. Re:Creationist? by M$Lackey · · Score: 1

      Firstly: I actually find it easiest to think of the Universe (in the true sense of the word) as something that have existed for infinity.

      Secondly: Maybe the dimension time as such is too simplistic a dimension to be applying when measuring the development of the universe. After all: Time really only makes sense for slow moving objects in proximity to eachother.

    43. Re:Creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Because at least some points of evolution can be proven

      Close. Scientific theories are never proven. Even in part. A theory can be "tested". A religion can not. At least no in the same sence. I think bible belt religion is facing a very serious test right now. Is the deep south ready to leave the middle ages?

    44. Re:Creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a "creationist textbook sticker" because Intelligent Design is just a secular telling of creationism. It supposes an intelligent creator which we have no scientific evidence for except circularly ourselves and our surroundings which is at best specious. Secondly, it has a huge flaw with "first cause" since everything must come from something more intelligent so supposedly "The Creator" was created from a more intelligent "Creator" and so forth. Third, it is wrong, because it is easy for us to concieve of cases where we muddle with our DNA to create more intelligent human beings (which I believe to be just a matter of time). This goes directly against the notion of intelligent design where beings can only create things less intelligent.

      Mod parent down. The stickers had nothing to do with Intelligent Design. He's just rambling for karma and presenting a straw man argument. Here's the text of the sticker, from TFA:

      "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

    45. Re:Creationist? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      But they're not contrary world views. Creationism is a contrary world view to evolution, and they are often pitted against each other. Quite often, schools don't dedicate -any- time to creationism, while essentially call evolution fact by not refering to it as a theory at all.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    46. Re:Creationist? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      It is nearly beyond my comprehension that someone who trusts in evolution,

      Well, I can understand that you're having comprehension problems, given that you think that it's a matter of "trust" rather than an acceptance of the overwhelming mountains of evidence.

      can then say that the "entire" field of biology is in agreement with this "theory."

      Like I said, it's your comprehension problem. However, to be fair, I will admit that there is a small 1% of biologists who have expressed doubts with the theory. Typically, however, their claims demonstrate their own lack of expertise when examined, rather than actual flaws with evolution.

      Especially macroevolution.

      What's wrong with "macroevolution"? What stops "microevolution" from accumulating into "macroevolution"?

      To say that we, as human beings, were not created as such... that we evolved from some lower life form is ridiculous.

      Argument from incredulity. Logical fallacy. You could at least try to justify your claim rather than just wave your hands about and admit that you just don't want to accept reality.

    47. Re:Creationist? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Creationism is a contrary world view to evolution, and they are often pitted against each other. Quite often, schools don't dedicate -any- time to creationism,

      Why should schools be dedicating time to teaching religious myth in a science classroom? "Creationism" is not science. Creationism is a religious assertion, nothing more. It has no scientific validity whatsoever. "Creationism" differs depending on the religious person telling the story, and it has no foundation in real evidence whatsoever.

      while essentially call evolution fact by not refering to it as a theory at all.

      When I learned it, I was taught that it was 'theory', as sound and valid as any other 'theory' in science. Then again, I was also instructed as to what, exactly, makes an explanation a 'theory'. I guess that I had a rather skilled biology teacher.

    48. Re:Creationist? by krenner · · Score: 1

      My point was that the evolutionist agenda is based on the belief in no god , and so is just a religious as the creationist point of view.

      The chance of a beneficial genetic mutation is close to zero
      Wrong: Evidence

      Some people have better genes than others in various ways. Your 'evidence' call this varation a mutation, which it was not. It's just variance within the human species. Mutation involves change outside the scope of what the ancestors had in the past. Couldn't there have been an ancestor with the beneficial traits discussed in the paper?



      Evolutionists keep expanding the time frame of events
      Evidence?

      Well, you got me there. I didn't have evidence. I did a quick Google and the first result reads:

      It ultimately proves that the origin of all complex life goes back much further than previously imagined. (abc.net.au)


      They dig up fossils of several creatures and decide that there was some sort of evolutionary relationship between them. Why can't there just have existed distinct creatures that may or may not have similar traits, but no ancestorial relationships?
      They assume neither and both. The evidence (age, traits etc.etc.) determines one or the other based on previous evidence/conclusions.

      I think they have a mountain of previous evidence that is based on prior assumptions of previous evidence concluded from assumptions that .. well, you know where I'm going with this.



      Evolutionists have an agenda Based on testable theories. Creationists have no testable theories.

      How can they be testable theories? How do you test these theories without going back in time? Evidence?

    49. Re:Creationist? by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

      They also never talk about how, as theories go, evolution (as the origin of species) is pretty weak

      Its certainly the strongest theory we have. Do you not concur?

    50. Re:Creationist? by juan2074 · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a theory. It also might be a fact.

    51. Re:Creationist? by CODiNE · · Score: 1

      You got it... the infinity of time that exists before us. No matter what you believe there's still that unanswerable question of how anything at all exists.

      I had a Mormon missionary once tell me that belief in a single God doesn't make sense... after all, who made him? He felt their pyramid-scheme of gods answered that. The obvious answer is as I told him... okay, so this god made that god, and he was made by another, etc... you have the SAME PROBLEM.

      People like to forget that prior to Hubble showing that the universe is expanding and must have had a beginning, the general scientific consensus was that the universe had always existed. Accepting that it had a beginning was uncomfortable for many since it implied perhaps there was something to Gen. 1:1 after all.

      String theory, inflationary universe model, God... no matter what you believe there's a huge question that frankly seems outside the grasp of human comprehension. This sort of thinking is what leads many to believe there must be a God... even if they don't believe in any religious books or even consider him a real person. It gets kind of abstract when you remove the personality, you end up believing more or less what Einstein did.

      Simply put, evolution in no way causes belief in a higher power to become irrational. It's simply a very small part of the big picture.

      -Don.

      --
      Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
    52. Re:Creationist? by kherrick · · Score: 0

      Rather than argue what seems to be a, "it is true because I say it is so argument," I will post to an article I read in a magazine recently that I liked. http://www.epm.org/articles/evolution.html

    53. Re:Creationist? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      #1 relies on the debunked "irreducible complexity" argument. Supposedly "irreducible" functions in organisms already have a rather detailed explanation. Some information on the claims of irreducible complexity.

      #2 makes a claim without substantiating it. Information in DNA is not like information in spoken languages, despite the dishonest creationists who continue to make this comparison. Essentially, you've gone from not wanting to make an argument by "because I said so" by instead deferring to someone else who does exactly the same thing.

      #3 is just outright false. The person writing the article is either woefully misinformed or an outright liar.

      #4 is an appeal to the debunked "law of thermodynamics" argument. Only complete and total morons appeal to this attempt to assert that evolution violates the principle that entropy always increases in closed systems. It doesn't help their argument that earth is not a closed system.

      The "2nd law of thermo" argument is one that Answers in Genesis even says that creationists should NOT use. The author of the piece really demonstrates his fundamental lack of education on the matter.

      #5 is a subjective claim. There is a plethora of transitional fossils and living forms, but creationists always seem to want N+1 no matter how many N specimens are found. Here's just a small sample of evidence of transitional forms.

      #6 is a common claim from creationists who don't bother to actually understand the evidence. It's funny how many creationists assert that one fossil is "A man, just a man!" while other creationists claim that the same fossil is "an ape, just an ape!".

      #7 is outright false. There are multiple dating methods, and no single method is ever used at one time. Findings are always cross-checked with multiple dating methods in order to rule out a possible discrepency with one of the methods involved. Yes, there are conditions that can skew dating methods, but those conditions are often known and worked around in advance, and for the unknowns, there is cross-referencing to detect such discrepencies. Creationists frequently nitpick dating methods without knowing a single thing about how the dating methods are used.

      A bit of information on Isochron dating.

      #8 is a fundamental lack of understanding of the meaning of "vestigal". Vestigal organs are not necessarily completely unused, it simply means that they do not serve the same function as they did in the past.

      #9 is an outright lie. The theory of evolution says absolutely nothing whatsoever about how life ultimately came to exist. Once again, the author demonstrates that when he can't attack evolution with facts (or rather, with his total lack of understanding of facts), he's willing to use lies to support his claims.

      It is a common creationist tactic to attack "spontaneous generation", and they also misrepresent the work of Louis Pasteur -- who simply demonstrated that fully grown flies do not emerge spontaneously from rotting meat, NOT that life cannot emerge from non-life under any circumstances whatsoever -- as an attack on evolution. This is because creationists don't actually bother studying evolution before they consider themselves educated enough to attack it. It would be like someone attacking the "absurdities" of Christianity without reading a single page of the Bible.

      #10 is an assertion that we can never draw conclusions about past events based on evidence. By this reasoning, we can never claim to know anything about history, and our criminal justice system will fall apart, because there's no way to "prove" that a murder ever occured, much less that an accused committed it.

    54. Re:Creationist? by caudron · · Score: 1

      Atheism is merely the lack of belief in any god. Very few atheists would argue that life couldn't have been created by an intelligent designer, only that there is no evidence that this is the case and that in the lack of any evidence it doesn't make sense to believe.

      Scientifically speaking, the evidence equally supports two opposing hypotheses[*]:

      1) The Primary Cause (which religious folk call "God") is intelligent and the universe is the result of explicit intent.

      2) The Primary Cause (which religious folk call "God") is non-intelligent and the universe is not the result of explicit intent.

      Religious people make a leap of faith toward the first hypothesis. Atheists make a leap of faith toward the second hypothesis. Agnostics choose not to make a leap of faith in either direction on that issue.

      That small caveat made, I don't think we disagree enough on this point to debate it. Basically, I agree with your premises.

      The Theory of Evolution makes no claim whatsoever about how life started. It only describes the ways in which life has changed over millions of years.

      Absolutely. Indeed, this hints at the distinction being lost in these religion/science debates:

      There is a why to the universe which transcends and does not conflict with the how that modern science is trying to resolve.

      [*] Of course, both hypotheses make as their underlying assumption the idea that the universe is not an unending causal chain. If the assumption is not granted, a leap of faith is stil required for religious people and atheists alike, albeit a slightly different leap than the ones presented above.

      --
      -Tom
    55. Re:Creationist? by bamberg · · Score: 1

      1) The Primary Cause (which religious folk call "God") is intelligent and the universe is the result of explicit intent.

      2) The Primary Cause (which religious folk call "God") is non-intelligent and the universe is not the result of explicit intent.

      Religious people make a leap of faith toward the first hypothesis. Atheists make a leap of faith toward the second hypothesis. Agnostics choose not to make a leap of faith in either direction on that issue.


      It's not so much that atheists make a leap of faith towards the second hypothesis as it is just a matter of not assuming the existence of intelligence without some sort of evidence. For me, at least, it's a matter of saying "I don't know how the universe began, or even that it did. Yet. So I'm not going to make any assumptions."

      Absolutely. Indeed, this hints at the distinction being lost in these religion/science debates:

      There is a why to the universe which transcends and does not conflict with the how that modern science is trying to resolve.


      Yes. Science is only a threat to religious inerrantists, not religion in general.

    56. Re:Creationist? by Ernesto+Alvarez · · Score: 1
      There's something really funny about that reasoning. Even considering points 1-6 as true, point 7 is false.

      By the way, whenever I'm speaking about god, it's always within the scope of this proof. I don't care about all that stuff, except if it somehow messes my life.


      1) Effects have causes
      2) No effect can cause itself
      3) Every effect, therefore is caused by something other than itself
      4) A causal chain cannot stretch back infinitely in time
      5) There must, therefore be a First Cause that, itself, had no preceding cause
      6) God uniquely answers the cosmological question by being the Uncaused First Cause
      7) God, therefore, exists and created all that is.


      Let's assume that there has to be a "first" effect ("god").

      Here it can only be inferred that god existed at that first moment. What if one of the effects created is its destruction (like a bootstrapping program that removes itself from memory when it has launched the next stage). There is nothing saying it cannot happen.

      Therefore, the only known fact (within this exercise) is that god existed at the "initial time".

      I cannot prove that god exists or not, but it is true that point 7 is false, since it claims that god exists (and there is a possibility that it doesn't).

      I cannot deny that it created all that is, but within this exercise no other known properties can be proven (except he is the cause of something at "initial time"). Nobody shoud be able to claim he's right about god (since nothing else is known about him, in this exercise of course).

      It was fun doing that. Imagine what would happen if someone prayed and received an ICMP host unreacheable as answer?

      By the way, if you are going to post saying that "I cannot know that god doesn't exist, therefore it exists" or something like that, don't bother. That's a fallacy.

    57. Re:Creationist? by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Correct, evolution is just a theory. So's relativity.. and you know how unreliable THAT one is. Heck, don't even get me started on electromagnetism.. damn theories, always fall apart so easily. Now a good solid belief on the other hand...

      (if this sounds like a flame, it's not. I realise parent isn't defending creationism, I'm just making a point, tongue firmly in cheek)

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    58. Re:Creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution is a laughing stock

      For some reason I'm reminded of Bill Hicks:
      "Ever notice how people who believe in creationism look really un-evolved?"

    59. Re:Creationist? by RichardX · · Score: 1

      At the risk of cutting myself on Occam's razor, the universe is, last I heard, infinite in all spacial dimensions... so why not temporal? The unending causal chain seems the most straightforward solution to me.

      Disclaimer: I have about as much authority and qualification in this field as the average potato.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    60. Re:Creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What religious freaks seem to misunderstand is that EVERYTHING in science is a theory.
      Ha! See? Finally you admit it! Your feeble science is but a cheap sham. Your puny logic and reason are no match for faith and belief! all hail TIMECUBE!

    61. Re:Creationist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about:

      "Automotive repair is just a theory...."

    62. Re:Creationist? by jcelko · · Score: 1

      The arguement of the first cause is an old fallacy. It begs the question: (4) A causal chain cannot stretch back infinitely in time. Why not? Would you like to think about a "time before time"? Time is the measurement of the movement of objects, so to have no time you would have to have no objects. Therefore, time and matter have existed together for enternity and we cannot have a first cause. Time is infinite, a continuum, in a closed loop with matter.

    63. Re:Creationist? by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      I'm not going to say you are wrong, but must point out that YOU are denying the almost-universally accepted paradigm of modern science that there was a "beginning" of time, The Big Bang. And you are not accepting Einstein's theory, which has worked so well and survived every experiment so far, that time is not a separate dimension, but is integrated with space, hence there is only spacetime. It could not exist before the "space" of the universe existed. To speak of time before time is to fail to grasp his theory. Nor is there anything to suggest that time or spacetime is a "loop", or eternity. Eternity, in fact, is exactly what relativity, and the Big Bang cosmology, have said does not exist. And neither is time a "continuum". The "fabric" of spacetime is replete with discontinuities, and the whole point of quantum mechanics (the other best proven, best utilized theory of all physical and cosmological sciences, is that spacetime is quantised, discrete quanta. It's more like grains of sand, or like a collection of bubbles or loops - that's what string and M theory are about, and why science is having such a tough time with understanding gravity.

      The very fact that everything in science (well, in physics and astronomy and cosmology) points to a Big Bang beginning begs the question of a "First Cause". The rather fantastic imaginations of "branes" and "multiverse", even of "wormholes", are the hopes and dreams of scientists stepping outside science and into metaphysics, and science fiction if you will, trying to come up with a "not-God", "not-Bible" or "not-Intelligent Designer" answer to the obvious need for a first cause. Of course, they merely postpone the inevitable: when one is finally done regressing into "branes" and the "bulk", and whatever lies beyond even them, you reach another boundary that begs still, a First Cause!

    64. Re:Creationist? by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      I cannot prove that god exists or not, but it is true that point 7 is false, since it claims that god exists (and there is a possibility that it doesn't). I cannot deny that it created all that is, but within this exercise no other known properties can be proven (except he is the cause of something at "initial time"). Nobody shoud be able to claim he's right about god (since nothing else is known about him, in this exercise of course).

      You know, you are absolutely right about this. What one believes about any "first cause", whether it be of spacetime, or the universe, or life, or whatever, is a choice of belief And to the degree one holds that belief, and acts upon that belief, is a matter and measure of one's faith. Faith in what one believes.

      Evolutionists, theists, atheists, Christians, Bhuddists, animists, and scientists who rest their enquirey at the throne of the Big Bang or string theory or Brane theory - all of us/them do that. They find the ultimate answer/belief/"theory of everything" that they are most satisfied with and stop, usually to shut down their minds in more or less "blind faith", or to work mainly to shore up and further support their decision. Some may switch, some may not, but all choose the belief they want.

      It is a fact we can never claim we know or are right about god, or God, or the Big Bang, or string theory or quantum theory, or any such thing. We only have our own personal convictions, and accumulate experience and things we consider evidence to shore up or argue for our own belief. Some are content with tradition, or peers, or the Bible, or Hubble photos. But you can be pretty confident, that most will be very resistent to hearing or seeing or admitting anything that contradicts their choice, once they've made it!

      Pretty obvious in threads like this, huh?

    65. Re:Creationist? by jcelko · · Score: 1

      >> the obvious need for a first cause. > Of course, they merely postpone the inevitable: when one is finally done regressing into "branes" and the "bulk", and whatever lies beyond even them, you reach another boundary that begs still, a First Cause!

      NO, it supports an infinity regression. Even Cantor's transfinite numbers become "an infinity of infinites" without an ultimate stopping point.

    66. Re:Creationist? by caudron · · Score: 1

      The unending causal chain seems the most straightforward solution to me.

      I don't realy have an opinion on that one way or the other. In this thread, I was talking specifically about the views of the Creationists and the IDers, both of which do have an opinion on this question (whether the causal chain has a beginning or is infinite).

      I gave a small nod to the other view in my initial comment, without going into the theological implications much. The replies so far in this thread suggest that the infinite causal chain is popular amongst slashdotters, though that doesn't mean much scientifically.

      Disclaimer: I am no physicist, so I won't touch the infinite causal chain question, but I am a theologian (well, my degree says I am, and I don't argue with it ) and I'll be happy to offer what insight I have as to the implications of either answer.

      --
      -Tom
  19. theory... by AmigaAvenger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ok, it's a theory, I think most of slashdot agrees on that one. now do we need warning stickers on every text book that contains a theory! science books would take on an entire new meaning. half the pages would contain the stickers for the remaining half of the book, containing the forbidden 'theories'

    1. Re:theory... by rickst13 · · Score: 1

      Amen to that!

      Can we get another "Amen"? Anyone?

    2. Re:theory... by Artraze · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wrong. In science books things are either theories or law s (or the occasional corollary, etc.) They need no stickers because they mention, in the text, what everything is. Evolution, however, is often presented as the truth; no theory, no uncertainty. So if it's "Theory of Relativity" it better be "Theory of Evolution". And if they just called it "Relativity" I would certainly hope that there'd be a sticker noting that it is, in fact, just a theory. (Note: laws are basically theories, but they describe _what_ happens, not _how_ it happens.)

    3. Re:theory... by QuantumG · · Score: 1
      Ummm no. Have you read Cryptonomicon? Neal Stevenson has a bit of a dig at the creationists when his character is faced with that "it's just a theory" crap at a cocktail party. I'm going from memory here, but as I remember it his argument was as such:

      In the sea around a certain part of Japan there are people who have fished the waters for over 400 years. During that time they have caught millions and millions of crabs, but they always throw back the ones that look like a samurai. At first they would only have to throw back one a month, but as the years went by the population of samurai crabs outstripped the population of other crabs and today almost every crab you catch in this part of Japan looks like a samurai. If this is what 400 years (mere instant compared to the age of the earth) of artificial selection can achieve, there is no doubt that natural selection over a period of billions of years is responsible for all the diversity of life that we see around us. Evolution is not just a thery, it's an observed fact.

      My apologies to Mr Stevenson if I'm misquoted him (which I most certainly have).

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    4. Re:theory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      But you have to realize the fact that evolution is not widely accepted. In fact, the only places where it's taught is the USA, Most of western europe, Canada, and a few asian countries (Japan, China, South Korea).

      However, relativity is widely accepted by the great amount of the population of the earth. Waaaaay above 99%.

      There's a difference between teaching gravity as a fact and evolution as a fact.

    5. Re:theory... by presidentbeef · · Score: 0

      but that isn't the point - it's that the book presented the theory as fact.

      --
      Everything I need to know about copyrights I learned from Slashdot.
    6. Re:theory... by starworks5 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      The Intelligent Design movement has opened my eyes. I realize that although I believe that evolution explains why the living world is the way it is, I can't actually prove it. At least not to the satisfaction of the ID folk, who seem to require that every example of extraordinary complexity and clever plumbing in nature be fully traced back (not just traceable back) along an evolutionary tree to prove that it wasn't directed by an invisible hand. If the scientific community won't do that, then the arguments goes that they must accept a large red "theory" stamp placed on the evolution textbooks and that alternative theories, such as "guided" evolution and creationism, be taught alongside.

      So, by this standard, virtually everything I believe in must now fall under the shadow of unproveability. Most importantly, this includes the belief that democracy, capitalism and other market-driven systems (including evolution!) are better than their alternatives. Indeed, I suppose I should now refer to them as the "theory of democracy" and the "theory of capitalism", to join the theory of evolution, and accept the teaching of living Marxism and fascism as alternatives in high schools.

      Written by :
      CHRIS W. ANDERSON
      Editor-In-Chief, Wired

      I think chris explains it elequently.Furthermore what i find is that people tend to believe that the world is too "perfect" for life to arrive any other way, or that unless you can completely know the answer to how life arrived here, that "invisible hand" must have had some part. But i purpose that not all questions can be answered, and that people use some rationality. but for course explaining the world around you with something that cannot be understood or explained itself by, isnt rational. ID is an escape hatch for those who cannot deny the obviousness of evolution but don't want to give up their need to belief in God and, ergo, an afterlife.

    7. Re:theory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The judge actually addressed this in his ruling. Briefly: there are multiple theories that form the foundation of science, but accentuating this fact in a directed fashion (against evolution) undermines it for sectarian gain.

    8. Re:theory... by Bradmont · · Score: 1

      Interesting to note that the version of evolution taught in pretty much every school is decades out of date and has been disproven. I think knowingly teaching children something that is false is worthy of some sort of warning...

    9. Re:theory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That doesn't show that evolution isn't a theory. It doesn't show that a single cell creature can evolve into something.

    10. Re:theory... by uberdave · · Score: 1

      There is no doubt about short term evolution, like the crab story. Things get quite a bit more hazy when the same theory is used to try to explain the existence of different species. That has not been observed.

    11. Re:theory... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      If you want proof that a single cell creature can evolve, we can do that experiment in a day. If you want proof that one species is descended from another we can look at DNA similarities. Of course, the alternative explaination (it's like that cause God made it that way) can explain anything, so there's really no point discussing the matter with someone who is willing to resort to that.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    12. Re:theory... by Peyna · · Score: 1

      If you have time, read the entire opinion (although you might skip over a lot of the facts, it can drag...)

      "Notwithstanding the foregoing, it appears that the Sticker 1s impacting science
      instruction on evolution Some students have pointed to the language an the Sticker
      to support arguments that evolution does not exist (McCoy Triad Test) In addition,
      Dr McCoy testified that the Board's misuse of the word "theory" in the Sticker
      causes "confusion" in his science class and consequently requires him to spend
      significantly more time trying to distinguish "fact" and "theory" for his students
      (Id ) Dr. McCoy stated that some of his students translate the Sticker to skate that
      evolution is "lust" a theory, which he believes has the effect of diminishing the
      status of evolution among all other theories (Id )"

      --
      What?
    13. Re:theory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are many theorys to explain evolutionary fact. Darwin's is the one with most of thje evidence.

    14. Re:theory... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      So Phenology is the study of what? Maybe back before we could sequence DNA and observe the difference between two different species at a genetic level you could make these kinds of arguments, but today there is no question.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    15. Re:theory... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Can you site an example of something that's a law but not a theory?

    16. Re:theory... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Yes, actually it has.

    17. Re:theory... by TiredGamer · · Score: 1

      That's just like Bones, going all out against the crazy-dazy world and get some common sense in there.

      --
      No penguins were harmed in the making of this post.
    18. Re:theory... by Paua+Fritter · · Score: 1
      But you have to realize the fact that evolution is not widely accepted. In fact, the only places where it's taught is the USA, Most of western europe, Canada, and a few asian countries (Japan, China, South Korea).

      bollocks!

    19. Re:theory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Phenology: the study of the timing of recurring biological phases, the causes of their timing with regard to biotic and abiotic forces, and the interrelation among phases of the same or different species.

      Nothing there about creating different species. Plenty of stuff about when the first robin of spring shows up in relation to when the crocus blooms though.

    20. Re:theory... by jcknox · · Score: 1

      No, it actually hasn't.

      So there.

    21. Re:theory... by ars · · Score: 0

      Yet another poster without a clue of what evolution really is.

      You didn't evolve the crabs. All you did is kill off the other kind, the samurai kind was already there.

      So many people here are confusing natural selection with evolution. No matter how much you scream, you'll never make the two the same thing.

      Once is proven and is testable, the other just an untestable theory.

      For the interested: evolution: change one species into another.

      Natural selection: from a preexisting species, make one more populous then the other.

      --
      -Ariel
    22. Re:theory... by Markov+Chaney · · Score: 1

      Yes of course we've proved the theory of relativity at 2.8 x 10^8 m/s, but it's never been shown to work at 2.81 x 10^8 m/s. Clearly it isn't a theory. Just a matter of scale. Just a matter of scale.

    23. Re:theory... by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      I think knowingly teaching children something that is false is worthy of some sort of warning...

      You mean, akin to the way we teach then Newtonian mechanics, then General Relativity, both of which we know to be wrong without putting warning stickers on books? Or how about basic economics? each progressive year of economics amounts to being told "All that stuff we told you last year... It isn't entirely true. Here's the real version..." No warnings on Economics textbooks either. It happens all the time, and we simply expect children (and teachers!) to be aware that what they're being taught is the older simpler theory so they can build toward the cutting edge.

      Jedidiah.

    24. Re:theory... by anethema · · Score: 1

      All laws are theories. They are just theories that have worked consistently for a long time without any flaws.

      --


      It's easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them.
    25. Re:theory... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      Evolution isn't a theory - it's merely stating the obvious that if traits are hereditory then competition to survive, prosper & procreate will leave the next generation better able to compete. It has to be so - simple logic.

      I guess you could say that back when Darwin proposed this it WAS a theory since he was merely hypothesing that traits are hereditory, but since the discovery of DNA we know this to be a fact, and calling it a theory is simply wrong.

      Nowadays we can even simulate evolution via genetic algorithms where we can see that random changes (genetic mutation and variation) fed into a competetive hereditory survival process will have "beneficial" (seemingly designed) results rather than random ones... not very surprising to be sure, but still nice to see the process at work in seconds rather the tedious observation of nature that Darwin undertook.

    26. Re:theory... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Phenology. Try updating your arguments to an era were we can actually read the genetic code.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    27. Re:theory... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      It also helps to use a dictionary written in the last 20 years. Here's a link for ya: first genetic evidence uncovered of how major changes in body shapes occured during early animal evolution. Of course, no matter how much evidence is collected, and no matter how much research is done, the creationists will never admit their fantasy is wrong. Even if we layed down a giant phenological map of how every creature on earth day was evolved from a single source, the creationists would point to the species that have since gone extinct as reason why the "theory" is incorrect.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    28. Re:theory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, every link I checked on phenology was a "study of the seasonal timing of life cycle events" link, not a "development of different species from a parent species" link. Perhaps you meant a different word?

    29. Re:theory... by srleffler · · Score: 1
      Science books are notoriously bad at explaining how science actually works. Contrary to what you might think, 'laws' are often less certain than theories. A theory is a logical and/or mathematical explanation for a set of observed facts. A law on the other hand is usually a simple empirical relation that models the observed facts without actually explaining them. I'm mostly familiar with the history of physics. As far as I know physicists stopped making 'laws' over a hundred years ago. Most of the 'laws' of physics are simple approximations that are either not perfectly accurate or apply only to special cases (Hooke's Law, Ohm's Law, the Law of Universal Gravitation, Newton's Laws). Others were empirical observations that are now explained much better by newer theories (some of the Laws of Thermodynamics, for example). Note that the term 'theory' in science does not in any way imply doubtfulness the way it does in common usage.

      Relativity is a theory with extremely strong evidence (facts) supporting it. Evolution is an observed fact. There are several 'theories of evolution' which explain the details and mechanisms of the observed process of evolution. The current preferred theory is not actually really Darwin's theory at all but draws heavily on the hundred years of progress in biology and genetics since Darwin's time.

    30. Re:theory... by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      ell, we have to be easy on creationsists. Scientists have extensive and prolonged tests to prove a law of science. Creationsists can take someone's word for it.

      We're playing against a stacked deck.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    31. Re:theory... by srleffler · · Score: 1

      Of course, all of the physics we teach children in high school is a century out of date and has been disproven. That doesn't necessarily mean that it's not the right thing to teach at that stage, although I tend to agree that it would be preferable to teach a more modern theory of evolution.

    32. Re:theory... by madprof · · Score: 1

      Yes it has been observed. Either go check your facts or stop contributing.

    33. Re:theory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      cite.

      fucking CITE!

    34. Re:theory... by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      Crap, I need to get into the sticker making business!

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    35. Re:theory... by Unordained · · Score: 1

      I'm of a mind to encourage these stickers -- teachers wind up stressing important things like "theory is not fact." If it keeps up, maybe they'll also stress "stories are not fact." Think that'll piss off the people who wanted the stickers in the first place? More careful education can't be a bad thing (at least not for most of us.)

    36. Re:theory... by esanbock · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. This reminds me of when I asked by high school physics teacher "what is gravity?" Little did I know that years later I'd be reading Einstein because Newton teaches the what, but not the how or the why.

    37. Re:theory... by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

      You mean like the Bohr model of the atom which is decades out of date and has been disproven, but is what's taught in most classrooms still? Don't think this is limited to evolution, but is rather more indicative how science in general is taught in our schools.

    38. Re:theory... by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

      Somewhat tangential to you post, but I've always thought that, given the religious divide in today's evolutionary debate, that it's somewhat amusing that one of the first researchers to lend serious validity to genetic heredity was an Augistinian monk. :-)

    39. Re:theory... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      There's nothing special about the creation of new species - it's just a continuum of variation within species, and nothing more significant than a matter of definition.

      The definition of different vs same species is simply that different species can't successfully interbreed, while same species can.

      The definition of species is useful and significant because while you'd never notice when speciation is occuring (i.e. the first point at which a genetic mutation has occurred that means successful interbreeding is impossible), it does represent a point of no return, and a point from which divergence (due to lack of ability to breed and re-mix the gene pool) is inevitable.

      People often claim that we have never seen speciation occuring, but that is simply wrong - it is absolutely all around us in various stages...

      1) There are species taking the first step of forming different sub-groups such as forest and plains elephants (similar DNA, but where "cultural" seperation means that the DNA is diverging due to lack of interbreeding, and they are on their way), or similarly perhaps human races where interbreeding is again limited for cultural reasons. Of course cultural seperation isn't the only species formation initiator, but it's probably more common than the more obvious physical isolation (e.g. between continents as movements of the earth's tectonic plates seperate portions of the same species).

      2) There are species where the cultural seperation (step one) has persisted long enough that fairly major genetic differences are present, and visually we may even think of them as different species despite their still having the ability to interbreed (e.g. lion & tiger, wolf & chihuahua).

      3) There are species that have JUST crossed the point of no return, such as horse & donkey. They are still able to interbreed in the sense of producing offspring, but the offspring (a mule) are themselves unable to breed, so the point of no return has already been crossed.

      4) There are species who crossed the point of no return a while ago and although still similar genetically have accumulated enough change to start to be quite different - e.g. homo sapiens and chimpanzees, and interbreeding is no longer viable.

      5) Finally there are species who crossed the point of no return (speciation) so long ago that have diverged radically, typically somewhat comessurate with the length of time that has passed.

      When people claim we don't see speciation occuring they are typically only referring to group 5), and obviously ignoring the cladistic tree derived from the fossil record informing us of the speciation sequence and interrelationships.

    40. Re:theory... by uberdave · · Score: 1

      You raise many good points. I withdraw my objection.

    41. Re:theory... by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      I don't agree with that at all. Evolution is a fact, it's been observed, and it happens, period.

      Evolutionism, however, is a theory. The idea that humans evolved can easily be said to be a theory, the the process of evolution itself can be seen and observed. Bacteria mutate in the lab and in the real world in observable ways (resistance to antibiotics, for example) - this is evolution, on a microscopic scale.

      If they had said 'human evolution is a (generally accepted) theory' blah blah, then I'd be happy with that.

    42. Re:theory... by RichardX · · Score: 1

      I'll see your "Amen" and raise you a "Hallelujah" ;)

      Actually, I say we allow the creationists their stickers... If we get to put a page in the front of the bible that says "This story is entirely fictional. Any resemblance to real characters or events is purely coincidental"

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    43. Re:theory... by RabidStoat · · Score: 1

      I must have missed the poll where the earth was surveyed then. I'll bet you there are more than 50 million (approx) people who haven't heard of relativity let alone accept it. You were doing ok until that point.

  20. "Creationist"? by mskfisher · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How is this "creationist"? Evolution is a theory, not a fact, and as with all scientific theories, should be presented as such.

    Is there a better way to teach scientific thinking to students than to emphasize "what you are learning is not final"?

    --
    0x0D 0x0A
    1. Re:"Creationist"? by thefirelane · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How is this "creationist"? Evolution is a theory, not a fact, and as with all scientific theories, should be presented as such.

      You realize "Electricity" is a theory right? The reason this was thrown out, was because it was a deliberate attempt to confuse school children by muddying the difference between the common usage of the word theory (aka. hunch) and the scientific:

      A set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena.

      Is there a better way to teach scientific thinking to students than to emphasize "what you are learning is not final"?

      In fact, no... but the basic tenant of science is to keep an open mind so why stress this about evolution? Also, as I stated, this was not designed to open students minds but merely to confuse them.

    2. Re:"Creationist"? by Joe+Random · · Score: 1
      How is this "creationist"?
      It's "creationist" because there is only a disclaimer for evolution. If there were a sticker for every single theory in the book, from the germ theory of disease to the theory of gravitation, well, I'd still complain about it, just for a different reason.
    3. Re:"Creationist"? by bani · · Score: 1

      they already know that. they don't need a sticker in a book to remind them of that.

      and why only a biology textbook? why not be consistent and stickers in all textbooks?

      'astrophysics is only a theory, there are some equally valid theories available in genesis that should be given equal time in the classroom.'

    4. Re:"Creationist"? by cartel · · Score: 0

      There is only a disclaimer for evolution because that is what the book is teaching. If it mentions creation at all, then yes, it should also put a disclaimer for that too. If they need to put a disclaimer for Creationism, then they need to put a disclaimer for every single theory that exists pertaining to the origins of life.

    5. Re:"Creationist"? by The_Rook · · Score: 1

      do you think the creationists would tolerate a similar sticker about their favorite junk science?

      "This textbook contains material on Creationism. Creationism is religios dogma, not scientific fact, regarding the origin of living things. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

      i suspect not.

      --
      when religion is no longer the opiate of the masses, governments will resort to real opiates.
    6. Re:"Creationist"? by Jordy · · Score: 1

      Sigh.

      Most biologists today consider evolution to be a fact. What is a theory is the mechanisms that drive evolution, such as natural selection.

      Speciation has been observed directly. Mostly with plants and insects. [1] There is more than enough literature on this.

      --
      The world is neither black nor white nor good nor evil, only many shades of CowboyNeal.
    7. Re:"Creationist"? by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      Is there a better way to teach scientific thinking to students than to emphasize "what you are learning is not final"?

      In fact, no... but the basic tenant of science is to keep an open mind so why stress this about evolution?


      because, as the article stated, the parents (2000 of them) felt that evolution was being stated as a fact. No "open mind" about it, that's just the way the book says it is.

    8. Re:"Creationist"? by eruanno · · Score: 0

      Well, if you look at the definition you just gave, you can see that the scientific quality of the theory of evolution is a bit lacking in that it has not been repeatedly tested because it was a one-time incident. Many questions are left unanswered by this theory, many important questions. Creationism also leaves some questions left unanswered for those who do not have faith that there is a designer and creator (well, in fact, creationism is simply rediculous to those without faith).

      The point is, the creationists don't want ONLY evolutionism taught in textbooks and would like for students to be emphatically informed that the theory for the beginning of the earth solely being taught in the textbook is NOT fact. Then those that believe in evolution DO. Creationists were being satisfied with not putting creationism into textbooks or taking out evolutionism and all theories for the beginnings of the earth with this simple solution called a disclaimer on a sticker.

      So, it's the creationists that are being radical in wanting to be fairly represented, whereas the evolutionsists are being radical and not letting any other view be expressly taught to the students. These evolutionists are smart. It's like a racist calling "RACISM!" It's hypocritical.

      Really, both theories take a bit of faith and belief because the essence of science is the observation (sometimes over time) by men. Unfortunately, men weren't around to record and observe the beginnings of this earth so we cannot know for sure scientifically.

      With that in mind, calling these stickers "unconstitutional" is completely rediculous. It is simply the only way this evolutionist judge (or something to that effect) could justify the removal of these stickers. The idea that it is anti-evolutionist and pro-creationist is absurd. It is simply correcting a typo of sorts, correcting from "fact" to "theory."

      Evolutionists that are happy with this, think about this: would you be happier if creationism had the same coverage in the books? Creationists: maybe you should pursue putting creationism into these science textbooks to an equal or satisfactory extent.

      I think a little cooperation on both sides would do very well. Unfortunately, I think the ACLU on the one side and whatever other organization or group on the other will only be happy when they get their way completely. An utter shame.

      Matt

      --
      "Support Bacteria - Its the only culture some people have" - Circa 1985
    9. Re:"Creationist"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to pick nits, but the word is 'tenet', as in belief, rather than 'tenant', as in someone who occupies.

    10. Re:"Creationist"? by thefirelane · · Score: 1

      Congratulations.... you just wrote a very long post to make it perfectly clear you have confused "evolution" with the formation of life.

      Technically, evolution doesn't care about the formation of life... it could be though random collision of primordial molecules, or through a protein laced meteorite... who cares? Evolution is only concerned with the continual changes of life after is has formed. It makes hypothesis about this continual change, makes predictions about future observations, and is testable. Creationism meets none of these standards.

      Creationism is not falsafiable, because it fundamentally rests on faith. All arguments that are placed forth for Creationism can be used for this theory:

      5 Minutes ago, God created the entire world. He created all molecules, and arranged them as he saw fit. He arranged all molecules and cells so that people were made with memories of the past.

    11. Re:"Creationist"? by Londovir · · Score: 1
      Explain to me exactly how the purpose of the sticker was the confuse school children? You seem to think it somehow muddies the difference between "hunch" and "statements devised". What, exactly, is the difference between those two? Isn't the former merely vernacular to describe the latter? I will grant that scientifically speaking a theory is more akin to a hunch that has been [semi]rigorously tested to ensure its accuracy, but when you get down to it, a theory is still a devised explanation for something that may be true or may not be true, but appears to remain unassailable under all current testing.

      Then again, it's curious that you chose to quote definition #1 under the link you provided, and skipped over definition #6 listed there:

      An assumption based on limited information or knowledge; a conjecture.

      Many theories of science (both biology, physics, etc) at one point in their development seemed akin to fact because no test available could disprove the theory. Of course, then again, there were people firmly convinced that light had only wavelike properties, and others convinced that light had only particle properties. It was only until such point as tests were developed that exposed flaws in a particular theory that it was modified and expanded. Relativity is a theory, albeit a strong one, but again, only in the last 50 years or so has science advanced to a stage where methodology and technology have begun to allow us to put stronger tests in place, and find faults in an otherwise excellent theory. Someday soon perhaps something may arise that will find a small fault in evolution theory. The sticker is correct (perhaps not in motive) to point out that evolution is a theory and not fact.

      Again, I simply don't see what the sticker says that can confuse students - unless you appear to want current students to accept scientific theories as fact. I agree that singling out evolution was perhaps a bit on-the-nose for the groups' intentions, but again, it doesn't confuse anyone in any way. It merely reminds the readers to not accept the theory as fact, which in this case is a valid point to make.

      Londovir
      --
      Londovir
    12. Re:"Creationist"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's designed to do more than just confuse them, although that's a part of it. In my view, this is the first step of a long-term strategy that goes something like this:

      First, evolution is disparaged as a theory. As the parent said, this is not to be taken in the scientific sense of what a theory is, which would be perfectly fine, but it's instead meant to make everyone, not just students, think of evolution as nothing more than a guess made by those God-hating scientists. Once that's done, it brings evolution down to the level of intelligent design...er...creationism, at least in the minds of the general public. The creationists would have us believe that intelligent design is a theory, which it is, in a nonscientific sense, but that's all it is. However, once they get it on an equal footing with evolution in the minds of much of the general public, then they can argue that it should be taught alongside evolution in the schools, or, failing that, that no explanation for the origin of life should be taught because, obviously, this subject is way too controversial, so it ought to be left for parents to discuss with their children.

      And, as an aside, I'd like to point out that I went to Catholic elementary and high school, as well as a Catholic undergraduate college, and I was taught evolution, not creationism. In fact, many Jesuit priests are also scientists, and if you find one who happens to be a biologist or botanist, ask him what he thinks of all this. I can say with almost complete certainty that he'll tell you it's all a bunch of bullshit, which it is.

      IMHO, what this all boils down to in the mind of the average creationist has very little to do with whether or not God created life because, when you really think about it, evolution never really excludes that possibility. No, what these people are clinging desperately to is the Adam and Eve creation story. Why? I think it's because they can't bear the thought that we're descended from lower life forms. To them, that thought is terrifying because they think it diminishes what we are. After all, how can we be created in God's image if we descended from...dare I say it...a monkey? Of course, we didn't actually descend from a monkey but from some other sort of primate, but let's not allow mere details to get in the way of their fear.

    13. Re:"Creationist"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if you accept that evolution is a theory in the scientific sense, then you also must accept that creationism, intelligent design, or whatever it's called at the moment, is not. We may revisit this in a century or two and decide that it is, assuming it's passed some rigorous tests in the meantime, but, right now, it's merely conjecture. There's nothing wrong with that, since just about every scientific theory starts out that way, but if its backers want it to be accepted as science, then they have to be ready to do the work to move it along, and they must also be willing to try and disprove it and accept any findings, no matter whether they prove or disprove it. If they aren't willing to do that, then they can't call it science, because it won't be. It may be religion, philisophy, or something similar, but it won't be science.

    14. Re:"Creationist"? by SilentT · · Score: 1
      A set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena.

      Exactly. And since there is no record of any observation of the process that led to the origin of the human race, and since neither supernatural creation nor chaotic macroevolution can be repeatedly tested, perhaps science has no business trying to explain how we got here at all.

    15. Re:"Creationist"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. Many people think that water is formed from hydrogen and oxygen, but we can't really be sure. I want a label on the chemistry books, next. And don't get me started on that whole inscrutible Special Relativity stuff, even if it happens to be popular in current culture. Students shouldn't be misled into forming a closed mind.

    16. Re:"Creationist"? by thefirelane · · Score: 1

      1) There is no observation of the formation of the human race... but evolution can make predictions. Basically evolution can say "If evolution occurred, we should expect to see X" X being transitionary states, vestigial organs, and close genetic relations. When we see these things, it lends credence to this theory.

      What can creationism make predictions about? How can it be tested?

      2) We can see evolutionary processes in other species... so why would it be happening for them, but not humans for some reason?

    17. Re:"Creationist"? by logan@bitsmart.com · · Score: 1

      wow! for preaching having an open mind, you (and most evolutionists) have a very closed mind at the /possibility/ of a supreme being. consider: it takes more of an open mind to believe in a supreme being than it does to believe in some that is immdediately replicable.

      consider the uncontrolled element in experiements attempting to disprove the existence of God: faith. those that have faith have repeated the experiment often enough to continually rebuild their faith. those that repeatedly fail to prove the existence of God are experimenting under a different set of variables. self-fulfilling prophecy? not really. just controlling the wrong variables in the experiment.

      personally, i believe that both religion and science can coexist quite well. i believe that God is bound by the true laws of science, He just has a complete knowledge of them, whereas we have an infantile knowledge.... then again, i believe that as man is, God once was, and that as God is, man may become. from a scientific point of view, with a few more billion years to figure out the true laws of the universe, we will be able to do everything that is attributed to God (to the best of the understanding of the observer).

      in my own life, there have been far to many "coincidences" to be coincidences. it is a fact (that, unfortunately, i've retested far too often) i live a much happier life when i do "what's right" than when i do what's "wrong". side note, i tend to have more /pleasure/ when i do what's wrong, but in the long term, happiness is better.

    18. Re:"Creationist"? by thefirelane · · Score: 1

      you (and most evolutionists) have a very closed mind at the /possibility/ of a supreme being.

      Please point out where this was stated or implied in my parent post

      consider: it takes more of an open mind to believe in a supreme being than it does to believe in some that is immdediately replicable.

      Incorrect, it takes faith 'open mind' is not the correct term there.

      i believe that God is bound by the true laws of science

      Circular logic alert: who created those laws? God? Is God all-powerful if he's bound? If he is all powerful then does he have the power to create a law that binds him?

      The point of my, and many other posts is that faith and God are not part of the equation of science. God may very well be powering every electrical device... but the model we use to predict how they'll behave is the theory of electricity. Tomorrow God could decide not to power these devices, breaking with our theory.... But we can't base theories on that possibility. We have to build models based on our observations and tests.

    19. Re:"Creationist"? by SilentT · · Score: 1
      1) There is no observation of the formation of the human race... but evolution can make predictions. Basically evolution can say "If evolution occurred, we should expect to see X" X being transitionary states, vestigial organs, and close genetic relations. When we see these things, it lends credence to this theory.

      What can creationism make predictions about? How can it be tested?

      2) We can see evolutionary processes in other species... so why would it be happening for them, but not humans for some reason?

      Basing a scientific theory on predictions seems like sketchy reasoning.

      Do we even have proof that transitory states and vestigial organs exist? Regardless of whether or not they do exist, they could have come about in ways other than evolution, including creation.

      Creation doesn't make scientific predictions, but it does make claims about what the world is like, and I believe that its claims fit reality. One such claim that the Bible makes is that humans are not just sophisticated animals, but are created in the image of God and have souls. The Bible gives us an explanation of various aspects of human nature. The reason everyone has some concept of beauty, justice, the importance of truth, etc, is because we are made in the image of God. If, as evolution claims, we are just the result of a string of random events, and are therefore nothing more than bags of chemicals, why should we care about anything? You think that evolution is the true explanation of why we are here, but why do you care if I believe something which you think is false? If we're just bags of chemicals, and our thoughts and beliefs are nothing more than chemicals reacting, why do you pursue knowledge and truth? The reason for your pursuit of these things is that you are made in the image of God, and because of this you realize that these things do matter.

    20. Re:"Creationist"? by thefirelane · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Creation doesn't make scientific predictions

      Which is why it doesn't belong in "Science" class

      but it does make claims about what the world is like, and I believe that its claims fit reality

      So would saying "The world is really an illusion created by robots who have enslaved us (a la the Matrix)". Remember, I can invent any story to explain how things are... but it it isn't testable or falsafiable then it is not science!

      You think that evolution is the true explanation of why we are here, but why do you care if I believe something which you think is false?

      You are making 2 common mistakes:

      1) assuming people who believe in evolution do not believe in God
      2) Believing the absence of God implies the absence of morals. It is entirely possible to believe in objective morality.. where morality (just like mathematics) can be discovered through the application of reason

      The reason for your pursuit of these things is that you are made in the image of God,

      Or, because curiosity gave our ancestors an evolutionary advantage by allowing us to gather knowledge and manipulate our environment.

      One last thing..

      Basing a scientific theory on predictions seems like sketchy reasoning.

      This is most certainly not 'sketchy reasoning' and only serves to bolster my argument by showing your ignorance about the scientific process. Very often in science a theory is tested by saying something like this: "If the theory of relativity is true, we should expect to see light bend around gravitational objects". Then we make observations. If our observations match our expectations then it bolsters the theory

      Keep in mind, in my previous examples, as well as in all of science the theory is just a model. It might very well be that the reason we see light bend around gravity is due to God, magic, or pixie dust and it just so happens that the theory of relativity lines up with this magic. The model we use to describe what we repeatedly see is called a scientific theory

      Now, as a follow-up question (that I sincerely hope you answer). If we are not a 'bag of chemicals' and have a soul... what happens to our soul when we get drunk? If our thoughts and actions are effected by alcohol, then how is our soul affected? If it is not affected, then our soul is not responsible for our thoughts and actions (as these are affected by alcohol) or our soul is responsible for our thoughts and actions.. and therefore our soul can be drunk.

    21. Re:"Creationist"? by SilentT · · Score: 1
      Now, as a follow-up question (that I sincerely hope you answer). If we are not a 'bag of chemicals' and have a soul... what happens to our soul when we get drunk? If our thoughts and actions are effected by alcohol, then how is our soul affected? If it is not affected, then our soul is not responsible for our thoughts and actions (as these are affected by alcohol) or our soul is responsible for our thoughts and actions.. and therefore our soul can be drunk.

      I haven't thought about this before, so I'm not sure. I'd guess that our soul isn't effected by alcohol, but I don't see how that means it isn't responsible for our thoughts and actions...

    22. Re:"Creationist"? by thefirelane · · Score: 1

      I'd guess that our soul isn't effected by alcohol

      Here's the thought process... (assuming your we're more than a bag of chemicals conjecture)

      1) Our actions are not just the process of a series of chemical reactions (ie. in our brain)
      2) Our actions and thoughts are controlled by some meta-physical entity (ie. a soul)
      3) Alcohol affects our thoughts and actions
      Therefore, either:
      a) Alcohol affects our soul, therefore our soul gets drunk, but is still responsible for our thoughts and actions
      b) Alcohol does not affect our soul, therefore our soul does not affect our thoughts and actions

      Anyway... just something to think about. From your lack of response... can I assume that you now accept that "Creationism" is just as sensical and valid an explanation of the state of the world as "The Matrix" (In terms of testability at least).

  21. Dear Creationists by aendeuryu · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dear Creationists,

    We'll put these stickers on our science textbooks when you put "God's existence is a theory, not a fact" on your bibles.

    1. Re:Dear Creationists by Yolegoman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      By that logic, you are declaring Evolution a religion... thus, why the hell is Evolution in Public Schools and not Creation? You _do_ realize that you are are declaring Evolution equal to Creation on a scientific scale...

    2. Re:Dear Creationists by The_reformant · · Score: 1

      This is the most insightful post i've seen on this whole subject. Its beyond me why its currently modded funny

      --
      I have discovered a truly remarkable sig which this post is too small to contain.
    3. Re:Dear Creationists by shanen · · Score: 1
      Right now it is actually knocked down to 0, though I think it should be a +5 funny/insightful. The topic has obviously attracted the attention of the Bible thumpers with mod points. Remember they are not able to accept the lack of evidence of God's existence as any reason for doubt.

      To give you another chance to see it, the original said:

      Dear Creationists,

      We'll put these stickers on our science textbooks when you put "God's existence is a theory, not a fact" on your bibles.

      I say "Right on!"

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    4. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was saying that creationism is a theory, not a fact. You are saying that evolution is a religion, not him. I don't know how to make this any clearer to you, since it was very clear to begin with. A lot of people will disagree with your assumption that evolution is a religion. Just because science disagrees with religion doesn't make science a new religion, no matter how much the religious want science removed from classrooms.

    5. Re:Dear Creationists by sg3000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > "God's existence is a theory, not a fact" on your bibles

      While I agree that Bible-thumping moderators shouldn't be modding down posts they don't agree with, I have to say that I disagree with the suggestion that with the sentiment above.

      Religion and belief in God is a matter of faith that transcends fact. Part of this debate starts when ignorant religious people think that science is somehow against them. The fact is that science and religion are about two different things. Science is about fact, while religion is about ethics, morality, and other things that are supposed to elevate us.

      One can't use science to "prove" religion any more than one can use religion to disprove science.

      --
      Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    6. Re:Dear Creationists by froschmann · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but I pay for a public school's textbooks. You don't pay for my bible.

    7. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear Evolutionist,

      When you are forced by law to read the Bible, I'll put a sticker on yours for you.

    8. Re:Dear Creationists by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      If there was a Bible, paid for by the schools, provided to the students, I'd be okay with that.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    9. Re:Dear Creationists by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      God's existance, for most definitions of "God," is not a scientific theory, because it is not falsifiable.

    10. Re:Dear Creationists by Solandri · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Probably because it's not insightful. Actually, I take that back. It does give insight, just not where you think it does. Mind you I think the stickers were a dumb idea. But any objective person could immediately see that a textbook paid for by public monies that's legally required reading is not at all analagous to a book purchased in private and read voluntarily. That you failed to notice this rather obvious difference gives insight into your lack of objectivity on the topic.

      Objectivity and rational thinking mean you have to appraise each situation presented to you on its own merits. You cannot pigeonhole comparisons into categories you've already pre-judged (e.g. evolution good, creationism bad). If you do that, you make the same logical errors you so often accuse the other side of making.

    11. Re:Dear Creationists by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      Faith begins where science ends.

      Science is about the things we _can_ know and attempt to explain based around our knowledge. It doesn't require belief - in fact, it's largely a defence against belief in the face of contradictory facts.

      Faith, OTH, is about the things we can't (yet) know. Unfortunately, as what we know grows over time, it starts to conflict with the faith that occupied that spot earlier.

      Personally, I prefer to say "I dunno" and move on.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    12. Re:Dear Creationists by Rares+Marian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It called an analogy. study of another, if you will. Why is it people are so unable to suppose something rather than taking it literally? If I say start a problem with there's a train in chicago, are you going to actually believe there's a train in Chicago?

      --
      The message on the other side of this sig is false.
    13. Re:Dear Creationists by RetiredHacker · · Score: 2, Informative

      The existence of God is a hypothesis, not a theory.

      Once enough evenidence is provided, and other hypotheses disproved, then it might become a theory.

      --
      ... Retired Hacker
    14. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yeah, but I pay for a public school's textbooks. You don't pay for my bible.

      That will change with school vouchers.

    15. Re:Dear Creationists by GryMor · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Err, thats not particularly usefull. Better to say:

      Dear Creationists,

      We'll put these stickers on our science textbooks when you put "God's existance is an untestable hypothesis that can never rise to the level of validity of a theory. Belief that 'God' created the universe is as demonstratable and testable as 'invisible pink elephants' created the universe."

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    16. Re:Dear Creationists by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      "One can't use science to "prove" religion any more than one can use religion to disprove science."

      Wow. You're not serious, are you?

      The 1840's called. They said they wanted their culture back.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    17. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you dare. Theories are the highest, most complete models science has produced. They're supported by piles of stacks, and have survived decades of challenges. God's existence isn't supported by facts but by faith.

    18. Re:Dear Creationists by firewood · · Score: 1
      By that logic, you are declaring Evolution a religion...

      Not quite... but the theory of evolution is usually accepted as true based on the belief that truth can only be the result of applying Occam's razor to objectively testable and falsifiable hypothesis. The latter is itself a form of religion. Just try and test it without assuming it's true.

    19. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      when you put "God's existance is an untestable hypothesis that can never rise to the level of validity of a theory.

      But then will dismiss us as ignorant savages who write things like existance.

    20. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is not quite correct. Science can disprove religion.

    21. Re:Dear Creationists by tfoss · · Score: 4, Funny
      'invisible pink elephants' created the universe.


      Wait, if they're invisible, how can they be pink?

      (;

      -Ted

      --
      -=-=- Quantum physics - the dreams stuff are made of.
    22. Re:Dear Creationists by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      There is plenty of evidence as to whether or not there is a God. The problem is that everyone who has that information is dead.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    23. Re:Dear Creationists by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Funny...evolution is also an untestable hypothesis. How is it untestable? You can't go back and repeat it to see if it really happened that way. You can't make evolution happen in a lab. The only way we can make conclusions about evolution is through interpreting what we observe the best we can. It's not testable though, which is why evolution as a means of the rise of life can never be touted as fact.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    24. Re:Dear Creationists by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Fine. As long as you stick "Juils Caesar's existance is an untestable hypothesis that can never rise to the validity of a theory. Belief that 'Julius Caesar' once ruled the Roman Empire is as demonstrable and testable as 'invisible pink elephants' ruled the Roman Empire.

      You can scientifically prove neither God's existence nor the existence of Julius Caesar. You can examine what evidence there is, and come to a conclusion on the basis of that evidence, but that is not the scientific method. It's an historical method. There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than can be proved with your methodology.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    25. Re:Dear Creationists by sbaker · · Score: 1

      Bibles are not required reading in schools. Science textbooks are.

      Creationists can do whatever they like with their bibles - because my child isn't forced (by law) to go to a place to be fed with that information.

      So there is a good case for schools to have to tell all sides of the story.

      I think science books should also have stickers saying "The existance of the Tooth Fairy, God and Santa Clause are impossible to either prove or disprove by scientific means. This book teaches you the scientific method - and the conclusions you get as a result of doing that."

      --
      www.sjbaker.org
    26. Re:Dear Creationists by IntelliTubbie · · Score: 1

      'invisible pink elephants' created the universe.

      Wait, if they're invisible, how can they be pink?

      Just have faith that they can be both! I mean, I can't even imagine a world where invisible pink elephants didn't exist. That should be reason enough, right?

      Cheers,
      IT

      --

      Power corrupts. PowerPoint corrupts absolutely.

    27. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well you can test natural selection in a lab which is the driving force of evolution. You just use something that has a short lifespan and reproduces a lot like bacteria or fruitflys in your experiments.

    28. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't make evolution happen in a lab.

      I can't believe I'm letting you troll me like this but, yes, you can make evolution happen in a lab. It happens all the time, in fact. Bacteria evolve resistance to antibiotics, for example. On a larger scale, plants evolve characteristics that adapt them to their environments. Both these processes are the result of mutation followed by selection: i.e., evolution.

      Belief in macro evolution---evolution of species wholly different from their progenitors---thus requires only extrapolation. But we extrapolate all the time in the sciences. Is astrophysics untestable because we can't create its conditions in the lab? Because we can't travel to where it is happening and observe it directly? Perhaps you would answer "yes". I would answer "no".

    29. Re:Dear Creationists by Aceto3for5 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a pretty good deal. Let us put the bible in school.

    30. Re:Dear Creationists by km790816 · · Score: 1

      Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind."
      -- Albert Einstein

    31. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Infidel! It's the invisible pink unicorn (may her hooves never be shod).

    32. Re:Dear Creationists by BenJaminus · · Score: 1

      Except that the Bible is a record of things that God has done with eye witness accounts. The equivalent evolutionist book would be lots of examples where the slime turned into fish with someone saying it was a fun event and I was there.

      Sure you could put these stickers on Bibles for RE lessons but teachers already have to be very careful not endorse any particular religion so it's redundant. Pointing out that a theory taught in science classes is a theory is not something that I remember teachers saying much of.

    33. Re:Dear Creationists by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      Except that the Bible is a record of things that God has done with eye witness accounts.


      There were eye-witnesses present when God created the Earth, animals, and Adam and Eve?
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    34. Re:Dear Creationists by m50d · · Score: 1

      Julius Caesar's existence is not contradicted by any other historical evidence (unlike that of any god, as there are a number of religions which claim that their god is the only god), and makes sense with what we know of how the world works. It does not require adding an unnecessary deity (the original form of Occam's Razor, I believe). And there are historical records from disinterested people saying that he existed, which does not seem to be the case for any God I've heard about.

      --
      I am trolling
    35. Re:Dear Creationists by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Julius Caesar's existence is not contradicted by any other historical evidence (unlike that of any god, as there are a number of religions which claim that their god is the only god), and makes sense with what we know of how the world works. It does not require adding an unnecessary deity (the original form of Occam's Razor, I believe). And there are historical records from disinterested people saying that he existed, which does not seem to be the case for any God I've heard about.

      Despite all that, Julius Caesar's existance is not provable via the scientific method. You are taking in the evidence, evaluating its worth based on your own common sense and its concordance with other sources, and reaching a conclusion from that. The point I was making that the fact that something cannot be proven scientifically does not mean it is not true. Religion, of whatever nature, cannot be proven scientificaly. It still may be true.

      makes sense with what we know of how the world works. It does not require adding an unnecessary deity (the original form of Occam's Razor, I believe)

      Not really. I find that all these sort of things tend to come back to the origin of the universe, as the fundamental event in history. Both science and religion require the universe to exist. Science cannot explain the universe without resorting to an outside influence (which in turn must have an origin, ad infinitum) or to saying that the universe simply always existed (an act of faith). Try explaining where the Universe came from without a deity or act of faith - Occam's Razor does not apply because the deity is not unnecessary. Without a deity (or similar outside influnce) there is no explanation of the origin of the universe.

      And there are historical records from disinterested people saying that he existed, which does not seem to be the case for any God I've heard about.

      Perhaps because experience of the divine tends to be a polarising influence. If you are the recipient of a divine revelation, you are unlikely to remain disinterested. What your saying in that remark is all the eye-witnesses are unreliable because they were eye-witnesses.

      That said, there are references to a historical Jesus (and I assume major human figures in other religions) from disinterested parties. They simply make no mention of the miraculous. The disinterested, historical accounts (at least of Jesus, and there aren't many) do seem to be compatible with the writings of interested parties, however.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    36. Re:Dear Creationists by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Religion is about the politics of faith, not necessarily about faith.

      I would almost argue that "ethics", "morality", and other noble western ideas about interhuman behavior exist on their own as much as scientific fact and religious tenets.

      That areligious people can be just as ethical or moral as the most pious Christian is my proof. Jerry Falwell and Robert Jones are the most obvious counter-proofs.

    37. Re:Dear Creationists by superyooser · · Score: 1
      Justin [Martyr] Narrates the Manner of His Conversion (translated from Greek)

      "And while I was thus disposed, when I wished at one period to be filled with great quietness, and to shun the path of men, I used to go into a certain field not far from the sea. And when I was near that spot one day, which having reached I purposed to be by myself, a certain old man, by no means contemptible in appearance, exhibiting meek and venerable manners, followed me at a little distance. And when I turned round to him, having halted, I fixed my eyes rather keenly on him.

      "And he said, 'Do you know me?'

      "I replied in the negative.

      "'Why, then,' said he to me, 'do you so look at me?'

      "'I am astonished,' I said, 'because you have chanced to be in my company in the same place; for I had not expected to see any man here.'

      "And he says to me, 'I am concerned about some of my household. These are gone away from me; and therefore have I come to make personal search for them, if, perhaps, they shall make their appearance somewhere. But why are you here?' said he to me.

      "'I delight,' said I, 'in such walks, where my attention is not distracted, for converse with myself is uninterrupted; and such places are most fit for philology (the exercise of reason).'

      "'Are you, then, a philologian (an exerciser of speech),' said he, 'but no lover of deeds or of truth? and do you not aim at being a practical man so much as being a sophist?'

      "'What greater work,' said I, 'could one accomplish than this, to show the reason which governs all, and having laid hold of it, and being mounted upon it, to look down on the errors of others, and their pursuits? But without philosophy and right reason, prudence would not be present to any man. Wherefore it is necessary for every man to philosophize, and to esteem this the greatest and most honourable work; but other things only of second-rate or third-rate importance, though, indeed, if they be made to depend on philosophy, they are of moderate value, and worthy of acceptance; but deprived of it, and not accompanying it, they are vulgar and coarse to those who pursue them.'

      "'Does philosophy, then, make happiness?' said he, interrupting.

      "'Assuredly,' I said, 'and it alone.'

      "'What, then, is philosophy?' he says; 'and what is happiness? Pray tell me, unless something hinders you from saying.'

      "'Philosophy, then,' said I, 'is the knowledge of that which really exists, and a clear perception of the truth; and happiness is the reward of such knowledge and wisdom.'

      "'But what do you call God?' said he.

      "'That which always maintains the same nature, and in the same manner, and is the cause of all other things -- that, indeed, is God.' So I answered him; and he listened to me with pleasure, and thus again interrogated me: --

      "'Is not knowledge a term common to different matters? For in arts of all kinds, he who knows any one of them is called a skilful man in the art of generalship, or of ruling, or of healing equally. But in divine and human affairs it is not so. Is there a knowledge which affords understanding of human and divine things, and then a thorough acquaintance with the divinity and the righteousness of them?'

      "'Assuredly,' I replied.

      "'What, then? Is it in the same way we know man and God, as we know music, and arithmetic, and astronomy, or any other similar branch?'

      "'By no means,' I replied.

      "'You have not answered me correctly, then,' he said; 'for some [branches of knowledge] come to us by learning, or by some employment, while of others we have knowledge by sight. Now, if one were to tell you that there exists in India an animal with a nature unlike all others, but of such and such a kind, multiform and various, you would not know it before you saw it; but neither would you be competent to give any account of it, unless you should hear from one who had seen it.'

      "'Certainly not,' I said.

      "'How then,' he said, 'should the philosophers judge correc

    38. Re:Dear Creationists by superyooser · · Score: 1

      We'll do that when you put "Evolutionism is a religion" on your textbooks.

    39. Re:Dear Creationists by BenJaminus · · Score: 1

      I think that bit was passed down through an oral culture before being written down (I think Moses recorded a lot of it).
      But the point I was making was that there are loads of eye witness accounts of stuff God's done (see pretty much any page in the Bible) hence why people believe God exists. People still are lacking actual cases where its definate new genetic material has been added by something evolving - it's all theories saying that it looks like this evolved from this but it's still theory (not talking about natural selection here of course). See what I mean?

    40. Re:Dear Creationists by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      I think that bit was passed down through an oral culture before being written down (I think Moses recorded a lot of it).


      Was Moses there to see the Creation?

      But the point I was making was that there are loads of eye witness accounts of stuff God's done (see pretty much any page in the Bible) hence why people believe God exists.


      Just because there are some things in the Bible that has some sort of connection to historical events, does not mean that everything in there is true. How do you know that some of the stuff in the Bible REALLY took place? How can you be sure that the things in Bible were not invented by two guys after they drank some bad wine? What evidence do you have of Gods work, or God in general? No, Bible (or anything in it) can't be used as proof, since that would be circular reasoning.

      Yes, evolution is theory. And no-one is disputing that. Hell, many of the things in science are theories. Creationism is not even a theory. It is a wild guess with no evidence to back it up. Just because theory of evolution might have some things that are not 100% understood yet, does not mean that the entire theory is therefore invalid.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    41. Re:Dear Creationists by BenJaminus · · Score: 1

      >Was Moses there to see the Creation?
      No, but the comment bunched Adam and Eve in with creation, they had kids, hence oral culture of recording history.

      >Just because there are some things in the Bible that has some sort of connection to historical events
      A lot of it IS a historical account! Sure it's written down by people and therefore it's from their point of view (like all historical accounts). But if their point of view was that God sent an angel, told them to do something, they did it and what was promised happened then isn't that exactly the evidence of God's work that you'd like to see?

      >Yes, evolution is theory. And no-one is disputing that
      What really is the point here is that people don't realise that and so don't ever question it. It's like people 'believe' in science without understanding what good science is or that what they're doing is un-scientific.

      >Creationism is not even a theory
      See Answers in Genesis for some theory (it is a Christian organisation btw)

    42. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not even a hypothesis. A hypothesis must be falsifiable.

    43. Re:Dear Creationists by larsho · · Score: 1

      But the Bible isn't taught in school, is it? if it were, a sticker would be appropriate.

    44. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up you atheist bitches.

    45. Re:Dear Creationists by sg3000 · · Score: 1

      > That areligious people can be just as ethical or moral as the
      > most pious Christian is my proof. Jerry Falwell and Robert
      > Jones are the most obvious counter-proofs.

      Absolutely. I didn't intend to imply that you can't have morality without religion, or that religious people are somehow more moral or ethical.

      What I meant was that religion, like morality, ethics, and philosophy are not in the same category as science. Science explains the natural world: what, where, who, how. If you want to know the ultimate "why," well, that's best left up to philosophy and religion.

      However, religion-- if practiced properly-- can provide a framework to help some people be more moral. If it's used incorrectly, all sorts of horrible things can happen, ranging from stickers being put on science textbooks to self-righteous fanatics waging war in the name of religion.

      --
      Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    46. Re:Dear Creationists by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      No, but the comment bunched Adam and Eve in with creation, they had kids, hence oral culture of recording history.


      Such history can radically change it contents even after few generations. How can it be trusted? Hell, even the Bible has changed over time due to different intrepetations and translations!

      A lot of it IS a historical account!


      Some of it is, perhaps. But that doesn't mean that we should blindy believe everything that it says. Was tower of Babel real? Did God really create flying animals before he created land-animals?

      But if their point of view was that God sent an angel, told them to do something, they did it and what was promised happened then isn't that exactly the evidence of God's work that you'd like to see?


      No, that is not evidence of God or his work. I have seen zero evidence that suggests that Angels (or God for that matter) are real.

      What really is the point here is that people don't realise that and so don't ever question it.


      Well it IS called "evolutionary _theory_". And it'c constantly tweaked as new evidence is uncovered. So I don't think that people believe that it's set in stone and that it's absolute truth. It merely reflects the evidence that we have gathered to date.

      See Answers in Genesis for some theory


      The way I see creationism is this: In normal scientific process, you gather evidence, and you then come up with a theory that explains the evidence. In creationism they first came up by a theory (as told by the Bible) and they then try to come up with evidence that supports that theory.

      Why is it that available evidence seems to support evolution instead of creationism by a factor of 50:1 (my guesstimate)?
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    47. Re:Dear Creationists by Sirch · · Score: 1

      ...are you going to actually believe there's a train in Chicago?

      I find it helps me get around the city if I believe there is a train in Chicago...

    48. Re:Dear Creationists by vjmurphy · · Score: 1

      "We'll put these stickers on our science textbooks when you put "God's existence is a theory, not a fact" on your bibles."

      Why? We should never equate a science textbook and a religious text ever. It gives the latter legitimacy that it does not deserve.

      --
      Vincent J. Murphy
      Spandex Justice
    49. Re:Dear Creationists by Cyn · · Score: 1

      They've told me they are when they've spoken to me.

      They also tell me to buy Microsoft products, so I don't trust them too much.

      --
      cyn, free software and *nix operating systems enthusiast.
    50. Re:Dear Creationists by Beige · · Score: 1

      They're magical invisible pink elephants.

      --
      pandnotpian.org. The untruth will set you free!
    51. Re:Dear Creationists by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Why can't we make evolution happen in a lab? The fact that you need a lab the size of a small planet does not make it impossible, just impractical.

    52. Re:Dear Creationists by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      Religion, of whatever nature, cannot be proven scientifically. It still may be true.

      Luckily many religions contradict eachother, so we can logically claim that they cannot conceivably be all true. Given that they all have the same amount of (historic) evidence behind them (none), one might actually be tempted to conclude that religion and truth are two completely different concept and should not be applied to eachother. Hence any form of religious claim on truth should be disregarded.

    53. Re:Dear Creationists by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Actually, Occam's razor itself has been mathematically formalized and sharpened in recent years. It's called the Minimum Description Length principle, which loosely states that the best theory is the one that minimizes (in bits) the length of the theory (in bits) plus the length of the exceptions to the theory (in bits). It is itself based on Bayes theorem, and is used in communication and learning theory, but can equally be applied to science. Unfortunately the thing itself depends on the Kolmogorov complexity and is thus uncomputable. Still, it does show that Occam's razor is a simplification of a deeper principle that is rooted in the axioms of mathematics. There's no religion there. (And no, you cannot equate mathematical axioms with religion. They're just not comparable in scope and intent.)

    54. Re:Dear Creationists by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Nope, the existence of God is an assertion, as there is no effective test for falsifying the hypothesis. The non-existence of God however is a valid scientific hypothesis as you only have to show the existence of God to disprove it. If this happens, the existence of God becomes a fact, but it would still lack a theory explaining this existence. Facts are boring and akin to collecting stamps, building a solid theory is what matters scientifically.

    55. Re:Dear Creationists by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      God doesn't play dice
      --Albert Einstein

      And he was wrong there as well.

    56. Re:Dear Creationists by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Given that they all have the same amount of (historic)

      Strike one. Some religions have more historical evidence than others - simply because they have a foundation in historical events. Christianity is based on the historical events of 200 years ago, and thus has more historical evidence than something like Buddhism, which from what I understand, grew out of philosophy rather than history.

      evidence behind them (none) Strike two. Plenty of evidence. Whether you find it compelling or not is up to you, but there's plenty of it out there.

      Hence any form of religious claim on truth should be disregarded.

      Strike three, you're out.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    57. Re:Dear Creationists by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      Ball 1:
      The fact that Jericho didn't exist anymore when the walls came tumbling down doesn't strike you in the least bit odd then? No problem, religious myth in a historic setting does not give credence to the religion, it gives evidence to the historic setting. No more, no less. There's no historic evidence for any of Gods interventions, even though there's plenty of historic evidence that the Judaic people were dwelling in that place at that time. Myth != history. Oh, and Buddha is as much an historical figure as Jesus.

      Ball 2:
      No there's not. Show me some evidence of religious (not historical) significance of the actions of the Christian God. Or of any God. I like Haephistos.

      Ball 3:
      Hey, you have to throw you know! You can't strike me out on the basis of the first ball alone.

      Ball 4:
      Mostly harmless. Part five in the increasingly inaccurately named trilogy the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
      --Douglas Adams

      First base!

    58. Re:Dear Creationists by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      The fact that Jericho didn't exist anymore when the walls came tumbling down doesn't strike you in the least bit odd then

      I don't know what your talking about. The general criticism of the Jericho story is that Jericho was not a walled town at the time in which the Bible claims its walls were knocked down. This is explained here.

      Oh, and Buddha is as much an historical figure as Jesus.
      Buudha is just as historical as Jesus, but Buddhism is based more on Buddha's philosophy (ie: non-historical), as opposed to Christianity which claims miracles as evidence (ie: historical events). Christianity is more susceptible to historical proof/refutation then Buddhism is.

      No there's not. Show me some evidence of religious (not historical) significance of the actions of the Christian God

      I don't get his. Your asking me for the religious consequences of the Christian God's actions? The entire of existance of any religion is an outworking of religious significance of a gods' actions.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    59. Re:Dear Creationists by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      Ok on Jericho. The point still stands. All historical evidence points to the fact that the Old Testament was a written down account of oral history, written down by jews in exile. So its oral history and very suspect in that.

      The New Testament, which is what Christianity is based upon, doesn't have these monumental miracles that might show in the historical records as the Old Testament has. It's merely the philosophy (ie: non-historical) of a particular person who was by a small set of people considered the Messiah. In that sense, Christianity and Buddhism are very comparable. The philosophies of the old and new testament are very different from eachother. The Old is an account of the history of a people, while the New presents a personal account of an individual.

      About the last part. What I was poorly phrasing there is indeed evidence of the miracles: where's the burning bush? In any case: what significance would it have if we found out that the Red Sea indeed was dry at a certain point? Or if we find a boat on the top of a mountain? There are numerous explanations for that, including a natural (or human induced) phenomenon that was construed to be of religious significance. Religion is a matter of faith, science a matter of reasoning. The two are not exclusive, even though I am a person of little faith.

      But it's getting late and I'm losing coherence.

    60. Re:Dear Creationists by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      The New Testament, which is what Christianity is based upon, doesn't have these monumental miracles that might show in the historical records as the Old Testament has. It's merely the philosophy (ie: non-historical) of a particular person who was by a small set of people considered the Messiah. In that sense, Christianity and Buddhism are very comparable. The philosophies of the old and new testament are very different from eachother. The Old is an account of the history of a people, while the New presents a personal account of an individual.

      Not as many as the OT, but still some. Jesus performed many miracles, but one of the key events of Christianity (the crucifixion of Jesus) is clearly historical. That does not make Christianity more factual than Buddhism, it just makes it more provable/disprovable through historical analysis.

      There are numerous explanations for that, including a natural (or human induced) phenomenon that was construed to be of religious significance. Religion is a matter of faith, science a matter of reasoning. The two are not exclusive, even though I am a person of little faith.

      I totally agree. What most "Christian Scientists" are doing, I have observed, is trying to demonstrate that science does *not* contradice the Bible. They're not trying to prove the Bible, they're trying to demonstrate that science does not disprove it.

      Its not late over here, but it is early, and I need to get some work done. I think we've both said our piece now anyway.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    61. Re:Dear Creationists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same way god can have a son by a virgin and a holy ghost, to boot...

      What? you dont think that the elephants can be both pink AND be invisible? You lack FAITH!!!!!!

    62. Re:Dear Creationists by km790816 · · Score: 1

      Touche.

  22. so, how is creationism taught anyways? by k4_pacific · · Score: 5, Funny

    Teacher: Class, today we are going to study Creation. A long time ago, God, who cannot be quantified or proven to exist or not to exist, created life using supernatural powers that cannot be explained by science.

    Student: Will this be on the test?

    Teacher: Will what be on the test?

    --
    Unknown host pong.
    1. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's no need to teach creationism. As a half-creationist myself, I wouldn't agree with anything like what you said.

      Simply state, validly, that evolution seems to fit with the facts as science is best capable of recording it, and that there are some failures which we cannot explain yet but which alternative theories, including creationism might possibly explain. If you start teaching creationism, you're teaching religion, and that should be kept out of public schools.

      Anything that, as you say, cannot be explained by science has no place on a science test.

      The fundamental problem here is an impression of science as truth. I don't normally like to attack truth, but often what we're using the word for is a scientific construct -- what would have happened assuming that things behaved rationally. Such a belief is a rational belief. Yet if you believe in God, you must believe that He can throw things off. Other arguments (another can of worms which I don't want to get into now, especially not on Slashdot; if you're really interested, get a copy of C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity) argue for believing in the existence of a God. Besides, science admits that spontaneous generation happened in the past -- otherwise, whence did life evolve in the first place? Creationism, in its most fundamental form, is that a Sentience caused that first spontaneous generation.

      BTW: people who take Genesis 1 literally should be regarded with about as much truth as you give to Scientologists. Sure, it might be true, but as much evidence as supports the rest of fundamental Christian beliefs supports a non-literal interpretation.

    2. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who is dumber the Student or the Teacher. Lets make this a poll.

    3. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by discordja · · Score: 1

      After we finish with creationism we will go over the big bang. At it's core, it's nothing more than a best guess scenario that we have no hope of proving either, but don't let that turn you off of believing it's hard science. If you do, the vast right wing conspiracy will have already won.

      --
      I stole this .sig
    4. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Kris_J · · Score: 1
      As a half-creationist myself,
      Half-creationist? Is that like having vegitarian tendancies because you only eat chicken?

      Anyway, who created God then, smarty?

    5. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by k4_pacific · · Score: 1

      Think of the big bang this way. Imagine someone showed you a still picture of watermelon pulp spraying outward through the air, apparently moving at great speed from a central point. There are two possibilities:

      1. Someone dynamited a watermelon and took a picture of it.

      2. The pieces of watermelon were arranged in mid air by the photographer and somehow imparted with great velocity to create the impression of option 1.

      Creationists would have us believe the latter.

      --
      Unknown host pong.
    6. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by thefirelane · · Score: 1

      Complete these sentences... here I'll help and do the first one (this is how science works)

      If "The Big Bang" occurred we should observe X (X is background radiation)
      Now we go see whether X is observed. If yes, add X to data pool. If no, create testable theory given new larger data pool.... repeat

      Your turn

      If "Creation" occured, we should observe X....

      What is X that allows the testing and predictive ability of creationism

      P.S. I'm actually serious, what is X? (ok, there was a little sarcasm there too, but please reply)

    7. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by CoolMoDee · · Score: 1

      Mrs. Badcrumble of course. If this is unfunny to you, got rent Eddie Izzard: Glorious and Sexy Live. It is a hoot.

      --
      Jisho - A Japanese English German Russian French Dictionary for the rest of us.
    8. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Besides, science admits that spontaneous generation happened in the past -- otherwise, whence did life evolve in the first place?

      No.

      Science says that complex chemical interactions evolved into a primitive life form under unique circumstances.
      Not that the first cell was spontaneously created.

      Structures similar to cell walls have been shown to form naturally. Amino acids form naturally in space... We're still fuzzy on the details, but that doesn't mean that the theory is wrong or that we should use magical beings as an explanation instead. It just means that there is still some discoveries to be made.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    9. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by zephc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      spontanious generation?

      You mean simple amino acids creating more complex ones, and taking a billion years to figure out the cool trick of replicating itself? No need for an invisible hand, just blind, drunken* inevitability. Though I wouldn't quite call it spontanious, unless you're speaking in geological timeframes.

      *Metaphorically speaking.

      --
      "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    10. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by ars · · Score: 1

      What's the difference? Where did the watermelon (and the dynamite) come from in the first case?

      Did it come from any different place then it did in the second case?

      And just because you can't give pieces of watermelon velocity doesn't mean that god can't. I mean hello--- if he can create a watermelon out of nothing, I think he can make it move.

      I've heard lots of arguments both ways, some good ones, even though none can be proved. But this one is a really poor argument.

      --
      -Ariel
    11. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by k4_pacific · · Score: 1
      Where did the watermelon (and the dynamite) come from in the first case?

      We don't know. In light of the fact that no one was there when the watermelon, or its constituent matter, came into existence, we cannot say how it came into existence with any certainty. No one knows what happened prior to the big bang or if there even was one. Perhaps the universe was created, along with your parents and everything, the day before you were conceived. Prove that it wasn't.

      If it helps you sleep at night, you can imagine a Christian God creating it in seven days or whatever. I've seen no evidence to indicate that to be the case. So, just because I cannot explain it does not mean I will default to unsubstantiated mythology.

      --
      Unknown host pong.
    12. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "there are some failures which we cannot explain yet but which alternative theories, including creationism might possibly explain."

      Really? Which failures are these? While no one says that we understand evolution totally, I know of no contradicting data. I *do* know of data that contradicts Creationism, though. That makes the latter unviable scientifically.

    13. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Bad+Boy+Marty · · Score: 1
      ... there are some failures which we cannot explain yet but which alternative theories, including creationism might possibly explain.

      Excuse me? Pray, tell. Which failures are these?
      --
      RHCE; are you certified? Karma: ambiguous.
    14. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Anyway, who created God then, smarty?
      That's easy. Cronus is the father of Zeus. Everybody knows who the father of god is...
    15. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Half-creationist? Is that like having vegitarian tendancies because you only eat chicken?

      Maybe he's a transitional form.

    16. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by jfengel · · Score: 4, Informative

      Do a web search on irreducible complexity.

      The idea of irreducible complexity is scientifically valid: if you could find a structure which could not have evolved, that's proof that evolution is wrong. That's why evolution is a scientific theory: it proposes tests which it could fail.

      Creationists (like the grandparent post) cite certain examples: the eye (there are an awful lot of pieces, and it's hard to see how a less-complex eye could exist to evolve into an eye without first being selected against); the bacterial flagellum (another rather complex piece from which it's hard to imagine the immediate evolutionary precursor).

      The examples strike me as extremely strained. There are very few of them repeated over and over. They always apply to soft tissues, so the fossil record is poor. Every time we look at hard tissues, the evolutionary trace is clear.

      Despite the complexity of these systems, it still seems that with enough effort we will eventually uncover how they did evolve, perhaps once we have sequenced the genomes of creatures along the evolutionary path. It certainly seems premature to throw out a very successful theory on the basis of this evidence.

      But the evidence is there, waiting for you to explain it. Don't dismiss the challenger; know his argument and refute it.

    17. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Though I wouldn't quite call it spontanious, unless you're speaking in geological timeframes.

      Nope. Not even geological timeframes are long enough. See http://www.nutters.org/docs/monkeys for a mathematical analysis of the probabilities required for the evolution of complex life forms. The probabilities required for evolution are so miniscule that it truly does take a leap of faith to believe that random chance alone is responsible.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    18. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by cebailey · · Score: 1

      Here comes a handful of theistic evolutionary creationism, and my first slashdot post ever! This is being done by a minority of Christians who think that a long time ago, God made every animal in exactly the form it is today. Luckily, that's not how most educated Christians think. In reality, Christianity and science are in perfect harmony, because the God we worship created science in the first place. I have absolutely no problem with God creating creatures that can become better as time goes by...as a matter of fact, that's pretty damn impressive if you ask me. If Christians need to make a stink about something, instead of just teaching their kids at home like a responsible parent should anyway, let's talk about the origin of the universe. I've read scientific explanations of the Big Bang, and it still sounds sketchy to me. But if that's the way it happened, what's to say it wasn't some sort of God who made it happen that way? I mean, the theory basically says there was some stuff, it blew up, and it made the universe. The stuff had to come from somewhere, and the 'boom' had to come from somewhere too. The problem is, as humans we can never comprehend the idea of God, at least the God presented by Christianity. But that debate belongs in a different thread...

    19. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by cebailey · · Score: 1

      By the way, being my first post and all, I didn't realize I needed to put those pesky "br" tags in there to separate lines.

    20. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
      Simply state, validly, that evolution seems to fit with the facts as science is best capable of recording it, and that there are some failures which we cannot explain yet but which alternative theories, including creationism might possibly explain.
      But why do you want to single out evolution for this treatment? There is plenty of other science with as many failures and alternative theories. The big bang theory, a lot of quantum mechanics, for example. The obvious answer is dogma. To push for this sort of disclaimer on evolution alone under the pretext that it's the right thing to do scientifically is to be dishonest about your motives, IMHO.
    21. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by mikeg22 · · Score: 1
      Simply state, validly, that evolution seems to fit with the facts as science is best capable of recording it, and that there are some failures which we cannot explain yet but which alternative theories, including creationism might possibly explain
      Alternative theories? Could you please state the scientific Theory of Creationism? I'd love to hear it. Also, could you show one weakness in the current Theories of Evolution that can be explained scientifically by this Theory of Creationism, or any other alternate theory?
      science admits that spontaneous generation happened in the past -- otherwise, whence did life evolve in the first place? Creationism, in its most fundamental form, is that a Sentience caused that first spontaneous generation.
      Abiogenesis is being studied as we speak. We understand many of the processes that may be responsible for the forming of a protocell from organic molecules, but nothing to constitute a scientific theory. As to creationism explaining abiogenesis, this is absolute hogwash. How did a "sentience" cause abiogenesis? What processes did the sentience use? What is this sentience and how was *it* created? Just saying a sentience started life tells you absolutely nothing useful. I could just as easily say "A pile of rocks created the first life" and I would be saying something as scientifically useful as saying "A sentience created the first life."
    22. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1
      Besides, science admits that spontaneous generation happened in the past


      And it attempts to explain it - it doesn't just say that some supernatural being created us.

      There are good and credible theories explaining how organic life, with its tendancy towards increasing complexity, can come about. Futhermore, the key ingredient (self-replicating crystals) have been reproduced under laboratory experiments. It turns out, in fact, that we probably came from clay.
      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    23. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by kherrick · · Score: 1

      ...but as much evidence as supports the rest of fundamental Christian beliefs supports a non-literal interpretation.

      Can you explain this? I don't understand what you are getting at...

    24. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by daliman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, until you multiply the this by the size of the universe (effectively infinity) and the length of time in which this has to occur (also something like inifinity). Then it's occurrence seems pretty much inevitable.

    25. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      Wow, a Creationist with a rational mind. Shouldn't we have you bronzed or something?

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    26. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet if you believe in God, you must believe that He can throw things off.

      So stop. It is the rational thing to do. Or is your mind too weak to live without faith?

    27. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by swillden · · Score: 1

      Wow, a Creationist with a rational mind. Shouldn't we have you bronzed or something?

      I think tar and feathers are the more traditional approach.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    28. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Kris_J · · Score: 1

      Maybe he thinks a demi-god created the universe.

    29. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by fredrikj · · Score: 2, Funny

      Anyway, who created God then, smarty?

      No one created God. He spontaneously expanded into infinity out of an initially infinitesimal lump of potency.

    30. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Atrax · · Score: 1

      Luckily, that's not how most educated Christians think.

      OK, so speak up then. Go to school board meetings and help counter the nutters.

      Where are these 'moderate' christians when the district meets to formulate their whackjob policy?

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    31. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by 808140 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Irreducible complexity, while typically parrotted by Intelligent Design proponents as Evolution's great failure, is actually mostly based on a flawed understanding the mechanics of evolution. Here's a pretty in-depth article on it: Irreducible Complexity Demystified.

      It doesn't include the bit about the eye, but the eye isn't all that complex, actually (as evidenced by it being one of the only senses whose mechanics, at the chemical level, we completely understand.) This example of so-called irreducible complexity was actually first contemplated by Darwin (iirc) and has been treated pretty extensively. Nowadays, most ID proponents don't even bring it up, prefering more exotic and less easily refuted examples, like bacterial flagella.

      Anyway, it's a good read.

    32. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by cebailey · · Score: 1

      Us educated Christians are the ones hanging out with the educated atheists who can just simply not say the words "under God" in the pledge instead of putting up a big stink about it. But I digress...

    33. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by grotgrot · · Score: 1
      and that there are some failures which we cannot explain yet

      Which are? Evolution does require that the Earth be billions of years old.

    34. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Jardine · · Score: 1

      Creationists (like the grandparent post) cite certain examples: the eye (there are an awful lot of pieces, and it's hard to see how a less-complex eye could exist to evolve into an eye without first being selected against)

      The eye is a terrible example for creationists to bring up. It's great evidence for evolution. The human eye is wired ass-backwards (the optic nerve goes through the retina instead of attaching behind it), causing us to have a blind spot. The eyes of other creatures such as an octopus are wired with the optic nerve behind the retina.

    35. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      No, no, no, no, no! Read the second followup paper (linked to in the first). Infinity is not an option. Astronomers now say that the universe is finite, but it doesn't matter even if it were infinite, because we're only talking about this one particular solar system. And we don't have an infinite amount of time, because the universe is only 15 billion years or so old.

      The number of possible atoms in the universe times the number of possible time intervals (planck time being the smallest possible interval) gives the maximum number of events that could have occured since the beginning of the universe. This number is finite!

      There is no such thing as "effective infinity". Either it's infinity, or it is a finite number infinitely smaller than infinity. There is no inbetween. In fact, mathematics itself changes between the finite and the infinite!

      When you use terms like "effectively infinity", you're leaving the realm of probability and entering the realm of faith. In an infinite universe, everything is not only possible, they've ALL happened an infinite number of times! If you define God as "omniptent", then a belief in an infinite universe is a belief in God. (of course, to prevent a universe of Zelazny-esque chaos, you need to throw "omniscient" into the mix as well...)

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    36. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by iamghetto · · Score: 1

      Other arguments (another can of worms which I don't want to get into now, especially not on Slashdot; if you're really interested, get a copy of C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity) argue for believing in the existence of a God.

      I've read Mere Christianity. In it C.S. Lewis makes the argument that Jesus was the son of god in the following way:
      1. Jesus went around proclaiming himself to be the son of god
      2. For someone to just go around proclaiming themselves to be the son of god, they could be two things, a) telling the truth or b) crazy
      3. We all know Jesus wasn't crazy, so I guess he's the son of god

      I'm a) telling the truth. You should mod that as funny. Seriously. :)

    37. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
      "The problem is, as humans we can never comprehend the idea of God, at least the God presented by Christianity."

      Then why do you talk so much about God? Why do you have all those ceremonies and holidays and books? By doing all that, you're acting like you do comprehend God. That just seems dishonest.

    38. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by eAspenwood · · Score: 1

      The theist finds comfort by attributing the unexplainable/unknown to a god.

      The atheist is comforatable leaving it as that - the unknown (for now, maybe forever).

      -- J.

    39. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Mac+Degger · · Score: 1

      "theories, including creationism"

      But there's the rub: creationism is not a theory; it's at best a hypothesis, and a bad one at that. Hell, it's not even a scientific hypothesis, as it doesn't make predictions (it can't!)and is therefore untestable, and it does not reduce complexity (it only adds complexity in the form of an inexplicable being of infinite complexity).

      Creationism is not science. If you think so, google for 'the Scientific Method'.

      "Besides, science admits that spontaneous generation happened in the past -- otherwise, whence did life evolve in the first place? Creationism, in its most fundamental form, is that a Sentience caused that first spontaneous generation."

      And that is the crux of the matter: creationism cannot explain that first moment, except in terms of the inexplicable.

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
    40. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      I think this is along the right track. We have a very large universe, and a lot of time on our hands. 15 billion years have passed since we think the Universe began.

      If you can get behind those concepts, the 'spontaneous' generation of life seems almost a given. Yes, it may be a very improbable event, but it's NO LESS PROBABLE than any other event in the universe. Generally speaking, if humans can do something, the universe will have done it first. We can't quite create DNA and life in a petri dish, but every year that goes by, our biologists figure out a little bit more.

      If something is a one in a billion chance, it's really only a matter of time before it happens. Don't exclude possibilities because they seem extremely unlikely. Extremely unlikely is just another way of saying definitely possible.

    41. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by jfengel · · Score: 4, Funny

      I just want a word with the guy who came up with the term "intelligent designer". If I'd designed this thing I'd have been fired. The design sucks. I've already had to repair one serious failure on my knee (which doesn't come with a warranty, natch, so it's out-of-pocket). And my own eyes have never worked properly; I've had to work with a miserable hack using third-party lenses.

      "Intelligent design" my ass. Write up a textbook on "crappy design theory" and I'll buy it.

    42. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, that link doesn't disprove anything. He makes a lot of assertions without any proof. He ignores the fact that it is incredibly unlikely that you would have an organism "evolve" all the parts necessary for a complex system like the to work. And this is even less likely when you consider that almost never, if ever, do mutations add genetic material. They always either rearrange or destroy DNA. It's preposterous to think that all of hte structures and proteins that are contained in many of the IC systems could happen by chance. That's a lot of added DNA, which mutations don't add.

      In fact, I'd like to see someone explain the mechanism of how an organism gains genetic material. How do you go from 300 genes to 301 genes?

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    43. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gee, you must know a lot of molecular biology...

    44. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by daliman · · Score: 1

      Gah, I've ran out of mod points damnit! Nice one ;)

    45. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by esanbock · · Score: 1

      Fortunatly, the big bang explains the what. The why is left up to religion. The big bang states:

      It looks like all the starts are moving away from one another because everything just exploded outward for some unknown reason. We don't really know what caused it, though.

      The big bible states:

      Question not thy god and creator who doth makes big bangs. Or something.

    46. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by MechaStreisand · · Score: 1

      OT, but astronomers are now saying that the universe is finite? It seems like just a year or two ago my Astronomy TA told me that it's likely infinite, and that does imply all that craziness with everything that is possible (that could occur in the 13.7 billion years since the universe began) has already happened, and there are parallel mes and yous and slightly different versions of us, and everything else that could ever be, somewhere is.

      It would just really suck if that weren't the case. It's way too much fun to think about.

      --
      Disclaimer: IANAL. This post is, however, legal advice, and creates an attorney-client relationship.
    47. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking as an atheist I believe it's more probable that life started a long time ago in a far away galaxy and hopped a ride on an icy comet.

    48. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      Indeed, the good old post hoc, ergo propter hoc method (which is logically wrong).

      Eg:
      1. All trousers have two legs
      2. All men wear trousers
      3. Therefore all men have two legs

      --
      Did he inhale?
    49. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      Bah. Creationism has a way of explaining that, but they don't like to talk about God's .. um .. youthful indiscretions.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    50. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      Astronomers now say that the universe is finite, but it doesn't matter even if it were infinite, because we're only talking about this one particular solar system.


      Of course chances of life appearing on this particular solar-system and on this particular planet, are really, really really small. But, we have billions of solar-systems on this galaxy alone, and we have billions of galaxies, ad we have had something like 15 billion years of time. Odds are that on few of those life did appear. It just happens that this solar-system is one of them. To us, it seems like we have beated incredible odds by just being here. And on small scale, we did. But on universal scale, the odds are not that small. Hell, I think that given the number of solar-systems and the amount of time, the possibility of life appearing in the universe is about 99.999999999%.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    51. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      So, where did God come from? I would assume He is pretty complex being, so someone must have created Him, right?

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    52. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by m50d · · Score: 1

      If you have an infinite universe, you still have an infinite number of possibilities, even in a finite time interval. Read up on the anthropic principle to see what we're arguing here. There are a stupidly large number of Type I (?) stars with suitable planets in the right places. Given this very large ("effectively infinite") number of planets, something that is very unlikely for any single planet would still have occured on at least one of them with a very high probability. Our system is otherwise unremarkable, it is simply the system on which it happened. And the reason it happened in our system rather than one of the heptillions of others is simple: we only exist here because it happened here.

      --
      I am trolling
    53. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by m50d · · Score: 1

      "As much evidence as supports the rest of fundamental Christian beliefs" seems to me to be zero. Scientific belief is the only rational form of belief, because it is the only way of believing which ensures you always believe that which has the most evidential support. Science as truth is the most logical thing to believe in as truth. Christians really seem to believe in a god of the gaps, shrinking how much of the bible is literal as science advances - remember Gallileo? To me it seems they're deliberately creating a belief system that cannot be disproved. When part of it is disproved, they simply deny that that was really an important belief anyway. Such an approach works for any theory, so it's unreasonable to believe Christianity on the basis that it hasn't been disproven - why do you think it's any better than any other religion?

      --
      I am trolling
    54. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      well, if 10^100 possible events are there, then it's going to be a LONG time indeed for enough time to have passed for all possible events to have occured.

      Remember that old Tower of Hanoi puzzle, that in its classical form requires moving a stack of 32 disks from one post to another, so that they end up in the same order? Well, it ends up being 2^64-1 moves to do. Which is a long time, even on a very fast computer...

    55. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Walterk · · Score: 1


      No one created God. He spontaneously expanded into infinity out of an initially infinitesimal lump of potency.


      So where did this lump of potency come from then?

    56. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      ...and didn't it take at least 100 years or so for the stories about Jesus' life to be written down in the first forms that we have?

      And we all know how infallible humans are at preserving oral histories...

    57. Re: so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > I just want a word with the guy who came up with the term "intelligent designer". If I'd designed this thing I'd have been fired.

      My coworkers do crap like that all the time, and the PHB expects me to clean up behind them.

      I wonder who cleans up behind the Designer, and what's taking him so long to get around to planet earth.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    58. Re: so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Do a web search on irreducible complexity. [...] But the evidence is there, waiting for you to explain it. Don't dismiss the challenger; know his argument and refute it.

      The IC argument is a lamer that only fools people who are ignorant or uncritical. The argument is that you can break certain things if you remove one part at a time, therefore those things could not have been built up by the reverse process.

      However, people with only a smattering of knowledge about evolution know that it not only builds up, it also tears down, modifies, changes function, etc. Simply demonstrating that something is IC is not a valid argument that it could not have evolved, pace Behe and Dembski.

      A high-school student who has had an uncensored biology class is smart enough and educated enough to refute the arguments offered by the proponents of ID. (That's why I think the handful of overreligious PhDs who are peddling it are doing it out of dishonesty rather than honest error. That, and the fact that they keep using the arguments even after having the factual and logical flaws pointed out to them.)

      BTW, IMO there's nothing wrong with being ignorant about evolution or anything else unless of course you're willfully ignorant.


      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    59. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by superyooser · · Score: 1
      Teacher: Class, today we are going to study Evolution. A long time ago, undetermined chaotic occurrence(s) generated life using super, natural powers unknown to science.

      Evidence compels long-time atheist/evolutionist to lose belief in materialist cause of life

      At 81, after decades of insisting that belief is a mistake, Antony Flew has concluded that some sort of intelligence or first cause must have created the universe. A super-intelligence is the only good explanation for the origin of life and the complexity of nature, Mr. Flew said in a telephone interview from England.
      [...]
      Flew told The Associated Press his current ideas have some similarity with American "intelligent design" theorists, who see evidence for a guiding force in the construction of the universe. He accepts Darwinian evolution but doubts it can explain the ultimate origins of life.
    60. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by isometrick · · Score: 1

      A small nitpick ... the anthropic principle centers on the "observer" ... i.e. we can only observe our existence because we exist, and if we were much different we wouldn't be here to observe it.

      Life, it seems, is a giant optimization problem. We find ourselves in a universe that sits at a criticial point between all of the constraints. It has one of the relatively few configurations of universal constants where existence is possible. Thus, whether the universe is infinite is immaterial. The fact that we exist validates that this critical point was met, no matter how large or small the probability.

      Try the book "The Constants of Nature", it delves into some interesting mathematical and topological topics related to the anthropic principle.

    61. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by bheer · · Score: 1

      The fact that the universe is finite but expanding explains a lot of experimental data, notably red-shifted stars, and also why the night sky is dark.

    62. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

      I agree. An honest teaching of any scientific theory ought to at least mention the observations that the theory does not adequately explain. In our time, with men routinely going into space and computers that churn out data faster than anybody can use it, anything "scientific" is taken to be as good as gold. (I was going to say "as gospel truth" but that simile didn't seem to work as well in this particular thread! :-)

      If we're trying to teach kids to have an open mind, to question, to think for themselves, and not to just blindly accept what they're told - which is critical for good scientific thought - we need to be honest that the theories are not perfect, and teach their flaws, too. A supposedly flawless theory is too easily accepted as unquestionable, and that's not what we want. Maybe the kid will grow up to throw down that theory and replace it with another. Maybe the kid will grow up to fix the theory in a way that accounts for the previous flaw. We don't know, and we do science a disservice if we set up any theory as unassailable.

      Even atheists and agnostics, to be truly open-minded, have to be willing to admit the possibility that a Deity may exist, that some religion might have the right take on metaphysical reality. (That may or may not have direct bearing on his/her personal situation, but that's a different subject.) Said Deity may affect the universe in ways beyond the capability of science to explain. So yes, keep using science to look for a naturalistic explanation, but be prepared that you may never find one because it may not exist.

      Of course, the religious also have to be willing to accept the possibility that there is no Deity, and that we simply have an imperfect understanding of how the rules of the universe work. The fundamental nature of the universe may be a question we'll eventually figure out...100,000 years from now. I personally can accept that possibility. It just doesn't fit my personal observations.

      "Closed-mindedness" is not the exclusive province of the religious. Practitioners of science are just as susceptible. Intellectual honesty requires that both reexamine their beliefs, and be open that those beliefs may be completely wrong. There's nothing wrong with being wrong, as long as you are willing to change. Everyone makes mistakes.

    63. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by jschottm · · Score: 1

      that evolution seems to fit with the facts as science is best capable of recording it, and that there are some failures which we cannot explain yet but which alternative theories, including creationism might possibly explain.

      The insane guy who rants on the street might have an alternate theory that could explain the existance of everything. So does Terry Pratchet. Does that mean that they should be mentioned in school as well? Being less silly, what about Bhuddist and Hindi creation stories? African and Indian ledgends? Do you decide which ones to mention by popularity, by the background of students in the class, or by all inclusiveness?

      The place for the alternate theories (as you put it) to be explained is in the church, not the school. I'm pretty sure that 99.9% of high school students are aware of their religion's views on the creation of everything by the time they get to high school, and they are perfectly capable of seeking out council that can help them determine what they want to believe (creationism, guided evolution, metaphor, whatever).

    64. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by cebailey · · Score: 1

      When I say "comprehend," I mean fully and completely understand. When you get right down to it, every human is at least a bit of an agnostic, because we can't 100% know if God exists or not. That's that whole "faith" thing us Christians are always talking about. I'll save discussion about whether or not God exists for another thread, but as Christians we feel like He's out there and deserves some respect.

    65. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by bamberg · · Score: 1

      I've read Mere Christianity. In it C.S. Lewis makes the argument that Jesus was the son of god in the following way:

      1. Jesus went around proclaiming himself to be the son of god


      Assuming that Jesus actually existed and that the biblical description of him is accurate, an assumption for which there is little basis in fact.

      2. For someone to just go around proclaiming themselves to be the son of god, they could be two things, a) telling the truth or b) crazy

      Or misquoted, or non-existent.

      3. We all know Jesus wasn't crazy, so I guess he's the son of god

      No we don't. Plenty of crazy people have made wild claims about gods. The Heaven's Gate cult is one of the more recent examples. Those morons killed themselves for their beliefs. Unless you're claiming that you believe they were correct (in which case why are you still alive?), you must admit that Lewis's "proof" is no such thing.

      Did Lewis really intend this as a general proof that Jesus was god? I had read somewhere that this was merely an argument against people who believe that Jesus existed and said the things he said but that he was merely a great philosopher. Supposedly Lewis's point was that if you believe Jesus was a great philosopher then you believe he existed and said what the bible says he said so you must believe that he was either lord, liar or lunatic. And if he's a liar or lunatic then he can't be a great philospher. An interesting argument against Jesus being merely a great philosopher but not a good general argument for his existence and divinity.

    66. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      Simply state, validly, that evolution seems to fit with the facts as science is best capable of recording it, and that there are some failures which we cannot explain yet but which alternative theories, including creationism might possibly explain.

      That's not true though. Creationism is not a theory in the sense that word is used in science, nor does it serve to explain the observable facts. Saying "this just happened to appear because of god" is not any more an explanation than saying "this just happened to appear". Less actually, since then you'd have to explain how god suddenly came to appear.

    67. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by magefile · · Score: 1

      You think that's bad? Pah. I have serious failures developing in my knees and ankles, and my hips are already jury-rigged as it is. But it would be more practical to replace the whole thing than to replace all six of those parts, so it ain't happening any time soon. Any designer that doesn't plan for incidental damage and repair isn't worth it's salt.

    68. Re: so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He did. Showed up about 2000 years ago.

    69. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      The machine is probably designed well, but being operated in an environment which exceeds several of the specifications.

    70. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by evil_tandem · · Score: 1
      creationism as a theory...

      an equally valid "theory" is that i, in a past life, created the universe and life because i liked the idea of having rocks around. eventually i created people b/c i wanted the rocks to get moved around on an intensely micro scale

      you cannot prove yours is any more valid than mine. so as long as you put the "ryan" theory next to creationism in the textbooks then i have no problem teaching children this.

      on further thought i'd like to dispute gravity too... not because i have any evidence of what did happen, but because the model isn't complete yet...

    71. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by codehoser · · Score: 1

      Here's my proof that the idea of "intelligent design" is bogus:

      The hole that I breathe through is the same hole that I regularly pack full of food.

      Brilliant!

    72. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was only potential to begin with.

    73. Re: so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually there's a story that god created the universe in al it's serene splendor and when he wasn't looking for a moment the devil made the earth and everything on it behind his back. The way things are going strongly suggest that god has been ignoring the resultant mess on his metaphoric carpet (so to speak).

    74. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by MechaStreisand · · Score: 1

      The fact that the observable universe is finite explains why the night sky is dark, yes. But what we know is that the universe extends far beyond what we can actually see. Think of it this way. We can only see 13.7 billion light-years away (and then only the cosmic microwave background), since beyond that, the light has not had time since the beginning of the universe to reach us. It's outside our light cone. (A google search for that term might explain this better than I can.) But it's still there. We know that the universe is one of two things: either very, very large but finite, or infinite. Two years ago, we thought it was infinite, but now it seems that astronomers are saying that it's finite. Which sucks.

      --
      Disclaimer: IANAL. This post is, however, legal advice, and creates an attorney-client relationship.
    75. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you know that what the human race is right now is as it is supposed to be? Perhaps we are just another step in the path of the Intelligent Design....

    76. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      What the page is missing is the possibility that there could easily be enormous amounts of different ways to produce life by arranging molecules and our little world just stumbled on one of them. The page argues on the basis of Hamlet, and there is only one such thing. The faulty assumption is that life is like a book, unique and you need to stumble upon the exact thing. Life is much more diverse and opportunistic, and stating that the only example we know of is the only possible configuration is a bit silly.

    77. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      Actually irreducible complexity is easily refuted. It hinges on the fact that parts of organisms are so complex and interdependent, that if you take one thing out it ceases functioning. Hence, the IC proponents (who have died out by now) claim that the thing must have been created as a whole, as it cannot conceivably have been build up with small steps. And the ID is there.

      To refute this, simply take the construction of an arch of bricks. Humans have been capable of doing this for millennia. The nice thing about a brick arch is that it is irreducibly complex: take one brick out and the entire thing collapses. Unlike what the IC people claim, people don't put a ready made arch out of nowhere, they first build supporting structure, build the arch, and then remove the supporting structure. Something similar can easily happen in evolution. Lots of structure with limited functionality gets added and added, and lots of old superfluous structure gets removed. What you end up with is a 'irreducibly complex' structure where every part has a function and there's no clear indication how it was build. Simply because the supporting structure has been removed underway.

    78. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by jfengel · · Score: 2, Funny

      So we're evolving towards an intelligent design? That should make everybody happy!

    79. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Then go read his followup paper, which is linked to in the first. It addresses that very point.

      Those articles aren't meant to convert anyone. They aren't claiming that other mechanisms are any more probable than evolution, only that evolution itself is incredibly improbable.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    80. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      If something is a one in a billion chance...

      Except that the odds of evolving a life form as complex as homo sapiens isn't one in a billion. It's more like one in a trillion trillion trillion (or more).

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    81. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Your point is well taken, but be careful that you don't make the theory of evolution nonfalsifiable by taking it as an article of faith that everything must have evolved.

      It is incumbent on proponents of evolutionary theory (including me) that every putative example of irreducible complexity must be shown that it could have evolved. If they claim that some individual piece could not have evolved, you must find a series of steps by which it could have evolved.

      Evolution makes predictions about what can and what cannot evolve. These predictions are what's important about evolutionary theory, or any theory: a theory which makes no predictions is useless.

      That's a key difference between ID and evolution theories. ID makes no predictions; an "intelligent designer" created everything, and so everything physically possible could be created. Evolution says, "Certain structures are immensely unlikely to have evolved, and future species are more likely to look like X, Y, and Z and not like P, Q, and R." In that sense ID isn't a scientific theory at all, and why essentially every scientist rejects it.

      You're not likely to have evolved parts made of pure aluminum, for example, since pure aluminum never occurs on planet Earth. Moreover, the energies involved in refining it seem to occur in no natural organism. If were were to find such a mechanism in, say, ocelots, fully formed, with no fossil record or examples in related species, you'd be hard pressed to defend evolution.

      To my knowledge no such examples exist. The ones put forth by ID theory seem to be grasping at straws, and confused "unexplained" with "unexplainable".

      But that doesn't make evolutionary theory necessarily right. All scientific theories must be tested against their predictions, and that's a process that never stops. All challengers must be accepted. The examples that ID proponents push these days are excellent tests of evolutionary theory, and as they are refuted, evolution gets stronger, not weaker.

      Admittedly, it is difficult to argue with somebody who isn't putting forth a theory of their own. In theory science accepts all challenges; in practice, scientists have limited time and limited funding and simply don't care to refute every example. Bring me a skeleton of a dinosaur fossil with an aluminum bone, and I'm not going to spend the immense amount of time involved in proving that you faked that bone. Neither can I explain the evolution of bacterial flagellum while standing on one foot to somebody without a strong understanding of bacterial biology, intimate knowledge of metabolic biochemistry, etc.

      But please don't make evolution nonfalsifiable to recourse to analogies. I'm willing to accept credible challenges to evolution, and while my explanation may look like your arch example, until I've found the specifics, evolution still hasn't conquered that challenge. If I'm unwilling to accept evidence that refutes my theory, then my theory has no predictive value and I might as well scrap it here and now.

    82. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      If you have an infinite universe

      Except that current though doesn not hold that the universe is infinite. If the big bang happened, then it happened a finite amount of time ago with the universe expanding at a finite rate. You encounter other finite limits with other theories.

      The only possibility to get us infinity is the belief that there are an infinite number of universes. But wait! Isn't that in and of itself a huge leap of faith?

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    83. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Last I heard the Big Bang was the accepted theory for the origin of the universe. If the Big Bang happened a finite amount of time ago (15 billion years more or less), and the universe has been expanding at a finite rate (the speed of light, more or less), then you end up with a finite universe.

      There may indeed be an infinite expanse of nothingness for our finite universe to expand into, but since no events can possibly occur there, it doesn't concern us.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    84. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      The analogy was not meant to explain evolution, it was there to refute the challenge. The implicit assumption behind IC is that anything that cannot be broken apart cannot have been built. This is wrong and the arch example shows that. This means that the challenge is faulty and does not need to be taken seriously.

      My further statements about how evolution builds up and removes stuff is based on a few experiments I've done with artificial evolution (genetic programming), where indeed irreducibly complex programs evolve through mutation and selection and where a complete 'fossil' record was there to see that adding and removing stuff while retaining functionality indeed is possible. This doesn't necessarily mean that natural evolution does the same thing, but that wasn't what the analogy was used for.

    85. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      Then go read his followup paper, which is linked to in the first. It addresses that very point.

      No it doesn't. It addresses the point that if there is a particular document (string of genes) to be reached within a certain error limit, it is still impossible. My point was that there might be a wealth of documents, all giving rise to life. We've observed the outcome of one, but don't know about the magnitude of all. He talks about a minimum coding length of 256 (meaning a search space of 4^256). This assumes that the only coding space that can support life is DNA. How can he claim this? For all we know, life can arise from interactions of completely different molecules, which also has a tiny probability of success to be found. If the possibilities are numerous enough, they might simply add up.

      I grant the author his scepticism though, as I'm also not very convinced by science's forays into pre-biotic evolution. It's a tough problem, but I'm sure there's a rational explanation for it. On the other hand, it could have been this 2^(-256) chance that created life in this universe, and we would be shit out of luck with our science to explain that.

    86. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Anyway, who created God then, smarty?

      The same guy that created your godless Big Bang. Smarty.

      Oh, and don't try to propose a continuously collapsing/recreating universe, or I'll just propose an eternal God.

    87. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Could you please state the scientific Theory of Creationism? I'd love to hear it.

      Could you please state the religious Doctrine of Evolutionism? I'd love to hear it.

      When you're trying to refute creationism by saying it doesn't work in the bounds of science, you're making as much sense as saying that Microsoft Word is impossible because it doesn't work on a Linux system.

      (Please don't mention WINE. I'm trying to make an analogy, not actually install Evolution or anything.)

    88. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
      "When I say 'comprehend,' I mean fully and completely understand. When you get right down to it, every human is at least a bit of an agnostic, because we can't 100% know if God exists or not. That's that whole 'faith' thing us Christians are always talking about. I'll save discussion about whether or not God exists for another thread, but as Christians we feel like He's out there and deserves some respect."


      What I am saying is that, if you assume this notion of God is infinte, etc., any possible (finite) model you may have of it is going to be woefully inadequate, and hence a completely disrespectful trivialization.


      As an analogy, say I have a function on the plane, and I give you 10 random sample points with x values in the interval [0,1]. Now you might interpolate a polynomial through those points, and say you have found my function. But have you? Well, maybe, but there are a lot of other possible functions that also go through those points! In particular, even if I gave you all the values with x in the interval [0,1] and said my function was continuous, you still wouldn't have any idea what's going on outside of [-epsilon,1+epsilon] or so. This is what I think of when I see people trying to model a God based on their experiences. It just seems like a huge insult to any possible such figure to assume that you can model them like that when you really know nothing. Sure, maybe your polynomial approximation works quite well to predict things in the observable world. For example, certain moral standards work well, at least in a homogenous group which respects them -- e.g., as far as my own actions are concerned, I tend to adhere to a set of morals often associated with Christianity in the U.S. (though not an extremist). But it seems like unnecessarily, disrespectful human gradiosity to extend those claims to an area with which you have no contact and over which you have no control, and, moreover, to cause all sorts of conflicts with other people who believe in other equally questionable models of that domain.


      Disclaimer: The above breaks down if you argue that God is finite or finitely modelable, e.g., by a polynomial interpretation. But in that case, you have a different notion of what a God is, since this places severe restrictions on what it can do. Indeed, we could probably set up scientific tests for a particular instance of a finitely modelable God.


      In conclusion, I submit that the sincerest form of respect for a God, or any such entity which may or may not exist, is through deference to its existence and characteristics alone, and not to the judgment of any alleged human representative thereof (including parents, priests and books). Yes, I realize I am expressing a human view on this phenemena, but my goal is not to convince you that I am correct, but rather to try to explain what my viewpoint truly is, because I feel I am gravely misunderstood -- though as with any religion, it seems to me that if someone truly understands what I am saying, they will tend to agree with me.

    89. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Kris_J · · Score: 1
      Oh, and don't try to propose a continuously collapsing/recreating universe, or I'll just propose an eternal God.
      Because, of course, observation and experimentation support the idea of an unseen all-powerful guiding hand.
    90. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by m50d · · Score: 1

      OK, but we don't need infinite. We just need enough planets that (1-p(a given planet develops life))^n to be 1-(1/2)^(10^-28) which is a very small number.

      --
      I am trolling
    91. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by m50d · · Score: 1

      OK, but we don't need infinite. We just need enough planets that (1-p(a given planet develops life))^n to be <1/2. And given that we have an estimated 10^28 stars in the universe, I think this is the case - all we need is p>1-(1/2)^(10^-28) which is a very small number.
      (sorry for double reply, forgot about posting as code so my <s work right)

      --
      I am trolling
    92. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by cebailey · · Score: 1

      Ah, a fellow math nerd. This just got more interesting!

      The problem is, God is outside of a realm we can fully understand, but parts of Him can be revealed through analogies to this world. I'll stick with your function example. Instead of assuming God is a 2-dimensional function, I would call this universe and existence a 2-dimensional plane. God, however, is a gigantic, complex, 3-D surface that intersects our 2-D plane at various points and lines and curves.

      It would be like us trying to build a HyperCube. Sure, we can make a 2-D stereographic drawing of one, or we can even try to make a 3-D model, but we could never actually build a 4-D HyperCube. In the same sense, we have a limited understanding of God in our world's terms, but not the full picture of Him. The picture we DO have is based on what He's revealed to us through the Bible and personal experience. (I promise that's all I'll say about Christianity right now...back to more abstract theology.)

      In reference to your conclusion, I submit that we don't disagree as much as you think. Many people find it easier to just fall in line behind some sort of religious authority and do whatever he/she says. But if you read the textbook, we're supposed to follow God's will and God's will alone...this means that sometimes, parents and priests are going to be wrong. And the Bible might even be 'wrong' on some little things, but not theology, which is another story entirely--but don't tell that to the fundamentalists!

    93. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      How do they support an eternal universe? I'm honestly asking...I don't know if they do or don't.

      All I've seen in this theory is a poor attempt to make the universe self-contained so that scientists have to neither invoke God nor violate the first law of thermodynamics. These theories make about as much scientific sense and reasonableness as assuming the presence of God.

    94. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
      "The picture we DO have is based on what He's revealed to us through the Bible and personal experience."

      This point is where we differ. I see no reason to absolutely trust the authenticity of anything the Bible says, in particular that which is not corroborated by independent sources which I have a demonstrable reason to trust (i.e., the parts that aren't heavily stylize history or reasonable moral lessons). Let us consider several alternate definitions of "the Bible:"

      1. the abstract notion of "the word of God"
      2. the divinely inspired ideas in the transcribers' minds
      3. the actual text, at some point in the past
      4. a particular translation of the actual text in its current form
      5. the idea in a reader's mind based on reading of said text
      I see no reason that these definitions must all refer to the same identical concept, and based on historical indications and personal experience with human nature, many reasons that they may not, in possibly very gross ways. There is no way for me to rigorously verify that (5) in any way corresponds to (1) without deferring to the authority of a fallible outside authority with ulterior motives. This makes the authority of the Bible indistinguishable from the authority of parents and priests:

      "But if you read the textbook, we're supposed to follow God's will and God's will alone...this means that sometimes, parents and priests are going to be wrong. And the Bible might even be 'wrong' on some little things, but not theology, which is another story entirely"

      Wait a minute, theology is, in the end, an attempt to explain everything -- strictly, if it is wrong on any matter, it is wrong on a matter of theology, though that is not to say it is wrong on all matters [of theology].

    95. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. But even given a number as large as that, over the course of time, if the probablity is non-zero, it becomes more and more likely to happen.

      First of all, even if the probability is as large as you say, you don't have to run the 'experiment' one trillion-trillion-trillion times to get one instance occuring. It could happen on the first try, and that happening is no more unlikely than your 'experiment' turning up results the 15th trillion time.

      Moreover, as time passes, as long as you have a finite probability that something will happen, it starts to become more unlikely that it WON'T happen. Given the amount of time that the universe has been here (we think), at a certain point, it's almost impossible that life WOULDN'T occur.

      Incidentally, if you decide to take the femtosecond as the smallest tick of time where something can be decided (and it's still pretty big compared to units of Planck time - I picked it because I know that we can generate femtosecond pulses of light), around 10^32 femtoseconds have passed since the creaion of the universe. That's a lot of chances for life to 'spontaneously' arise as we see it.

    96. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Kris_J · · Score: 1
      These theories make about as much scientific sense and reasonableness as assuming the presence of God.
      I'm sorry, no. Scientific theories about the creation of the universe are base on observation and experimentation. Religious theories about the creation of the universe are just making shit up. It's like comparing apples and hydrogen.
    97. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Where's the observation and experimentation that supports a phoenix universe or time that somehow bends back on itself? I haven't done much reading in this area, so I haven't heard of any, but I'd be really interested in the observations there.

      Although I disagree with any "experimentation." Besides, a theory is only something you made up and that happens to fit with observations.

    98. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Kris_J · · Score: 1
      Where's the observation and experimentation that supports a phoenix universe or time that somehow bends back on itself?
      Have you heard of the fields of astronomy, physics and astrophysics? Hubble, The Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope, particle accellerators, super colliders? Red-shift, dark matter, black holes, the strange gravitational effects affecting the Voyager spacecraft? For that matter, gravity, space or science in general?

      I don't know how many people I speak for here, but religious twits that actually have the gall to say that science and religion are the same thing simply because they understand neither are really starting to get up me. Religion is crowd control using fiction. Science is a real attempt to understand the universe.

    99. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Have you heard of the fields of astronomy, physics and astrophysics?

      Dude, I won first place at the astronomy event in the National Science Olympiad in 2002, out of teams from state champion schools from almost every state. I know astrophysics. If there were anything in regular astrophysics that necessitated a universe before ours or a looping universe, I'd know about it. Nothing of what you mention requires any more than the Big Bang and an expanding universe.

      If you continue to personally attack me and resort to name calling, I can only assume that you have no rational arguments left. I'm interested in rational debate according to the generally accepted rules of your science.

      Oh, and I'd like to see your explanation behind "crowd control using fiction." Who benefits from controlling the crowd? How effectively is the crowd really controlled? If you want to control crowds, you're better off starting some cult like Scientology or ruling a country with a perverted ideology and an iron fist. Granted, Christianity has been used in both these manners, but I detest those incidents.

    100. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Kris_J · · Score: 1
      Dude, I won first place at the astronomy event in the National Science Olympiad in 2002, out of teams from state champion schools from almost every state. I know astrophysics. If there were anything in regular astrophysics that necessitated a universe before ours or a looping universe, I'd know about it. Nothing of what you mention requires any more than the Big Bang and an expanding universe.
      Uh huh. Even ignoring the fact that you could easily be making this up, this is apparenly a high school (teams) event. Making you, what, 20 at the oldest? I think there are probably things in the world that you don't know about yet.

      "your science"? Nah, why don't we have a debate based on your religion. Then I could just say whatever I want and claim god told me.

    101. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      you could easily be making this up

      Except for the minor fact that I'm not. I can find proof, both on the web and in print, it's just that it's not worth wasting the effort on you. Why don't you Google for "National Science Olympiad 2002"?

      I'm amazed at your persistence. If nothing else, I respect you for your tenacity and belief in your viewpoint.

      Making you, what, 20 at the oldest?

      Oh yeah, so the older guys always are right? Children are meant to be seen and not heard, of course. What're you going to do, believe Julia Child's or Strom Thurmond's statements about science?

      Hey, if you want to make this a personal-attack-fest instead of a rational debate about something important, go for it. I was really hoping for the rational debate, but I can do personal attacks. And live up (down?) to my age.

      "your science"?

      Yeah, your science. As in the science that you were supporting. Now you're not even defending it, you're just appearing more childish than myself (if that's even possible).

      You haven't said one thing about the topic at hand. May I interpret that as a statement that you have nothing left to say, and you're admitting defeat?

    102. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Kris_J · · Score: 1
      You haven't said one thing about the topic at hand. May I interpret that as a statement that you have nothing left to say, and you're admitting defeat?
      You can, but you'd be wrong. I don't intend to defend science, because I don't think it needs defending. I'm attacking religion here and I don't see you defending it much yourself.
    103. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Couldn't have been said better. I've used that particular argument against the damn Christian evangelizers myself-"Well, if the guy did design humanity, he's an idiot. I don't follow idiots."

      Never have gotten any kind of meaningful response to that one, seems no one still cares to try here either.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    104. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are similar things, which are a hybrid of creation and evolution.

      However, the more overarching point here is: Creation is a doctrine, and belongs in a church. Evolution, on the other hand, is a scientific theory, and thereby, belongs in a science class. Creationism, not being a scientific theory, does NOT belong there.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    105. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by jfengel · · Score: 1

      The best I get is usually splutterings along the lines of how magnificent it all is anyway, or "why bad things happen to good people"-type morality plays. Phooey.

    106. Re:so, how is creationism taught anyways? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Creation is a doctrine, and belongs in a church. Evolution, on the other hand, is a scientific theory, and thereby, belongs in a science class.

      Agreed. Completely.

      Except for the minor fact that a lot of people don't realize this distinction. The underlying problem, which I'd prefer to see solved, is that people realize how science properly works and what its bounds are, so that nobody complains when science gets a different answer from religion.

      Public state-run education and freedom of religion should not be interfering with each other.

  23. Re:Yay! by Em+Ellel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    +1 for creationism!

    Read it carefuly, actually it is -1 Creationism. They are ruling creationist's stickers unconstitutional, though wierdly enough part of me feels like it is also "-1 Free Speech". :-/ I am kinda split if it is a good thing to make "keep open mind" stickers unconstitutional.

    -Em

    --
    RelevantElephants: A Somatic WebComic...
  24. owned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't thoery meen most factual in a scienctific scence. It seems like they owned themselves.

  25. America still might have a chance by Sophrosyne · · Score: 1, Funny

    Stupid religious nuts

    1. Re:America still might have a chance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah! MOD +4 OPTIMISTIC

    2. Re:America still might have a chance by mapmaker · · Score: 1

      Well, parts of it anyway.

    3. Re:America still might have a chance by Spl0it · · Score: 1

      That made me laugh soo loud! You hit the bullseye with that one. It's so funny to watch people fromt he southern states speak about anything. I love how sports players credit their abilities and hardwork to some magic man called 'god' as opposed to their parents sports backgrounds, hard work, and spending their entire life playing that sport.

      --

      No, this is
  26. The Lemov Test by alphakappa · · Score: 4, Informative
    For those who might cite the First Amendment: The judge based his decision on the test established by the SC in the Lemov vs. Kurtzman:

    Under the Lemon test, a government-sponsored message violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment if: (1) it does not have a secular purpose, (2) its principal or primary effect advances or inhibits religion, or (3) it creates an excessive entanglement of the government with religion.


    Since putting the sticker violated rules (2) and (3), it was deemed to be unconstitutional.
    --
    "When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail." - Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
    1. Re:The Lemov Test by comwiz56 · · Score: 1, Informative

      I would say it does quite the opposite, despite the court ruling.

      The books present evolution (a counter-religious theory) as fact, making the books violate #2 more than the sticker, saying that the school system condones neither belief.

      And for #3, I'd say that these stickers help to remove the entanglement of government and religion, by not presenting a certain view as a fact.

    2. Re:The Lemov Test by firewood · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Since putting the sticker violated rules (2) and (3), it was deemed to be unconstitutional.

      Removing the sticker also violates rule (2) and (3). How are you supposed to believe that the Great Pumpkin poofed the world into being atop the Giant Turtle with all the public schools forcing these scientific theories down your throat as absolute fact.

      Only by stating the evolution (or creationism) is merely a strongly (weakly) supported scientific theory, are we Great Pumkin worshippers not inhibited in holding our silly beliefs, and thus entangling the schools into endorsing atheism or agnosticism.

    3. Re:The Lemov Test by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      Why do you view evolution as a "counter-religious" theory?

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    4. Re:The Lemov Test by zephc · · Score: 1

      Evolution is only counter-religious if your religion is counter-evolutionary. There's got to be a religion or three that concurrs with evolution, or at least has nothing to say against it.

      --
      "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    5. Re:The Lemov Test by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course since the Patriot Act breaks the 4th and 6th amendments ... and you dumbass americans have not overthrown your government in response to stealing those rights from you ... as it is your responsibility to do so ... the fact that the damn sticker may have violated the first amendment really doesnt matter.

      Your constituition has already been rendered meaningless.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    6. Re:The Lemov Test by parliboy · · Score: 1

      But this assumes that the only two viable options are Evolution or Creation. By saying this fails the Lemon test, doesn't the judge essentially discount any other possible explanations about our beginnings?

      --
      "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
    7. Re:The Lemov Test by JustinXB · · Score: 1

      What? The sticker didn't mention God, religion, or creationism. It didn't violate rule 2 or 3 in any way, shape, or form.

    8. Re:The Lemov Test by belmolis · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Most Jews accept evolution. The Roman Catholic Church accepts evolution. Most Protestant denominations accept evolution. Buddhists accept evolution. Baha'is accept evolution. The three groups adamantly opposed to evolution are fundamentalist Christians, "fundamentalist" Muslims, and "fundamentalist" Hindus. It isn't an accident that these are also the groups that create the most hatred, cause the most violence, and try the hardest to impose themselves on others.

    9. Re:The Lemov Test by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 1

      There's got to be a religion or three that concurrs with evolution, or at least has nothing to say against it.


      There is, depending on which participants in said religion you talk to.

      I was sent to a rather conservative christian private high school. Evolution and natural selection were what was taught in biology. Anything in the bible that blatantly contradicted scientific fact (like earth being created in 6 days) was either said to be simply a parable that was not meant to be taken literally or that god ultimately caused the observed scientific to process happen, so the religious and scientific statements agree (such as evolution).

      After hearing the exact opposite from other christian institutions numerous times throughout my childhood, I eventually came to realize they are all wrong.

    10. Re:The Lemov Test by Herbmaster · · Score: 1

      I agree completely. Would your nation, whatever that may be, take its armed forces, and start bombing/invading ours? Any collateral damage done to our civilians would be perfectly understandable, seeing as we have failed to meet our responsibility to overthrow our government after they stole our inalienable rights.

      ...and while you're at it, could you see if you could aim most of that collateral damage in the direction of, say, West Virginia and Oklahoma?

      --
      I'm not a smorgasbord.
    11. Re:The Lemov Test by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

      Here's an analogy: In the USA, government may not (it is unconstitutional to) decide they don't like Voodoo, and therefore ban animal sacrifice. They may (and do) ban certain practices on the grounds of hygene and animal cruelty. These bans may prevent Voodoo animal sacrifice, but they are constitutional, because they were enacted for a secular purpose. (As I recall, there has been a court case over exactly this issue.)*

      Evolution is similar: it is a scientific theory, developed in isolation from religious beliefs - it neither seeks to advance nor refute any religion. The fact that it incidentally conflicts with the religious beliefs of some people (as did the animal slaughter laws) is not relevant to the constitutionality of mandating its teaching.

      In contrast, the stickers are entirely driven by religion. The 'open mindedness' argument fails because other scientific theories given the same treatment. Where is the warning that electrons and gravity are 'only theories'?

      * I think there is a legal middle ground, where the law stands but a religious exception must be granted. I'm not familiar with the details.

      Disclaimers: I am not a lawyer. I am an athiest and an evolutionary biomathematician.

      --
      Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    12. Re:The Lemov Test by mog007 · · Score: 1

      Long ago they figured we might try that, which is why the U.S. government spends more on defense than any other country on the fucking planet.

    13. Re:The Lemov Test by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      Sticker:
      "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered.Evolution is a theory"
      "Evolution is a theory" sounds like a statement that everyone can agree with. How exactly does this advance or inhibit religion?
      "it creates an excessive entanglement of the government with religion." Huh? why? because the government is stating a fact about the textbook?

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    14. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there very fact that its called the "THEORY of evolution" should sum up a lot of things.

      but to a lot of people, creationism is the only thing that should be taught.

    15. Re:The Lemov Test by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

      Wow, you mean that that is possible that us humans are merely incorrectly interpreting the bible as opposed to incorrectly interpreting reality? Hmmm, reality or fairy tales, which one could it possibly be that we are misinterpreting.

      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
    16. Re:The Lemov Test by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      In contrast, the stickers are entirely driven by religion. The 'open mindedness' argument fails because other scientific theories given the same treatment. Where is the warning that electrons and gravity are 'only theories'?

      Exactly. This is what the people who say "but, but, the stickers just point out a fact about the book!" are missing: CONTEXT. The stickers single out evolution for special treatment.

      Biology textbooks are full of theories - theories about how germs cause disease, how DNA encodes the blueprint for a living creature, and so on. But what a surprise: there's no sticker on the front cover of the textbook saying "The germ theory of disease is a THEORY, not a FACT, and it should be critically examined." The reason they chose to treat evolution differently from all these other theories is obvious, and it has to do with religion.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    17. Re:The Lemov Test by Londovir · · Score: 1

      This sounds like something that, on appeal, may very well get overturned. The Lemon case was originally based on a state reimbursing mostly religious private schools for teacher salaries, textbook costs, and other expenses. It was clearly a case in that sense of establishment of religion, etc, etc. It happens to be one of the most commonly cited court decisions in lawsuits against school vouchers, for that reason. It's interesting that a judge would choose to use that particular precedent in this case, as they aren't really even close.

      Even if you choose to use this case, as the judge did, you have to debate whether or not putting the stickers on the books truly violated the intent of the 3 clauses. For it to violate #2, it would mean that placing the stickers would have the principal effect of advancing or inhibiting religion. I'd say that is entirely subjective, as the sticker itself makes absolutely no claims with respect to religion. It merely reminds readers that evolution is a theory, and not a fact. The difference between theory and fact (as scientific terms) is drilled into nearly all science majors in college, and I recall (ironically) in Catholic high school being taught how a theory differed from a fact. I see absolutely nothing to suggest that reminding readers something is not hard fact does anything to promote or deter religion.

      Now, perhaps the problem is that some people are not looking at the sticker objectively, but imposing religious/nonreligious fervor on the situation. THAT is the problem here. This isn't a direct or even indirect endorsement of a religious belief. And it certainly isn't an "entanglement" of government into religion, which it perhaps would have been if the sticker was being somehow forced onto textbooks in a religious school setting. As I said, this is a clear-cut case of a judge misapplying a SC decision in a situation that doesn't warrant it.

      Now, if you ask me if I think the stickers are nutty, I'd agree - frankly they don't bother to say anything that isn't (or shouldn't be) obvious to anyone. I believe in the theory of evolution after having studied the numerous concepts of origin "out there". And, just like many things in science which are thought to be true, but cannot be conclusively [yet] proven, I consider it a theory and not fact. Sure, in my mind it is just about the same, but it's not [yet]. I don't need a sticker to tell me that.

      Londovir
      --
      Londovir
    18. Re:The Lemov Test by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 0

      The 'red' states shall be the target. ... education through culling of the ignorant.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    19. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was placed there by creationists, that's why there was only one sticker - stating that evolution was a theory (incorrect, the theories regarding why evolution occurs are theories, evolution is a naturally and scientifically observed fact).

      As someone else pointed out, scientific method already states being open minded and all that, so why should that argument be repeated for this single instance. Why not other theories?

      The judge considered the evidence: 2000 religious parents suddenly objected to this one 'theory'. The motivation was quite clear. An organised vendetta by some fundamentalist Christians (religious fundamentalists are the worst people in the world, and rarely show any of the morality their religion preaches). Therefore the existance of the note was not because the book was incorrect and needed a correction, etc.

    20. Re:The Lemov Test by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      It's not the red states, it's the red counties. But if you get rid of the red counties, the only things that will be left are large cities, university towns, and a few odd "bedroom" communities for those who work in the former.

      You may hate the red states, but what I truly hate is the attitude that 95% of the US geographical landmass should be nuked out of spite. The last two months have demonstrated quite clearly that the last thing the Democrats and Greens stand for is tolerance.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    21. Re:The Lemov Test by devnullkac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Patriot Act does not, of course, break the 4th or 6th amendments, though it may be incompatible with them. One of the many strengths of the United States Constitution is that it provides for a resolution to this kind of problem that is well short of overthrowing the government, specifically, appealling court decisions which involve the Patriot Act until a court is reached which has the scope to rule on that compatibility. Our responsibility, which we do not take lightly, is to avail ourselves of the remedies which exist under law before discarding law in favor of outright revolution.

      A lesser nation might have devolved into chaos following a court ruling that decided a tight presidential race. But in the US, those that disagreed with the decision value the consitutional process too much to discard it when the outcome isn't to their liking.

      --
      What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
    22. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a great point. Many of the first (pre-Darwin) proponents of evolution (or natural selection) were religious leaders. Though that has changed since Darwin's time, some religious leaders incorporate religion into evolution (using God as the force behind it). Evolution certainly does not have to be counter-religious.

    23. Re:The Lemov Test by kaiocool · · Score: 1

      Actually, I am not sure what the status in the courts is, but bill of rights amendments can be infringed upon slightly if there is a compelling government interest and if it uses the least restrictive means. Obviously there is a compelling government interest, but the least restrictive means is debatable. Its prolly in the courts. I am against the Patriot Act. But as an American I am not going to overthrow the government, I am going to have faith in the design of the governmnet and the constitution. I am not completely sure, but I bet the Patriot Act is somewhere in the court right now and they are prolly debating it to hell. I would suspect it would be enjoined slightly.

    24. Re:The Lemov Test by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Hmm. It's like this: religion does not necessarily mean belief in God. It could mean multiple Gods, or no Gods. There could be figures of some other nature. Doesn't matter. What does matter is that Evolution attempts to replace, or answer the questions posed by religion. Because Evolution isn't definitive (as of yet), it is filed under religion.

      For it to become definitive, you need some irrefutable proof. Lab tests do not cut it. Pictures of black holes and ref-shifts do not cut it. Think of it this way: for Christians to prove they are right, they need Jesus to show up with a cadre of angels. For Muslims, Muhammed with sword in hand. Other religions have their own things. So, for Evolution, you need a video tape of the beginning of creation. Have fun!

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    25. Re:The Lemov Test by rdwald · · Score: 1

      Only by stating the evolution (or creationism) is merely a strongly (weakly) supported scientific theory Creationism isn't a "weakly supported scientific theory*." It isn't even a "completely unsupported scientific hypothesis." In order to be scientific, it needs to be, in principle, falsifiable (among other things.) If you can insert "God works in mysterious ways" to explain away any counter-evidence, your theory isn't falsifiable, and thus isn't scientific. * Actually, the phrase "weakly supported scientific theory" is self-contradictory. A scientific theory is by definition well-supported.

    26. Re:The Lemov Test by firewood · · Score: 1
      A scientific theory is by definition well-supported.

      Only because you are attempting to equate the term "scientific theory" with truth. Lot's of 18th and 19th century scientific theories considered partially supported by the evidence in their day are now considered bunk.

    27. Re:The Lemov Test by rdwald · · Score: 1

      A scientific theory is defined as a scientific hypothesis which has gained a large ammount of support from a variety of different sources. Note, however, that nowhere in this definition did I use the word "truth." In fact, science never uses the word "truth." After all, we could all be massively deluded by Decartes's "evil genius." We could all be brains in vats. All science does is say that, assuming that there is an external reality and that we can make consistant observations of it, a given theory is the best explanation currently thought up to explain the observations. Thus, scientists know that their theories are not true in some abstract sense; all scientific theories are just models to explain the data. Note that this entire discussion applies to the Theory of Relativity, the Germ Theory of Disease, the Theory of Electromagnatism, the Theory of Heliocentricism, etc. Evolution is just as well supported as any other scienfitic theory; in fact, I would suggest that it is better supported than, say, relativity or quantum theory, both of which we know can't explain certain observations.

      Old scientific theories aren't "considered bunk," they're just "considered supplanted by better theories which fit the data better." As soon as you can come up with a scientific theory (hint: it must be falsifiable) which explains all the data better than evolution, you can complain. Simply saying "Evolution doesn't perfectly explain this one data point!" doesn't count.

    28. Re:The Lemov Test by Evil+Poot+Cat · · Score: 1

      ...because the religion declares evolution to be counter-religious. Like witches, but different.

    29. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...Evolution attempts to replace, or answer the questions posed by religion.

      Nice try, talibaaner. You've failed, however. Evolution attempts to answer questions answered by religion, as posed by humankind. Evolution is not religious at all, merely conflicts with some religious teachings. Therefore, some religions oppose the concept of evolution, in direct proportion to their aspirations of power.

    30. Re:The Lemov Test by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Ah the tolerance and acceptance that the libera...I mean progressives have for people of different beliefs is amazing to see.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    31. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thats a pretty lofty way to say "the average American is apathetic about their country, government and basically couldn't give a crap enough to revolt".

    32. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Our responsibility, which we do not take lightly, is to avail ourselves of the remedies which exist under law before discarding law in favor of outright revolution.

      From what I read of the patriot act, you basically have no leg to stand on.

    33. Re:The Lemov Test by version5 · · Score: 1
      The books present evolution (a counter-religious theory) as fact

      The only problem here is that evolution only violates certain Christian religious teachings, so putting anti-evolution stickers on science books gives special treatment to those denominations that other Christian and non-Christian religions don't enjoy.

      If you wanted to clear up that little constitutional issue, you could mandate that school curricula include all the teachings from all religions where they differ from the scientific mainstream, but would Creationists be willing to have intelligent design, evolution and all the various other creation stories taught side by side? Somehow, I doubt it.

      --

      "It's Dot Com!"

    34. Re:The Lemov Test by omarin · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry but you're stupid. For example, despite all that George Bush Jr. has done WRONG, he WAS elected (this time anyway!) democratically/constitutionally by the portion of the population that wanted him in office. Furthermore, the fact that this Creationist sticker was considered unconstitutional shows that the Constitution (and the concept something being "unconstitutional") is still alive and kicking, thank you very much!

      (I now live in the UK, and I get tired of all the nonAmerican whiners who bitch and moan about Bush and then try to tar ME/all Americans with the same brush! Sheesh!)

    35. Re:The Lemov Test by juanillodgn · · Score: 1
      Re:The Lemov Test (Score:3, Insightful)

      Insightful??? OMG, hope it's just "humoderation"... ;-)

    36. Re:The Lemov Test by superyooser · · Score: 1

      How did natural processes create life? Science works in mysterious ways.

    37. Re:The Lemov Test by oyenstikker · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Its not the red states. Its not the blue states. Its the voters. No real policitcal (or moral) conservative should vote for Bush. I can't understand for the life of my why many of my Christian friends (I am also Christian) think Bush is "God's tool" instead of a lying, dim-witted politician with frail graps on economics, foreign policy, and reality as a whole. Nor can I understand why any liberal would vote for a man with no clear plan to change what the liberals (I used to be a liberal. Then I had to get a job. I sympathize with many of their beliefs, but don't think its the government's job to carry these things out at my expense.) think is wrong, but who's most solid point is that he's Not Bush.

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    38. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sieg heil, Herr GGG!

    39. Re:The Lemov Test by Herbmaster · · Score: 1

      One of the many strengths of the United States Constitution is that it provides for a resolution to this kind of problem that is well short of overthrowing the government, specifically, appealling court decisions which involve the Patriot Act until a court is reached which has the scope to rule on that compatibility.

      Damn you Anton Scalia!


      Seriously though, the constitution really hasn't given us an effective method of removing supreme court justices who make decisions restricting the constitutionally-given civil rights of individuals, or a congress that repeatedly has shown a will to pass laws, seemingly ignorant of their blatant unconstitutionality.

      You could make a strong case that this isn't the problem; rather, the problem is that we don't have an effective protocol for systematically disenfranchising voters who willfully vote for politicians who would abridge the constitutional rights of US citizens. We don't know how to shrink the country if we decide that it's too big to govern with a single federation.

      --
      I'm not a smorgasbord.
    40. Re:The Lemov Test by devnullkac · · Score: 1

      Not to get too far afield of the topic, but I argue that the problem of a Congress that passes apparently unconstitutional laws and a Supreme Court that restricts apparent constitutional rights is wrapped up in checks-and-balances and constitutional interpretation. The words of the constitution never stand on their own: they always live under current interpretation. The USSC is charged with making consistent long-lasting interpretations and life appointments improve those attributes of the court decisions. The Congress is always the front-line of "what the people seem to want" and the USSC is the gatekeeper to prevent willy-nilly change. When we disagree with what the USSC considers willy-nilly, unconstitutional change is still possible (through the Amendment process), but it requires more people and a broader base of people to make it happen.

      In the end, the US Constitution is all about ensuring the people get the civil society they want, but not so quickly that fads become ill-conceived law. If the Patriot Act stands indefinitely, it will be because a revised interpretation of the 4th and 6th amendments is what the people are really looking for.

      --
      What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
    41. Re:The Lemov Test by Herbmaster · · Score: 1

      If the Patriot Act stands indefinitely, it will be because a revised interpretation of the 4th and 6th amendments is what the people are really looking for.

      I think you're giving the electorate too much credit. The justices have their own priorities, the congress is beholden to other interests, and the electorate votes on other issues: whether they agree with a candidate's position on abortion and how their policies would affect their wallets.

      The PATRIOT Act has already stood for 3 years. 3 years is WAY too long to be imprisioned without a hearing in the US. I don't think I'm in the minority of Americans in thinking that this is unconscionable. But this can happen because Congress had no problem passing it (likewise the president), the courts don't bother overturning it, and American voters don't care or don't understand for it change their votes.

      --
      I'm not a smorgasbord.
    42. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Science can already explain how life come about, life would not exist without prebiotic RNA. The steps from RNA onward to celluar organisms are pretty straightforward. The real question is WTF caused nucleic acid bases to arrange themselves into RNA.

    43. Re:The Lemov Test by rdwald · · Score: 1

      Evolution doesn't claim to explain abiogenesis. That isn't to say that we have no ideas about how abiogenesis could have occured; rather, we admit the evidence on that one is a whole lot weaker than for evolution. If you want, you can have your "God of the gaps" do it, at least until the data improves.

    44. Re:The Lemov Test by spasmatik · · Score: 1

      I think this http://www.intrepidsoftware.com/fallacy/toc.php should be something you should take a gander at.

    45. Re:The Lemov Test by superyooser · · Score: 1

      For for foreseeable future, you'll have your "Science of the gaps" do it.

    46. Re:The Lemov Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Atheism and agnosticism are *not* religions.

    47. Re:The Lemov Test by rdwald · · Score: 1

      ...Because science admits it can't know everything. While you claim to know exactly how everything worked. (That is, you say "God did everything," which (according to you) is an explanation for everything.) And you guys always talk about fallability and humility.

    48. Re:The Lemov Test by azzl · · Score: 0

      Yes, but people will only respect a process for as long as they can be convinced that it isn't corrupt and broken.

    49. Re:The Lemov Test by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that all theories need irrefutable proof to become definitive? You're basically repeating the old "just a theory" point here. Scientific theories are by definition the best explanations of phenomena that science has to offer.

      Theory of Gravity, Atomic Theory, Theory of Evolution, Theory of Relativity, Quantum Theory. Those are all "just" theories. There is no definitive proof that they're right, and there never will be.

      For example, God could appear tomorrow, and tell us that He made the planets circle the sun, and us on the ground, and the planes in the air, all by himself, and that gravity does not exist. Or that He fiddled with the particle colliders to make them give measurements that would suggest all kinds of subatomic particles and radiation that doesn't actually exist!

      It's not likely, but it's also impossible to prove that it's impossible. Hence, all these scientific theories are true*.

      *) True as far as we know, but we cannot ever be 100.0% sure of the veracity.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    50. Re:The Lemov Test by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      You get tired of it huh?

      I never get tired of hearing how the search for WMD's has quietly been called off, having found absolutely no weapons, chemicals, radioactives, ... nothing despite 1000 trained searchers and a billion dollars spent just by them. .... You do recall how the leader of your new home ran right into Iraq supporting Bush based on a severe immediate threat, of how Saddam could launch a WMD attack within 45minutes if he wanted to. Launch what? a stink bomb? a bag of confetti? what? huh?

      Canada was proven to be 100% right to not follow bush, 100% right on their suspicions that Bush was full o shit. .. and meanwhile US troops have murdered more innocent Iraqi's due to the military action than died in the Tsunami.

      support bush or not, you damn americans deserve whatever tar the world paints you with.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
  27. Not like the stickers make a valid point anyway by knapper_tech · · Score: 0

    "In the same sense, relativity as described by Albert Einstein is 'just' a theory. The notion that Earth orbits around the sun rather than vice versa, offered by Copernicus in 1543, is a theory" - The New Monkey Trial salon

    --
    "There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell them." ~ Louis Armstrong
  28. Which religion? by Ironsides · · Score: 0

    Seriously? Which religion? I do not know of any religion other than the religion of aethism that does not have some sort of creationist begining. This includes all native american beliefs that I have heard of. So, which religion?

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    1. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my religion doesn't have a "creationist begining" since I believe that time is an illusion created by our inability to see the illusory energy framework creating the reality perpetrated by long forgotten agreements....

    2. Re:Which religion? by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      Shinto

    3. Re:Which religion? by DylanQuixote · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I know it is popular to call atheism a religion, but that doesn't make it true. That is like calling the lack of atmosphere an atmosphere.

      If I have a religion, as in what I believe in, I'd call it the scientific method. And my god would be Truth.

    4. Re:Which religion? by The+Only+Druid · · Score: 1

      You're seriously mistaken. Many of the world's religions, while believing in a Creation myth of some kind, do not believe that humans were created as they are today by some deity in the past.

      Notably, Hinduism/Buddhism make no specific mention of the human species in creation, nor do Shintoism or Zoroastrianism (still alive, believe it or not, although I may have mispelled that).

      Moreover, most protestants actually believe in a non-literal form of biblical interpretation, which could accomodate evolution as the mechanism by which God created Mankind (they would simply either dispute Natural Selection, or argue that the world was shaped so that Natural Selection could only result in the human species).

      It is in fact only conservative Christians/Jews/Muslims who really have a problem with evolution in concert with creationism.

      --
      "Stumble before you crawl"
    5. Re:Which religion? by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      Buddhism has no creation story as far as I know. I haven't encountered one yet.

    6. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Atheism is not a religion.

      A Theist is someone who believes in supernatural being(s). Atheist is the opposite.

    7. Re:Which religion? by rickst13 · · Score: 1

      But not all Christians! Catholicism appears to be somewhat open, mainly saying that evolution was very possible and doesnt necessarilly conflict with Christianity. While looking for a website to back this up, I found this quote: "We now have proof that Roman Catholicism teaches Evolution rather than Biblical Creationism. When you add to this shocking teaching Rome's disrespect for the Bible, you understand that Roman Catholicism cannot be Christian as she claims". Sorry, I read this and it made me mad. If a Christian doesn't take everything in the Bible literally, that person is less Christian?

    8. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mormonism subscribes to a more scientific creation: that matter was organized (which is very scientific) into planets and such, and that it did _not_ take 7 days, but rather much much longer (possibly within scientific estimates).

      Most other Christian churches teach creationism ex nihilo, which is out of nothing, and completely at odds with science.

    9. Re:Which religion? by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      I do not think Buddhism is a religion so much as a philosiphy on the path to enlightenment or nirvana. Hinduism does contain creationism. I know of no gods in buddhism (the buddha was a man, not a god).

      About 1000 different ones according to this http://www.unesco.org/courier/2001_05/uk/doss24.ht m Oh, and please note that there is a huge difference between the two and that they should not be linked together.

      Can't say much on the protestants.

      Let me post this and see what people say. Lets say Creationism is the idea that a supreme being created the universe, the earth and everything here. Now lets assume that it either has a plan and starting things a long and just keeps adjusting minor things as we go (inteligent design). Or just watches us as a "lab experiment" to see what happens. Does any of this mean that creationism is incompatible with either of the other two? After all, Live, the Universe and Everything had to have come from somewhere.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    10. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The trouble with Truth is that it is so relative. If you only ever believe truth, you can never say something like, the sky is blue. You can only say, the combination of my eyes and nervous system currently perceive the sky to be blue.

    11. Re:Which religion? by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      There is no beginning in Hinduism, well at least in advaita vedanta; the universe is infinite backward and forward in time.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    12. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is like calling the lack of atmosphere an atmosphere.

      No, thats like calling the lack of heat.....cold.


      -The Anonymous Bastard

    13. Re:Which religion? by LGagnon · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, you're wrong. Atheism is not the lack of religion, it is the lack of belief in god(s). An atheist can still be religious (as in the case of some Buddhists). What atheism is, is a belief that one can have, whether you have religious beliefs or not.

    14. Re:Which religion? by Transcendent · · Score: 0, Troll

      I give athiests the same respect as I do the people on the 700 Club (see: Religious News)... none.

      Mainly because you *cannot prove* that god/God does not exist, but you argue against religious people like they are the moron.

    15. Re:Which religion? by TheOriginalRevdoc · · Score: 1

      Atheism may not be a religion, but it is a faith. The only way that it could be otherwise is if you can prove that gods, spirits, demons, and all the other occult mechanics of religion categorically do not exist.

      We both know that such proof is impossible, so we are left with the conclusion that the only truly rational position is agnosticism.

      Don't get me wrong... I'm an atheist. But I freely acknowledge that my belief that there are no gods, ghosts and afterlife is an act of faith, not logic.

    16. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Everybody prays. Let me find my own way." - Blind Melon

      In the broad sense, I'd say that everyone has a "religion". Often not an organized religion, but something. You have mechanisms for dealing with the unknown, and unknowable. You have ceremonies for important events in life. You have morals and standards and values.

      Everyone uses the scientific method to some extent. The method is just a formalization of "learning". Make observation, make prediction based on observation, test prediction. I learned to walk that way.

      Your religion is how you deal with things that science can't deal with. Since there are a lot of things in that category, everyone has to have some sort of religion. You're right that atheism isn't a religion. It's just a characteristic of your religious belief system.

    17. Re:Which religion? by aspx · · Score: 1

      When cornered, I call myself non-religious. But most are lost on such a subtlety, so I give them the bumper sticker version: atheist.

    18. Re:Which religion? by DylanQuixote · · Score: 1

      Which is why I'm agnostic. I also think a complex system where life arises from chaos without aid is more fitting of an all-powerful being than just, like, building fish. But that's just me.

    19. Re:Which religion? by DylanQuixote · · Score: 1

      True enough. I have a lack of knowing of if I have a religion or not, and I'm agnostic.

    20. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If a Christian doesn't take everything in the Bible literally, that person is less Christian?

      After the person has had a fit trying to reconcile the multiple instances of contradiction in the bible ... I don't know. Maybe they'd be scientologists after that.

    21. Re:Which religion? by Bluetick · · Score: 1

      I can't prove there's an Easter Bunny or Tooth Fairy, that doesn't mean they exist.

    22. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just make sure that your scientific method allows for all possible causes, and not just naturalistic ones. The scientific method espoused by atheistic organizations such as ACLU, NCSE, and NAS don't allow the possibility that any aspect of our existence could have been the result of some intelligent agent or agents. So, if an intelligent agent crafted DNA and its mechanisms of replication and self-repair, you'd never be able to discover that because that is not allowed by today's science priesthood. On the other hand, true science would allow you to explore the possibility that an intelligent agent may have had a hand in some aspect of our existence. You could form a hypothesis and then design tests. For example, what tests would you conduct to determine if some aspect of our existence was designed?

    23. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I cannot prove that an intelligent entity wrote the message I'm responding to either. You sir, must not exist.

    24. Re:Which religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I cannot prove that an intelligent entity wrote the message I'm responding to either. ...? Yes you can.

    25. Re:Which religion? by sbaker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are certainly correct about the dictionary definition of the word 'Atheist' - but that avoids the point that an overwhelming majority of people who describe themselves as atheists are also disbelievers of all kinds of 'supernatural' matters, and disbelief in religion of necessity makes you an atheist.

      So what word would you recommend for someone who rejects both God and Religion if not 'Atheist'?

      I'm certainly one of those people.

      For believers in religions and/or gods, I find that they typically want to label me as 'Agnostic' - which suggests some measure of doubt on my part. They are a little horrified when I tell them "No - I'm quite certain that there isn't a God."

      For me, God is precisely as believable as the Tooth Fairy and Santa Clause. I really, truly cannot put any more conviction into it than that. This makes it very hard to take anything that religious people say seriously. If you met an adult who fervently believed in the Tooth Fairy and modelled their life on that basis, you'd think they were a certifyable lunatic!

      What I fail to understand about believers is this. If I truly believed in the existance of a being with utterly unlimited powers who could see and hear absolutely everything and who could understand everything - yet who would be prepared to accept the terrible things that happen on Earth without offering help - and (worse) condem people he regards as 'sinners' to an infinite prison sentence beyond death in the most inhumane conditions with pain and torture...would I be able to live my daily life?

      To follow such a dangerous, sadistic maniac with the fervor that people do would seem impossible to me even if I believed in him. Yet to oppose such a being and risk literally infinite punishment is an unacceptable risk too. I truly don't know what I would do. Certainly, the idea of just persuing my daily life in humdrum normality making the occasional trip to church would be impossible.

      Even if I could somehow rationalise the bad things that this guy permits to happen, I couldn't *possibly* risk upsetting the guy. How is it that religious people ever come even close to breaking God's rules? Yet they clearly do it all the time! I'd be terrified that I'd picked the wrong God! What the Christian God wants may be 180 degrees off what some Wikkan believer thinks is the case - the consequences of being wrong would be rather serious.

      How can religious people stand to live that way? I can only imagine that they are just totally lacking in critical thinking skills...but then that's a given for someone who might just as likely believe in Santa Clause.

      Welcome to my world!

      --
      www.sjbaker.org
    26. Re:Which religion? by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      But that's the point. If you cannot prove/disprove the existence of gods, why invent such a notion? To atheists, the whole clutter of contradictions and hypothesizing as a result of these inventions is ridiculous. Keep it simple.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    27. Re:Which religion? by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, but I'm always wary of using the word 'supernatural'. I've elaborated the problem with this word here a little more.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  29. Ob. Satire Link by __aagctu1952 · · Score: 1

    (Alternate) Textbook disclaimers.

    If I had a kid in school in that area, I would so stick some of those in his books...

  30. Thank God! by lordofthechia · · Score: 1

    (no pun intended... really)

    I for one would be for these stickers if similar disclaimers were placed on bibles (I would vote for for "should not be taken literally"). But that would never happen. As long as scientists aren't busting into sunday schools and inflicting their beliefs there I say the churches should stay out of the classrooms.

    --
    Georgia Tech, the leader in Chia(tm) technology.
  31. Wow.... by Artraze · · Score: 0, Troll

    Isn't it amazing how something that doesn't even call evolution wrong could be considered supporting religon? Nevermind the fact that the sticker is completely true, and anyone with half a brain could tell you that. Evolution, as it currently stands is more disproven than proven (as a realistic model has yet to be devised). But I guess the judge is just takeing it on faith.

    Yey secular fanatics! May you one day make the state religion atheism!

    1. Re:Wow.... by DylanQuixote · · Score: 1

      It is not that it is a perfect theory; it is that it is the *best* theory. Same is true for physics, geology, astronomy, etc. The best current theory *is* the truth, until a better theory is found. Or, as close to the truth as human minds have yet been able to see.

    2. Re:Wow.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why is evolution more disproven than proven at this point in time? Have you actually read anything about it?

      Tell me exactly which of the following statements you disagree with:
      1) Different individuals of the same species have different traits.
      2) Some traits can improve an individual's success in life (i.e. chance not to die).
      3) Living individuals are more likely to reproduce than dead ones.
      4) Parents pass on traits to their children.

      Logical conclusion: successful traits are passed down to offspring.

      OK, so the exact model of evolution is not known in all cases. This doesn't mean that the core idea of evolution is incorrect.

      I suggest reading http://evolution.berkeley.edu/ as an introduction to the topic, and also a dispelling of common misconceptions about evolution.

    3. Re:Wow.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution, as it currently stands is more disproven than proven

      Eh what? You pulled that out of your arse, boy!

      May you one day make the state religion atheism!

      Fine by me. Then all you religo whacks can keep your nutty shit at home where it belongs.

    4. Re:Wow.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please - I just don't have the effort to even correct you here.

      Just understand, you do not know enough to comment on this. Biological scientists do. They have studied this, and have reached a consensus. Creationists are not qualified to respond.

      Evolution is proven. It is both fact and theory. This is not debateable.

    5. Re:Wow.... by ZeusAndHades · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Even evolutionary theory has changed drastically over time. It may be true, but it's not a set in stone fact. Seems like every week a new posting comes out about a new supposed missing link that... wait for it... "revolutionizes evolutionary theory", many times made in hasty delusions of granduer. Are they? Maybe... but lets keep a firm grasp on what is theory, and what is fact.

      --
      -=Zeus=And=Hades=-
    6. Re:Wow.... by Artraze · · Score: 1

      I've done my research, and it looks like you have as well.

      I know that evolution, to a certain extent, is undeniable. Evolutionary changes can be seen even over then span of a couple generations. One example is the falcon (IIRC, but could be another raptor), which has become considerably smaller over the past x number of years.

      However, this is simply a size issue. It's not really a significant matter, because the birds can be large or small and it doesn't really matter (in terms of simple existence). If the smaller ones do better, than the smaller ones reproduce. Rather simple.

      How many birds do you see with three eyes? I haven't seen a whole lot. And accidentally growing a third eye would be easier that growing the first (the plans are there already).

      Now people will say different things. I've seen numbers as short as 300,000 years development of the eye from a light sensitive spot. However, that's just the eye, and not from scratch either. The thing would need the brain to interpret sensory data from that patch, and make it usable enough for the creature to survive longer/better (have more offspring).
      And that's just the eye, not all the other systems in the body.

      Keep in mind, I didn't say it was _wrong_, I just said it lacks a good enough model to satisfactorily explain everything it needs to. Thus making it a weak theory, or as I, somewhat poorly, called it: "more disproven than proven"

    7. Re:Wow.... by wash23 · · Score: 1

      A lot of publicity surrounds the issue of evolution vs. creationism (or intelligent design), and no other alternatives are being publically discussed. There is a very clear association between proponents of alternative views of creation and the rise of christianity in america. In light of this, stickers decrying evolution carry an intrinsic association with creationism, intelligent design, and also bibilical literalism and religious fundamentalism (though of course not all anti-evolutionists are fundamentalists). It is absolutely true that evolution is a theory, but the currently debated alternatives are motivated by religion and very poorly supported using what scientists would call scientific approaches.

      Would you let a biblical scholar dictate engineering principles to a group of civil engineers about to go out into the world and construct towers and bridges? Uhh, no. Unless the scientific method is revised, these stickers don't belong in a science text book.

      After high school, the children are free to run off and join contemporary christian rock bands, and never set eye on a dirty old science book again.

  32. evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    evolution smevolution. i have always had 6 toes and breathed air , these damb gills keep getting in the way though

    1. Re:evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When creationists can come up with a testable alternative theory, then get back to me. Until then, it would be nice if they'd pack up their intelligent design books and go away. They want to replace a fairly solid theory with something that is untestable and pretty ridiculous to boot. I don't think they're doing anyone any favors.

  33. Creationism is not a Theory by EvilBastard · · Score: 1

    It's been covered many times before

    Creationism and it's jumped up little brother Intelligent Design would be hard put to prove themselves as a Hypothesis.

    People who misuse the language of science in order to try to disprove something should be pointed and laughed at, rather then engaged in debate.

    Learn the ground rules first people, otherwise you come across as a fool.

  34. ........ What?-Worshipping technology. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But it's a fact, a fact I tell you! The techno-gods told me.

  35. Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by UpLateDrinkingCoffee · · Score: 1, Insightful
    This is the text that establishes religion according to the judge:

    "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

    No mention of creationism... no mention of God. It only states that Evolution is a theory regarding the origin of living things which is absolutely true. Why is this world trying to abolish critical thinking?

    1. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We believe life was better before Socrates, Aristotle, et al.

    2. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by realdpk · · Score: 1

      What I think is funny is the creationists that put the stickers on the books are suggesting that every other book you read is OK, but this particular book is one to be critically considered.

      How about a school where they teach that every book should be critically considered? (Or, more appropriately, parents that teach their children that every book should be critically considered).

    3. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by lordofthechia · · Score: 1

      I guess part of it could be the preperation or mindset of the student. If you present something as being highly doubted they may not take it openly. The question would be when should critical thinking be called into place.

      I'm all for children having both sides of the argument presented in the best form (man now were calling sides...). Let them learn scientific theory in science and religion in church.

      But when you instill doubt in something from the getgo (on someone that young) then you are slanting that childs beliefs. Then again there should be common sense and critical thinking classes separately in schools.

      --
      Georgia Tech, the leader in Chia(tm) technology.
    4. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it singles out a specific theory. It doesn't address any of the other tens or hundreds of theories also taught in the book that are theories and not proven fact. Aside from that, what other theories are there for the origin of living things that are not religious? (not to say that religious anything can even be considered a scientific theory).

    5. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The statement that evolution is not a fact cannot be proven true.

      On the other hand, evolution is indeed a fact. It has been observed at the microscopic scale and even few cases at the macro scale. Yes, that damn butterfly.

    6. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Dimensio · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why not similar disclaimers on all other science texts? One for gravitational theory, one for the theory of relativity, one for atomic theory?

      Why single out evolution?

      It only states that Evolution is a theory regarding the origin of living things

      Actually, it's a theory regarding the origin and diversity of species. Evolution does not cover the ultimate origins of life, and the disclaimer is misleading in its wording.

    7. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by JasonStiletto · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because the intent of the sticker was to deliver the "Evolution is...not a fact" message, not the "Evolution is a theory" message. Plate Techtonics is a theory. Relativity is a theory. Newtons laws of motion also a theory. The creationists want to pound in the "is a theory, not a fact" because they want you to think of it in the same way that The sun is driven across the sky every day in a giant chariot sort of a theory, not a this matches all the available facts sort of theory. Just because you believe people couldn't possibily live in Australia because they'd fall off the earth doesn't make it true.

    8. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      "This textbook contains material on CREATIONISM. CREATIONISM is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." ... I'd love to see that on every bible, not just the american bible, but the bible of every religion.

      But most ignorant followers of most religions don't think critically, simply following the herd of sheep they've decided to group with, letting the brainwashers keep the power.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    9. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by OldAndSlow · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The trouble with the sticker is that it singles out evolution, and was put on the biology books to support a particular religous point of view. If every science book carried a sticker to the same effect, for example f = ma is a theory then I suspect that the entire endevor would pass constitutional muster, but it would also collapse under the weight of its own stupidity.

      Lots of people want humans to be special in the universe. Evolution pretty much trashes that. But they are not so conflicted as to take on the entire scientific establishment that produces obvious, powerful things like atomic bombs and internets. They think that they can cut evolution out of biology without destroying the entire fabric of modern science. But it won't work.

    10. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by kwalker · · Score: 1

      Because it singles out Evolution, specifically to discredit it as "a theory". It doesn't state that Creationism or "Intelligent Design" is a theory as well.

      --
      ... And so it comes to this.
    11. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But most ignorant followers of most religions don't think critically, simply following the herd of sheep they've decided to group with, letting the brainwashers keep the power.

      Except in your belief system, I'm sure...

    12. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by cyb0rg · · Score: 1

      mod up parent

      Seriously though, does anyone challenge the validity of the statement?

    13. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apply some critical thinking yourself. The scientific community has a consensus that evolution IS a fact. It is ALSO a theory. The sticker claims it is not a fact, but ONLY a theory.

      This sticker is incorrect, based on the combined expertise of the entire scientific community. Therefore, the only reason to push to have a scientifically incorrect claim like the sticker's placed on a scientific text must be to push an alternate agenda - in this case, creationism (possibly under the guise of Intelligent Design).

      The Judge ruled correctly. It is a pity you could not think this issue through yourself.

    14. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously though, does anyone challenge the validity of the statement?

      Not as long as the textbook has stickers on it making every other valid statement in existence. :)

      Besides, as many other people have pointed out, evolution has been observed. Thus it's as factual as "the sky is blue". Care to prove that the sky is blue without relying on observation? Or do you disagree about the color of the sky?

      Nothing in the real world is a self-contained logic puzzle. We have to consider issues such as context, intent, missing/incomplete facts. Think about the sticker in terms of context, in terms of intent, and in terms of what's being left out. Now do you understand why it's a problem when a government body (a school district) mandates it?

    15. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by UpLateDrinkingCoffee · · Score: 1

      Do a google search for "chemical evolution".

    16. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by harborpirate · · Score: 1

      Because school is about rote memorization and the ability of the student to repeat what they are told.

      Ever wonder why so many students complain how "word problems are so hard"? Because schools teach memorization, not problem solving.

      They teach: if the problem looks like example_1 then use equation_alpha to solve it. Nothing on why equation alpha works, or the history of equation alpha - there simply isn't time for that sort of thing.

      Fortunately it gets somewhat better in college, but even then I pity the poor fool who questions his professor. Teachers are all knowing! Do not question the teacher! Now memorize another equation that includes 10 greek characters because I said so.

      Stinking greek characters. I'm glad I've got my degree so I don't have to write that damn squiggly S anymore unless I have an actual use for the thing. Take your lambda and pi and theta and shove 'em, I say.

      Sorry, please go back to your regularly scheduled memorization.

      Thank you.

      --
      // harborpirate
      // Slashbots off the starboard bow!
    17. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by wwahammy · · Score: 1

      They can't call Creationism a theory though. It just complaints about evolution. Sure evolution has evidence that seems to contradict some of the theory but hey most theories do. That's why you try to figure out a better theory. Saying that some species don't seem to follow the most likely pattern that evolution should give it means that you need to research the species and/or evolution more not that the whole theory is wrong. I can completely see why one might think that life was created by a higher being even if I don't think it is. But that's not science, its faith.

      I think one of the problems with this entire situations is these people think we're attacking their beliefs.I think its important for people who aren't as religious if we even are religious, to not attack people's faith but try to show them that we respect their beliefs but science and religion are separate and attempt to explain different things. (Gould was a proponent of this view) Also, most people are religious because it helps them and as long as they don't go overboard in trying to control others because of their religion we should try to respect that as much as possible. I say if you believe that you're going to go to heaven and it gives you inner peace, I say more power to you. If you want to force that upon me or others, that's a huge problem.

    18. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      "Do a google search for "chemical evolution"."

      That's a whole different kind of evolution, if you would even allow it to be called a kind of evolution. Really it's abiogenesis, using evolution as a convenient metaphor for a particular abiogenic theory. The name of the theory might be confusing.

      Textbooks and scientists when referring to biological evolution mean 1) the gradual change over time of species and speciation (what is said to be fact by scientists) and 2) the mechanism by which this is said to take place, usually some kind of natural selection (what is said to be theory by scientists) and nothing more.

      It does not explain--or even try to explain--the ultimate origins of life. So, yes, the disclaimer is misleading in its wording.

    19. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by wass · · Score: 1
      How about this theory then, could it possibly make both camps happy? (Well, it does mention God, that could always be changed to Creator, whereby that could mean God, Big Bang, or whatever to each student)

      When God created the Universe, (s)he designed the genetic structure of the lowest forms of life (which were created before man) with the ability to reproduce their genetic code asexually, occasionally making errors that caused species variety, until sexual reproduction was achieved at which point variation was substantially increased. Through natural selection, God's will was carried out as the plants and animals evolved, and ultimately the line of primates formed, which eventually produced Man.

      That way you can explain nearly anything to satisfy religion/science.

      That's why I don't get the whole animosity of the Church toward the Heliocentric theory in the middle ages. There was no mention (that I know of anyway) of Geocentric theory in the bible. Why couldn't they say God specifically created the sun at the center of the universe. God specifically designed atoms such that they would form molecules to have the noted properties that they have, which allow for evolution. Or more generally - this effect happens because it is God's will.

      --

      make world, not war

    20. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by ezeri · · Score: 1

      The diference is that macroevolutionary biology is not realy a "hard" science. And by hard science I mean it doesn't fit in to the scientific method. It's more akin to history than anything else. Fiting peices together to try to make a whole picture of how life was formed. That is all it ever can be until someone creates a time machine. And just like there is much dispute in among historians as to the events of the past, there is alot of dispute, even among evolutionary biologists as to how things came to be.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    21. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      I think the point is that in theistic view, man was a `special' creation, not something that just happened there by a series of some events. Most theists would be `ok' with evolution of animals (that's fine) but man has to be outside of it.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    22. Re:Why are we abolishing critical thinking? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      When God...

      Sorry, but you've just left the realm of science by invoking the supernatural.

  36. Evolutionism... creationism... by WormholeFiend · · Score: 1

    What I'd like to know, is why reality actually exists.

    1. Re:Evolutionism... creationism... by oneiron · · Score: 1

      because it can.

    2. Re:Evolutionism... creationism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't its just a figment of your imagination.

    3. Re:Evolutionism... creationism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I already asked myself this exact question.

      Why does the Universe exists ?

      This question makes me sick ! Really. Think about it yourself.

    4. Re:Evolutionism... creationism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To state the best line in the Restaurant at the End of the Universe: "Any people you meet are the product of a deranged imagination."

    5. Re:Evolutionism... creationism... by alucinor · · Score: 1

      or because it wants to?

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    6. Re:Evolutionism... creationism... by oneiron · · Score: 1

      Most of the time, I think, yes... ;)

    7. Re:Evolutionism... creationism... by oneiron · · Score: 1

      Sick? Nah.. It's easy. It exists to sustain life. Life exists to sustain it. It is life. Life is it.

      Whoa...I'm getting dizzy.

      ...maybe you were right.

  37. No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 1

    One is fact, one is fiction... It does not matter how much we argue or what the courts rule. We all will know which one is true and which one is false in the End.

    1. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We all will know which one is true and which one is false in the End."

      There isn't an "End", because reincarnation is infinite.

      PS: You're pissing off Bhudda.

    2. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      Actually we will not know in the End.

      Because the absolute nothingness of death, with its ceasing of that great chemical coincidence we call consciousness, will preclude you from having any being whatsoever, let alone any type of knowing.

      You will have as much ability to 'know' anything as the inanimate chair you are sitting on.

      Its a shame you can't just face the truth and realize that all religions are based on the thoughts of insecure dumbasses and power hungry bastards who were scared of what they couldn't see past the light of their campfires in the bush ... and that all 'paranormal' events are nothing more than simple coincedence or you misunderstanding the mixed up signals your imperfect brain has to deal with.

      But, dont let me stop you, you keep on believing, and supporting religion so that we can keep murdering people around the world who believe in other imaginary gods or believe in the same imaginary god as you ... but with a word or two interpreted differently in the book of lies; so we can continue to destroy unique cultures in the guise of 'saving' them; and best of all, so we can keep letting perverted priests around the world molest boys in the name of god.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    3. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      One is fact, one is fiction.

      False dichotomy fallacy. Both could be fiction.

    4. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      PS, in the perfect state of enlightenment, there is no being pissed off, there is simply being.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    5. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The first thing we need to do is let each other believe what we want to believe. Honestly, it makes no difference whether my barber believes in Creationism or Evolution, neither changes how well he cuts my hair.

      The problem at hand is not with evolution or creationism or intelligent design or dumb design or TheoChristian Hubbardistic Creatiolution, but public schooling. The power to teach is also the power, in a sense, to control. When the government controls education, it also controls the minds of our youth. Democracy is always at risk when the government has the power to stamp out the radical new ideas needed for progress. The education of our children is too important to be at the whim of politicians.

      How can we ensure that our children receive a quality education and are taught to be freethinking individuals? It needs to start at home. If a parent wants their children to believe in Creation, they need teach it to them before the school teaches them otherwise.

    6. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 1

      Funny how you assumed I was a "religious" person from my post.

      "Because the absolute nothingness of death..."

      Hmmm, smells like a theory to me.

    7. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 1

      "Both could be fiction."

      True. But then which other theory would be fact?

    8. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      Prove to me that your soul exists and continues to do so after your death and I will reduce my fact down to a mere theory.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    9. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 1

      Heh, I was referring to the two theories of Biblical Creation and Evolution.

      Since I did not RTFA, I assumed it was talking about Biblical Creation, not Buddhism Creationism.

    10. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 1

      *sigh* Prove to me it (soul) does not (still exist) and I will reduce my theory down to a, well a mere theory.
      d

    11. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      yes, because buddhists have no books at all that could be thought of as their bible. only the christian bible is the real bible. That goes for the Koran and the Torah as well, they aren't really bibles either.

      Of course you probably didnt know that 'bible' is simply ancient greek for 'book'. In fact i just read a great bible by Stephen King the other day.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    12. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      True. But then which other theory would be fact?

      Currently there is only one theory. Falsify that, and the only scientific explanation becomes "unknown", until a new theory is devised.

    13. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yes, what?
      You obviously are one of those angry hate anyone who believes in anything type of atheists... I can feel it emenating off your posts, like the fetid smell from a turgid piece of dog crap on a hot summer day.

      Wait, you are contradicting yourself...
      That goes for the Koran and the Torah as well, they aren't really bibles either.

      Yet, you effusively postulate...

      Of course you probably didnt know that 'bible' is simply ancient greek for 'book'. In fact i just read a great bible by Stephen King the other day.

      You don't consider the Koran and Torah books, yet Steven King's writing constitutes a book. You are a strange sick little man, all wrapped up in yourself.

      Anyways, you have taken us totally OT now...

    14. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 1

      Theory...

      Main Entry: theory
      Pronunciation: 'thE-&-rE, 'thi(-&)r-E
      Function: noun
      Inflected Form(s): plural -ries
      Etymology: Late Latin theoria, from Greek theOria, from theOrein
      1 : the analysis of a set of facts in their relation to one another
      2 : abstract thought : SPECULATION
      3 : the general or abstract principles of a body of fact, a science, or an art
      4 a : a belief, policy, or procedure proposed or followed as the basis of action b : an ideal or hypothetical set of facts, principles, or circumstances -- often used in the phrase in theory
      5 : a plausible or scientifically acceptable general principle or body of principles offered to explain phenomena
      6 a : a hypothesis assumed for the sake of argument or investigation b : an unproved assumption : CONJECTURE c : a body of theorems presenting a concise systematic view of a subject

      From a analysis of a set of facts to a belief, covers a lot of ground.

      In that case, you are wrong in saying there is only one theory. Both are theories, as there are probably a couple dozen other theories on how the earth was created. But since you are so sure, you are right and you know all the answers I won't bother discussing it with you.

    15. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      I am referring to a theory within the context of science. Attempting to swap in a different definition of theory is the fallacy of equivocation.

    16. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 1

      Hey, I didn't make up the definition of "theory" if you don't like it go argue with Webster.

    17. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      I am aware of multiple definitions of the word "theory". By attempting to insist that any one definition can be swapped out with another when the discussion is clearly over the matter of a scientific theory, you are demonstrating that you are willing to stoop to outright dishonesty in an attempt to make your point.

      This is sadly typical amongst anyone who makes a case for creationism and/or ID (Same thing). Once they no longer have an excuse to plead ignorance, they simply start lying.

    18. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      yet another poor fool falls victim to his complete and utter lack of ability to understand or even detect sarcasm.

      so to spell it out for you, nice and simple like for a simple guy like you to understand ...

      'biblical creation' ... who's bible? bible simply means 'book'. The buddists have a creation theory, the Jews have a creation theory, the Muslems have a creation theory (yes those three groups are all really just stealing credit for each other's false god but you get the idea) ... the thousands of other religions that you've never heard of all have their books that describe their creation theories, but because they have failed to brainwash large parts of the world's population we call them 'cults' rather than 'religions'

      What makes you think that the one book you were forced to follow as a child is the one right book? Who is wrapped up in himself now? ... open your eyes and accept that you live in one tiny narrow minded brainwashed part of society.

      And since you so obviously failed to understand the 'book' idea ... book! book! book! ... the christian bible is a book, the Koran is a book, the torah is a book, and all of King's horror stories can be bought ... as a book! ... and you have failed to detect that all of those books are works of fiction.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    19. Re:No, I did not RTFA... as this isn't news to me. by Matt1313 · · Score: 1

      Your "sarcasm" truly lacks. I'll leave it at that.

      "What makes you think that the one book you were forced to follow as a child is the one right book?"

      Um, it appears you are assuming things... since I was not forced to follow any book as a child. But apparently since you are all knowing I won't be able to tell you otherwise.

      You are just showing your idiocy in re-stating your postulation of "book, book, book". YOU were the one who said that the Koran and the Torah were NOT bibles (which YOU said are just a book, bible = book, YOU said that). Which means, from your understanding they are not books. You are one messed up confused little person.

  38. Mod parent up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's funny not trollish

  39. PDF of complete decision by alphakappa · · Score: 4, Informative

    can be found here.

    --
    "When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail." - Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
  40. video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    am i the only one here opened up IE just too see the video because it has a pretty girl inside?

  41. A better warning ... by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 2, Funny

    alert alert!

    A theory may be inside this textbook!

    You may be forced to think for yourself!

    Don't read this textbook, instead keep on blindly swallowing the lies spread by your religious overlords so they can remain in control of you!

    --
    George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
  42. Y'all a little slow dow'n thar in Alabama... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not a +1 Ned...

  43. Re:goddamned fundamentalists.. by randallpowell · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Fundamentalist Christians who are scared by reality and must insist that everyone must be like them to validate their religion and feel secure once more.

  44. Equality? by almostmanda · · Score: 1

    I see no problem with these stickers. As long as there is a similar sticker inside every Bible claiming "Creationism is a theory, NOT a fact."

    1. Re:Equality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But a bible isn't teaching material. A book on evolution is. A book on evolution is used to teach people evolution. Many then believe that evolution is a blind fact whereas it's just a theory. Anyone with half a brain knows this.

    2. Re:Equality? by madpanzer · · Score: 1

      The problem with your idea is, Bibles aren't in state education cirriculums. Students are required to read it.

      Evolutionists accuse Creationists as being hive-minded and thickheaded... but I don't see Mr. Evolutionist as any better off.

      Where'd critical thinking go, folks?

    3. Re:Equality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think critically, that is why I have an open mind about stuff like evolution and even gravity. If anyone can show me some evidence disproving evolution, then by all means go ahead. Similarily, if anyone can show me some evidence disproving gravity, lets see it. On the other hand, I have NEVER seen any evidence whatsoever that the universe was created by an intelligent being. Not s single published paper. Nothing. I think critically all right, and that is why I have ruled out creationism and intelligent design in favor of the only scientific theory that explains the observations: evolution.

    4. Re:Equality? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      *** Re:Equality? (Score:0)
      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 13, @10:48PM (#11356500)
      But a bible isn't teaching material. A book on evolution is. A book on evolution is used to teach people evolution. Many then believe that evolution is a blind fact whereas it's just a theory. Anyone with half a brain knows this.***

      bible isn't teaching material??? sure it is, it's used to taught people what to believe in. hell, even in finland bible is used in schools(granted that it's taught pretty lightly nowadays - and the subject also includes information about all other major religions on earth, in fact, after you've gone through the system you're more than likely to not believe in bible word-for-word. because you know the beliefs of other people are quite diverse and that none of them really have any proof to back it up).

      maybe you're going to argue that koran isn't teaching material either, despite there being schools that use it as the main source of teachings...

      btw. the same people pushing for these stickers are pushing for barring the teaching of evolution totally as well. creationism is not a "theory"(it's a myth, not a theory in the sense 'theory' is used in scientific material) that you'd come up with if you would start to scientifically research the earth and try to figure out how it got formed and how life on it came to be. creationism is something that you'd come up if you stayed home the whole time trying to think a possibility for how it could have happened - and were drunk and on a deadline(thus needing a nice 'cover it all' explanation that you nor anyone else could ever prove).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:Equality? by Atrax · · Score: 1

      I see no problem with these stickers. As long as there is a similar sticker inside every Bible claiming "Creationism is a theory, NOT a fact."

      Except it's not even a theory.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    6. Re:Equality? by madpanzer · · Score: 0

      And you may not see any evidence unless you find it yourself. The "scientists" of today won't find it, because they are not looking for it, and if they found some, they would quickly discount it and add another 10 billion years to the timeline. Too much in society today depends on this "theory" being true. Too many jobs, too many lifestyles, and so much immorality (a word which means nothing these days, because if evolution is true, there is no such thing as morality, nor is there a meaning to life.)

    7. Re:Equality? by ragnar · · Score: 1

      Except that creationism isn't a theory, in the sense that the word is used by scientists. When I encounter creationists I ask them about new discoveries or predictions that creationism has produced. I have yet to hear of one. While I respect the faith of others, I take issue with putting faith on the same level as science.

      --
      -- Solaris Central - http://w
    8. Re:Equality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > (a word which means nothing these days, because if evolution is true, there is no such thing as morality, nor is there a meaning to life.)

      How does that follow? God or not, humans and societies have thought up moralistic guidelines that might all boil down to "do good, don't be a detriment to society." Don't cause others pain, don't kill, help others in need, etc. Generally these will look like some religious morals, but that isn't a coincidence. The difference between god existing/not existing is consequences in the afterlife, not the morals of people.

      What difference does it make if there no meaning to life? If there isn't, people can still enjoy their time on earth through friends, family, entertainment, hobbies, work, culture, study, art, and so on. Frankly, if god (any god) existed AND the purpose of life is to bow down and appease the overlord to make it in the afterlife, I would have rather not been born.

    9. Re:Equality? by madpanzer · · Score: 0

      What is your basis of morality? If it is not founded on a constant, i.e., God, then you have nothing. Humans are hardly constant. We are deteriorating and if left to our own devices, will destroy each other. Any inner sense of morality we may contain, to be honest, I believe, comes from God. If there is no God, morality becomes whatever is popular at the time. 200 years ago, our Founding Fathers would be absolutely appauled by the degree of deterioration we have managed to achieve. Do you honestly think we are better off today? Does anyone really think the accepted morals of today's society are more advanced than that of 200 years ago? I'm afraid many do. The fact is, there is nothing new. Nations will crumble, and the foundation of their collapse is lack of a strong moral foundation, which we are increasingly straying from.

    10. Re:Equality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is why masturbatory philosophy is *bad news*.

  45. One word: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Idiot.

  46. Hold it... by mmarshall · · Score: 1
    Stating that the Theory of Evolution is a theory is unconstitutional?

    This must be a huge ploy of textbook printers -- Now schools have to buy the all new editions that say "Fact of Evolution" instead.

  47. ID is not a theory by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

    ID is not a theory and it should have no place in our schools. In order for something to be a scientific theory it needs to be subjectable to experimentation. It needs to be able to be proved wrong and the experiments need to be able to be reproduced by peers.
    There is no way to rigorously apply the scientific method to ID so it will never be a scientific theory.

    1. Re:ID is not a theory by google · · Score: 1

      What about string theory? Is _that_ provable?

      --
      "Thank you. Please spellcheck your genitalia references though. :) - Mike D."
    2. Re:ID is not a theory by reidbold · · Score: 1

      String theory has not failed any tests, so it has not been proven wrong yet. So it is a theory.

      It basically is mathematical way to tie together quantum field theory (quantum mechanics, eletromagnetism, more) and general relativity. String theory postulates that point particles aren't zero dimensional points, but one dimensional strings.

      However, string theory's postulate is not testable right now, and it looks like it may never be, so it is generally not the current accepted unified theory, there are no accepted theories at the moment.

      --
      -Reid
    3. Re:ID is not a theory by Atrax · · Score: 1

      What about string theory? Is _that_ provable?

      Not really, but it can bve demonstarted to fit observable facts, or at least, not violate them.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    4. Re:ID is not a theory by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Yes, it makes predictions that are testable. Unfortunately, the means of testing it are beyond our current technology.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    5. Re:ID is not a theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your point is null. Unlike intelligent design which is not and never will be falsifiable, much of the work being done around string theory at present is to develop methods by which it can be made falsifiable. Even by string theorists they admit they still have a long way to go. String theory is much more of a theory than intelligent design ever will be since it basically says "hey look, this stuff works pretty well, someone must have built it!" when infact it can just as easily be a result of coincidence and as such is not falsifiable.

    6. Re:ID is not a theory by jcknox · · Score: 1

      Can you please tell me how to rigorously apply scientific theory to evolution? Point to one person that saw it happen. Point to a solid piece of evidence demonstrating an intermediate form (one tooth or leg bone does not count). Give me some probabilities on punctuated equilibrium that actually work. Point to a dating method that is provable in the laboratory without circular arguments or gross assumptions that things have always been the way they are now.

      ID does not stand up to rigorous application of science. Neither does evolution. They both require a degree of faith, and a decision to believe it because there's no other option in the individual's mind.

    7. Re:ID is not a theory by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      They both require a degree of faith

      True. It's about believability. If you find it easier to believe that some magical creature created the world in six days and placed all the geological evidence in all the appropriate places--fine. If you find it easier to believe that some magical creature set the rules and then let the algorithm run--fine.

      I don't see any harm done in teaching both. I learned both. I can see the merits of both. Am I to believe that I'm especially gifted and intellectually evolved because I can comprehend both without experiencing an internal breakdown leading to a fanatical legal pursuit?

      Vote me for president.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    8. Re:ID is not a theory by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Intelligent Design also provides no scientific basis for itself. Intelligent design is simply an Anti-Theory. It states that evolution is wrong, therefore it's right. It is legitimate for a theory to be questioned, it is not a logical practice to assume that because A is wrong B is correct unless there are only two choices. If intelligent design could prove that random processes in general COULD NOT create life it would have a leg to stand on. It may make a small case against evolution, but it makes no case against improbable events.

    9. Re:ID is not a theory by srleffler · · Score: 1

      Testability is really a fundamental requirement for an idea to become a scientific theory. It is not sufficient for an idea to simply not have been proven wrong yet. Such a definition would allow all kinds of crackpot ideas to be considered scientific 'theories'. What keeps string theory going is that it does make some predictions, albeit ones that we will not be able to test anytime soon. There is also good reason to hope that we will eventually be able to make testable predictions based on string theory.

    10. Re:ID is not a theory by madprof · · Score: 1

      Total nonsense. We can observe evolution on both a small scale and a large scale. Now, it is the creation of life itself we can't go back and test. We can run scientific experiments to see if we can replicate those conditions in laboratories though and people over many years have done just that.
      There is not much we can do to replicate an intelligent creator of the universe in a lab....

    11. Re:ID is not a theory by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      There is a major difference. The problems you point out with evolution came about via application of the scientific method. So we know there are problems with the current theory. We also know there are problems with Newtonian physics. Should we throw it out as well? Or is it still useful as a model as long as you know where the problems are?

      Or, as people who push the ID would have us do, should we throw up our hands and say some deity did it? That makes a nice tidy package and we could go about the rest of our lives pretending that we understand the world around us, so I understand why some people find that tempting. I find it nothing less than contemptible to label it as science.

    12. Re:ID is not a theory by rw2 · · Score: 1

      Can you please tell me how to rigorously apply scientific theory to evolution?

      It has predictive qualities and those can be tested. Examples are intermediate forms and the prediction of a DNA like mechanism for allowing and propogating change.

      Point to one person that saw it happen.

      Both species change from the standpoint of groups no longer able to breed and the standpoint of changes in gene counts have been observed in the lab. It has also been observed by every farmer on the planet.

      Point to a solid piece of evidence demonstrating an intermediate form (one tooth or leg bone does not count).

      The Okapi.

      Point to a dating method that is provable in the laboratory without circular arguments or gross assumptions that things have always been the way they are now.

      There is not a single dated method which makes those assumptions. All are cross checked using completely orthogonal mechanisms.

    13. Re:ID is not a theory by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps not yet, but for something to be a theory it is more important that it be possible to prove it wrong than right.

      This is such a common misconception here on /. that I think our schools must not be teaching kids what the scientific method IS anymore.

    14. Re:ID is not a theory by Engineer+Andy · · Score: 1

      Other than the post-modern preference to think that there is no deity who created, what objection is there to holding that as a theory?

      what advantage has knowlege of the theory of evolution given us in terms of our day to day existence? The theories of quantum mechanics give us transisters, semiconductors. Newtonian physics gave us the framework for most of the physics that mechanical and civil engineering works on.

      I'm not flaming, but am genuinely curious as to what benefit knowing that evolution is a theory has helped us.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14
    15. Re:ID is not a theory by esanbock · · Score: 1

      String theory is a philosophy. It is a mathematical model of what someone thinks the universe is made of. It may be right, but can never be proven. Once someone claims to have found the absolute smallest unit making up the universe, there's no way to measure it. The atom was the smallest unit until someone smashed it. Once you find the smallest unit, it can't be smashed and it can't be measured.

    16. Re:ID is not a theory by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      "Other than the post-modern preference to think that there is no deity who created, what objection is there to holding that as a theory?"
      I have no objetion to calling it a belief or a part of your faith. It is not scientific theory.

      I'm not a biologist but I'll give it a shot.
      If we are able to understand how creatures evolve we may be better able to understand how the different species relate in the web of life. We are really just part of that web so this understanding could lead to an understanding of how our actions affect the web and us.

    17. Re:ID is not a theory by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      Why can't it be proven? There are already ideas to test the theory. Once these tests are performed,then the theory is either discarded, incrementally improved or generally accepted.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    18. Re:ID is not a theory by army_ant · · Score: 1

      Simply by looking at all the facts (observed instances of evolution), using those facts to test predictions made by various theories and settling on the most solid of the theories - in this case the theory of evolution. All these arguments are pointless because of a fundamental misunderstanding by those who think that evolution is 'just a theory' (emphasis on the 'just'). If something is a scientific theory and it's been around for anywhere near as long as the theory of evolution has (and is still seen as the favourable theory), then we can be pretty damn sure of it's validity. A competing theory, such as Intelligent design, can be proposed (only it's not a theory) but it's no better than the theory of evolution - as far as theories go - because it makes no predictions whatsoever that we can test using physical instruments. We simply cannot observe an "intelligent designer" (one god in particular), or any instances of "intelligence" in our world - as it's an abstraction invented by humans which cannot be measured in our environemnt since it is defined in terms which are outside our physical environment. Thus, since it is untestable, it is not a theory at all.

    19. Re:ID is not a theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why can't it be proven?

      Nothing in science can be proven. Theories can be tested. If they fail, they are false, but no matter how much testing you do, it's still not proof. Think of Newton as an example. For hundereds of years it tested true, but we now know it was false. Even a theory that's not perfectly true like Newton's can be very useful as long as it doesn't fail any tests.

    20. Re:ID is not a theory by espressojim · · Score: 1

      Think about all the drugs you'll be taking over the next 50 years. Many of those are being developed by the application of population genetics to study populations of people and common mutations in people in order to find causal links between people and disease.

      All the statistics for these methodologies rest on assumptions we've made about the underlying models, many of which are based on evolution.

      I'm currently looking at very similar (conserved) regions in mice, chimps, and humans, and pinpointing interesting places in the genome that we'll want to study further. If there was no evolution, then why would we be so similar to chimps? Why would we have so many regions of similarity to mice?

      There are 3,000,000,000 bases in our genome. If every genome is essentially random, then the level of conservation we see (99% similarity in chimps!) would not be there.

      I think this evidence makes it obvious that we shared a common ancestor with chimp. And that's how we leverage evolution to produce drugs.

      Please note that while population genetics has been around for a long time, the horsepower to do research (via experimental process) has been in a moore's law type situation for the last 10 years, so we're just getting into the range of doing large scale, comprehensive analysis of the human genome.

      The next 10 years are going to be pretty damn cool.

    21. Re:ID is not a theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pah! Facts! Everyone knows they can be used to prove anything that's even remotely true. </Homer>

  48. The entire label by LunarOne · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The entire label:

    "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

    The only way we can make progress on any theory is with an open mind. After all, that's what allowed the theory of evolution to come about in the first place. It's not like the label said that the students should consider the alternative of creation.


    Furthermore, there are many scientists at the highest level who have questioned the theory of evolution, and far from all of them are creationists. Anyone who truly wants to advance science and has a degree of humility could readily accept the contents of that label at par.


    Go ahead and mod my opinions down, as is so typical in the slashdot forum. It will only make me think moreso than ever that evolutionists are not above engaging in the occasional witch hunt, just like any other, um...religion.

    --

    Read my sig if you like, but I'll never see yours, thanks to Discussions, Viewing, Disable sigs...
    1. Re:The entire label by zephc · · Score: 1

      Please come up with a better theory, which doesn't involve invisible patriarchs in the sky, and takes into account the massive body of evidence already supporting evolution.

      Ugh, this whole story is a troll.

      --
      "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    2. Re:The entire label by nbv4 · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, evolution is a theory and like all theories should be constantly under scrutiny or else science and human progress will go no where. The problem here is in a typical science textbook, there are thousands of theories presented at the same time require that same amount of open mindedness. If the sticker read

      This textbook contains material which is theory, not fact. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.

      then there is no problem. The fact they singled out evolution to me just reeks of politics which should be kept out of the science classroom at all costs. ...On the other hand, whether this is unconstitutional or not, I'm not too sure of...

    3. Re:The entire label by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      *sigh* It's not the fact that evolution is a theory that's the problem. It's the fact that the sticker is on a science book with dozens of other likely-but-not-certain theories. None of them are called into question. Thus, a single theory has been singled out for the purposes of advancing a religious argument. And _that_ was what was deemed illegal.

      If the sticker was on a book solely about evolution, it would have been more likely to be okay. If it had been more generally worded, talking about the scientific process in general, that would probably have been okay as well.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
  49. Not Atlanta by AubieTurtle · · Score: 1

    Cobb County is not part of the City of Atlanta. Cobb hates Atlanta. Just look at this week's Creative Loafing to see what a difference there is between Atlanta and the Bush voting, religious right sprawl that surrounds it. The city school board has nothing to do with this. It is the suburbs, not the city!

  50. Role of law in society by starworks5 · · Score: 1

    Technically evolution is a theory, not a LAW of science. but i dont think i see where the unconstitutionality comes in. of course these days judges dont interperate law, they make thier own. and these laws are on thier views of right or wrong, which may or may not be right or wrong.

    Its about time that the US law stripped bare, because this is just one more example of how extremism is choking the air out of society.

    Yes, its fundamentally wrong to put idiotic messages on all school books, yes its wrong to give children ideas of fantasy, and ludacrisyin a center of learning, and yes its done because of religon. but "so is life" and we cant go mandating what actions people are allowed to do. a better action would be to discipline whomevers decision it was to put the stickers there in the first place. this is DOE's job, not the courts.

    1. Re:Role of law in society by geomon · · Score: 1

      Technically evolution is a theory, not a LAW of science.

      Germ theory, or the theory of how humans contract disease, is not a law.

      Does that mean you shouldn't wash your hands after taking a dump?

      but i dont think i see where the unconstitutionality comes in.

      Because the issue of the "stickers" is yet another attempt to get creation injected into the scientific debate.

      Creationism is not science. There is no falsifiable premise to the statement that "God created the universe" that falls within the realm of scientific debate.

      It may be philosophy or theology, but there is no way to apply the scientific method to the question.

      of course these days judges dont interperate law, they make thier own.

      No one said that Creationism couldn't be taught, just can't be taught as 'science".

      and these laws are on thier views of right or wrong, which may or may not be right or wrong.

      No, they are interpreting the Constitution.

      Its about time that the US law stripped bare,

      Great.

      First Amendment:

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

      That pretty much leaves the study of religion in a secular school as off limits. There is nothing in that statement that prohibits the discussion of Creationism in a church.

      because this is just one more example of how extremism is choking the air out of society.

      Spoken like a true extremist. Play the victim while pushing your opinion on the rest of society.

      Yes, its fundamentally wrong to put idiotic messages on all school books,

      Yep. I guess this is the appropriate time to ask: "What is your point?"

      yes its wrong to give children ideas of fantasy, and ludacrisyin a center of learning, and yes its done because of religon. but "so is life" and we cant go mandating what actions people are allowed to do.

      Constitutional law isn't your strong suit.

      a better action would be to discipline whomevers decision it was to put the stickers there in the first place.

      That is what the courts are doing.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    2. Re:Role of law in society by starworks5 · · Score: 1

      The article doesnt mention that creationism was being taught as a science, the judge wanst judging that, he was judging on the fact that they were misleading

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

      The sticker doesn't mention make any mention about religon, therefore wouldnt be subject to the establishment of religon clause. but prohibiting the sticker might be subject to the first admendment.

      and although adding stickers to science books is extremism, and i do object to it, i think its the job of the DOE to uphold the education standards of the schools. The fact that the courts got involved is even more extreme, because although it does make sense, they are over-stepping thier bounds.

      Constitutional law isn't your strong suit
      what i should have said is "what people ARENT allowed to do. in fact the constition is the basis of our rights, a contract of sorts, to line out what rights we, and the government are entitled to.

      in this instance, the ruling shouldnt fall underneath the seperation of church and state,(even though the judge doenst agree with me). This should fall underneath the jurisdiction and responsibility of the DOE to ensure that the school follows educational guidlines and policies, and in general provide a good education to its students (by removing the stickers). by ruling that this falls underneath the seperation state, he is making (in my opinion) and indirect connection, that may have other re-procussions in the future.

      ultimatly i believe that society works best if its left to live as free as possible. and goverment should provide the most simplicity and least restriction as possible, but within the societies ability to utilize its freedom responsibly to a reasonable degree

    3. Re:Role of law in society by geomon · · Score: 1

      The article doesnt mention that creationism was being taught as a science, the judge wanst judging that, he was judging on the fact that they were misleading

      No, he was reacting to the intent of the stickers. He wrote his opinion based on how the school board had made an executive decision regarding evolution. The school board's decision affected only one scientific theory for editorial comment.

      Any guesses why the board did that?

      The sticker doesn't mention make any mention about religon, therefore wouldnt be subject to the establishment of religon clause. but prohibiting the sticker might be subject to the first admendment.

      Right, but why did the school board single out *one* theory from all the rest?

      in fact the constition is the basis of our rights

      Wrong again.

      The Constitution lays out the rights that We The People grant it, not the other way around.

      No wonder this issue confuses you.

      his should fall underneath the jurisdiction and responsibility of the DOE to ensure that the school follows educational guidlines and policies

      The Department of Education (which, by the way, should be abolished) is part of one of three branches of the government. It is the job of the courts as well as Congress to weigh in on the matter. The courts weigh in only because it is too political for Congress or the Administration to touch.

      ultimatly i believe that society works best if its left to live as free as possible

      Then why do you believe that the government doles out the rights?

      Vote for change. Vote Libertarian.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    4. Re:Role of law in society by starworks5 · · Score: 1

      you should realize i always knew the reason why the schoolboard did what they did. but what i disagree with is the judge

      i also said:

      by ruling that this falls underneath the seperation state, he is making (in my opinion) and indirect connection, that may have other re-procussions in the future.


      "By denigrating evolution, the school board appears to be endorsing the well-known prevailing alternative theory, creationism or variations thereof, even though the sticker does not specifically reference any alternative theories," U.S. District Judge Clarence Cooper said.

      so in the future, say if there becomes another theory that becomes an alternative(perhaps not popular, but scientifically sound, and hadnt been disproved) to the big bang, then if some phyisics teacher decides that he wants to call it,"a theory, not a fact". and the most predominate theory is creationism.

      i dont like the fact, that he should judge what we can and cannot "denigrate", regardless of if the next predominate theory is religous or not. because that is protected under the first admendment.

      again(like a broken record), this is better approached from a viewpoint of upholding educational standards, which is the responsiblity of the DOE.

      what i said exactly was

      in fact the constition is the basis of our rights, a contract of sorts, to line out what rights we, and the government are entitled to.


      so, infact the constitution is a contract, that determines the rights the government has(the right to collect tax for instance), and what rights we have(the 1st admendment for instance). never did i say that the government doles out the rights.

      constitution n.
      the basic principles and laws of a nation, state, or social group that determine the powers and duties of the government and guarantee certain rights to the people in it

      contract n.
      An agreement between two or more parties, especially one that is written and enforceable by law

    5. Re:Role of law in society by geomon · · Score: 1

      so in the future, say if there becomes another theory that becomes an alternative(perhaps not popular, but scientifically sound, and hadnt been disproved) to the big bang, then if some phyisics teacher decides that he wants to call it,"a theory, not a fact". and the most predominate theory is creationism.

      But we are discussing "science" in this context. All theories are up for challenge and no one is taking issue with providing students with 'alternative' theories. If an alternative "scientific" theory is provided, they will be discussed.

      You know full well that the school board was not interested in offering a real alternative "scientific" explanation for consideration. They want discussion of Biblical explanations for life treated on a level playing field with "science" in a discussion about "science".

      You can't discuss the supernatural in "science". "Science" only explains the natural laws and systems, not super natural laws and systems. This is the issue that the court took up.

      i dont like the fact, that he should judge what we can and cannot "denigrate", regardless of if the next predominate theory is religous or not. because that is protected under the first admendment.

      This isn't a free speech issue. You are still encouraged to speak out all you like in the US. You are also correct in identifying this as a First Amendment issue, but not the way you think it about it.

      All government agencies and their employees are prohibited from using public dollars to encourage or support a religious cause. The advancement of Creationist principles benefits no one outside of a circle of the public who believes in it. It clearly benefits only Christians who believe that the Bible is literally true with no errors.

      Creationism is not "science". It is is religion that is attempting to rewrite "science" without abiding by the principles that "science" requires to work.

      Teaching "science" serves a secular public good. Tax dollars that build highways for public commerce are also expended to educate students in the field of "science". They become doctors, engineers, and priests.

      Teaching Creationism, does not advance "science", but instead breeds hostility to scientific explanations. Not all theories, just those dealing with the origins of human life. Creationist webpages are wonderfully anemic in the fields of physics, chemistry, astronomy, pharmacuticals, automotive engineering, nuclear physics, etc. They focus entirely on geology, paleontology, and anthropology. That approach to *alternative* science seem limited and opportunistic.

      Any guesses who this shift in public policy benefits?

      The First Amendment priciple at stake here is not free speech, but separation of church and state.

      so, infact the constitution is a contract,

      No, in fact it isn't. You wrote the definition yourself:

      constitution n. the basic principles...

      Contracts are, as you say, An agreement between two or more parties... The Creationist issue isn't a contract case of law anyhow.

      The US Constitution is a declaration of principles stating that the citizens of the US have ALL of the rights to begin with, but we will cede a few of them to the government just to keep the ship of state afloat. All other rights are reserved for the States and the people:

      Article [X.]

      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.


      So, you see, nothing in the US Constitution is the basis of the rights the citizens hold. It is the exact opposite.

      Did you catch the empasis on "science"?

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
  51. Painful waste of money by jtshaw · · Score: 1

    I happen to live in Atlanta these days and the thing that upsets me most is how much of a waste of money this whole ordeal was.

    Georgia has enough money problems (and education problems) without having to waste money on stupid stickers and the legal battles caused by them.

    Yes, Evolution is a Theory. So are a lot of other things presented in that book and other science text books. Do we need to put stickers on all our books for each theory they contain now? This is rediculous.

  52. Halleluja by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sweet jesus!

  53. A precedent... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does that mean that on all books that present an argument that there has to be a sticker warning that what lies inside could be one sided? On all Michael Moore books do we need to put a sticker on saying that 'This could present one side of the story'. No. We don't. Surely High School students are smart enough to know that it is a theory, and make up their own minds as to their belief. A sticker doesn't matter, but i know if i got that textbook, i would start to question all my science lessons, and how much influence the church has had in my school...

    On the bible, is there a sticker saying that Genesis is basically just a theory? NO! So why does there have to be one on a textbook?

  54. Hey! 111111111x111111111=12345678987654321 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mentos!

    Hey! 111111111x111111111=12345678987654321

    It's true! On-topic! And the fresh-maker!

  55. ha ha ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you stupid christian fucks....

  56. Only amongst Christians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one is advocating the Hindu, Bhuddist, Shinto, or other theory of the creation of everything. I don't see anyone but Christians queuing up to force their religion upon everyone.

    That's the real test if this is an endorsement of one religion, or not. The fact that you advocate intelligent design (the new name for the Christian theory of creationism) means we know which biased camp you're in.

  57. All Science is a theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope they put similar warnings on the Physics books "the existence of electrons is a theory and should be critically considered". The only theories that ever become theorems are in maths, and that's assuming you accept the axioms.

  58. Sorry, No by occamboy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Evolution is observable, and explains lots of things that cannot be explained more simply, making it a theory.

    You may be of the opinion that there is a God, er, I mean "Intelligent Designer" (to use your code word) behind all of this, and you may be right - but there's no observable evidence of this, just a guess. That makes intelligent design your hypothesis, not a theory.

    Sorry.

    1. Re:Sorry, No by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "That makes intelligent design your hypothesis, not a theory"

      It would need to be testable and therefore disprovable.

      Naturally, no theist wants to admit that the existance of their divinity *can* be disproved, so they will never offer a scientific theory. Its therefore a research dead-end.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    2. Re:Sorry, No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, no, that doesn't make Creationism a hypothesis. It's based on a fundamentally different epistemological system.

      Creationism is a story which relates a revealed truth of how the world came into being. It's not a hypothesis because that's a term that presupposes that the story is potentially false. As the literal, directly revealed word of God, the Bible is by definition correct. It merely relates what occured, not a proposition of a possible state of affairs. I'm not saying that the religious understanding of the world is good or bad, merely that it assumes things that scientifically minded people sometimes forget. You may disagree with the religious world view, but it behoves you to understand it for what it really is.

    3. Re:Sorry, No by pinkocommie · · Score: 1

      i'm muslim and nothing in the quran explicitly states anything 'refuting' evolution.
      As someone else mentioned about the bible that it mentions creation extending from the seas to land (which is the order in which its currently believed evolution took place)
      It may well be that the single 'creation' event was the big bang or maybe something else, but simply because ones 'understanding' of religion does not coincide with science does not mean that one has to attack science. Maybe our understanding of the bible , quran etc is flawed, maybe our 'current' understanding of science will improve and help our understanding of divinity. Whats wrong in simply saying we dont know enough about the universe to form accurate thoughts on its origin? (and i'm talkin about origin from a theological point of view)

    4. Re:Sorry, No by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      Ok so do you think that mullah might be prepared to entertain the notion that it may be possible to disprove the existance of Allah?

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    5. Re:Sorry, No by pinkocommie · · Score: 1

      I think those that cling to dogmatic beliefs are usually in the minority but are vocal enough to drown out saner voices.
      My point was our knowledge of 'everything' (religion and science) is largely imperfect and a work in progress, why cant people simply accept that they dont have the answers.
      For this specific debate its framed as evolution is right or biblical creationism? All evidence supports evolution which obviously riles up creationists, how about the 'third' pov that creationists are misinterpreting the bible? (again extending my little knowledge of the quran to my non existant knowledge of the bible)

    6. Re:Sorry, No by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "All evidence supports evolution which obviously riles up creationists"

      Because reliance on non-scriptural evidence is the very reverse of 'good reasoning' to these people.

      To the typical religious type, and I know its a generalisation, things should be 'self evident' (where that usually means reference to scripture).

      At the end of J.G.Fraziers classic "The Golden Bough" he makes a very shrewd comparison of magic, religion and science and comes to the conclusion that magic and science have more in common with one another than either have with religion;

      Religion is essentially the submission of the human will to that of a higher order, sometimes a capricious order which may be swayed by prayers and offerings. Its rules and motivations are known only to itself.

      Magic and science both present the world as operating according to rules, not according to the will of supranatural entities, and that human beings can understand these rules and if they do so, can change the world.

      For my own part... I actually prefer mysteries. Its when you don't know the answers and know that you don't... thats when one makes ones greatest advances.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  59. It's still just a theory... by mark-t · · Score: 1
    Just like Relativity is a theory.

    There is an abundance of evidence to support it.

    There has yet to be discovered any evidence to authoritatively disprove it.

    But it's still _JUST_ a theory.

    1. Re:It's still just a theory... by BlueCup · · Score: 1

      Aristotle once said that if "I hypothesize that all swans are white" that it wouldn't matter how many white swans you found, there could still be a black swan.

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
    2. Re:It's still just a theory... by jjoyce · · Score: 1

      Yes, but evolutionists are not dogmatically clinging to their theory in the face of a black swan.

    3. Re:It's still just a theory... by BlueCup · · Score: 1

      I agree, I was trying to say that there isn't always a black swan,

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
  60. ID is not a theory by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

    ID is not a theory and it should have no place in our schools. For something to be a scientific theory it needs to be subjectable to experimentation. It needs to be able to be proved wrong and the experiments need to be able to be reproduced by peers.

    There is no way to rigorously apply the scientific method to ID so it will never be a scientific theory.

  61. Embarassment by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

    Why do school boards have to keep embarassing us all with this shit? Evolution is one of the most successfull scientific theories EVER. You might as well say that gravitation is just a theory.

    1. Re:Embarassment by Atrax · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the definition of 'theory' is comonly misunderstood.

      Lots of people somehow conflate the word 'theory' with 'guess', which is just not the case. A theory, in this case, is an explanation which fits the facts. it can be disproved, but can usually never be absolutely proven - it just fits the facts.

      So 'closest we have to fact' is probably a better way to think of it.

      Evolution fits observable fact to an incredible degree, whereas creation is just pulled out of thin air.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    2. Re:Embarassment by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1
      Well, strictly speaking, creation matches observable fact perfectly. That's the problem with religious answers to scientific questions -- there's no way to disprove them. A theory that can't be disproven has no merit.

      The text of this sticker is clearly equating equating 'theory' with its colloquial use, rather than its scientific or mathematical/logical use.

    3. Re:Embarassment by mog007 · · Score: 1

      *Applause to parent*

      Exactly. Nothing can be proven if it isn't observed. We can't see atoms. Literally... cannot... see them. They're just a theory. The idea of the earth going around Sol? That's a theory too, but the bible has its own view on that as well. I don't see any disclaimers in the Physics textbooks about that.

  62. Offtopic for Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lawyer jokes? Creationism stickers? Is this a slow news-for-nerds day or what?

  63. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It is not so much -1 Free Speech, as -1 Pointless Vandalism.

    Even though in the case of the schools, the adminstrators were encouraging their use (which should have had them removed from any educational capacity IMHO), the "faithful" were encouraged to go beyond this and put their stickers on books in stores and public libraries.

    That is criminal vandalism, and by bringing this Court ruling in, it may discourage it somewhat. That is a good thing.

  64. isn't fallability the corner stone of science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    maybe these idiots need to take a science class. the first thing I learned in science is that the best theory is the model of how things work, until someone proves it has flaws. Then it gets revised. It is not truth in the religious sense. Evolution is the best theory we have, which has the most evidence supporting it.

    I don't need some fucking dumb ass telling me science is a theory. Yeah, no shit it's a theory. I'm suppose to think for myself and try to see where the theory works and where it fails. Those parents are a bunch of whack jobs.

  65. creationism isn't a theory... by bani · · Score: 1

    ...because it isn't scientific.

    you can't test it.

    it is, by its own definition, magic.

    creationism isn't a scientific theory, so it doesn't deserve equal time with genuinely scientific theories.

  66. 2000 lawsuit-threatening parents by Migraineman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems that the "vocal special interest group" mentality was at work here. 2000 parents bitched that the book contained "evolution" and needed a warning label. The school district attempted to dodge what probably would have become a (cl)ass-action lawsuit. They seem to have made matters worse, garnering national attention.

    They had a flaming bag of dogshit tossed on their doorstep, and they made a choice as to which foot to stomp with. If they'd decided to do nothing, they get sued. If they put the current sticker in, they get sued (albeit by a different group.) If they changed the wording to say something like "all religion is theory, as is evolution; decide for yourself" they'd get sued too. A better solution would have been to show the bitching parents the door, and remind them that they can always home-school the little hellions if the parents don't like the public school curriculum. At least then the school district could have stood up in the courtroom (for the inevitable lawsuit) and maintained that "we will not endorse religion; any of them." A lawsuit was pretty much inevitable. I don't think they chose the right one, though.

    1. Re:2000 lawsuit-threatening parents by absolutes · · Score: 1

      What a bunch of crap. Why don't you actually do some research.

    2. Re:2000 lawsuit-threatening parents by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
      I don't think they chose the right one, though.
      Clearly they didn't; they lost.
    3. Re:2000 lawsuit-threatening parents by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      The school board didn't have a "flaming bag of dogshit" tossed at them; they put it their themselves.

      The school board itself is comprised of the special interest group you mention.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    4. Re:2000 lawsuit-threatening parents by mihib · · Score: 1

      The problem is neither the sticker nor the parents. The problem is, that in some huge state a very crappy law system exists. You can sue anyone for pretty much anything.
      Religion is a personal thing and should allways be a personal thing. So people have to decide for themselfs. And parents give their belief to children. No one has to be sued for this crap. A book has pages, if you don't like a chapter, don't read it. Or better read it, think about it and then say whats wrong.
      Why do i allways think of idiots when i hear storys like that?

    5. Re:2000 lawsuit-threatening parents by Migraineman · · Score: 1

      Oh yes they did. The school board didn't just decide "hey, this book needs an 'evolution' warning sticker." 2000 irate bible-thumping parents incited a response (the incitement was the "flaming bag of dogshit.") The decision to put the sticker in the book just resulted in steaming poo on the shcool baord's collective foot.

      Once the pro-religion folks opened the can of worms, a lawsuit was inevitable. The school board failed to realized that they couldn't avoid litigation, and took action that they hoped would quell the vocal parents. Classic myopia. The school board neglected to consider that their actions would cheese off an even bigger chunk of the population.

      Yep, it was a real-life Kobiashi Maru kind of situation.

    6. Re:2000 lawsuit-threatening parents by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      No, if you follow the story (and not just the article quoted), you'll see that the special interest group took over the school board before raising the sticker issue. Well over half of the board are directly associated with creationist groups.

      Only _after_ they'd taken over the board did the creationists organise the public outcry. And that's why they did it there, rather than somewhere else.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    7. Re:2000 lawsuit-threatening parents by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      You can sue anyone for pretty much anything.

      And that's the way it should be. There is no possible way to screen out potentially frivilous lawsuits without blocking worthy ones as well. How can you possibly decide the merit of a suit before hearing the facts? If a case doesn't have merit, it will be dismissed. If it is a "frivilous" one, it will be dismissed with prejudice so it can't be brought again.

  67. These stickers say nothing about creation... by emplynx · · Score: 1

    This is such crap. The stickers read "Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered." Can someone point out to me where that says anything about intelligent design or creationism? Evolution as taught in many text books is not proven. You can show me skeletons of what are supposively pre-homo sapeien creatures, but you cannot demonstrate to me that happening! Evolution is a theory. I believe every scientist should admit that. Maybe it is a correct theory, but it is a theory.

    So... Is the part of the Constitution you believe it contradicts is the part saying, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." Can someone explain to me the connection between a sticker saying evolution is a theory and that first amendment?

    --
    -Tim
    1. Re:These stickers say nothing about creation... by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      Fundamentalist Christians are scared since Jesus didn't return in 2000/2001 like they hoped so they want a theocracy and their religion forced onto others. In other words, they are scared they maybe wrong and if they force people to listen to them, they might agree and Jesus returns.

    2. Re:These stickers say nothing about creation... by JasonStiletto · · Score: 1

      mod up as funny.

    3. Re:These stickers say nothing about creation... by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      Come on... who are we fooling here? Doesn't take a rocket scientist to know what that sticker is insinuating, and exactly who is behind it and what they're trying to say.

      By placing a sticker like that right smack in a book like that basically gives the message to students, "hey all this stuff in here, don't take it seriously. it's not really true."

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    4. Re:These stickers say nothing about creation... by Poverty+P'uh · · Score: 1

      Everything contained between the covers of a science textbook is a theory, and if you disagree you don't understand the use of the word "theory" as it relates to science. All ideas are not theories. For instance, creationism is not a theory. It's an explanation, but it lacks the critical aspect: it cannot be tested.

      The reason the stickers are problematic is they call attention to one theory in particular. This technique uses flaws in nomenclature and faulty human thinking, combined with the 'exception that proves the rule' phenomenon, to imply that evolution is somehow less of a theory than say, gravity. This is not the case, however it is fitting with the agenda of certain religious fundamentalists.

      Basically, even though it's a truthful statement, it's still deceitful. For further examples of this, see any of Michael Moore's movies (look at that, I criticize both the right-wingers AND the left-wingers!)

      --
      "Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups."
    5. Re:These stickers say nothing about creation... by emplynx · · Score: 1

      I disagree, but I take your point. I don't believe the insinuation (that says nothing even remotely about religion) is unconstitutional. That is the issue here.

      --
      -Tim
    6. Re:These stickers say nothing about creation... by bamberg · · Score: 1

      I disagree, but I take your point. I don't believe the insinuation (that says nothing even remotely about religion) is unconstitutional. That is the issue here.

      The reason that this particular insinuation is unconstitutional is that the school board made it for the express purpose of promoting religion. The board members admitted this openly. The decision that has been handed down was narrowly crafted for precisely this reason. The court isn't saying that putting disclaimers on books is always unconstitutional. They're saying that in this particular instance the disclaimer is unconstitutional because of why it was made.

  68. ICR - Institute for Creation Research by genrader · · Score: 5, Funny
    1. Re:ICR - Institute for Creation Research by geomon · · Score: 1

      I have.

      They do not provide positive evidence, but they do provide some great challenges.

      Unfortunately, the role of science is not to just provide a counterpoint to every theory, but to provide affirmative defenses of scientific evidence.

      Nothing on the ICR site is scientific evidence in the support for a supernatural creation.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    2. Re: ICR - Institute for Creation Research by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > They do not provide positive evidence

      It's far worse than that: their "researchers" have to sign a statement of faith that rules out anything that doesn't jibe with their version of young-earth creationism.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:ICR - Institute for Creation Research by sbaker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Creationism and Research in the same title! That's just too funny!

      --
      www.sjbaker.org
    4. Re:ICR - Institute for Creation Research by genrader · · Score: 1

      Read the Impact articles.

    5. Re: ICR - Institute for Creation Research by Macrolord · · Score: 1

      Kinda like signing a contract that when employed, you will agree to a certain code of conduct? There is nothing wrong with requiring someone who joins your organization to support the organizations primary goals and operating guidelines.

      Ensuring your organization maintains integrity of it's key principles is hardly a "bad thing". Don't agree? don't join. real simple.

  69. analogous != equivalent by aendeuryu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    By that logic, you are declaring Evolution a religion...

    I'm doing no such thing. You're confusing analogy with equivalence.

    My point is that Christianity (specifically, Creationistic Christianity) is going outside the bounds of acceptable behaviour by trying to intrude on other disciplines. If the converse were done to them and their bibles, hopefully they could see the error in their ways.

    Unlikely, though. Christianity's biggest problem, as Joseph Campbell pointed out, was that for Christians it's more important to believe the existence of Jesus, Adam and Eve, Satan, etc. than it is to understand the meaningful significance behind them.

    1. Re:analogous != equivalent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christianity's biggest problem, as Joseph Campbell pointed out, was that for Christians it's more important to believe the existence of Jesus, Adam and Eve, Satan, etc. than it is to understand the meaningful significance behind them.

      Adding a related quote by Dawkins regarding blind faith:
      "Nothing is more lethal for certain kinds of meme than a tendency to look for evidence. ... The meme for blind faith secures its own perpetuation by the simple unconscious expedient of discouraging rational inquiry."
      Which I see as essentially saying the same thing. That is, that Christianity has survived so well because once it has been established in an individual, their doubting of it is unthinkable by its own standards, and by the time one is old enough to doubt it, it has most likely already been established.

    2. Re:analogous != equivalent by firewood · · Score: 1
      My point is that Christianity (specifically, Creationistic Christianity) is going outside the bounds of acceptable behaviour by trying to intrude on other disciplines.

      The issues is not with intruding on other disciplines. The issue is with publicly funded and state enforced teaching about those disciplines. How can kids go on exercising their constitutional freedom to believe in the Great Pumpkin if the chemistry curriculum requires that the fact that it's impossible for Pumkins to rise that way on Halloween night be stuffed down every kids throat.

      But chemists should be free believe rational things on their own time and dollar.

    3. Re:analogous != equivalent by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "...is going outside the bounds of acceptable behaviour by trying to intrude on other disciplines."

      I happen to be a Christian AND am in complete agreement with you on this point.

      In fact, the Bible agrees with you on this point as well. Without getting in to a Sunday school style dissertation I will simply state the position of the Bible.

      According to the Bible itself, and God if you believe the Gospel, the things contained in the Bible should not be taught to unbelievers, nor discussed with them (except for the applicable Cristology, hamartiology, etc. that go along witht he gospel.)

      The Bible details the system of acquiring knowledge about God. It requires faith in Christ and the participation of the Holy Spirit as mentor. Unbelievers do not qualify under these circumstances and should definitely not have the contents of the Bible shoved down their throats.

      Joseph Campbell makes a good point. I see this in the hipocrisy of people who profess to be Christians but will not engage in systematic study of the Bible. However, the fact that he recognizes this does not mean that he is able to extract that meaning himself or that he has the ability to refrain form attaching meaning to those individuals that is inconsistent with what they actually are.

      Case in point: If you take the Bible to be its own authority on these matters, belief in who and what Jesus Christ is is the whole issue of the Bible and even the universe. To say that the meaningful signifigance of Christ is more important than belief in the existence of Jesus is contrary to Christian doctrine. In fact, belief in Christ requires BOTH, and to put one before the other is the quintesential misunderstanding of what Christianity is all about.

      Regardles of all of this, Christians should scrutinize the Bible a little bit better and learn that we, as Christians, need to get out of politics and out of the school administration. The fact that so many Christians miss this point in the Bible further exemplifies the hipocrisy I spoke of earlier.

      Then again it could be evidence of something worse than hipocrisy.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    4. Re:analogous != equivalent by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      and learn that we, as Christians, need to get out of politics and out of the school administration

      I'm a Christian libertarian, and I agree with this point. But, as long as my money is forcibly confiscated to fund the public education system (which I agree is a worthy cause to fund charitably, even though the local elementary school took $10 from us for a recent fundraiser and never delivered the cookie dough we ordered), then I rightfully have a say in what they do. In fact, our school district even says so in their online documents. They make clear that they are accountable to two groups: 1) parents, and 2) taxpayers.

      As a taxpayer I rightfully deserve a say, though of course as a Christian even if I did not have that say I am commanded to still pay taxes.

      For my part, I do not believe in forcibly confiscating the money of other people to educate my children, and so my children will be homeschooled. They will indeed be exposed to evolution. (Mommy and Daddy love Star Trek, so they'll be hearing about it a lot.)

      I suggest that if the state public school system doesn't want my vote in how things are taught, they need to eliminate my means of participation through compulsory funding; i.e., they need to allow me to "secede" or "opt-out" of the program entirely. As it is, the problem really stems from the conflict between two views of how education ought to be: one view is that science (and other appropriate disciplines) rightfully ought to set the standard. The problem is in our democracy we insist that these things be done by a vote, which is also right since we're taking people's money away and they deserve a say in how their money is spent. But submitting things to a vote, which is the right thing to do, is necessarily going to make influence from the appropriate disciplines on the curriculum be secondary, which is a problem for quality of education.

      Thus, I will opt-out of sending my children to the public schools so that their education will not be subject to a vote. If I could opt-out of compulsory funding of the system, I could probably use that money to fund my kids travelling in Europe or something to broaden their worldview, and I'd happily yield any interest I have in setting the agenda of the public school system.

  70. How can America ignore the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just look at what these brilliant scientists of tomorrow have discovered

    1st Place: "My Uncle Is A Man Named Steve (Not A Monkey)"

    One of my personal favorites

    2nd Place: "Women Were Designed For Homemaking"

    Jonathan Goode (grade 7) applied findings from many fields of science to support his conclusion that God designed women for homemaking: physics shows that women have a lower center of gravity than men, making them more suited to carrying groceries and laundry baskets; biology shows that women were designed to carry un-born babies in their wombs and to feed born babies milk, making them the natural choice for child rearing; social sciences show that the wages for women workers are lower than for normal workers, meaning that they are unable to work as well and thus earn equal pay; and exegetics shows that God created Eve as a companion for Adam, not as a co-worker.

    (P.S. that site is for real)

    1. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about kid's crafts: Make a nail just like the ones used by the Romans to crucify Our Lord! Whoa, holy educational.

      "Caution: Pointy edges. Not for children under 5."

    2. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've spent 30 minutes looking at this site and I still cannot convince myself that it could possibly be real. What the hell is WRONG with the US?????

    3. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by coyotecult · · Score: 1

      Haha, no it's not, although it's certainly one of the best trolls ever. That makes you either: A) Gullible B) A troll -- right in line with your AC Take your pick.

    4. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by identity0 · · Score: 1

      Oh... My.... Gawd....

      That site was alternately hilarious and terrifiying. I can't believe people put ideas like that into kids' minds. It was so bizzare that I thought it was a parody site at first, but it appears to be legit.

      '"Pokemon Prove Evolutionism Is False" - Paul Sanborn (grade 4)' is funny, but what the hell is up with '"Dinosaur & Man Walked Together" - Donny Findlay (grade 6)' ??? How can parents teach kids this stuff in good conscience? Stuff like this makes me wonder about the future of this country - obviously there are fundamentalists in every country, but the ones in America seem the most organized and well-funded, at least in the developed world.

      Oh, and check out the page on their crusade against Landover Baptist, a parody site:

      "The Internet was created by the United States of America - a Christian nation [ref. 1, 2, 3] - and should not be used to spread anti-Christian, secular, or non-Christian propaganda and hatespeech. This is our Internet, and we should exercise our position as its owners and as the guardians of civilization to stop its misuse." ... "For this blasphemous atrocity, the Landover Baptist website must be removed from our Internet."

      Later on the page:

      "Their modus operandi is simple: post articles that take good Christian values and twist them - beyond recognition - such that they look arrogant, hateful, or just idiotic."

      Right, there's no way real christians can sound arrogant or idiotic! I didn't particularly like Landover because their parody is designed to confuse people, but this response is so over the top it's hilarious.

    5. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I posted it AC because I don't want insane fundamentalists harassing me. I think the site is legit. I first saw it two years ago.

    6. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      HOLY SH*T. That's amazingly ignorant. Are these people for real??!

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    7. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Atrax · · Score: 1

      errr.. no. It's legit. look again.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    8. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Shrei · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Well Thats not the worst part of that site, i don't like to be OT, but this deserve a mention, look at this part of the site:

      However, these propagandists aren't just targeting the young. Take for example Apple Computers, makers of the popular Macintosh line of computers. The real operating system hiding under the newest version of the Macintosh operating system (MacOS X) is called... Darwin! That's right, new Macs are based on Darwinism! While they currently don't advertise this fact to consumers, it is well known among the computer elite, who are mostly Atheists and Pagans. Furthermore, the Darwin OS is released under an "Open Source" license, which is just another name for Communism. They try to hide all of this under a facade of shiny, "lickable" buttons, but the truth has finally come out: Apple Computers promote Godless Darwinism and Communism.
      But is this really such a shock? Lets look for a moment at Apple Computers. Founded by long haired hippies, this company has consistently supported 60's counter-cultural "values"2. But there are even darker undertones to this company than most are aware of. Consider the name of the company and its logo: an apple with a bite taken out of it. This is clearly a reference to the Fall, when Adam and Eve were tempted with an apple3 by the serpent. It is now Apple Computers offering us temptation, thereby aligning themselves with the forces of darkness4. This company is well known for its cult-like following. It isn't much of a stretch to say that it is a cult. Consider co-founder and leader Steve Jobs' constant exhortation through advertising (i.e. mind control) that its followers should "think different". We have to ask ourselves: "think different than whom or what?" The disturbing answer is that they want us to think different than our Christian upbringing, to reject all the values that we have been taught and to heed not the message of the Lord Jesus Christ!


      I really don't like the way they refer to open source, i dont care about it to be communist or not, but the way they say it is intended to scare people away, and they dont see the benefits for us the community.
      and if you continue reading, you will find this:
      It appears we have entered a terrible new phase in the Evolutionism propaganda campaign that Apple Computers has been waging. Apple has just announced the "eMac", a Macintosh computer designed specifically to smuggle Darwinism into our schools! According to their propagandistic sloganeering, the "e" in "eMac" ostensibly stands for "education", although it should be obvious to readers by now that it's really a cryptic tipping of the hat to their true agenda: "Evolutionism". However, this isn't the only thing hiding behind this choice of moniker; according to my research, the name eMac is also a referrence to "Emacs", a program that is a standard-bearer for the Communistic Open Source movement mentioned above and whose mascot is some sort of effeminate-looking, horned devil-man. Is there no end to this tangled web of evil?

      i don't know about you, but i found this extremely disturbing. I know that part of that site is old, like 2002, even so, they are not convincing young people, they are convincing someone's parents.
    9. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by djplurvert · · Score: 3, Informative

      That site is CLEARLY satire....navigate your way to the jesus anti-fornication thong" to convince yourself.

      I'd bet money it's the same people who do landover baptist church which, btw, is ALSO funny as hell.

    10. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by renata.org · · Score: 1

      Absolutely fantastic. I live in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and our governor has forced state schools to teach creationism as an "alternative" to evolution. She'd love this site.
      Therefore, I need to observe that man are stronger and taller than women, wich would make them more suitable for housekeeping activities like supermarket shopping and window washing, as well as carrying babies for their wives. :P

    11. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Flyboy+Connor · · Score: 1
      (P.S. that site is for real)

      No, it's not.

      Unfortunately, since the comment is already labeled "Interesting", it cannot be turned into "Funny" anymore.

      Because funny it is.

    12. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by superyooser · · Score: 1
    13. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by pjt33 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's a parody site - or was, before it exceeded its bandwidth quota.

    14. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Dana+P'Simer · · Score: 1
      I just recieved this from the cingular wireless proxy when I tried to look at your link. So funny...

      ---

      You have attempted to reach an unauthorized or inappropriate Internet website. If you feel there is a LEGITIMATE REASON for accessing this site, please contact employee.communications@cingular.com. Include your name, phone number, the site URL, and the reason you need access to this site. It is Cingular's policy to provide official access to the public Internet to all authorized employees and agents of the Company. Employees must exercise good judgment that is consistent with Cingular's Internet Policy and the Code of Business Conduct. Failure to comply with this policy may result in disciplinary action, up to and including dismissal. While trying to retrieve the Universal Resource Locator(URL):

      http://objective.jesussave.us/creationsciencefai r.html from client workstation IP address 10.87.36.251 at 15:54:12 UTC on 2005-01-14

      Failure Reason: Either 'deny' or 'exception' was matched in policy

      Category: Pornography

    15. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Internet was created by the United States of America - a Christian nation [ref. 1, 2, 3] - and should not be used to spread anti-Christian, secular, or non-Christian propaganda and hatespeech. This is our Internet, and we should exercise our position as its owners and as the guardians of civilization to stop its misuse." ... "For this blasphemous atrocity, the Landover Baptist website must be removed from our Internet."

      This almost proves that the creators of this site are on the same ilk as the Landover Baptist creators. Either that or they are the same people.

      It does prove that this is a parody site. A legit e site wouldn't single out LB.

    16. Re:How can America ignore the evidence? by coyotecult · · Score: 1

      You first saw it two years ago? What a coincidence! So did I! I couldn't quite believe it was real, so I did a bit of research, and it's not. Oh boohoo. And insane fundamentalists harassing you? Bullshit. I mean, sure I'll harass you for being a bigoted, gullible dumbass (or troll, you're still being trolly), but I'm agnostic, so I don't think it counts.

  71. This is just dumb by ellem · · Score: 1

    Evolution is a theory. What's the beef? To re coin a coined phrase?

    --
    This .sig is fake but accurate.
  72. c^2 = a^2 + b^2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouldn't the math textbooks have a disclaimer for Pythagoras' famous theorem?

    1. Re:c^2 = a^2 + b^2 by grolschie · · Score: 1

      > Shouldn't the math textbooks have a disclaimer for Pythagoras' famous theorem?

      No they shouldn't. Because Pythagoras is openly taught as theorem, whereas macro evolution is blatantly and falsely taught as being fact.

      Geesshh!!! Scientists cannot even agree on how old the earth or universe is, yet so many textbooks (and documentaries for that matter) state that such and such events occurred x million/billion years ago as if established fact.

      Perhaps they should use words like "estimated to be" or "believed to be"?

    2. Re:c^2 = a^2 + b^2 by shark72 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they should use words like "estimated to be" or "believed to be"?"

      Most textbooks do. If you have a textbook that tries to assign a particular year to a geological or evolutionary event in the remote past for which we can only speculate with low granularity, that's simply a bad textbook.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    3. Re:c^2 = a^2 + b^2 by reepicheep · · Score: 1

      A theorem is different than a theory. A theorem can actually be mathematically proven, where as a theory can never be known to be 100% accurate.

    4. Re:c^2 = a^2 + b^2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can be mathematically proven within a logical framework by means of a system of axioms and definitions.

      The axioms and definitions have to come from somewhere, and things change if you change the definitions and axioms. Since the specific math here is Euclidean geometry, we have all of Euclid's definitions and axioms to work with. This is in some sense how mathematics and the other sciences differ: mathematicians can change the universe at whim by simply changing the axioms. The resulting universe may be absolute non-sense, or totally useless, but it's still mathematically solid as long as it's logically self-consistent. As an example, change the parallel postulate from Euclid appropriately and you get two different geometries, both of which are perfectly self-consistent.

      As a side note, the nature of axioms and definitions has always reminded me of faith in the sense that many things elude precise definition. "A point is that which has no part"? What on earth is that? Yet we talk about points all day long...

  73. Re:. What? by utahjazz · · Score: 1

    Evolution IS a theory, and not a fact

    Evolution is a theory and a fact.

    The court opinion stated that they had no problem with stating that evolution is a "theory", using the scientific definition of "theory". But, in stating that evolution it is "not a fact", they are invoking the popular definition of "theory", which means "speculation".

    Ultimately it was decided this was a violation of the Establishment clause, because it was religiously motivated.

    Imagine there was a religion that strongly believed God wants us to smoke tobacco. So, they put stickers in biology books saying "the link between tobacco and lung cancer is a theory, not a fact".

    That would be a violation of the Establishment clause.

  74. Micro- vs. macro-evolution by tepples · · Score: 0

    To my knowledge, the evolution observed during human history has been microevolution, which the intelligent design hypothesis accepts. Creationists such as myself believe that the Creator made each plant after its kind and each animal after its kind, and the animals escaped the Great Flood of 1656 on Noah Cruise Lines two by two after their kind. Intelligent design does not require that the Creator make each species separately; consider that the "kind" in "after its kind" is cognate to Latin genus. (Incidentally, the order-of-magnitude decline in human life spans can be attributed to a population bottleneck caused by the Flood.)

    1. Re:Micro- vs. macro-evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why isn't there evidence of a population bottleck in every other living species? Noah could only have carried so many creatures on his ark (he would have had to carry more food mass than animal mass. Did he save plants as well? If not, how did they survive?) We should see evidence of all life having evolved from a few thousand (at most) species at a single point. Instead, our evidence shows species rising and falling at different times and in different places. There have been many mass extinctions, but none to ark-levels.

      I'm really not trolling or trying to attack you. I'd like to hear your answers.

    2. Re:Micro- vs. macro-evolution by Zilverfire · · Score: 1

      "Flood myths in various cultures" good reference cheif

      --
      "Could you put that in a memo entitled, SHIT I ALREADY KNOW!" - Sarge
    3. Re: Micro- vs. macro-evolution by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Creationists such as myself believe that the Creator made each plant after its kind and each animal after its kind, and the animals escaped the Great Flood of 1656 on Noah Cruise Lines two by two after their kind. Intelligent design does not require that the Creator make each species separately; consider that the "kind" in "after its kind" is cognate to Latin genus.

      So you appeal to evolution-on-steroids in your alternative to evolution...

      > Incidentally, the order-of-magnitude decline in human life spans can be attributed to a population bottleneck caused by the Flood.

      Actually, humans (and almost all other species) have far too much genetic diversity to have suffered such a radical bottleneck in the past few thousand years.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    4. Re: Micro- vs. macro-evolution by tepples · · Score: 1

      So you appeal to evolution-on-steroids in your alternative to evolution...

      I believe that evolution does not progress from single cells to apes to man but rather from man to man-prime, from ape to apes-prime, from cat to cats-prime, etc.

      Actually, humans (and almost all other species) have far too much genetic diversity to have suffered such a radical bottleneck in the past few thousand years.

      How much of that is caused by random mutations?

  75. MCHawkings said it best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck The Creationists
    Trash Talk
    Ah yeah, here we go again!
    Damn! This is some funky shit that I be laying down on your ass.
    This one goes out to all my homey's working in the field of
    evolutionary science.
    Check it!

    Verse 1
    Fuck the damn creationists, those bunch of dumb-ass bitches,
    every time I think of them my trigger finger itches.
    They want to have their bullshit, taught in public class,
    Stephen J. Gould should put his foot right up their ass.
    Noah and his ark, Adam and his Eve,
    straight up fairy stories even children don't believe.
    I'm not saying there's no god, that's not for me to say,
    all I'm saying is the Earth was not made in a day.

    Chorus
    Fuck, fuck, fuck,
    fuck the Creationists.

    Trash Talk
    Break it down.
    Ah damn, this is a funky jam!
    I'm about ready to kick this bitch back in.
    Check it.

    Verse 2
    Fuck the damn creationists I say it with authority,
    because kicking their punk asses be me paramount priority.
    Them wack-ass bitches say, "evolution's just a theory",
    they best step off, them brainless fools, I'll give them cause to fear me.
    The cosmos is expanding every second, every day,
    but their minds are shrinking as they close their eyes and pray.
    They call their bullshit science like the word could give them cred,
    if them bitches be scientists then cap me in the head.

    Chorus

    Trash Talk
    Bass!
    Bring that shit in!
    Ah yeah, that's right, fuck them all motherfuckers.
    Fucking punk ass creationists trying to set scientific thought back 400 years.
    Fuck that!
    If them superstitious motherfuckers want to have that kind of party,
    I'm going to put my dick in the mashed potatoes.
    Fucking creationists.
    Fuck them.
    Close

    1. Re:MCHawkings said it best by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 1

      gawd damn! I loved this!.. although I wonder if I still have the MP3...

  76. Wow! by garcia · · Score: 1

    Sounds a lot like Slashdot.

  77. god is a cunt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there is no god, there is no santa.

  78. Interesting discussion by lucabrasi999 · · Score: 1

    Here is a link to a series of articles at the American Institute of Biological Sciences. The articles discuss both points of view.

  79. Welcome to the 21st century Georgia by Easy2RememberNick · · Score: 1

    Strange that just recently we were discussing how the length of the day had changed by 3 microseconds (due to the Indonesian earthquake). In "Inherit The Wind" one of the key arguments was that a day could be of indeterminate length; 24 hours or 2 billion years.

  80. The Simple Fact by Omniscientist · · Score: 1

    The reason there is a huge problem with that sticker is that its wrong in every single degree. No matter what religion you follow, evolution is not something that can possibly be questioned. Evolution is a fact, because it is a simple observable phenomenon. Natural selection, as much as I like it, is a theory. Evolution is observed, documented, and easily seen, but the mechanism of evolution (which is natural selection) falls under the term theory.

  81. evolution isnt fact? by scforth · · Score: 1

    i actually read something about this the other day while sitting at the dentists office. it was about how we treat infections and diseases with medicines, and then the germs evolve to become resisant to that drug. just a thought

    1. Re:evolution isnt fact? by cicho · · Score: 1

      "...while sitting at the dentists office..."

      Was it before or after the nurse applied anesthetics? (GD&R)

      --
      "Only the small secrets need to be protected. The big ones are kept secret by public incredulity." - Marshall McLuhan
    2. Re: evolution isnt fact? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > i actually read something about this the other day while sitting at the dentists office. it was about how we treat infections and diseases with medicines, and then the germs evolve to become resisant to that drug. just a thought

      It is indeed a fact. Creationists, either out of ignorance or else out of rhetorical need, almost always confuse the fact of evolution with the theory that explains the fact. Then they only require the additional step of confusing a scientific theory with a conjecture, and bingo the fact has become a mere conjecture!

      Now re-read the disclaimer with that background in mind.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  82. Atheism is a religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great, I can get tax exempt status!

    Oh, wait...

  83. For me this ruling depends on books contents by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the books contents are written so as to imply that evolution is fact then such a sticker is probably appropriate.

    If however the book glosses over all theories as fact then the sticker is innappropriate for singling out evolution and a more general sticker (or preferably a different text) would be appropriate.

    If no such glossing over is done then the sticker is innappropriate.

    Any science book however should teach that theories are there to be challenged by scientific means. Science's strength is that theories can be improved upon or replaced when a demonstrably better (not merely "alternate") theory eventuates.

    Science should be proud of it's theories, proud that they represent accumulated knowledge and proud that science is honest enough to let them go if we get something better (not merely "alternate").

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    1. Re:For me this ruling depends on books contents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, if students get the impression that evolution is a fact not a theory then there is something more fundamentally wrong with the science curriculum than can be fixed with a sticker.

    2. Re:For me this ruling depends on books contents by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1
      If the books contents are written so as to imply that evolution is fact then such a sticker is probably appropriate. ... Any science book however should teach that theories are there to be challenged by scientific means.

      Look at it this way; wouldn't such a sticker would seem pretty silly on a math or chemistry book? It basically tells students that the material may or may not be true. That only gives students less incentive to learn the material, and hinders them from relying on it to understand the natural world. That can even hinder those who decide to pursue careers in biology or paleontology.
      Chemistry and physics consist of a lot of theories, and yet those theories are considered factual and reliable. The same is true with evolution.

      --
      No data, no cry
    3. Re:For me this ruling depends on books contents by mattdm · · Score: 1

      Exactly, if students get the impression that evolution is a fact not a theory then there is something more fundamentally wrong with the science curriculum than can be fixed with a sticker.

      This gets into technicalities of epistemology -- how exactly do we know that anything is "true"? Can't everything be doubted -- from "I think, therefore I am" on up? I've got this theory about how the wall to this room would hurt if I were to try to walk through it, and there's some others about the earth going around the sun and things falling when I drop them.

      These theories are well-enough established through long observation and common experience that we all consider it completely reasonable to treat them as fact -- and in fact, we consider anyone who thinks otherwise to be a bit off.

      The basics (not necessarily the techical details) of evolution are on this order. They are, for all intents and purposes, facts.

      Sure, children should be taught to question authority and to approach everything with a healthy degree of skepticism. And understanding of the scientific process -- and the philosophical process that gave rise to science -- should underpin all teaching about our understanding of the world. But the only reason to single out evolution as "theory not fact" in schools is the same one that gave the proponents of a non-earth-centric universe solar system such trouble: narrow-minded religion which has no interest in facts whatsoever.

    4. Re:For me this ruling depends on books contents by orin · · Score: 1

      Science's strength is that theories can be improved upon or replaced when a demonstrably better (not merely "alternate") theory eventuates.

      This is not always the case. If you read Philosophers of Science Karl Popper and Thomas Kuhn you will gain an understanding, through their use of historical examples, that theory change is rarely a matter of simple rationality.

      What history shows happens is that adherents of the old theory tend to die out whilst younger adherents of the new theory take their place. Newton wasn't immediately accepted - it took some time for the Cartesians to lose their influence and to be replaced by the Newtonians.

  84. except that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It specifically says theory/not fact, which is bullshit. In science, theories become facts because they are the most accurate ways of explaining observations to date. Before Einstein came along, Newton's theory of gravity was fact. Now, Einstein's theories are fact. What else is a fact but the best possible conclusion based on the evidence?

  85. Gravity is just a theory too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hereby propose the alternative gravitional theory.

    The is no force of gravity, anyone who believes in a force of gravity is an evil heathen.

    God's angels move things towards the earth, God has enough angels to hold things and move them around in the sky. Yes by his word the angel's do everything .. the evil gravitationalist atheists are trying to make you think there are "fundamental forces" and all.

    But ask anyone and they have no idea why gravity works the way it does.

    We need physics books to say taht gravity is just a theory, it cannot be proven that gravity has been happening the same way for millenia or that it will contnue to happen the way recorded in textbooks.

    The same way he put fake dinosaur skeletons for us to find, God has made it look like there are objects in the sky that play along with this gravity force. It's all a test to see who the non believers are.

    One day, if God gets angry at us he might change how gravity works and we may all float off into space.

    1. Re:Gravity is just a theory too by TeraCo · · Score: 1
      Well, you're not too far off there.

      No one knows how gravity works. Damn gravity.

      --
      Not Meta-modding due to apathy.
    2. Re:Gravity is just a theory too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sad thing is, and anyone so jaded of opinions outside the box and so certain of their own opinion of things might not see it, you're statements actually underscore the need to drive home into students heads that theories are not facts.

      As absurd as you tried to be, can you explain to everyone how gravity in actuality works? Alot of theories, supported by facts out there, but that's all they are.

      What I personally would like to see, is that disclaimer applied to every theory taught. Really drive it into peoples heads, that theories are our best attempt to logically interpret the facts and that people should feel free to formulate their own theories and question the prevailing ones. IMO, science is poisoned by a lack of that perspective being driven home into the students of science. Too many crotchety "science" teachers out there bent on making you see the world they way they were taught to see it.

      Scientific bigots are as bad as religious bigots. How many arguments in the history of science, as well as personal grudges, have occured because scientists(more often the wannabes who read a book about the scientists and think they're scientific thinkers) have dogmatically clung to theories and refused new light?

      Better to suspend disbelief to entertain all ideas offered for what they are, and try to understand whatever it is the other people are trying to say, than to thump some widely accepted theory and tell people they're wrong 'cuz the theory says so. I hope the creationist in the crowd don't misread this as defending creation, you guys need to take this medicine everybit as much as the disciples of evolution, especially with regards to your religions.

      Personally, I don't buy the alien ufo stories, but if I run into someone who believes them, I'll hear them out, offer my own views and won't try to convert them. Not so with the religious and evolution nuts. Each side thumping their God damned gospels. Ya gotta believe what they do(which other people taught them to believe) or you're not rational. Pathetic.

      The next time I deal with either a true believing creationist or a true believing evolutionist attempting to convince me of their ultimate truth, I'm going to tell them I believe in devolutionary uncreationism. That's right, you heard it here first. Man didn't evolve, nor was he created. But rather, we are slowly being uncreated through the process of devolution. See, these clowns on the evolution/creation debate have believed in the fairy tales that things are progressing, or that we were created. The truth is, we were uncreated and we are regressing as a result of it. I believe the fossil record supports this view too, it's just the people interpreting it have their "true faith" of creation or evolution clouding their judgement so they don't see it.

      If you're sick of hearing about this debate, support devolutionary uncreationism. It is critical that the world leave behind the dark ages and enter into scientific enlightenment.

      Anymous Cowbird, Phd.

  86. For those with brains and a spiritual center by deft · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I found this in an earlier article on slashdot (the one where they asked a grip of scientists what they believe without being able to prove).

    This was spot on for me, and since we're in the smart room right now with this article, I thought I'd share. It's a wonderful explanation of why critical thinkers can still have faith.
    ----------------

    TOR NØRRETRANDERS
    Science Writer; Consultant; Lecturer, Copenhagen; Author, The User Illusion

    I believe in belief--or rather: I have faith in having faith. Yet, I am an atheist (or a "bright" as some would have it). How can that be?

    It is important to have faith, but not necessarily in God. Faith is important far outside the realm of religion: having faith in other people, in oneself, in the world, in the existence of truth, justice and beauty. There is a continuum of faith, from the basic everyday trust in others to the grand devotion to divine entities.

    Recent discoveries in behavioural sciences, such as experimental economics and game theory, shows that it is a common human attitude towards the world to have faith. It is vital in human interactions; and it is no coincidence that the importance of anchoring behaviour in riskful trust is stressed in worlds as far apart as Søren Kierkegaard's existentialist christianity and modern theories of bargaining behaviour in economic interactions. Both stress the importance of the inner, subjective conviction as the basis for actions, the feeling of an inner glow.

    One could say that modern behavioral science is re-discovering the importance of faith that has been known to religions for a long time. And I would argue that this re-discovery shows us that the activity of having faith can be decoupled from the belief in divine entities.

    So here is what I have faith in: We have a hand backing us, not as a divine foresight or control, but in the very simple and concrete sense that we are all survivors. We are all the result of a very long line of survivors who survived long enough to have offspring. Amoeba, rodents and mammals. We can therefore have confidence that we are experts in survival. We have a wisdom inside, inherited from millions of generations of animals and humans, a knowledge of how to go about life. That does not in any way imply foresight or planning ahead on our behalf. It only implies that we have a reason to trust out ability to deal with whatever challenges we meet. We have inherited such an ability.

    Therefore, we can trust each other, ourselves and life itself. We have no guarantee or promises for eternal life, not at all. The enigma of death is still there, ineradicable.

    But we a reason to have confidence in ourselves. The basic fact that we are still here--despite snakes, stupidity and nuclear weapons--gives us reason to have confidence in ourselves and each other, to trust others and to trust life. To have faith.

    Because we are here, we have reason for having faith in having faith.

    --

    There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
    1. Re:For those with brains and a spiritual center by rdwald · · Score: 1

      Also from that list, I greatly liked Michael Shermer's piece:

      I believe, but cannot prove...that reality exists over and above human and social constructions of that reality. Science as a method, and naturalism as a philosophy, together form the best tool we have for understanding that reality. Because science is cumulative--that is, it builds on itself in a progressive fashion--we can strive to achieve an ever-greater understanding of reality. Our knowledge of nature remains provisional because we can never know if we have final Truth. Because science is a human activity and nature is complex and dynamic, fuzzy logic and fractional probabilities best describe both nature and the estimations of our approximation toward understanding that nature.

      There is no such thing as the paranormal and the supernatural; there is only the normal and the natural and mysteries we have yet to explain.

      What separates science from all other human activities is its belief in the provisional nature of all conclusions. In science, knowledge is fluid and certainty fleeting. That is the heart of its limitation. It is also its greatest strength. There are, from this ultimate unprovable assertion, three additional insoluble derivatives.

      1. There is no God, intelligent designer, or anything resembling the divinity as proffered by the world's religions (although an extra-terrestrial being of significantly greater intelligence and power than us would be indistinguishable from God).

      After thousands of years of the world's greatest minds attempting to prove or disprove the divinity's existence or nonexistence, with little agreement or consensus amongst scholars as to the divinity's ultimate state of being, a reasonable conclusion is that the God question can never be solved and that one's belief, disbelief, or skepticism ultimately rests on a non-rational basis.

      2. The universe is ultimately determined, but we have free will.

      As with the God question, scholars of considerable intellectual power for many millennia have failed to resolve the paradox of feeling free in a determined universe. One provisional solution is to think of the universe as so complex that the number of causes and the complexity of their interactions make the predetermination of human action pragmatically impossible. We can even put a figure on the causal net of the universe to see just how absurd it is to think we can get our minds around it fully.

      It has been computed that in order for a computer in the far future of the universe to resurrect in a virtual reality every person who ever lived or could have lived, with all causal interactions between themselves and their environment, it would need 10 to the power of 10 to the power of 123 bits (a 1 followed by 10^123 zeros) of memory. Suffice it to say that no computer within the conceivable future will achieve this level of power; likewise no human brain even comes close.

      The enormity of this complexity leads us to feel as if we are acting freely as uncaused causers, even though we are actually causally determined. Since no set of causes we select as the determiners of human action can be complete, the feeling of freedom arises out of this ignorance of causes. To that extent we may act as if we are free. There is much to gain, little to lose, and personal responsibility follows.

      3. Morality is the natural outcome of evolutionary and historical forces, not divine command.

      The moral feelings of doing the right thing (such as virtuousness) or doing the wrong thing (such as guilt) were generated by nature as part of human evolution.

      Although cultures differ on what they define as right and wrong, the moral feelings of doing the right or wrong thing are universal to all humans. Human universals are pervasive and powerful, and include at their core the fact that we are, by nature, moral and immoral, good and evil, altruistic and selfish, cooperative and competitive, peaceful and bellicose, virtuous

  87. What about the phlogiston theory stickers? by mschaffer · · Score: 1

    Has there been a ruling about removing the stickers on the really old chemistry books about the phlogiston theory?

  88. Wired's thoughts about Intelligent design by starworks5 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The Intelligent Design movement has opened my eyes. I realize that although I believe that evolution explains why the living world is the way it is, I can't actually prove it. At least not to the satisfaction of the ID folk, who seem to require that every example of extraordinary complexity and clever plumbing in nature be fully traced back (not just traceable back) along an evolutionary tree to prove that it wasn't directed by an invisible hand. If the scientific community won't do that, then the arguments goes that they must accept a large red "theory" stamp placed on the evolution textbooks and that alternative theories, such as "guided" evolution and creationism, be taught alongside.

    So, by this standard, virtually everything I believe in must now fall under the shadow of unproveability. Most importantly, this includes the belief that democracy, capitalism and other market-driven systems (including evolution!) are better than their alternatives. Indeed, I suppose I should now refer to them as the "theory of democracy" and the "theory of capitalism", to join the theory of evolution, and accept the teaching of living Marxism and fascism as alternatives in high schools.

    Written by :
    CHRIS W. ANDERSON
    Editor-In-Chief, Wired

  89. Re: by iJed · · Score: 1

    The statement on the front of the book, whether motivated by religion or not, is completley true. Evolution IS a theory, and not a fact.

    Evolution is most certainly a theory but it is almost certainly a fact too. Therefore the sticker on the book is a lie. Evolution has masses of scientific evidence to back it up where as creationism is nothing more than a fairy tail since there is absolutely no scientific evidence to back it up.

  90. Re:Yay! by grolschie · · Score: 1

    > It is not so much -1 Free Speech, as -1 Pointless Vandalism.

    More like +1 for pseudo-scientific propaganda.

  91. Removing the stickers by Kris_J · · Score: 1

    What's the bet that the stickers are a right bastard to remove? I bet they're going to have to be stickered over.

  92. Probably only this sort of Credence by AnEmbodiedMind · · Score: 1
    Dictionary.com

    Gaining Credence? Probably only this sort of Credence:

    credence
    n.

    4. A small table or shelf for holding the bread, wine, and vessels of the Eucharist when they are not in use at the altar.

  93. GOD IS DEAD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    thank fuck, there is no god.

    1. Re:GOD IS DEAD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you've heard this quote...

      Year 1882: God is dead -- Nietzsche
      Year 1900: Nietzsche is dead -- God

    2. Re:GOD IS DEAD by JavaRob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Year 1882: God is dead -- Nietzsche
      Year 1900: Nietzsche is dead -- God


      That's funny, but it doesn't actually make any sense when you think about it. Try this:

      Year 1882: "God is dead" -- Nietzsche
      Year 1900: "Nietzsche is dead" -- Newspaper
      "" -- God

    3. Re:GOD IS DEAD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Year 1882: God is dead -- Nietzsche
      Year 1900: Nietzsche is dead -- God

      Year 2005: Nietzsche and God are dead. I fucked them both. -AC

    4. Re:GOD IS DEAD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Maybe you've heard this quote...
      >
      > Year 1882: God is dead -- Nietzsche
      > Year 1900: Nietzsche is dead -- God
      >
      Yup, and scrawled below it on the bathroom wall:

      Nietzche is God -- dead.

  94. Intelligent Design IS NOT science by chemstar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Let me break it down for you.

    Science is developing a theory from known facts. It's called the Scientific Method. You know, Francis Bacon. Maybe you don't.

    Magic, I mean Creationism, is trying to find facts to fit a predetermined theory, in this case an ancient story that everything is done with magic. *Poof*

    The difference is innate, and despite what many fundamentalist think, science will never be religion. The two are incompatible. Just ask Copernicus.

  95. MOD PARENT UP by deft · · Score: 1

    he strikes a blow for critical thinking, and that is your friend.

    --

    There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP by 955301 · · Score: 1

      That's what happens when you're forced to debate with a group that doesn't even try to test their hypothesis before slinging it around like a wet fish (pun intended).

      I want to see one credible journal article documenting a test of a fundamental creationist hypothesis. For example, I've heard this one before:

      All animals currently existing in nature have existing in their current form without evolving since the beginning of life.

      References please? Anyone? Seriously.

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    2. Re:MOD PARENT UP by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Seriously. I want to one credible journal article documenting one specias becoming another. Or maybe something like a species of fish that one day didn't have legs, and the next day when the scientists walked in, there were fish with legs swimming around. Don't knock creation. It's too easy to knock evolution.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    3. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Forbman · · Score: 1

      How does that explain mules, then, or the Duck-billed Platypus?

      I would imagine that in the genes of the Great White Shark is the potential to unlock the development of a Megalodon, or to unlock the 30' long alligator predescesors, or 3' wingspan dragon flies. There's probably good reasons why those genes aren't expressable any more.

  96. Creationists by iXiXi · · Score: 1

    These people are trying to create a chaotic learning environment. When you teach creationism, you are teaching faith. When you teach evolution theory, you are teaching scientific method. Some would argue that creationism could be taught as a form of scientific explanation but the payload is religion which is much too volatile. I doubt there are any evolutionists bombing abortion clinics for the sake of life. Religion spawns fanaticism which unfortunately contains bias, arrogance and closed mindedness.

  97. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Whoa, whoa, whoa. They are ruling that stickers saying "Evolution is a theory, not a fact" are unconsitutional. God, the bible, and creationism has NOTHING to do with this.

    I do agree: Feelings like -1 free speech to me, beliefs aside.

  98. I am sorry but religion should be tought as.... by dangermen · · Score: 1

    philosophy. Creationism isn't about science, it is about a philosophy. Get it out of science class!

  99. Relativity is a Theory by jfonseca · · Score: 1



    Should all physics books now have stickers warning that Relativity is "only" a theory?

    Einstein's Noble prize was for demonstrating the photoelectric phenomenon.

    --
    Broken Hearts are for Assholes. - Frank Zappa
  100. Check Out the Poll Results by AtheM · · Score: 1

    What I found interesting were the online poll results that accompany the article, which divide equally among the two positions, approximately 40% each for "Yes, it violates separation of church and state" and "The board was right to put the stickers in, and the judge was wrong to take them out," respectively. To me - however unscientific the poll itself may be - this shows how polarized our society has become. It is also surprising to me that so many people seem to support intelligent design and creationism. I think this reflects a lack of scientific literacy among the general population, and a dangerous trend towards theological dogmatism.

    1. Re:Check Out the Poll Results by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 1

      Hello, where you on Earth for the 2004 elections? I hate to say it, but it would appear that at least 51% of the US population is functionally illiterate.

    2. Re:Check Out the Poll Results by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      now that can't be the case, if 51% of the US population were functionally illiterate, there would have been much more diversity in the votes (resulting in much funding for the green and libertarian parties).
      Don't get angry just because you supported what was deemed the greater of 2 evils.

  101. The real point by Bullet-Dodger · · Score: 1
    Well, I think the real point is that, if we're actually teaching kids science, it should be blinding obvious that evolution is a theory not a fact. The first thing that kids should learn is that everything is only a theory.

    If the creationists want to have people objectively consider the evidence in favor of creationism using the scientific method, that's good. But it just seems like a childish little potshot to single out evolution for a sticker. If kids really need to be hit over the head that evolution is only a theory then there's something more fundamental that they haven't learned.

    1. Re:The real point by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      havent ever met a kid from Cobb county, have ye? :)

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  102. Why are you incapable of critical thinking? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Why would a text book need a disclaimer regarding one of the theories discussed?

    Why is evolution the only theory that needs a disclaimer?

    Why is there a sticker warning the user that the book contains material on evolution? Makes it easier to identify when the book burnings start?

    The other warning labels I know of regarding content are for sexual situations and offensive language. Why is this scientific theory treated like pornography and obscenity?

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:Why are you incapable of critical thinking? by UpLateDrinkingCoffee · · Score: 1
      Why resort to insults? The book needed a disclaimer because 2000 parents complained about a controversial subject... this community decided that they wanted their children to think critically about the theory of evolution in HOW IT RELATES TO THE ORIGIN OF LIFE. Not about whether moths can change color or giraffes can grow long necks, but about how life began.

      I personally think the warning label is stupid, but I don't live in that community and I haven't read the textbook. What I have a problem with is a judge thinks this label somehow establishes religion. If the textbook truly does present evolution AS IT RELATES TO THE ORIGIN OF LIFE as a fact then that establishes religion more than the sticker because we know so little at this point accepting any theory as fact would be completely by faith.

    2. Re:Why are you incapable of critical thinking? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      What I have a problem with is a judge thinks this label somehow establishes religion.

      It clearly does: By undermining science.
      It was worded in a way to obfuscate that fact, but the separation of church and state isn't "unless you can say it cleverly".

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    3. Re:Why are you incapable of critical thinking? by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      "Why is this scientific theory treated like pornography and obscenity?"

      The answer is rather humorous. Because the same people - partly because of their religious beliefs - are offended by them.

      This is nothing more than an emotional reaction by emotional people. (no offence, most reactions and people are) Not a logical reaction of logical people. I think that answers your subject heading too. ;)

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    4. Re:Why are you incapable of critical thinking? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I think that answers your subject heading too. ;)

      Well, er, those were rethorical questions, but seeing the quality of thought displayed in most replies I get, I think they needed that. So, thanks ; )

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  103. They're both wrong by Le+Marteau · · Score: 0

    OK, I'm going to help you all out here. You need the truth, and I am going to so humbly lay it out for you.

    Today's Darwinists are wrong. Life did not just evolve from natural prey/preditor selection. There is something deeper going on than just prey/preditor. There is something going on beyond mere mechanics.

    Also, you shit for brains xians, there is no bearded chap in a chair who we can pray to and who will judge us based on whether we choose the right religion.

    Life is an ever increasing growth. It happens, and it is motivated by something greater than our ability to describe it. We cannot describe it because our abilitiy to describe is OF the whole, and therefore cannot describe the whole. But it exists. The motive force in the world exists. It is a natural urge to grow. To become better. To increase, and yes, evolve, but not in the Darwinian sense.

    The closest concept I can point to is the Tao. An ever present and ubiquitous power. One can feel it if one is sensitive enough. And one can discuss it if one is not either on the radical Darwinian side or the radical Fundy side.

    This power breeds feelings of holiness. Spirituality. Unfortunatly, religions have prostituted these very legitimate experiences so much that people tend to mock these feeling. But they exist.

    To more modern minds, the ever pervasive force comes about through satisfaction in doing. Satisfaction in doing the right thing. In creating fine art, or music, or saving a damsel in distress. In quality. In creation. It is the force which drives everything, literally everything, onward and growing and becoming better and better.

    That is what is the real motive force in so-called evolution. Not preditor/prey, but a growth in quality and greatness and magnificence and that which is good and spiritual and best.

    We've all felt that. Rand wrote about it. So did many truly spiritual people. But sadly, the fundies don't truly understand their mythology and its purpose, take it literally, and screwed it all up. Screwed it up so badly and prostituted all that is truly holy and great so much that it has turned people away from the best.

    --
    Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    1. Re:They're both wrong by Atrax · · Score: 1

      That is what is the real motive force in so-called evolution. Not preditor/prey, but a growth in quality and greatness and magnificence and that which is good and spiritual and best.

      Mumbo
      fucking
      Jumbo

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    2. Re:They're both wrong by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      Rand wrote about it.

      She also said that homosexuality is "immoral" and "disgusting", so I'm not inclined to give a shit what she thinks.

      Agree with above post: mumbo fucking jumbo. I'm a Taoist, but your post is just fucking retarded.

    3. Re:They're both wrong by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1

      She also said that homosexuality is "immoral" and "disgusting",

      You see, that's what's wrong with pinheads like you. Just because somebody is wrong about one thing you think they must be wrong about everything else. It has probably never occurred to you that many geniuses become so because they are deficient in other areas, and Rand was certainly in that category. But her illustration in the spirituality of the material and mundane was of value.

      But two hairy guys playing with each others asses IS disgusting. So there.

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    4. Re:They're both wrong by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1
      Mumbo
      fucking
      Jumbo
      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub [sydneypubguide.net].


      Cheers. Kill a braincell for me, will you?
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    5. Re:They're both wrong by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1

      I'm a Taoist,

      Oh, I am sorry about that. I should have been more understanding before I called you a pinhead.

      Taoism has some good concepts. The Tao is one of them. It's pretty close to the mark. However, a major problem with Taoism is that it advocates its followers become pussies. I'm glad to see you aren't THAT much of a Taoist, but still...

      They go on and on with stuff like 'the tree which bends survives but the tree that is firm will break' and bullshit like that. Sure, the tree that bends will not break and will not die, primarily because it was never strong and never thrived in the first place.

      That's one of the things I liked about Rand. Her heroes were men, and not pussies. They did not bend, they were strong and tall.

      So much religion is like that. Meekness and humbleness and 'bending' to other's will. Religions have destroyed the spirits of so many souls and have turned them away from their humanity and lead them around and cast them as sheep. What people like Rand and Nietzche did was to show the spirituality of man, without having to resort to hocus pocus and fairy tales.

      Yes, Rand and Nietzche were wrong about many things. I'll never call myself an Objectivist or a 'follower' of Nietzche. But what they wrote was of value, and served as a palliative to all the destructive pap floting about in the name of religion.

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    6. Re:They're both wrong by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1
      I can just see the massive boner poking out of your post. You are, indeed, a true man.

      Rand's novels are all just endless jerkfests for people disappointed about all this "equal rights" crap.

      The Daodejing doesn't urge its followers to become, ahem, 'pussies'; it urges them to be considerate and careful in their actions.


      31. Armies
      Armies are tools of violence;
      They cause men to hate and fear.
      The sage will not join them.
      His purpose is creation;
      Their purpose is destruction.

      Weapons are tools of violence,
      Not of the sage;
      He uses them only when there is no choice,
      And then calmly, and with tact,
      For he finds no beauty in them.

      Whoever finds beauty in weapons
      Delights in the slaughter of men;
      And who delights in slaughter
      Cannot content himself with peace.

      So slaughters must be mourned
      And conquest celebrated with a funeral.

      (Daodejing, Merel's interpolation)

      The near entirety of the Daodejing is devoted to explaining how to change one's condition without forward action or aggression. By no means does it encourage anyone to submit to oppression.

      The only correct answer to "Who is John Galt?" is "Someone who needed to get laid a bit more."
    7. Re:They're both wrong by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1

      The near entirety of the Daodejing is devoted to explaining how to change one's condition without forward action or aggression.

      Yes, indeed it do. Which is the problem I have with it.

      I'm working with this young man at a martial arts school I train and instruct at. This is a guy who is so sensitive it hurts. Unfortunatly, he is from a family of Buddhists. I say 'unfortunatly' because, although I have met some practitioners of the dharma who are wise, most Buddhists are almost as bad as a typical Christian. They don't want the truth, but merely comfort.

      Anyway, my friend seems to have bought into that whole 'meekness' and 'yeilding' thing.

      The guy is so shy and unsure of himself it is sickening. What he needs is not egolessness, but ego. What he needs is not selflessness, but selfishness. He needs to stand up and be proud. He needs a healthy ego. His parents and peers would have him strive for some kind of egolessness, selflessness when what he needs is to be proud of who he is, of the spark within his soul.

      He is so giving, and so kind, that he is has nothing to give except his own inadequacy. He has nothing to give except his own need.

      In other words, the young man needs to step forward and be a man. He needs ACTION. He needs CREATION. He does not need to yeild, but needs to put forth! This whole business of "changing one's condition without forward action" are the words of the sheep hearders who would have you submit and be docile and serve rather than stand up and assert your own humanity.

      As you say, Taoism teaches how to change conditions without action or agression. Buddhism does likewise (at least the flavors I have been and am exposed to). It teaches an egolessness, a selflessness, which I believe to be abhorrant and disgusting. Trust me, Lao Tsu and Buddha, and Jesus, had egos. You can't found a religion without an ego. The key is, they had HEALTHY egos. And they did not mistake their egos for themselves. That is a big mistake many make. They walk around with their egos, and get to beliving they ARE their egos. Of course, they are not. An ego, used properly, is merely a tool and a construct. Used properly, it is very valuable. It can move worlds.

      But we are not our egos. That is one of the valuable teachings of most religions. But they go too far, throwing the baby out with the bathwater. They say, "egos are artificial, so we must throw them away." I say, "egos are artificial, but they are useful tools".

      We (you, I, and my charge) are men. Our own existiance should be a thing of glory and magnificence, and it should shine. It should not be the cowering, simpering, 'please help me, I'm sweet, and I am yielding' thing my students put forward.

      Taoism, Buddhism, Christianity, you name it, they all teach selflessness and spinelessness. I think they are vile. You could say I am overreacting. I probably am. I am obviously compensating for some sadness or some wrongs that have happened to me. But I don't consider them wrongs or sadnesses, but blessings, for the have not caused me to seek ways to deny myself or to submit, but have caused me to seek ways to affirm myself.

      But I digress. The truly insidious part of these faiths is that there are elements of truth in them all. I could go on and on about the truthes of these systems. But in the end, they all end up advocating an egolessness which is defeating and enslaving.

      BTW, thanks for the link. I have not had the opportunity to check it out, but I will.

      --
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  104. Additionally by hayden · · Score: 5, Informative
    For something to be a "theory" in science it must be falsifiable. So the theory must predict things and then it must be conceivable to perform experiments based on those predictions and get a yes or no answer. If the experiment gives an unpredicted result then the theory needs to be modifyed or a new one investigated.

    A quote I've seen attributed to Asimov:
    'The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not "Eureka!" but "That's funny..."'

    Intelligent design/creationism are not falsifiable and do not belong in a science class. They belong in a class studying mythology and fairy tales.

    --
    Nerd: Derogatory term typically directed at anybody with a lower Slashdot ID than you.
    1. Re:Additionally by LiquidHAL · · Score: 1

      That reminds me of another appropriate Asimov quote. "Creationists make it sound as though a 'theory' is something you dreamt up after being drunk all night."

    2. Re:Additionally by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      For something to be a "theory" in science it must be falsifiable.

      Unfortunately, the only real way to experiment with evolution is to hang around and watch for a few million years. Experiments with bacteria have demonstrated adaptation, but not progression - even with the rapidity of bacterialogical reproduction that would, if evolution is true, take far too long for us to observe in our lifetime.

      Intelligent design/creationism are not falsifiable and do not belong in a science class. They belong in a class studying mythology and fairy tales.

      Or history and archeology. There are a vast number of "facts" which cannot be proved scientifically, but which are commonly accepted due to evidence from non-scientific sources. For example, you cannot scientifically prove that Julius Caesar existed. You prove it historically.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    3. Re:Additionally by maxkennedy · · Score: 0

      Intelligent design is easily falsifiable. You put a bunch of computer parts in a room by itself, come back the next day, and nothing is built. You put a hacker in a room with a bunch of computer parts, and the next day a computer is built. It will come out that way every time.

    4. Re:Additionally by Jagasian · · Score: 1

      The problem with "falsifiable" as a litmus test for what is and what isn't science is that mathematical theories are not falsifiable. They are constructed to be true a priori. So basic arithmetic, for example, is not falsifiable. It is true by definition. However, basic arithmetic is used everywhere in science. Similarly for classical propositional logic: unfalsifiable by definition.

      The formally stated difference between science and mythology is more subtle than you would think.

    5. Re:Additionally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously don't understand.

      History and archeology are a matter of record and science. Don't even compare them with ID or creationism, lest you prove your ignorance.

    6. Re:Additionally by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Scientific proof is mathematical. Historical proof is concerned with a preponderance of evidence. Things you prove scientificallu cannot be proved historically. Things you prove historically cannot be proved scientifically. As I have said in other threads, try and prove the existance of Julius Caesar scientifically. It can't be done. Julius Caesar's existance can only be demonstrated scientifically.

      It is no use trying to apply scientific methods to religion. Religion does not satisfy the scientific constraints for scientific theory. This does not mean science finds it false, it means that science is not capable of evaluating the truth of it.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  105. Instead of Removal... by the+pickle · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...they've been ordered to cover them with these!

    p

    1. Re:Instead of Removal... by Hecatonchires · · Score: 1

      On topic site. Funny.

      --

      Yay me!

    2. Re:Instead of Removal... by KidSock · · Score: 1

      This is hilarious. The second one down on the left reads:

      "This book suggests the earth is spherical. The shape of the earth is controvesial. Not all people ..."

      Is this for real? Are there really people that claim the earth is flat? I can't believe someone could actually make that claim and remain free to walk around.

      Also, I seriously doubt any science text book would "suggest" that the earth is spherical.

      When they see a picture of IIS on TV flying around the earth what do they say? Do they claim they're all actually different spacecraft flying by every few hours?

  106. Creationism Bashing by lieut_data · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I'm sorry. I've never posted to slashdot before, simply because it wasn't worth it or I didn't have time. But come on! What are all these posts about "evolution has been tested in the labs", "evolution is science", "scientific data tends toward evolution as being true", "creationism is a myth. Name me one. One single evidence "for evolution". Can they reproduce evolution in the labs? No. Could the earth have been around millions, billions of years? No. (Think of the size of the sun millions of years ago! Think of the orbit of our moon, steadily moving away from us! Think of the speed of the spinning earth!). Where are our thousands of missing links? Don't show me one malformed set of bones... if evolution really happened, they should be everywhere! Where are they?! Can Creationism be proved in the labs? No. Is there evidence for Creation? Yes, if you interpret it that way. Sadly, scientists view the Grand Canyon and erroneously claim that millions of years of irrigation led to its creation. Why couldn't it have been a world-wide flood? Why is it that every race on earth has historical data or stories of a one-world flood? Could the Bible be true? Gasp! No, then we'd have to believe all of it. So lets make up something else, something that lets us throw out Creationism and the Bible. Fact is, evolutions is a theory. It requires faith, just like Creationism. Science can be proven in the labs. Creationism is not science. Creationisn is a theory. There is evidence that supports Creationism. Some claim it, too, is distorted. But simply ask yourself: "were you there?". No. If you can't observe it, there is no way you can prove it. End-of-story. To claim that Evolution is not a theory, and to teach it as fact is simply plain wrong. When scientists stoop to falsifying data on a regular basis, something serious must be very wrong. (See link if you're really interested in reading about this....) http://www.evolution-facts.org/

    1. Re:Creationism Bashing by geomon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can they reproduce evolution in the labs? No.

      That doesn't mean the theory is false. There are observations that can only be explained "scientifically" by evolution.

      Atomic theory explains how neutrons, electrons, and protons interact. Does that mean they don't exist?

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    2. Re:Creationism Bashing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did the Assyrians exist? How about Chinese people 6000 years ago? If so, their bones should be everywhere. And don't show me broken and malformed fossils, because that doesn't count. And anyway were you there to see them? So you can't prove there were Assyrians. Were you on the moon when astronauts supposedly landed? Then how do you know?

    3. Re:Creationism Bashing by Spoonito · · Score: 2, Insightful

      lieut data writes: "If you can't observe it, there is no way you can prove it. End-of-story."

      To me, this treads danegrously close to the same arguments used in Holocaust Denial. Just because something occured in the past doesn't mean there's no evidence in the present to corroborate or disprove said event.

      Michael Shermer gives some excellent incite into these topics, and why "If you can't observe it, you can't disprove it" is a fallicy.

      http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/bios/shermer.htm l

      --
      "show me all the blueprint show me all the blueprint show me all the blueprints"
    4. Re:Creationism Bashing by randallpowell · · Score: 1
      Where are our thousands of missing links?

      There is evidence that Neanderthal and homo erectus formed a hybrid known as homo sapien.

      Why couldn't it have been a world-wide flood? Why is it that every race on earth has historical data or stories of a one-world flood?

      Maybe it relates to the melting of the polar ice caps at the end of the last ice age.

      But simply ask yourself: "were you there?". No. If you can't observe it, there is no way you can prove it.

      Same could be said for the universe coming into existance. Same for the accuratcy of the Bible.

    5. Re:Creationism Bashing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With quantum theory you can't prove shit, even if you observe it. Everything is probably a lie.... From my experience, this is probably true.... uh ... I mean a LIE! a dirty LIE!!!

    6. Re:Creationism Bashing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, my friend, are an idiot. I say that will all my heart. If you honestly believe the ridiculous assertions you posted, you lack the basic logic apparatus and take everything you are fed at face value. I feel sorry for you although you are probably very happy in your own little world.

    7. Re:Creationism Bashing by Infonaut · · Score: 1
      I've never posted to slashdot before, simply because it wasn't worth it or I didn't have time.

      Good strategy, my friend. Start off your post with a comment denigrating the forum and giving a backhanded insult to its inhabitants. My guess is people will be eager to absorb your insights.

      --
      Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    8. Re:Creationism Bashing by srNeu · · Score: 2, Interesting
      That doesn't mean the theory is false

      Correct, but finding evidence of a trilobites in a human sandal fossil and human footprints embedded in 250-million-year-old coal veins bring up interesting points on why the evolution theory does not change to meet the found facts, but rather the facts are discarded becuase they don't fit the theory. If a physicist threw out facts, he would be ripped apart, but evolutionists are given a free ride to say and do whatever matches their flawed theory.

      Plus the discovery of cave paintings of dinosaurs and pottery with extremely realistic depictions of man and dinosaurs together shoot more holes in the whole evolutiontists timetables.
    9. Re:Creationism Bashing by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      > Creationisn is a theory.

      No it's not. It's a wild goose chase, taking correlation and putting causation into it, without PROOF.

      > Fact is, evolutions is a theory. It requires
      > faith, just like Creationism.

      Science, unlike creationism, is not biased. It doesn't care which side is right. Conclusions and drawn from empirical data and evidence. creationism, on the other hand, doesn't. It says, you believe it because you must, no proof required, no strenuous process of double checking.

      > Where are our thousands of missing links? Don't
      > show me one malformed set of bones... if
      > evolution really happened, they should be
      > everywhere! Where are they?!

      Ignorance does not prove fallacy. Do you realize what strict set of conditions must be present for fossils to develop and be preserved?

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    10. Re:Creationism Bashing by Atrax · · Score: 1

      hmmm... that petroglyph is a little TOO conveniently close a fit to the artist's impression.

      can anyone say 'Piltdown'?

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    11. Re:Creationism Bashing by erturs · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Could the earth have been around millions, billions of years? No.

      There's plenty of evidence that the earth has been around that long. Certainly the universe has been -- just look up in the night sky and you'll see light from stars that are millions of light years away, so they've been in existence at least that long.

      (Or else the light was created in transit... in which case God wants the universe to look millions of years old, so there's no point in us trying to think otherwise!)

    12. Re:Creationism Bashing by geomon · · Score: 1

      Correct, but finding evidence of a trilobites in a human sandal fossil and human footprints embedded in 250-million-year-old coal veins bring up interesting points on why the evolution theory does not change to meet the found facts, but rather the facts are discarded becuase they don't fit the theory.

      I noticed that none of the evidence you cite is not found in any scientific journals.

      Conspriacy theories are not scientific ones. Publish the evidence in Science or Nature with your evidence to support your theories. The stones with the dinosaurs look amazingly "new" (i.e., no wear on the carvings at all, limited number of stones, no citation of other sources).

      If you have proof that these two citations are for real (both cites are from the same questionable source).

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    13. Re:Creationism Bashing by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      What's ironic here is that a lot of religion is blind faith. You can't see it. What you've just said shows that this is no reason to disbelieve that there is a God.

      (There is of course Jesus, who lived in the past, did a lot of cool stuff, had a lot of witnesses, but a lot of people who didn't see it refuse to believe, but that's a different topic)

    14. Re:Creationism Bashing by the+pickle · · Score: 1

      Well, you got one thing right.

      Science can be proven in the labs. Creationism is not science.

      You and all your fellow crusaders could stand to remember those two statements next time you try to dictate what should or should not be taught in a science class.

      p

    15. Re:Creationism Bashing by FirstTimeCaller · · Score: 1

      There's a good chance that all of you are just figments of my imagination. I have a theory, however, that you all actually exist. Just to be safe though would you mind placing this sticker on your foreheads? Thanks.

      --
      Wanted: witty unique signature. Must be willing to relocate.
    16. Re:Creationism Bashing by fossilstar · · Score: 1

      if evolution really happened, they should be everywhere! Where are they?! Apparently science isn't taught in gradeschool anymore.

      --
      "Support our Oops."
    17. Re:Creationism Bashing by lieut_data · · Score: 1

      Nor should it be. Fact was, I *was* taught Evolution. Except with a different perspective. One that assumed it wasn't already true

      Name me a single piece of fossil evidence that hasn't been concoted, misinterpreted, or pointed out by others to be an error.

    18. Re:Creationism Bashing by srNeu · · Score: 1
      trilobyte pic 1
      trilobyte pic 2
      Burial Stones pic1
      Burial Stones pic 2
      Burial Stones pic 3
      Burial Stones pic 4


      Publish the evidence in Science or Nature with your evidence to support your theories
      I cannot tell you if the discovery was published in Science or Nature, but if they are not, it furthers my point that evidence that doesn't match the theory can be disregarded in evolutionist science. Plus we all know that just because it's published (Piltdown man) in a science magazine means it's real.
    19. Re:Creationism Bashing by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >Sadly, scientists view the Grand Canyon and erroneously claim that millions of years of irrigation led to its creation. Why couldn't it have been a world-wide flood?

      Would a fast-moving deluge form these? This picture was taken upstream of the grand canyon. Can you even think of a realistic scenario where these extremely twisty canyons could form under flood conditions?

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    20. Re:Creationism Bashing by geomon · · Score: 1

      it furthers my point that evidence that doesn't match the theory can be disregarded

      More conspiracy theory.

      If it didn't get published in Nature or Science, it was probably NOT what the author thought it was.

      Consider this: Why does the foot impression have a negative cast of a trilobite on one side, but a postive cast on the other? Have you considered the possibility that what you are seeing is not a trilobite embedded contemporaneously with the "footprint"?

      The burial stone photos you show still do not constitute scientific evidence, (from the webpage: "While skeptics consider the Ica Stones a hoax, their authenticity has neither been proved or disproved." and "Some indicators of age also suggest that a modern forgery is unlikely") you have still failed to prove that the dinosaurs existed at the same time as humans.

      What "age" indicators did they use?
      Where are the nearest deposit of dinosaur bones? (hint: they live in the Andes)?
      Did it occur to you that the Incas, being modern humans, would be able to draw pictures of things they observed buried in stone?

      And the bonus question: Why do you insist that science behave in an unscientific manner (e.g., accept claims without asking for proof, or accept a supernatural explanation for natural phenomenon)?

      Do you really hate science that much?

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    21. Re:Creationism Bashing by FirstTimeCaller · · Score: 1

      I'd disagreee with the majority of these posts... evolution is a fact. Species do in fact change over time.

      Natural selection is the theory that suggests how evolution occurs.

      In checking out the site in the parent post, I ran across this interesting comment:

      Can anyone, viewing a hummingbird in action and knowing that all its hundreds of organs are packed inside something the size of a marble, believe the myth that, way back, it originated when a lightning bolt hit some dirty seawater?

      I'm having problems finding exactly where in Darwin's Origin of Species this claim is made? Perhaps someone can enlighten me. Or is this just another creationist strawman?

      --
      Wanted: witty unique signature. Must be willing to relocate.
    22. Re:Creationism Bashing by srNeu · · Score: 1
      Could the burial stones be fakes -- absolutely. And you are correct, they do not constitute scientific evidence of man-dinosaur co-existence. But they are one of many pieces of evidence that are not factored into evolutional theory.

      Why do you insist that science behave in an unscientific manner (e.g., accept claims without asking for proof, or accept a supernatural explanation for natural phenomenon)? Do you really hate science that much?

      I do not hate science, but rather enjoy provable and repeatable science. However, the theory of evolution is neither provable or repeatable.

      Here are some issues I have with the theory of evolution:
      1. The creation of the universe
      Evolution must start with the creation of the universe to be relevant. Most popular theories are based on a "Big Bang" or expanding universe premise. This theory states that there was some amount of super dense matter that imploded/exploded and began the universe. However, the First Law of Thermodynamics states that neither energy or matter can be created or destroyed (e=MC2). If e=MC2 is true, then where did the original matter come from? Did it just exist or was it created?

      2. Gender
      Assuming #1 doesn't matter, and evolutionary theory is true, where all living things started from single cell organisms that reproduced asexually, where did gender come from? If evolution takes the best traits of previous incarnations and passes them forward, why would something as inefficient as gender evolve?

      Excerpt from

      The Origin of Gender and Sexual Reproduction [Part I]
      By Bert Thompson, Ph.D. and Brad Harrub, Ph.D.
      Biology texts are quick to illustrate amoebas evolving into intermediate organisms, which then conveniently give rise to amphibians, reptiles, mammals, and, eventually, humans. Yet, interestingly, we never learn exactly when (or how!) independent male and female species "evolved." Somewhere along this evolutionary path, both males and females were required in order to ensure the procreation that was necessary to further the existence of a particular species. But how do evolutionists explain this? When pressed to answer questions such as, "Where did males and females actually come from?," or "What is the evolutionary origin of sex?," evolutionists become as silent as the tomb in which they have laid this perennial problem. How is it that, at one point in time, "nature" was able to evolve a female member of a species that produces eggs and is internally equipped to nourish a growing embryo, while at the same time evolving a male member that produces motile sperm cells? And, further, how is it that these gametes (eggs and sperm) conveniently "evolved" so that they each contain half the normal chromosome number of somatic (body) cells?

      3. Fossil Records for all other species
      Assuming all species evolved, shouldn't there be fossil records of the other animal's evolution?

      4. Flowers
      Assuming all vegetation as well as animals evolved, why do many plants require insects for pollination? Does this mean that all flowering plants evolved after insects appeared? If so, why evolve into such an inefficient type of reproduction?

      These are some of many questions that I do not believe can be answered through evolutionist theory without some sort of leap of faith that 1. Matter existed for the Big Bang, 2. A male and female version of every species evolved at relatively the same time, 3. Fossils are too hard to find to prove everything, and 4. evolution doesn't always produce the most efficient species (Natural Selection). So by having faith in these things kind of turns evolution

  107. Because it was lobbied for by creationists. by AnEmbodiedMind · · Score: 1

    QED.

  108. To be more proper... by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

    ...the stickers should have read, "Evolution is a theory, and not necessarily a fact."

    It may be a fact that the paint in a can reflects blue light better than any other wavelength, but that can't be proven until the can is opened.

  109. Re: by mr.+marbles · · Score: 1

    Science is never supposed to call a model facts, no matter how much evidence there is, prove is reason for confidence that a model is correct but the book is never closed. As soon as counter evidence or a more accurate theory is found we can't argue the original is fact and there's no need to change. That is a misunderstanding of science.

  110. Re:goddamned fundamentalists.. by madpanzer · · Score: 0, Troll

    Are you not the same way about your beloved theory?

  111. scientific dogmatism by Port-0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It never ceases to amaze me how dogmatic slashdotters are about their belief in science. You put the right wing christians to shame!

    1. Re:scientific dogmatism by JasonStiletto · · Score: 1

      it says in the title "News for nerds." Nerds dig science.

      Science has given me Coca-cola and cheep, easy to aquire porn. That's far more than any of the thirty-seven-million gods this world has had since humanity had time to worry about things other than eating and not getting eaten has given me.

      We'll talk when some god or another makes a Honda Civic.

    2. Re:scientific dogmatism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's kinda sad if you think a Honda Civic is better than a universe. You kind of need one of those to drive the civic in. It wouldn't be as much fun to drive a Del Sol if their wasn't any wind to blow through your hair. Or even the sun to name it after. And the car would just sit there wheels spinning with no friction to make it go.

    3. Re:scientific dogmatism by Port-0 · · Score: 1

      it says in the title "News for nerds." Nerds dig science.

      I realize this, I also realize that science is a powerful and effective paradigm and world view. My point is that it is somewhat ironic that the ability to evaluate something with objectivity and lack of bias, being one of the advantages of the scientific method, is not being actively utilized in this forum. How many here have actually taken time to understand the other side or even tried? Both Christians taking the time to understand the Scientific point of view. And those of the scientific point of view trying to understand what might be appealing about God and creation.

      As for the great wonderfulness of science, it is a coin with two sides. On one side we can travel the world in days be easily cured of previously deadly diseases, and drink Coca-cola cheap. On the other hand, we have managed to kill more people in this century through war than in all the other wars in human history. Both sides of the coin are made possible with science.

    4. Re:scientific dogmatism by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1
      As for the great wonderfulness of science, it is a coin with two sides. On one side we can travel the world in days be easily cured of previously deadly diseases, and drink Coca-cola cheap. On the other hand, we have managed to kill more people in this century through war than in all the other wars in human history. Both sides of the coin are made possible with science.

      Actually, not to split too fine a hair, but what you are referring to is technology not science. Scientists are interested in investigating natural processes and the inter-relations therein. Technology is how we put them to use.

    5. Re:scientific dogmatism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That isn't the issue. The issue is that a bunch of fantasy loving people(religious if you will) are meddling where they don't belong.
      Science isn't just another world view. No matter how hard people might pray, science cured polio, found insulin, got us to the moon, not religion.
      And before you spout bs about science having evil uses also, it is the mostly religious population and their leaders who use science for evil.

    6. Re:scientific dogmatism by Port-0 · · Score: 1

      Good point. Though technology and science pretty much inseparable. I think it would be safe to say that most scientists hope that their science have applications and probably do a bit of work on that application as well. Ultimately, the result both good and bad are due to science.

    7. Re:scientific dogmatism by HyperCash · · Score: 1

      Hell, what I'd really like to do is put them to flame. But I guess putting them to shame will have to do.

      --HC

      --
      So I'm jump'n up and down screaming show me the money.
    8. Re:scientific dogmatism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd say listen carefully. You get the sense the most dogmatic would follow either the flag of science or the flag of creationism as long as there was a flag to follow.

    9. Re:scientific dogmatism by JasonStiletto · · Score: 1

      I never said that hondas were better than the universe, rather, that specific people can be attributed the development path that led to car. Creation of the universe, however, is something one has to take on faith. I don't have a creationalist viewpoint, and therefore I think it's rather meaningless to wave your hands and say look at how infinately complicated the human body is. How can you say a honda is better than that?

      I can't really. Used to be, every bolt of lightening was god's wrath. Now adays, we understand lightening. In the future, perhaps we'll even predict it. Our understanding of the unvierse is more advanced today than it ever has been in history. I think saying that saying some god started the universe somewhere between 15 and 40 billion years ago in just such a way that it would produce us is arrogence. I think saying that we were crafted is even further arrogence. We understand many, but not all of the pathways that led to us.

      I'm personally rather tired of people who don't understand the words "Truth," "Theory," and "Fact."

      Theories like "I believe that kites fly because the sun is magnetic" come and go. Theories that agree with the available evidence, that predict the natural world, and who stay largely the same over the hundred fastest years of scientific advancement ever... Well, that's evolution for you. Pretty much everything that revolves around atomic energy is theory as well, but, that doesn't mean the US Navy's supercarriers can't actually transverse the ocean.. because all this atomic power stuff, it's just theory, not fact.

      Honestly, the message there was "Evolution...is not a fact." Not "Evolution is still only classified as a theory, but it most agrees with the natural world and thus is by far the dominating view of any scientist in relevent fields."

    10. Re:scientific dogmatism by randallpowell · · Score: 1
      Both Christians taking the time to understand the Scientific point of view. And those of the scientific point of view trying to understand what might be appealing about God and creation. As a Buddhist, I'm insulted. Why do Christians assume people are either atheists or Christian? There are other beliefs in America.

      On one side we can travel the world in days be easily cured of previously deadly diseases, and drink Coca-cola cheap. On the other hand, we have managed to kill more people in this century through war than in all the other wars in human history. Both sides of the coin are made possible with science.

      Science doesn't kill people, people kill people. Technology are only as good as the people using them. Complaining about it won't change human nature.

  112. Ugh! by Asprin · · Score: 1


    Ugh! Please, someone, anyone, explain to these munchers that in a scientific context, "theory" is not the opposite of "fact"!

    *That's* why they shouldn't be allowed to put these labels on books, not because of their religious positions! You need to understand what the words mean before you try to use them.

    P.S. I'm a Christian, but this frosts me somethin' awful!

    P.P.S. I also get ticked off at scientific types who deny the existence of God because they can't find facts to support it.

    P.P.S. I actually think anyone who gets into debates like this (on either side) has completely missed the point no matter which side they are on.

    --
    "Lawyers are for sucks."
    - Doug McKenzie
  113. Evolution is a theory.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    like gravity is a theory.

  114. why religion vs science? by acomj · · Score: 1

    Science based on observation Religion based on faith. I don't see why they can't get along.

    Why must certain people take everything in the Bible literally. Cleary much was lost over many translations, so its kinda more of a vague guideline.

    And why does evolution go against the scriptures. Surly if it was ID then there where a lot of failures based on fosils. Or where those fossilsjust put there to throw us off course?

    Its fairly clear the earth is not longer the center of the universe, but to claim otherwise was hericy in days past.

    Times change slowly. I think the church recently apologied to Galaleo.

    Heck maybe evolution is the wrong theory, and people in 100 years will laugh at it as we think those models of the atom 200 years ago were foolish. But the scientific method sort things out till we get to the point where buildings almost always stand and things in the world are just a little better understood.

    This debate drives me nuts.

    1. Re:why religion vs science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why must certain people take everything in the Bible literally."

      Because if lay-persons are allowed to cherry-pick parts of the Bible as being factual or not it undermines the power of the religious heirarchy. The Popes, Archbishops and televangelists of the world can't afford (literally) to have their authority questioned in any manner, except where a religious teaching is unsupportably absurd (not that it stops the Pope making ridiculous and easily disproven statements about the efficacy of condoms in preventing the spread of AIDS, for example).

      "And why does evolution go against the scriptures. Surly if it was ID then there where a lot of failures based on fosils."

      There's the problem: if the fossils represent God's failures, then God makes mistakes and therefore isn't infallible, contrary to what the church says. See the previous point. And if Genesis is only metaphoric, does that not cast doubt on the rest of the Bible's literal veracity (that is, when Jesus* said he was the "son of God", perhaps it was a metaphor that applies to all of us equally, so like him we are justified in defying our religious leaders if we see injustice. A dangerous precedent for organized religion if viewed this way)?

      "Or where those fossils just put there to throw us off course?"

      Which leads to the question: why? Can you really have an all-loving God who plays bastard tricks on His children? Frankly, if my dad worked that hard to distort my world view ("I'm not your father, your real father is a monkey and here's the proof I fabricated") I'd get Oedipal on his ass, not worship him.

      "Heck maybe evolution is the wrong theory, and people in 100 years will laugh at it..."

      Quite possible, though more likely it will be extensively revised in light of new evidence. Science has the humility to admit and correct mistakes in it's theories, whereas religion insists that it teaches the absolute truth regardless of the evidence presented; in the case of Galileo it took 400 years for the political hot potato to cool. They couldn't admit the mistake for the same reason they didn't act against paedophiles: the church is never wrong, because to be wrong is to be fallible, and fallibility puts them on the same level as everyone else: dirt. Dirt isn't the boss of other dirt.

      "This debate drives me nuts."

      And will continue to do so, until politics takes a back seat to facts (which, I believe is scheduled for shortly after Hell's First Airborne Pig Squadron is grounded due to ice on their wings)

      *I am of the opinion that Jesus was a real person who said and did some pretty good things; I doubt the miracles, though.

  115. Now what about blible studies by digitalgimpus · · Score: 1

    The supreme court has said that teaching about the Bible in public schools is acceptable... since it did have a signifigant impact in western history.

    They can't perform a sermon, but they can teach it from a historical perspective, and teach how it played a key role in history.

    Now does the bible need to carry a sticker that it's a theory and not a fact?

    Under the same principle, I'd say it's a fair compromise. Both can't be scientifically proven (at least not yet). Both have lots of believers.

    And yes, I'm a catholic.

    1. Re:Now what about blible studies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yes, I'm a catholic.

      go and sodomize some kids, you fucking pervert.

  116. Bummer by Spackler · · Score: 1

    To bad they ruled you could not do this because I just had 50,000 stickers printed up that said "Bullshit" that I was going to take to church on Sunday for bible class.

  117. Re:Yay! by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 2

    They are ruling creationist's stickers unconstitutional, though wierdly enough part of me feels like it is also "-1 Free Speech". :-/ I am kinda split if it is a good thing to make "keep open mind" stickers unconstitutional.

    Not allowing stickers to be put on textbooks by education boards is not a free speech issue. Creationist stickers were not declared unconstitutional - putting them on student's textbooks is. There is a difference. Just as I am allowed to hang the ten commandments on my wall, I shouldn't be allowed to do so in school.

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  118. I'm in the Cobb County School District by nfg05 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I go to a high school in the Cobb County School System (I'm a senior now), and I'm embarassed that we're even having this discussion. It's especially frustrating for me as my college applications are being reviewed and my school system is in the headlines for making everyone here like a bunch of crazy religious idiots. Not everybody here feels the way these "parents" do about evolution; most of the reaction I see at my school about this issue is disgust and frustration over the stupidity of the whole thing. I hope that this won't negatively impact my future, maybe I'll get lucky and the admissions officers at the schools I'm applying to won't read the news today.

    1. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by aspx · · Score: 1

      As an atheist living in the south, I can definetely relate. Georgia embarrasses me too.

    2. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by grcumb · · Score: 3, Funny

      "I hope that this won't negatively impact my future, maybe I'll get lucky and the admissions officers at the schools I'm applying to won't read the news today."

      No problem, just show up for your interview in a t-shirt with 'CAUTION - MAY CONTAIN THEORY' written across the front. They'll love you.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    3. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Progman3K · · Score: 1

      Hey, that would solve the problem, wouldn't it?

      If creationists are increasingly marginalized out of good educational institutions, there will be less and less of them in positions of influence to push the creationist agenda!

      It's evolution in action.

      Sucks for you though, I agree.

      --
      I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    4. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If creationists are increasingly marginalized out of good educational institutions

      I agree. I used to wonder why people in the midwest are in favor of Walmart when it drives their manufacturing jobs out of the country. Then it came to me: a lot of people are just idiots and should be treated as such. If they want to continue along their path, let them.

    5. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by davidesh · · Score: 1

      oh please... cobb county is one of the top performing school districts in the nation, as if colleges care about this issue... and yes I live in cobb county and went to cobb schools and a private school

    6. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Evil+Poot+Cat · · Score: 1

      I'd say this issue won't show up on colleges' radars when evaluating applicants. Aptitude, communication ability, community involvement, etc. remain the prime factors, because they reflect applicants' abilities, and not the school system's capabilities.

    7. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Uh, dude. President of the United States of America.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    8. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...communication ability...remain the prime factors"

      If the poor spelling and grammar displayed by alleged college graduates here on /. are any example, communication ability is NOT a prime factor.

    9. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can always apply to Bob Jones University!

    10. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I review college applications for a 'selecting' rather than 'recruiting' institution. Yes, it certainly matters where you went to school. Excellent grades from excellent schools are expected. Knowledge of the theory of evolution would be expected w.r.t. a Biology application. Therefore knowledge of Cobb County's school sytem would be extremely pertinent.

    11. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the county's fault.
      Having been a native Georgian and resident of Cobb County for 23 years, I know.
      This is the same county who lost anything to do with the olympics due to their "Family Values" program. For those of you unfamiliar with the term, it is simply nothing more than hatred towards gays disguised in a term to make the holy rollers of the county feel better about it.
      Have you ever seen the "hatred is not a family value" bumpter sticker in Atlanta? That's what it is referring to.
      Cobb County is the hub of Christian extremists.

    12. Re:I'm in the Cobb County School District by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      oh please... cobb county is one of the top performing school districts in the nation, as if colleges care about this issue... and yes I live in cobb county and went to cobb schools and a private school

      Too bad they don't teach writing.

  119. Education by the Majority by Boronx · · Score: 1
    Only if you don't want your kids to learn anything you didn't, which is a handicap that most parents don't want.

    I'd say that 99.99999% of parents want their kids' teachers to be way above the norm in both knoweldge and insight.

    This isn't really about education, it's part of a political war waged by the Poor Persecuted Fundamentalists against the rest of us.

  120. Free thinking: america's next great danget by Voxxel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What an utter load of crap. Where in the constitution does it say that you don't have the specific freedom to put stickers on a textbook? Exactly what part of the constitution was violated? And regardless, all theories of creation are just that: theories because we weren't there to witness it. Basically, this judge said 'oh no! free thinking! this sticker might cause a few neurons to fire. we can't have that can we?'

    --

    If a million monkeys randomly pounded on keyboards, they would all log into AOL.
  121. "epistemological system" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    and we all know that "epistemological systems" are a dime a dozen...

    In fact, I've got a few I'd like to sell ya. Maybe I could make a fortune on ebay.

  122. Ha ha ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you happen to live outside a police state, looking in is hilarious.

    Go right ahead, Yankees. Pray yourself back into the stone age. Those few judges o yours who still have their guts only half amputated are no match for Executive Power. Which, as most of you know, is anointed by that god creature.

  123. Obligatory link to talkorigins.org by wotevah · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Cut and paste to avoid slashdot effect.

    Page titled "Evolution is a Fact and a Theory":
    http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/evolution-fact.htm l

    When non-biologists talk about biological evolution they often confuse two different aspects of the definition. On the one hand there is the question of whether or not modern organisms have evolved from older ancestral organisms or whether modern species are continuing to change over time. On the other hand there are questions about the mechanism of the observed changes... how did evolution occur? Biologists consider the existence of biological evolution to be a fact. It can be demonstrated today and the historical evidence for its occurrence in the past is overwhelming. However, biologists readily admit that they are less certain of the exact mechanism of evolution; there are several theories of the mechanism of evolution.
    [...]

    Hence, saying that for sure evolution "is not a fact" at best cannot be proven, at at worst is downright false.

    Want more ? http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/list.html

    Quote:
    Creationist claims are numerous and varied, so it is often difficult to track down information on any given claim. Plus, creationists constantly come up with new claims which need addressing. This site attempts, as much as possible, to make it easy to find rebuttals and references from the scientific community to any and all of the various creationist claims. It is updated frequently; see the What's New page for the latest changes.
  124. Nothing to do with creation by cartel · · Score: 1, Interesting
    evolution "is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."
    This does not have anything to do with creation. It simply says that evolution is only a theory and should be not be accepted as 100% fact.
    1. Re:Nothing to do with creation by the+pickle · · Score: 1

      On its face, sure.

      But keep in mind the motivation of the people demanding that these stickers be placed there. This is why there are no similar stickers for gravitation or mechanics. Neither gravity nor motion poses a conflict to the very essence of their being. The idea that the Bible is not a literal document, however, does. Ergo, as others have aptly stated, the stickers are biased toward a certain religion, and are unconstitutional.

      p

  125. One good example by LunarOne · · Score: 1
    Consider some reasoning from one Professor Paul Davies:
    'Mathematics is not something that you find lying around in your back yard. It's produced by the human mind. Yet if we ask where mathematics works best, it is in areas like particle physics and astrophysics, areas of fundamental science that are very, very far removed from everyday affairs.' 'It suggests to me that consciousness and our ability to do mathematics are no mere accident, no trivial detail, no insignificant by-product of evolution.'
    Many agree and still many others disagree. The point is the jury's still going to be out for a long, long time yet.
    --

    Read my sig if you like, but I'll never see yours, thanks to Discussions, Viewing, Disable sigs...
  126. Re:correct. by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    Natural Selection happening on a microscopic scale does not in any way prove that we all started as dust and evolved into our current forms. Really all we've observed is the natural selection half of evolution- there's that other part in which one of two like organisms has to mutate first so that there's some difference to select.

    Evolution currently only wins because it's more believable than some all-powerful being deciding to create a bunch of weak little pissfreaks and thinking we're special.

    but no, facts dont exist.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  127. What about the children? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The courts are forgetting about the children! Children with righteous artwork

  128. Speaking of whacky stickers.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Just heard they were making Whacky Packs again. Loved'em when I was a kid.

    Whacky packages website

    And a

    slide show of originals.

  129. Gravity is just a theory too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I hereby propose the alternative gravitional theory.

    The is no force of gravity, anyone who believes in a force of gravity is an evil heathen.

    God's angels move things towards the earth, God has enough angels to hold things and move them around in the sky. Yes by his word the angel's do everything .. the evil gravitationalist atheists are trying to make you think there are "fundamental forces" and all.

    But ask anyone and they have no idea why gravity works the way it does.

    We need physics books to say taht gravity is just a theory, it cannot be proven that gravity has been happening the same way for millenia or that it will contnue to happen the way recorded in textbooks.

    The same way he put fake dinosaur skeletons for us to find, God has made it look like there are objects in the sky that play along with this gravity force. It's all a test to see who the non believers are.

    One day, if God gets angry at us he might change how gravity works and we may all float off into space.

    -Rev. Anonymat Cowardson

  130. How about "God creates evolution to... by dslmodem · · Score: 1

    simplify his daily life.

    Indeed, I bet that God likes an automatic system that can refine itself. It is boring to listen those complains, like:

    monkey, "we want to free our hands!" "try standing up then"

    women, "we want our men!" "hey, get viagr*"

    --

    ^(oo)^pig~

  131. Scientific theory by g0dsp33d · · Score: 1

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but technically isn't evolution (up to the present time) inable to be more than a theory? To be a law, it would have to be observable (and repeatable?) which is impossible.

    Furthermore, even if evolution is observed now, it doesn't prove it existed before.

    I'm not sure of the legal ramnifications, but I'm not sure why they make such a big deal about it being a "theory". Most students are taught the differences between theory and law.

    What upsets me isn't the inclusion or removal of "theory" literature, but that its necessary. Why not in the book just mention that its a theory, explain that it can't be observed, and leave it at that? Why start a legal flame war?

    --
    lol: You see no door there!
    1. Re:Scientific theory by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      Who ever said the "THEORY" of evolution was anything more than that, a theory?

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    2. Re:Scientific theory by g0dsp33d · · Score: 1

      From the gist I got from the article, it seemed that the textbook wasn't clear that it wasn't a fact, as all those parents felt the need to make the difference known.

      --
      lol: You see no door there!
    3. Re:Scientific theory by man_ls · · Score: 1

      Technically, the *Theory* of Gravity is still called as such.

      Scientific theories are never absolutely proved correctly, only absolutely proved wrong or strongly, strongly confirmed.

      One new development can shatter an existing theory. Evolution, gravity, both are the same for such purposes.

    4. Re:Scientific theory by g0dsp33d · · Score: 1

      Your right, but arguably they differ greatly in support. Regardless, my point was that the stickers weren't wrong.

      The thing that annoys me, after thinking about it for a moment, is that since both sides are equally entitled to their sides, and the sticker is technically correct, that the government decides to side with removing it.

      If its technically true, and both sides have the right to their opinion, why not try to make as many people happy as possible? Its like reverse democracy (I realize the US isn't a democracy). Or possibly rule that any decision would be overstepping the court's right to tell people what to think and not rule either way.

      --
      lol: You see no door there!
    5. Re:Scientific theory by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      To be fair, ALL science books that have theories in them should have in its first chapter, an explanation of what a theory is, and is not.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    6. Re:Scientific theory by g0dsp33d · · Score: 1

      I agree, I think scientists need to be more clear about fact, theory, and assumptions in general.

      --
      lol: You see no door there!
  132. Re:goddamned fundamentalists.. by grub · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That theory is backed by an awful lot of data both observed and learned from repeatable experiments. Damn cultists.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  133. Here, before you Evolutionists get all riled up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, God could solve all of this by making one appearance. One more appearance, after two thousand years of no-shows, isn't asking too much I would think.

    I rekon He's too busy saving innocent children in Africa from starvation or disease or bayonets or clubs, or He's busy saving innocent children from drowning in Indonesia, or maybe he's busy saving innocent children from Palesintian terrorists, or Israeli defence forces, or NATO rubber bullets, or American freedom fighters or child-fucking sub-human turd freaks that live in your neighborhood after being released early by some moronic judge. Maybe He's too busy saving these kids to make an appearance.

    Oh, wait...

    Of course Evolution is just a theory, you idiots.

    But that's not the point, is it?

  134. Creationism vs. Evolution by thewiz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've watched this debate with a great deal of interest and have laughed at the antics of those who want to push creationism on everyone.

    I was raised in a Roman Catholic family and went to a Catholic high school. Funny thing is they taught us EVOLUTION, not creationism, in science class. We discussed the creation story in theology and how it was a metaphor for evolution since the people who were inspired to write the Bible didn't have the knowledge to understand evolution.

    When will the people who want to put stickers like this in textbooks get the clue that trying to put science under the purvue of religion is a bad idea. Remember what happened to Galileo? When a group of people persecute others that don't agree with their idea of the "truth", we have tyrany.

    --
    If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
    1. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by phantasma6 · · Score: 2, Informative

      You do realise that all good Catholics should believe that evolution is correct. Pope John Paul II himself has declared that evolution is 'more than just a hypothesis'.

      http://www.2think.org/pope.shtml

      "When a group of people persecute others that don't agree with their idea of the "truth", we have tyrany"
      can I just ask who is persecuting who here?

    2. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Feel lucky. The books in my catholic school library showed a geocentric solar system. It wasn't until Pope John Paul II that Copernicus's theories were accepted.

    3. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by un1xl0ser · · Score: 1

      I request more detail. What year was this and what did they discuss as far as how the universe was created. I am assuming the Big Bang theory.

      Didn't the Pope tell Stephen Hawking not to investigate further back than the Big Bang because that was the moment of creation or something to that effect?

      --
      v4sw6PU$hw6ln6pr4F$ck 4/6$ma3+6u7LNS$w2m4l7U$i2e4+7en6a2X h
    4. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by joshmccormack · · Score: 1

      I was raised in a Roman Catholic family and went to a Catholic high school. Funny thing is they taught us EVOLUTION

      I can't find the funny part.

      I don't think your beliefs are unusual for Catholics, and I've heard from many people that have been taught similar things in Catholic sunday school and schools.

      Most devout Protestants, which the vocal creationists tend to be, would hesitate to include Catholics as Christians.

    5. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by Rellik66 · · Score: 1

      Oh man do I agree, in fact I would go as far as to say "God created Evolution" just to piss off the extremists on both sides

      --

      Too many zeros, not enough ones

    6. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      The Catholic Church is no longer a "strict-interpretation" religion. Part of this is that it doesn't have a single edition of the Bible to point at - instead, they have several translations which differ to some degree. Probably their biggest turning point in becoming more liberal was when they stopped using Latin for everything. Having to cope with different cultures makes the Catholic church far more wordly than any other. They've really come a long way since the times of Galileo (who, of course, the Catholic church prosecuted).

      Many Protestants (but far from a majority), however, are "strict-word-of-God" types. The Bible being the literal word of God, and all that. The edition they usually pick is the King James Bible, with its "translated by prayer" nature (other editions are usually treated as subservient or introductory). This introduces a high degree of fundamentalism.

      Ironically, this attribute is one they share with the Islamic fundamentalists. And for the same reason - both groups have only one holy book (and one version thereof) that they work from.

      (The sad thing about the King James Bible is that it's full of translation errors; apologists for it usually point out that the Latin bibles used as a basis were themselves translations, and that the power of prayer meant that the "errors" in the King James Bible are actually corrections)

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    7. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by tpgp · · Score: 1
      Didn't the Pope tell Stephen Hawking not to investigate further back than the Big Bang because that was the moment of creation or something to that effect?

      No. The pope told S. Hawking not to investigate the moment of the big bang.

      (from A Brief History of Time)

      "He [the pope] told us that it was all right to study the evolution
      of the universe after the big bang, but we should not inquire
      into the big bang itself because that was the moment of Creation
      and therefore the work of God. I was glad then
      that he did not know the subject of the talk
      I had just given at the conference - the possibility
      that space-time was finite but had no boundary, which means that it
      had no beginning, no moment of Creation. I had no desire to share the fate of
      Galileo, with whom I feel a strong sense of identity, partly because of
      the coincidence of having been born exactly 300 years after his death!"


      Mildly interesting: this page disputes Hawking's account of the meeting - saying it was embellished.

      *shrugs*
      --
      My pics.
    8. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

      That is exactly how we should approach things. The teachings of most major religions have core truths abotu how you should treat your fellow man. Their texts tell these through fables and it's very clear that they are stories based on antiquated unerstanding of the universe.

      How frickin' easy is this to grasp?!!! I wish there were more people who grew up with this mentality.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    9. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by Dreadknott · · Score: 1

      You are so correct! I live and work here in the south, and all the catholic schools teach evolution. Its the dumb born again highschool dropouts that are home schooling their kids creating the problems...

    10. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by merdark · · Score: 1

      I doubt many people would be upset by this, except the creationists. This statement is no different than 'god exsists', which philosophers will likely argue about until we all cease to exist.

    11. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by phantasma6 · · Score: 1

      I would disagree with you when you say that most Protestant fundamentalists use the King James Bible. AFAIK, most of the ones I know use the New International Version (NIV), although many have started using the English Standard Version (ESV) since it's recent release.

    12. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by maxkennedy · · Score: 0

      Nice link. I didn't know the pope had decreed evolution is more then a hypothesis.

      In like vein, in the early part of this century, the pope attacked the public education system.

      Why would the pope attack the public school system, and try to drive a wedge between it and non-catholic christians? (The early school system in American was heavily protestant influenced).

      Because controling the school systems makes it easier to control people. In Boston, I talked to a few of the people who went to Roman Catholic schools their when the pedophile scandal started - they said they had been taught that earlier americans were bigots for says that the Roman Catholic church was involved in such scandals, and yet these where a thousand times worse and that they had been lied to. In my area, which is heavily Roman Catholic, all books on the inquistions have disappeared from the libraries! Unbelievable? I talked to someone across the country, and he couldn't find any books left in his library either.

      Its the same roman catholic schools that have been raping kids. School vouchers for religious organzations? The roman catholic schools will benefit the most, and they are already having a terriable effect.

      The roman catholic church is not a small congregation on the end of the street with 60 members. Its one of the largest organzations in the world, all of it is ultimately controlled by one man at the top, the pope, who sits in the vatican which is considered its own country, has its own bank and its own diplomatic and sovereign immununity (Diplomatic immunity that has been used to stop two investigations into murder, bank fraud, and the pedophile scandals in the last few years). Its one of the richest and most powerful organizations in the world, and the only religion that sits on the UN. Does your local 60 member protestant church get to sit on the UN? No, the local 60 member protestant church is probably told that "state and religion" should be seperated, by people getting their chains yanked by catholics, who meanwhile merrily go along and try to build another one world government.

      The roman catholic church could very well create anouther dark ages. The evidence that such could occur is if the laws stop applying to them. The evidence that such is occuring is in the news everday, the laws aren't beening applied to them.

    13. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by maxkennedy · · Score: 0
      I can't find the funny part. I don't think your beliefs are unusual for Catholics, and I've heard from many people that have been taught similar things in Catholic sunday school and schools. Most devout Protestants, which the vocal creationists tend to be, would hesitate to include Catholics as Christians.

      Its a way to keep protestants occupied, so they don't stick to the issue, which is the pope is the antichrist.

      I'll stick to that. The pope is the antichrist! The Roman Catholic church is the great whore with a million father priests! Always has been, as predicted in prophecy. http://home.fuse.net/gospel

      Stick to that, and I bet you will see a lot less of these type of stories (and stories about pedophile priests in the news as well).

      But biology? There are a thousand different opinions on this thread alone.

    14. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      I happily defer to superior knowledge.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    15. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by maxkennedy · · Score: 0

      I haven't quoted the above message, since there is nothing of substance in it.

      However, the Roman Catholic church has never used the bible as its highest authority. The word of the pope and the magistrum is of higher authority then the bible, and there the doctrine of papal infallibility. The opinions of the fathers of the church, church councils, church traditions, are are held higher then the Holy Bible. And the pope is of course infallible. And even after all that, the whole bible itself is given as much equal treatement as the aprochrapha, books of doubtful authenticity.

      For example, the roman catholic catechism says that the Sabbath was moved from saturday to sunday by its own authority.

      Worshiping on the seventh day is one of the ten commandments, written by the hand of God!

      No, I take exception to the sneaky implication that the Roman Catholic church has ever cared about the word of God. The bible alone was the slogan of the reformers, as well as we worship the pope as God and kiss his foot might have been the slogan of the Catholic church, if they thought the people around them would have tolerated it.

    16. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by g0hare · · Score: 1

      No, it's the Evangelicals who think Catholics aren't Christians. They are an EXTREMELY FOCUSED AND NOISY subset of Protestants. Don't let them fool you into thinking that they are they only true Christians. Although they are SOOO noisy it is possible to get that impression. Most Christians understand that the Bible is full of metaphor and the like. Beware of fundamentalists, of any religion.

      --
      Vote Quimby!
    17. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by Biogenesis · · Score: 1

      Exactly, I am a Christian and I see no problem with evolutionary theory or fact. To put it simply:

      Creationism states God created everything (as told in Genesis,
      Therefore God created DNA
      Therefore God created evolution, end of argument.

    18. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      Remember what happened to Galileo?

      The Catholic church forgave him 400 years later, so its all good now.

      I just wonder if Galileo is as forgiving.

    19. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by tedrlord · · Score: 1

      I was raised Protestant in an annoyingly conservative Presbyterian church (for California, at least), and I actually thought that the KJV was mostly Catholic. None of the Protestant churches I'd been to ever referred to it at all, other than perhaps as a historical note or to mention one of its quirks.

      I guess it's difficult to make generalizations about Protestant churches since they basically consist of anything that isn't Catholic or Eastern Orthodox (plus Coptic, Ethiopian, Assyrian and other ancient sects). While there are some extremely hardcore Evangelicals, there are also churches such as the Quakers, Unitarians, and Lutherans, who are far more peaceful and accepting, some to a degree as extreme as the most conservative fundamentalists are the opposite.

      Anyway, as you say, the "strict-word-of-God" types are a minority, it's just that they're so loud that they drown out the more reasoned majority. It's sad, really, and gives the world an undeservedly bad view of Christianity. I only hope that one day these people will recognise that they are hurting our religion, but I doubt it will occur soon.

      --
      [insert witty quote here]
    20. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is both inflamatory and grossly incorrect. The Pope has no authority to change the teachings of the church, they can be restated, and which teaching takes priority over another can be in question (consider the issue of the pill being used to treat heart disease, artificial contraception is opposed, but treatment of disease is considered right and proper, so this use is considered licit). The Pope can speek ex cathedra (infallibly), but never in contradiction to the teachings of the church. Only one issue was taught ex cathedra in the last century, everything else that all popes said or did in the last 100 years was fallible. The Pope is /not/ worshipped, he is respected as the most senior philosopher and theologian in the Church. The Pope isn't even guarenteed his own salvation (no one is), and there are probably a few popes who have not been saved (though the contents of a man's heart are not known to any but God). The Holy Spirit prevents a Pope from abusing the power of his office to spread heresy. The teachings of the catholic church come from 2 sources scripture, and the sacred tradition, this second source is based on scripture as well, 'You are Peter and on this rock I shall build my church, that which you bind on earth," etc, etc. The apostles founded the traditions of the church, they embodied the holy spirit (cf pentecost), what they did was correct, and the traditions they handed down are those that the Catholic Church keeps to.

    21. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the world (where the world = the moving local space 10' in radius around you at all times) would be a better place if you focused your energies against the Scientoligists and Microsoft instead of the Catholics.

    22. Re:Creationism vs. Evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evangelical organizations can't control Catholics on a group or individual level. So they're useless to the Evangelicals, meaning they're "not real Christians."

      Evangelical (/Fundamentalist/Literalist) Christians are like that with all other groups that can't be rallied behind the Bible Belt Banner, because whatever doesn't strengthen their financial and political power weakens them. That's why they like to proclaim themselves the only true Christians - falsely.

  135. Antony Flew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And he's way smarter and kinder than most of you peasant rabble.

  136. Open Minds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They need to legalize weed in that state something fierce. Thank goodness the judges went to college.

    Evolution is _just_ a theory like my asshole. Hey! I've never seen it with my own two eyes! But the Bible never mentions my anus, so sorry God, I'm going to have to go with Science on this one: I poop therefore I have an asshole. It's a good theory. :)

  137. And of course talkdesign.org by wotevah · · Score: 1

    http://www.talkdesign.org/

  138. Intelligent design via Evolution by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

    Every time I see an article that expresses the differences in opinion between creationists and evolutionists I wonder: "Am I the only person on the planet who can clearly see that they are in no way mutually exclusive?"

    Then I realize that it would be very egocentric of me to actually think that I am the only one who sees things this way.

    I mean, for me, just looking around at the world around me is proof enough that there is an intelligence that created the universe and myself as well. No "faith" or "belief" is required. It's just obvious.

    Isn't it obvious that the universe we live in has been created by an intelligent being and that the mechanism that that being chose to develop this universe can be described by the theory of evolution?

    What am I missing here?

    1. Re:Intelligent design via Evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mean, for me, just looking around at the world around me is proof enough that there is an intelligence that created the universe and myself as well. No "faith" or "belief" is required. It's just obvious.

      Check your definition of 'Faith'. I think you'll find it equates to belief without evidence.

      You might look around and see proof for yourself, but if you think it's real evidence then you probably also use the argument "But i have felt Jesus' love inside me" when you have argued with atheists.

    2. Re:Intelligent design via Evolution by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

      Check your definition of 'Faith'. I think you'll find it equates to belief without evidence.

      Perhaps I should have said it dosent require a leap of faith.

    3. Re:Intelligent design via Evolution by kotku · · Score: 1
      Doh! ....

      Isn't it obvious that the universe we live in has been created by an intelligent being and that the mechanism that that being chose to develop this universe can be described by the theory of evolution?

      Lets break the "obvious"ness down and see where it leads us.

      • (A) The world is a complex system.
      • (B) It is "obvious" that complex systems are created by suitably more complex systems.
      • (C) The world must have been created.
      • (D) Name the creator as God.
      • (E) God is a complex system.
      • (F) It is "obvious" that complex systems are created by suitably more complex systems.
      • (G) God must have been created.
      • (H) Name the creator as God2.
      • (E) God2 is a complex system.
      • (F) It is "obvious" that complex systems are created by suitably more complex systems.
      • (G) God2 must have been created.
      • (H) Name the creator as God3.
      • Recurse : Stack overflow : core dump
      So you have a choice. Believe that life is an un-created phenomen or get stuck in an infinitely recursive philosophical mud puddle. So belief in God gets you no closer to the truth it just adds layers. Oh and before anybody comes back with the standard mantra that God has always existed and is uncreated ... well that is just the offence that creationists level against scientists who posit that the universe sponaneously created life. Belief in a creator gives no comfort and understanding of why and how life came about.

      By the way National Geographic recently published a feature article entitled "Was Darwin Wrong". The conclusion was NO however the interesting parts were the simple descriptions of the observations that Darwin made before coming to his obvious conclusions.

      One day the zoo-keeper noticed that the orangutan was reading two books-- the Bible and Darwin's Origin of Species. In surprise, he asked the ape, "Why are you reading both those books"? "Well," said the orangutan, "I just wanted to know if I was my brother's keeper, or my keeper's brother."

      --
      The bikini - security through obscurity since 1943
    4. Re:Intelligent design via Evolution by putaro · · Score: 1

      You're very clever young man, but I know the answer. It's turtles, all the way down!

    5. Re:Intelligent design via Evolution by alucinor · · Score: 1

      So you're just confirming that the true God is GodX, as X -> infinity. Umm ... correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that really just restating what "God" is, anyway? Surely you don't think the Omnipotent would be constrained to a finite line of logic, such as this?

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
  139. Look folks by erikharrison · · Score: 1

    I don't have a problem with people calling evolution a theory. They are ignorant, and ignorance is the predominant state of mind on the planet. And that includes us slashdotters (excepting UID under 1000, of course).

    To willfully ignore the argument behind evolution, to willfully ignore the terms used in science, and to willfully ignore the hard work and thought that brought the modern world the immense luxury available to those fortunate enough to be born in the right places. Which usually includes the people making the arguments.

    Evolution is both a theory AND a fact. To clarify, finally, to those of you not in the above category whose ignorance is not willfull: Evolution is a theory because

    1) There is a limitation to which man can trust his senses. You cannot prove that this isn't all a dream.

    2) There is a limitation to which man can trust the empirical world (I'm getting cartesion aren't I?). We have no way of knowing that the world wasn't made by a malevolent force - satan, the demiurge, or whomever.

    All of Science (in fact, almost all of human thought) is subject to those two things. But there is a third

    3)Given that the world is not purposefully decieving us evolution happened, period, end of story. But it cannot be empirically demonstrated, or rationally proven that it HAD to. Ergo it is a theory, not a law. Evolution could stop right now, for all we know. But animals change, period, and animals now are the decendents of animals before, shaped by selection and fitness pressures.

    TaDa! Now stop spending my tax money on stupid stickers, and spend it on computers in underprivilaged neighboorhoods, teacher raises, and things people need.

    1. Re:Look folks by standsolid · · Score: 1

      Give me one indisputable fact about evolution that does not depend on the theory of evolution being correct.

      --
      WTPOUAWYHTTOTWPA
      What's the point of using acronyms when you have to type out the whole phrase anyways?
  140. Like Catholicism, for example... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    after all, the Vatican embraces evolution.

  141. For balance... by leoc · · Score: 1

    Check out Talk Origins.

    --
    STFU about slashdot bias.
  142. give it time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and it will happen!

  143. Intelligent design says God is a dumb-ass by putaro · · Score: 1

    When you follow existing scientific theories down to the bottom, you get to the beginning of the Universe. The current main theory for the beginning of the Universe is the "Big Bang". Before the Big Bang science is stuck. Why the Big Bang occured is no longer physics, but meta-physics. This is why you'll hear people like Stephen Hawking talking about seeing into "the mind of God" when they are talking about really fundamental physics.

    The difference between "intelligent design" and "evolution" is that "intelligent design" assumes a dumb-ass god who is not smart enough to have created all of the Universe and all of the things in it by starting from something as simple as the Big Bang. Instead, you want a god who's really just an old guy with a beard who pokes around and doesn't have any more imagination than you do. Oh, and you REALLY, REALLY don't want to be related to monkeys.

    Consider the following sentence:

    The universe is so complex that it could not have been created without intelligent design.

    Now, is God more or less complex than the Universe? If more so, substitute God for "the universe" in that sentence and tell me why it's not true. Here, I'll do it for you:

    God is so complex that it could not have been created without intelligent design.

    If God is less complex, then what kind of God is that? Intelligent design simply pushes the problem one step further away because they want to hear the word "God" and they don't want to be related to monkeys.

  144. MOD PARENT UP by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

    Wow... my first "mod parent up" post. I feel so dirty... it feels... good...

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  145. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    at last a rational post.

    I'm not picking a side here but most of the people arguing for evolution on this site sound as closed minded as the creationists.

  146. Re:Yay! by HyperChicken · · Score: 0

    They weren't creationist stickers. They were stickers which said the simple truth: Evolution is a theory, not a fact. If they said "Evolution is a theory, not a fact. See creationism.", then I'd agree, but they didn't.

    --
    Free of Flash! Free of Flash!
  147. Re:Yay! by coupland · · Score: 1

    Huh? How is this "-1 Free Speech?" No one is being told they can't practise religion, no one is being told they can't teach it. But they are ruling that it is unconstitutional to place a sticker on every copy of a textbook that teaches evolution to say that it's only a theory. This is the same as if the government insisted every copy of the bible or koran be sold with a sticker on it that says "the opinions contained herein are bunk." They can't do that, nor can they mandate stickers on books that teach evolution. It's got absolutely nothing to do with free speech.

  148. I have a better idea by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 1
    Why dont we just stop teaching science. I mean the last 300 years have been a complete waste. We all know that when the church ran everything, they were sending people to the moon, exploring space, building computers, seting up global communications. We all could sleep better knowing the earth was flat, that hell was under, heaven was above, and that all 3 religions of the middle east all worship the same god, and there was no voilence, becuase everyone agreed that we should love and respect eachother.....

    Oh thats right, actually 99% of the population was illiterate, people lived to 30 (if they were lucky!), and it was called the freaking DARK AGES! Not to mention the various 'holy' wars, and the constant persecution for not choosing the right flavor, or not having a flavor of this G-D!

    People need to throw off the should of the past opression, and get with it!!

  149. Creationism != Intelligent Design by mark-t · · Score: 1
    Creationism is _NOT_ an alternative theory to evolution.

    It is more properly an alternative theory to the Big Bang, since it addresses the issue of how _EVERYTHING_ began.

    ID addresses how we got to where we are from where we may have been before. This is the same subject that evolution addresses.

    It is worth remembering that evolution does not require the big bang theory to be true, nor does Intelligent Design theory require creationism to be true.

    1. Re:Creationism != Intelligent Design by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      > ID addresses how we got to where we are from where we may have been before. This is the same subject
      > that evolution addresses.

      ID addresses nothing. It's only premise is "somewhere, somehow, something is wrong with evolution". It's singular claim that there is specificied complexity in biological systems, when actually put into concrete terms (most notoriously bacterial flagellum) has been debunked.

      ID is, at the end of the day, simply Creationism with direct reference to God removed.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Creationism != Intelligent Design by mark-t · · Score: 1
      ID fails to address specifics, but what it does point out is that the complexity of certain biological systems cannot always reasonably be explained by evoluation, as evoluation should choose the _simplest_ mechanisms to accomplish a goal.

      I'm not trying to say that evolution doesn't or didn't happen, only that the current model of it doesn't fill in some rather important details.

      Granted, ID leaves out details that evolution does explain....

      Maybe life is a combination of the two?

    3. Re:Creationism != Intelligent Design by king-manic · · Score: 1

      as evoluation should choose the _simplest_ mechanisms to accomplish a goal.

      Why is that? Simpliest? No evolution chooses the most convient (ie the one that happened to occure). Nowhere does it say it chooses the simplest. That would occam razor and thats logic not biology.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    4. Re:Creationism != Intelligent Design by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      > ID fails to address specifics, but what it does point out is that
      > the complexity of certain biological systems cannot always
      > reasonably be explained by evoluation, as evoluation should
      > choose the _simplest_ mechanisms to accomplish a goal.

      It doesn't point anything out, it makes an assertion which cannot be backed up by the ID "theorists". They have been debunked on particular claims, and thus most frequently the Dembskiites will stick to generalities much like the one you wrote above.

      > I'm not trying to say that evolution doesn't or didn't happen, only
      > that the current model of it doesn't fill in some rather important
      > details.

      No one denies that our explanations aren't all-encompassing. Then again, I know of no scientific theory that is. That isn't license to insert non-science into the gaps, which is all ID is, a God of the gaps argument, except that God has been cleverly disguised as the "Designer". Except that, unlike proper sciences that do study intelligently-designed phenomona, ID refuses to answer why, when, where and how. Point out to me in ID where the nature of the Designer is even hypothesized. Show me how the Designer set about designing the components of organisms that ID advocates allege cannot be produced by purely natural processes. Point me to the mechanisms/forces/procedures that the Designer used to produce life.

      > Granted, ID leaves out details that evolution does explain....

      ID explains absolutely nothing.

      > Maybe life is a combination of the two?

      Who is to say? But science is agnostic in nature, and unless you can provide some evidence of a Designer or Designers, then there is absolutely no reason to simply fill up the gaps in our knowledge with cleverly-disguised religious claims.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    5. Re:Creationism != Intelligent Design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How can anyone possibly answer those questions when we ourselves have not actually accomplished the same?

      Perhaps when we have built a race of artificial life, and humanity has long since died out, a decendant of our artificial creation (which may conceivably be even more advanced or complex than ourselves) may speculate on its own origins in much the same way we do today.

    6. Re:Creationism != Intelligent Design by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I have absolutely no comprehension of what your reply means. I am pointing out that in areas of scientific research where the actions of intelligent designers are studied, these are the questions that are asked, and there is a methodology present to explore them. ID does not ask those questions (explicitily) and provides no methodology to even pursue such an avenue of inquiry. It is anti-science, whose only purpose is as a legal construct to push Creationism on to school children.

      It isn't the not knowing the answers that's the problems, it's that with ID, you can't even ask the questions.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  150. you must be blind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you must be blind.

    or presbytherian.

  151. You misunderstand by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

    Most theories aren't "provable" nor did the previous poster suggest they are. However they must be testable, as the previous poster said "It needs to be able to be proved wrong". It must make predictions which you can go forward and test.

    String theory is certainly a very immature theory but people are working on performing tests which could falsify or further refine the theory.

    Similarly people do think up ways of testing and refining evolution .

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  152. Sad... by nicc777 · · Score: 1

    At least God is NOT a theory. We might speculate and have theories as to how He created the Universe, but at least we all know one thing - He is constant.

    --
    Need an ISP in South Africa?
    1. Re:Sad... by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 1

      You are so right. 'He' is not a theory, 'he' is fiction.

    2. Re:Sad... by mlk · · Score: 1

      Beep, wrong. He is she.

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
  153. Theories and facts by cquark · · Score: 2, Informative

    Facts and theories are completely different concepts in science. Facts are observations; theories are explanations of facts.

    Gravity is a fact, or more precisely, a set of facts describing how objects are attracted to each other. General relativity is our best theory for explaining how gravity works. We know that it's flawed, but we haven't been able to come up with a consistent theory of quantum gravity.

    Evolution is also a fact. It is the observed change in allele frequencies over time. We've observed species adapting to new situations, and we've observed new species evolving from older ones. Natural selection is our best current theory for how explaining how evolution works.

    Neither Creationism and Intelligent Design are theories. They are both myths, which cannot be tested or falsified.

    Singling out the fact of evolution or the theory of natural selection is an attempt by American fundamentalists to prevent children from seriously considering and understanding evolution. They do it for the same reasons that people objected to the heliocentric model of the solar system: they think it reduces the significance of humanity so that it's not the most important thing in the cosmos.

    Is scientific truth important in this case? Yes, modern biology is based on the foundation of evolution. Look to history to see what happens when dogma trumps scientific fact: google for Lysenkoism, which the dogmatic Soviet interpretation of Lamarck's failed theory of acquired characteristics, that lead to the starvation and death of millions of Russians in the 20th century.

    1. Re:Theories and facts by ars · · Score: 0

      What?

      By your definition, how does evolution have more observed changes then relativity?

      Relativity is the most observed theory off all time - and you can actually test it!

      Evolution is a collection of untestable observations, with some outliers that don't quite meet the data.

      Please, get a clue.

      I don't mind if you call them both theories - but to claim evolution has more data then relativity? Did you learn any science at all?

      --
      -Ariel
    2. Re:Theories and facts by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Evolution is a collection of untestable observations"

      What exactly is an untestable observation? I observe it but I can't test it?

      --
      evil is as evil does
    3. Re:Theories and facts by ZuG · · Score: 2, Informative

      IAABiologist..

      Evolution has been observed and tested over and over again in real life studies. The most advantageousely traited organisms live to spread their genes, and the organisms with the worst traits die before they can reproduce (much).

      For examples: species evolution of fruit flies in the laboratory and of Tilapia fish in East African lakes, as well as the English moths (their exact species escapes me at the moment).

      The exact mechanisms of evolution and what exactly involved into what things is still constantly squabbled over. But the basics have been proven. There is near-universal agreement among biologists on this, despite what many creationists would like you to believe.

    4. Re:Theories and facts by madprof · · Score: 1

      A collection of untestable observations - like...?
      Genetic mutation? Well we can test for that - oh heck looks like that one happens.
      Speciation of animals? Looks like we can test for that - oh and it looks like that one happens.
      The tricky bit is the origins of life.

    5. Re:Theories and facts by ars · · Score: 1

      Exactly! You just proved my point. The only thing you've observed is natural selection (AKA survival of the fittest). You have never observed evolution.

      And contrary to ignorant belief the two are not the same thing.

      --
      -Ariel
    6. Re:Theories and facts by RKThoadan · · Score: 1

      You are not using the term evolution in the same sense that it is generally used. You are using it as a word describing observable changes in present day biology. That is valid, but not how the word is usually understood.

      As an explanation for the origin of life, Evolution is just as much a myth as Creationism and Intelligent Design. None of them can be testeed (barring the invention of a time machine) so therefore none of them can be falsified.

    7. Re:Theories and facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, so when you have some testable theory to replace evolution, you let me know.

    8. Re:Theories and facts by mpe · · Score: 1

      Evolution is also a fact. It is the observed change in allele frequencies over time. We've observed species adapting to new situations, and we've observed new species evolving from older ones. Natural selection is our best current theory for how explaining how evolution works.

      Remembering that "natural selection" can easily include human activities. Both as a side effect, e.g. large populations of antibiotic resistant bacteria and as deliberate action. The latter applying to just about every (non GM) domesticated plant and animal species.

    9. Re:Theories and facts by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      This is a distinction which I have made many times, yet, many people seem completely unable to seporate the two. We know natural selection occurs. We have observed this on both the micro and macro level. Evolution has not been observed and there are huge holes in the theory.

      Thank you for not only raising the issue, but for spelling it more clearly than I have been able to in the past.

  154. Re:Yay! by PKPerson · · Score: 1

    In the article, it says 2000 parents complained. This is only problably because this is a highly catholic community and they dont want their chilren believing otherwise. I think that these stickers shouldent have even been put there in the first place. First of all, evolution has been PROVEN to take place in some form or another, from bones and fossles, and whick would you be more inclined to believe - A modern theory with -=*PROOF*=- or a child's story that dates back c. 2000 years ago? I'll admin that i have had wierd dreams of highet powers and crap, but they defy about every scientific law there is. This is a subtle example of church INFLUENCING our government, and the stickers should have been made optional or "opt out"able.

  155. Theory vs Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of the controversy between creationism and evolution boils down to a difference in understanding the usage of the word "theory".

    Scientists understand the word "theory" to represent a scientific (often mathematical, in physical science) model of a process. Like relativity. My computer models of plasma physics processes are referred to as "theory". These models or "theories" are used to make specific quantitative predictions, which are then tested against experiment. If the "theory" does not fit what is observed, it is refined, modified or discarded.

    Therein lies the key difference between the "theory" of evolution and the "theory" of creationism. Creationism is not a theory. It is a faith.

    Creationism does not give predictions. And if this "theory" is challenged by facts (like dinosaur bones or planetary orbits), more often than not the challenger is burned at the stake, excommunicated, or suffers in other ways - but the "theory" itself does not evolve, as true scientific theories do as more facts are incorporated.

    Advocating creationism as a "theory" is merely a ploy to put religion on an equal footing with truly testable scientific theories.

    Creationism is not a theory. It is religion, plain and simple, no matter how hard the fundamentalists try to disguise it.

  156. Interesting take on reality... by Gleenie · · Score: 1, Troll

    Although I am a creationist myself, I value open-mindedness in education. I do find it interesting that, even though none of them were actually there at the time, the scientific community in general are greatly offended by anyone who suggests that evolution (and likewise, I freely admit, creationism) is unproved and unprovable.

    There's only one way to find out for sure - but unfortunately, though we'll all do it eventually, no-one who has done it is currently available for comment.

    --
    -- Your mother uses Emacs.
    1. Re:Interesting take on reality... by DaCool42 · · Score: 1

      Well said. The fact is that we don't know everything, and most people don't like to be told that (creationists included).

      - A creationist.

      --

      ----
      All of whose base are belong to the what-now?
  157. Never mentions GOD, Creation, Intelligent Design.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The sticker states that evolution is a theory and not a fact.

    That is perfectly acceptable given that no mention of god, a supreme being, intellegient design, etc is mentioned by the sticker.

    How can the ACLU twist a statement such as "X is a theory and not a fact" into "Y is a theory also"?

    How can terrible logic be approved by /. readers?

  158. Fair enough by emplynx · · Score: 1

    If that's what you think... I'm not going to argue with you.

    --
    -Tim
  159. "Number Theory is Only A Theory" by rich42 · · Score: 2, Funny
    I've been spending the last two years trying to get them to put "Number Theory is Only A Theory" stickers on all the math books in Washington state.

    This does not bode well for my cause...

  160. Re:Yay! by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can't say it better than this post did, so I will simply link to it.

    If we want to have warning stickers attached to everything that is a theory (including gravity) then we can at least have a conversation about this - but this was clearly a case of trying to confuse and influence those reading the textbooks. In order to see it a different way, simply reverse the situation. What if, in San Francisco, they started putting stickers on textbooks that said the following:

    This book makes references to God. There has been no testable proof that God or any other form of supreme being exists throughout human history.

    Is it true? Yes. Would putting such a sticker on school's textbooks have a motive other than the simple conveying of a fact? Yes.

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  161. Fair, but... by emplynx · · Score: 1

    That is a fair argument, but the fact is we've all seen gravity in action way more than we've seen evolution in action.

    Maybe you're right though; I don't know.

    --
    -Tim
    1. Re:Fair, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The theory of gravity generally found in HS textbooks is also demonstrably wrong, unlike evolution.

      In fact, there is probably more evidence (in a numerical sense, not in the sense of it being as rigorous) for evolution than General Relativity, the standing theory of gravity.

  162. Proving black is white by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, you'll be very careful nextime you cross the road at a zebra crossing, won't you.

  163. Humour too subtle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The irony of the statement escapes you, obviously (therefore you must be a citizen of the USA). It was a joke intended to draw attention to the fact that all religions preach mutual exclusivity when it comes to an afterlife.

    I was making the point that belief in one religion or another is entirely arbitrary, and is based on the random nature of what society a person is born into, rather than any kind of proof or evidence, so making an absolute statement about what happens to a soul after death is ridiculous at best.

    (Personally, I'm an atheist. The soul cannot be weighed, measured, seen or touched; so lacking any hard evidence the theory that there is a soul has as much creedence as the existence of unicorns, elves and pixies IMO).

  164. Re:correct. by Omniscientist · · Score: 1

    Facts do exist. The scientific community regards evolution as a fact. Natural selection is merely a mechanism or a way of describing how what is happening is happening. Evolution is as much of a theory as a tree has bark is a theory. Evolution is simply an observation that species change over time and new species are formed (if you do not believe new species are formed, then you believe that 1 million years ago every species that exists today existed back then). HOW this happens is what the theory is.

  165. Yes, Creationist. by 955301 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you live in Cobb County? Because the school superintendent also wanted the word "evolution" to be replaced with "biological changes over time". The whole thing is caused by people here misunderstanding that creationism isn't a theory. It's an ongoing argument propogated by media and people who think media coverage = credibility. If you catch the local religious stations here it would make your stomach turn to hear the logic behind the "fight".

    BTW, facts are used to confirm a hypothesis and move it to theory status. Just shows that those that came up with the text don't understand science at all.

    --
    You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    1. Re:Yes, Creationist. by pi_rules · · Score: 1
      Just shows that those that came up with the text don't understand science at all.


      Hear hear!

      BTW, I seem to have lost the URL of that recent study which proved evolution worked in a repeatable experiment that elevated it from theory into scientific fact. Would you mind forwarding that one over?

      Thanks.
    2. Re:Yes, Creationist. by FireBook · · Score: 1

      whilst he finds that one, maybe you could forward over the scientific proof that elevates creationism from theory into scientific fact? (not the version with circular referencing and evidence that have no support other then themselves please)

      --
      My other OS is also FreeBSD
    3. Re:Yes, Creationist. by FireBook · · Score: 1

      and whilst he looks for that other link, maybe you'd like to read this one, just to give you some 'background'
      http://www.arn.org/cgi-bin/ubb/ultim atebb.cgi?ubb= get_topic;f=13;t=001768;p=0

      --
      My other OS is also FreeBSD
    4. Re:Yes, Creationist. by Phillip2 · · Score: 1

      You missed his point. If evolution had no "facts" supporting it, then it would be an hypothesis.

      Of course, science doesn't work this way either. There is not really any such thing as a fact, a theory, or a hypothesis. There are just degrees of doubt.

      As it stands, I wouldn't really have any problem with the stick, although it might be nice if those who campaigning for them, also had them put onto bibles as well. Fortunately for me, I don't live in the US, and I have the luxury of finding these things slightly amusing.

      Phil

    5. Re:Yes, Creationist. by CheshireCatCO · · Score: 1

      Just for the record, the "changes over time" thing was whoever is in charge of Georgia's education system, not Cobb County specifically. Which I think shows that the problem is worse that just one county, alas.

    6. Re:Yes, Creationist. by pabs · · Score: 1

      Evolution is both a theory and a fact. The process of evolution is a fact, because it's describing observed behavior (mutation, speciation, etc). The theory of evolution encompasses good old natural selection (the aggregate effect of random genetic mutations "selected" by fitness over time), which is the mechanism by which the process of evolution occurs.

      I wrote this slightly more verbose post a while back with additional links and information. Here's a quote from Stephen Jay Gould, which summarizes the issue in a fairly succinct (albeit opinionated) manner:

      In the American vernacular, "theory" often means "imperfect fact" part of a hierarchy of confidence running downhill from fact to theory to hypothesis to guess. Thus the power of the creationist argument: evolution is "only" a theory and intense debate now rages about many aspects of the theory. If evolution is worse than a fact, and scientists can't even make up their minds about the theory, then what confidence can we have in it? Indeed, President Reagan echoed this argument before an evangelical group in Dallas when he said (in what I devoutly hope was campaign rhetoric): "Well, it is a theory. It is a scientific theory only, and it has in recent years been challenged in the world of science that is, not believed in the scientific community to be as infallible as it once was."

      Well evolution is a theory. It is also a fact. And facts and theories are different things, not rungs in a hierarchy of increasing certainty. Facts are the world's data. Theories are structures of ideas that explain and interpret facts. Facts don't go away when scientists debate rival theories to explain them. Einstein's theory of gravitation replaced Newton's in this century, but apples didn't suspend themselves in midair, pending the outcome. And humans evolved from ape-like ancestors whether they did so by Darwin's proposed mechanism or by some other yet to be discovered.

      Moreover, "fact" doesn't mean "absolute certainty"; there ain't no such animal in an exciting and complex world. The final proofs of logic and mathematics flow deductively from stated premises and achieve certainty only because they are not about the empirical world. Evolutionists make no claim for perpetual truth, though creationists often do (and then attack us falsely for a style of argument that they themselves favor). In science "fact" can only mean "confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional consent." I suppose that apples might start to rise tomorrow, but the possibility does not merit equal time in physics classrooms.

      Evolutionists have been very clear about this distinction of fact and theory from the very beginning, if only because we have always acknowledged how far we are from completely understanding the mechanisms (theory) by which evolution (fact) occurred. Darwin continually emphasized the difference between his two great and separate accomplishments: establishing the fact of evolution, and proposing a theory natural selection to explain the mechanism of evolution.

      Source: Stephen Jay Gould, "Evolution as Fact and Theory"

      The URL you're looking for probably includes a list of observed speciation examples. Talk Origins has a couple of pages with examples of observed speciation, both natural and induced (artificial):

      Hope this helps...

      --

      Odds of being killed by lightning and winning the lottery in the same day: 1 in 2^55

    7. Re:Yes, Creationist. by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      Let's start with the scientific results that will actually give ID or creationism the status of a 'theory'. In proper scientific jargon, ID is at most conjecture, but actually an assertion. In scientific hierarchy of importance, this is the lowest of the low. In ascending order of scientific importance:

      Assertion: random guess

      Conjecture: more or less insightful claim on the basis of analysis

      Hypothesis: prediction of one or several facts. Still to be tested.

      Fact: more or less random observation that can be repeatedly observed. (If things are not supported, they fall down to the earth.)

      Law: very accurate equation tying together a number of facts. (Law of gravity).

      Theory: time-proven explanation of a wide range of facts. (Newtonian theory of mechanics includes the laws, but covers more ground.)

      So all in all, maybe the sticker is actually a good thing for evolution, as it readily claims that evolution is not a 'mere' fact, but an actual theory. Now to teach the students that science is about theory formation, with the facts as the thing to reason about. Collecting facts in themselves is as interesting as collecting stamps.

  166. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you suggesting it's Catholics who are the creationist zealots? Are you a fucking idiot?

  167. Creationism is not found in all religions by tehanu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    On an interesting note, not all religions seem to come to the conclusion of creationism. Chinese myth has no creator and a popular stance taken by Chinese philosophers (esp. Taoist ones, well Confucian ones don't really care either way since these sort of esotoric things aren't really their concern) over the millenia is that logically an ultimate creator cannot exist. This then leads to extended discussions about why the universe exists, why we exist, the meaning of life, etc. but a creator doesn't feature in these discussions. The guy who 2 000 years ago basically did the Taoist equivalent of editing and arranging the New Testament (and according to rumour, left out tons of chapters he didn't like and wrote some of the most important ones) was an especially strong advocate of this position. Well, this is more philosophical Taoism rather than religious Taoism, but none of the Gods worshipped by Chinese are ultimate "Creators". All have some sort of finite origin and they can also be severely injured or even killed. So Creationism, as advocated by groups in the US, is not even a pro-religion stance, it is a pro-Judeo-Christian religion stance. Creationism is totally against the religious beliefs of deeply religious Chinese (well, actually they don't really care, but I just wanted to make a point).

  168. Yes by AnEmbodiedMind · · Score: 1
    DO have a section of the curriculum on the philosophy of science and Epistemology.

    DON'T have a sticker on the front of the text book singling out evolution.

    The "Evolution Theory" is as good as the theory of electricity.

    There are two main "theories" bundled together here. Firstly, the theory which explains how orchardists have cultivated redder or tastier apples, and breeders have created dogs with crazy amounts of skin. We can also observe this process happening every day around us with the "evolution" of new strains of viruses and bacteria.

    The second part bundled in to what we call evolution is the theory that: we all got here today through the process of the first theory (evolution). This is the part that is hard to prove since none off us were around to observe it. However, the first theory (evolution) explains virtually every aspect of the origin of what we find in the biological world, while the bible is in direct contradiction with most of it. This should be enough for anyone who isn't a nut-bar to decide which theory to teach in schools.

    We don't teach the theory that electricity is created by invisible fairies.

  169. A Christian's opinions on the issue by DaCool42 · · Score: 1

    Disclaimer: I am a Christian, and I do not believe that the modern evolutionary theory is true.

    That said, I don't really have an opinion on keeping or removing the stickers. I guess I just don't think that the stickers mean much of anything one way or the other.

    It does seem, however, that there is a misunderstanding of the scientific method (though probably not so much among the slashdot crowd). Many people seem to regard the current theories as unopposable fact. We seem to think we have the world all figured out. I believe that is highly unlikely. Historically, people have always thought their models and theories were rock solid, but now they seem laughable. In the same way, I think both creationists and evolutionist alike will be surprised by what we learn in the future.

    In light of this, I think it is important that schools teach the importants of testing and evaluating ALL theories. A sticker on a textbook is certainly not the solution for that.

    I'm not quite sure what those who called for the stickers hoped to accomplish. What I hope is that schools do encourage students to come up with new ideas and test existing ones. After all, aren't we all just searching for the true facts?

    --

    ----
    All of whose base are belong to the what-now?
    1. Re:A Christian's opinions on the issue by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer: I am a Christian, and I do not believe that the modern evolutionary theory is true

      And yet you use technology which has evolved from mainframes of the 50s so that you can post on /.

      Being a Christian is fine. Ignoring the real-world examples of evolution is just... well... I don't know what it is. As a Roman Catholic, I can't even think of a good reason to argue with evolution unless you have a flaming desire to argue.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    2. Re:A Christian's opinions on the issue by daymitch · · Score: 1

      I must endorse your sentiment in its general form, although from an agressiveley anti-christian perspective.

      I submit that you are correct, creationists and evolutionsists *will* be surpized by what we figure out in the future. I also submit that a future-evolutionsist is much more likely to be *happy* with what we learn.

    3. Re:A Christian's opinions on the issue by king-manic · · Score: 1

      In light of this, I think it is important that schools teach the importants of testing and evaluating ALL theories. A sticker on a textbook is certainly not the solution for that.

      That said, there should also be some information taught about the plausibility of these theories. Creationism (high improbable), Evolution (veyr probably), I created a time machine and created all life when I sneezed at 2 billion bc (as pobably as creationism). And I too am a Christian. I object to how creationists deny facts and twist arguments. My christian faith is based on belief in God, Christ, and salvation. Not my beleif that god enjoys playing cruel pranks on use with fossil evidence, genome data, biology, and genology which creationists demand we believe.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  170. No. by uberdave · · Score: 1

    The best current theory *is* the truth, until a better theory is found.

    No. This is wrong. The best current theory is not the truth. The best current theory is merely our best educated guess as to how things work. If it were the truth, the true way things worked, then there would never be better theories being found.

  171. Weak faith in fundemalist. by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    I don't see why Evolution is such a threat to these religions. Sure Bible says the God created Man from Mud and under 7 days. But there a lot of other things the Bible say that have been proven wrong. Like space is a gigantic Ocean. If they get so defensive over this little fact from a story that has been passed down for generations by voice, and translated from on language to an other until at some point someone decides to write it down, then censored to make sure it doesn't conflict with the government. They act like this little passage in the beginning of the bible is the primary point. But they seemed to missed story and the moral of the story behind it. I am a religious person and I believe in evolution (as the most possible theory) I don't see any scientific evidence as something that will push my faith. If you read the New Testament (The part that Christianity is based off of) Jesus himself goes against many of the old teaching that is found in the Old Testament. To let plot holes in a collection of loosely connected story over a thousands of years tempt your faith. Maybe you should reexamine your faith.

    To say God will not let his word be corrupted and change then why are there Hundreds if Not Thousands of different religions and sects? And how can you be sure your interpretation is actually the right one or you are the one being corrupted.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:Weak faith in fundemalist. by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 1
      But there a lot of other things the Bible say that have been proven wrong. Like space is a gigantic Ocean.

      Are you familiar with the concepts of metaphor, illustration and poetry?

      f they get so defensive over this little fact from a story that has been passed down for generations by voice

      Some of it was by voice, some was written down from the beginning. Plenty of cultures still encourage the memorisation of large sections of holy scripture, tribal stories, etc. It's not that hard if it's what you're used to and you've got a bit of time. Especially if it's in a memorable form, such as the poetry of the Pslams. And of course with the Holy Spirit's help, it's not going to be hard to remember.

      , and translated from on language to an other until at some point someone decides to write it down

      Modern translations are done straight from the original Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic. No extra steps required. Alternatively, people learn Greek or Hebrew and get a Greek or Hebrew Bible.

      , and translated from on language to an other until at some point someone decides to write it down

      The OT is very critical of a great many rulers and governemnts, particularly in Israel and Judah, while the NT is critical of the religious authorities of the time. In fact, the people who wrote most of the NT were killed for writing and preaching its contents, by governments and authorities. People still get killed for it today.

      If you read the New Testament (The part that Christianity is based off of)

      The Bible has two testaments and Christianity is very much founded in the OT. The NT is the fulfilment of the OT promises. Jesus and the early church did their preaching from the OT scriptures.

      Jesus himself goes against many of the old teaching that is found in the Old Testament.

      Actually, Jesus said that he had come to fulfil the Law, not to remove any of it. What do you think he is contradicting? It his fulfilment, the ceremonial laws and the priesthood become redundant, but the essential truths God and our relationship with him, as revealed by those laws, remain the same.

      To let plot holes in a collection of loosely connected story over a thousands of years tempt your faith.

      For a story covering thousands of years, it is incredibly cohesive and I find it immensely encouraging to see the constant parallels between the OT and NT and the various promises, covenants and prophecies being fulfilled in the gospels and Acts. What plot holes are you thinking of?

      To say God will not let his word be corrupted and change then why are there Hundreds if Not Thousands of different religions and sects?

      In Exodus, Moses brings the Ten Commandments down from Mount Sinai, only to find the Hebrews worshipping a golden calf. 2 Peter 3 warns about false teachers who will twist scripture. The Bible is very clear that people will go astray , worship things other than God and teach lies while claiming they are God's word. That's why there's a heavy emphasis on sound Biblical teaching, always going back to the gospel, through the letters of the OT and why there are so many prophets sent to proclaim God's word in the OT.

      And how can you be sure your interpretation is actually the right one or you are the one being corrupted.

      By testing scripture against scripture. by checking how well an interpretation of a passage matches the gospel. By checking the meanings of words to ensure that you understand them correctly. Lots of other sensible things that anyone seeking to understand a message would do.

    2. Re:Weak faith in fundemalist. by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Are you familiar with the concepts of metaphor, illustration and poetry?

      Yes yes I am. Just as I see much of the other parts of the Genisus as Illustration and poetry.

      Some of it was by voice, some was written down from the beginning. Plenty of cultures still encourage the memorization of large sections of holy scripture, tribal stories, etc. It's not that hard if it's what you're used to and you've got a bit of time. Especially if it's in a memorable form, such as the poetry of the Psalms. And of course with the Holy Spirit's help, it's not going to be hard to remember.

      Well there is a large time frame with passing these stories around 10,000 years perhaps more maybe a little less. Even if they were memorized there are still an issue over such a long time of small changes, minute exaderations, combined over thousands of generations. Causes many of the facts to be stretched beyond what may have happened.

      As Moses stuck the rock with his staff water began to trickle out of it. -> As Moses struck the rock with his staff water began to flow from it. -> As Moses struck the the rock with his staff Water began to gush from it. Story telling is an art form (which can be considered lost in western culture) It must be able to keeps people attention so they will learn the point of the story (In this case Moses saves his people by finding a water source when they were about to loose faith in him and in God).

      Modern translations are done straight from the original Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic. No extra steps required. Alternatively, people learn Greek or Hebrew and get a Greek or Hebrew Bible.

      They are finding differences between Old Hebrew and New Hebrew. As well for Greek and Aramaic. Just look at the changes of the English language from Today vs. 1776 Only 229 Year have past and there is a large difference in our language, or just the differences between English from Northers US, Souther US, England, and Australia. The same will occur with these other languages. And you are assuming that Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek is being used when the stories first created. Many of these languages have been found to be dated 5,000 years ago. And many of these stories are assumed to be over 10,000 years old.

      The OT is very critical of a great many rulers and governments, particularly in Israel and Judah, while the NT is critical of the religious authorities of the time. In fact, the people who wrote most of the NT were killed for writing and preaching its contents, by governments and authorities. People still get killed for it today.

      So how many stories were killed off by the governemets who found these stories before they were spread? This is a time before Free Speech. Speaking these teachings were likely to get you killed so a lot of these teaching were unable to spread because you got killed to quickly. As well when they are spreading the teaching to the world governments my apprehend a person and these letters would be censored or destroyed.

      Jesus and the early church did their preaching from the OT scriptures.
      Yes he did. But he also corrected many of the teaching such as Eye for an Eye to Turn the other Cheek. As well he lessened the importance of religious authorities and made them under Gods eye just as accountable as the normal person. While the OT had a lot of cases where the Priests were given special treatment.

      For a story covering thousands of years, it is incredibly cohesive and I find it immensely encouraging to see the constant parallels between the OT and NT and the various promises, covenants and prophecies being fulfilled in the gospels and Acts. What plot holes are you thinking of?

      Well the plot holes I talk about are areas where science and what the bible says doesn't fit. People have a knack of filling empty holes we do it automatically by nature. We take a drawing and there is a gap in it or all the lines do not connect we can still see what the picture is even thoug

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  172. Re:Yay! by EnderWiggnz · · Score: 1

    so, evolution is pseudo-scientific propaganda?

    i dont understand, what are you trying to say, that ID, is an actual "theory" ?!?

    --
    ... hi bingo ...
  173. A few simple questions.. by handmedowns · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When do we take *in god we trust* off the dollar bill. Isn't that govt sponsored?

    What about "One nation under god" in the Pledge?

    What do people swear in on when going under "oath" in the court room again?

    And you're telling me a sticker that states a FACT is unconstitutional.. heh..

    USA, land of the greedy and oblivious.

    --
    The road between democracy and tyranny is paved with secrecy in the name of security.
    1. Re:A few simple questions.. by SilverspurG · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      What about "One nation under god" in the Pledge?

      Anyone who takes issue with the Pledge of Allegiance should be shot... or escorted to the Antarctic. Period. No trial, no lawyer, no argument. I've said the pledge for decades and I'll be gosh-darned if it isn't the perfect mantra.

      Of course, The Pledge invokes "The Republic", which is lost. :(

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    2. Re:A few simple questions.. by randallpowell · · Score: 2, Interesting
      When do we take *in god we trust* off the dollar bill. Isn't that govt sponsored? Lower case 'g' would be better.

      What about "One nation under god" in the Pledge? Again, lower case 'g' would be fine.

      What do people swear in on when going under "oath" in the court room again? How about the holy text of their choice?

      And you're telling me a sticker that states a FACT is unconstitutional.. heh.. No. The sticker implies that creationism is a theory when it is a believe. Teaching it as an alterative to science will corrupt our education system even more.

      USA, land of the greedy and oblivious. You're a Republician, right?

    3. Re:A few simple questions.. by the+pickle · · Score: 1

      For what it's worth, you aren't required by any law to swear on a Bible when you take an oath in court, nor is the President required to swear his oath of office on a Bible. The book is to be of your choosing, if it's even required, and most courts do not require it any longer. You simply raise your right hand.

      Fun trivia: LBJ swore the Oath of Office on a thin Catholic prayer book that happened to look like a Bible. (Someone either grabbed the wrong book or couldn't find JFK's Bible.)

      p

  174. Sheesh, EVERYONE gets this wrong! by DeanAsh · · Score: 1
    Evolution is a FACT. Just look at the fossil record. Talk to breeders. Things evolve. FACT!

    It is Evolution by Natural Selection that is the theory, here. In other words, not the observations, but the explanations.

    Frankly, I don't see why the Creationalists don't just say "Things evolve via natural selection according to God's plan." Simple, unprovable, and everyone is happy!

    --
    What is the shortest sig that cannot be expressed in fewer than 20 words?
  175. Humour too subtle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps I should have written "Ghandi was a selfish prick", and you would have noticed that it was A JOKE?

  176. Your theory has a monkey in it by putaro · · Score: 1

    Your theory would have humans being evolved from monkeys. Even worse, God made humans evolve from monkeys. If you examine the creationists arguments, they mostly come down to NOT WANTING TO BE RELATED TO MONKEYS.

    If you can come up with a theory that doesn not involve monkeys maybe you'll have a chance at kicking creationists out of the way.

    1. Re:Your theory has a monkey in it by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

      If you examine the creationists arguments, they mostly come down to NOT WANTING TO BE RELATED TO MONKEYS.

      Well jeez, I don't want to be related to all sorts of things that I am releated to but it dosen't change the fact that I *am*. I see your point, though.

  177. the burden of proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for the existance of God lies in the hands of the person(s) purporting the existance of God.

    atheists to not purport the existance of a deity; therefore, they have nothing to prove. observable reality does not support the existance of a god.

    those who claim there is a god have the burden of providing evidence to prove this claim. short of evidence, the existance of a god or gods is merely fantasy.

    this is debate 101 - be able to prove what you say. without empirical evidence, your claims are heresay.

    btw, i'm posting this as AC, because of my job, family, etc.; believe it or not, i have actually been fired in the past for posting my views about atheism. sick, i know. i really wish i didn't have to post this AC, but unfortunately i do. hopefully america's fundamentalist nazism is gone for future generations, and that freedom of religion is eventually expanded to account for our freedom to acknowledge that god doesn't and cannot exist... this statement is pure logic, though ... immanuel kant be damned.

  178. Fuck the Bible-thumpers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    I love the hypocrisy of the Christian Right.

    Evolution my be a theory, but scientific evidence exists that certainly supports it. To that, they say "The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered"-- but we're supposed to accept the claptrap in the Bible literally and without question, and without any concrete evidence whatsoever?

    If you ask me, it's the Bible that needs a sticker on the front: "Danger! May cause extreme self-righteousness in the weak-minded and suggestible."

    1. Re:Fuck the Bible-thumpers by gameboyhippo · · Score: 1

      It only makes sense why the world is very much against Christianity. They're right, a lot of Christians are hypocrits. They go to church on Sunday and praise God and then they go to the Bar on Friday and drink and praise evil. They further get highly emotional about stuff they don't believe in the first place.

      Jesus asked if people truely believed and followed him, why did they not do as he says. It seems to me that most "Christians" are modern day Pharisees. It's unfortunate too. No wonder the world does not believe.

      The world tries to see Christ as reflected by those who mearly say they believe in Him. They see those modern day Pharisees and see a completly different picture of who Christ was. In fact, Jesus came to dispute those self rightous hypocrits. Jesus came for the humble, the sinners, us. Those self rightous people are not Christians, they just say they are for fire insurance. Do they not realize that the God they claim to believe in sees through their lies.

      I believe Christ did come and die for my sins. I am not worthy of his grace. I wish I could be a good witness, but I am not for I am born with the evil that lies in all of us. It doesn't help that people have the wrong idea about this Jesus I worship. He's about as much of a hacker as we are. But just like hackers, people all have the wrong idea.

      As a hacker, I see that the world is too complex to not have been designed. Look at a cell. It's about as close to nano technology as one can get. Sounds like God was into Object Oriented Programming rather than Evolution.

    2. Re:Fuck the Bible-thumpers by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that most "Christians" are modern day Pharisees. It's unfortunate too. No wonder the world does not believe.

      Funny. In John 17:22, Jesus asks that his followers be one with Him as He is one with the Father. So THEN the world will recognize that God has sent Jesus.

      Prophetic words, indeed. And you just hit the bullseye. Thumbs up for that one.

    3. Re:Fuck the Bible-thumpers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd describe myself as an atheist/agnostic. I certainly don't believe any of it is true, but of course I have no facts to back up my belief with, so it's nothing more than a gut feeling.

      Parent post reminds me of Barbara Ehrenreich's book, Nickel and Dimed. She talks about Christianity, and says something to the effect of "crucifying jesus over and over again so that nobody can hear what he had to say." On the rare occasions that I go to church (my wife's family is catholic), they have this huge emphasis on the crucifiction/resurrection/last supper. I could understand it on/around Easter, but this is every single time. I don't think I've heard a word in the tiny sermons about how we are supposed to live and how we are supposed to treat people. And to me, that's the biggest travesty about going to church.

      Admittedly I'm not a religious person, but I'd like to see churches preaching about reaching out to people and living in harmony as neighbors. Instead, I see them still denying Women equality (priests, etc), attacking homosexuals, and supporting a warmongering president. Let me admit straight up that this is unfair -- I know that churches do a lot of good things for the homeless and so forth. But, they've never encouraged or even asked me to help out with any of that, and they certainly don't seem to be speaking out against the causes of poverty and the way our society ignores it.

      I dunno, I guess my whole issue with the church in general is the insistence on faith and blind acceptance of the bible. I know that I'm a moral person, I try to be civilly responsible and work to do the right thing, but I get the feeling that many religious folks would deny that morals are even possible without faith. Hell, my wife was counseled by her friends against marrying me because of my lack of faith back in the day. Some open mindedness. Some insight.

  179. It's not obvious by jjohnson · · Score: 1

    It's not obvious that an itelligent designer would allow for 9.0 earthquakes creating tsunamis that kill 100,000+. It's not obvious that an itelligent designer would include cancer in his creation. It's not obvious that an intelligent designer would create a race of beings capable of destroying themselves in their immaturity.

    The only way to rationalize those things with an intelligent designer is to imagine that they comply with some sort of divine plan, and if there is a divine plan, it's far from obvious what it is or why it should be that way.

    You can't really argue with this, since by arguing, you're acknowledging that an intelligent designer is not self-evident. If it's truly obvious, then no argument is necessary.

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    1. Re:It's not obvious by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

      It's not obvious that an itelligent designer would allow for 9.0 earthquakes creating tsunamis that kill 100,000+. It's not obvious that an itelligent designer would include cancer in his creation. It's not obvious that an intelligent designer would create a race of beings capable of destroying themselves in their immaturity.

      Maybe it's not to you. Perhaps it's not even "obvious" to me, but I don't see those things as a stumbling block to seeing that the universe is by design.

      You can't really argue with this, since by arguing, you're acknowledging that an intelligent designer is not self-evident.

      Oh, but I *can* argue with this...just because I don't understand the designers PLAN does not mean that the EXISTENCE of said designer is not self evident. I am by no means saying I believe in Jesus or Mohammed or Krishna or Buddah or whatever...I am simply saying that the intelligence that went into creating the universe is clearly visible by observing the universe itself.

    2. Re:It's not obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's not obvious that an itelligent designer would allow for 9.0 earthquakes creating tsunamis that kill 100,000+. It's not obvious that an itelligent designer would include cancer in his creation. It's not obvious that an intelligent designer would create a race of beings capable of destroying themselves in their immaturity.

      All these things can (and do) happen in video games. Are you saying it is not obvious that those games were created by intelligent beings? Maybe those video games appeared by chance via some sort of random number generator and people didn't buy the generated games that weren't really games so those games "died", but the real games live on and cost $49.87 at Wal-Mart.

    3. Re:It's not obvious by Atrax · · Score: 1

      One more

      a really intelligent designer would build an eye without a blind spot.

      wouldn't be that hard.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    4. Re:It's not obvious by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      I didn't say it was a stumbling block, I said it wasn't "obvious". And questions about the designer's plan necessarily make the existence of the designer non-obvious in the face of a competing theory that, by Occam's Razor, explains the existence of cancer, tsunamis, and humanity's flirtation with self-destruction more sensible without positing a supreme being.

      It's not "clearly visible" to me that an intelligent designer is responsible for the current state of affairs. In fact, the indifference to human life of the Indian Ocean tsunami makes more sense to me as a product of a mechanistic, unintelligent universe. Until you can explain the tsunami in a simple, self-evident way, I can't accept that an intelligent designer is behind it. That you accept it on its face is not convincing to me, either of a designer's handiwork or his existence.

      I'm not saying that the tsunami proves that God doesn't exist; only that it's not obvious or self-evident except by your uncritical appraisal.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  180. You miss the point by sabshire · · Score: 1

    I think it is funny that the atheists, religion bashers, and all come out on these news items. I find it even more funny that instead of actually replying to the topic whether the sticker is constitutional or not, they instead reply and bash those who believe in God. The news item was about the constitutionality of the sticker. Personally I don't see how a sticker is unconsitutional. The sticker said that "Evolution is a theory, not a fact". Big deal. Evolution IS a theory.... Get a life!

    --
    You will never "find" time for anything. You must "make" it.
  181. Many Posts..... by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1
    Many posts on this item will no doubt go on and on, back and forth, over whether Creationism, or Evolution is the "Truth". But, what is lost on me is, how is a sticker stating a theory is a theory possibly unconstitutional? It didn't say: "The State of Georgia declares that the Christian form of creationism is official State sanctioned fact."

    It stated that the theory of evolution is a theory. Funny, that's what I thought it was. It has always bothered me that so many things that are theories in science are taught as though they are fact.

    Does evolution take place? I think everyone but the farthest out there can agree with that. All life evolved to it's present state without any help or direction? Just an accident, as it were? That part is theory and should be treated as such. I don't think that is too unreasonable.

    No state religion was established here, no one put "God created the Heaven and the Earth" on page 27, chapter 6. All that was stated is that evolution as an origin of life is a theory.

    --
    I was raised on the command line, bitch

    "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    1. Re:Many Posts..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree.

      The Judge should have given them the option of keeping the sticker, but adding one stating that "there is no historical record from the time of Jesus indicating that such a person existed." Then those cultists would have to choose, both stickers or none ?

    2. Re:Many Posts..... by Procrastinatron · · Score: 1

      While I agree that the whole debate surrounding this issue is asinine, it is equally idiotic that the sticker was placed there in the first place. Why single out evolution?

    3. Re:Many Posts..... by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      Because the judge correctly perceived that the sticker was playing on a common misunderstanding of the term "theory" to attack the credibility of evolution. The sticker implied, for the purposes of religious reinforcement by conservative Christian parents, that evolution is somehow a dubious hypothesis rather than one of the strongest scientific theories around.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    4. Re:Many Posts..... by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1
      Greater point of contention is what I would say. As someone else pointed out, there is the "Theory of Gravity". But, everyone can see gravity. You can drop a glass and watch it break. You may not be able to prove for certain why it falls, but you can prove the action occurs. Also, gravity, and it's related theories, don't threaten the way we came to be. This does.

      Though I'm not sure I would have put the sticker there, I don't think I see the harm in it's being there.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    5. Re:Many Posts..... by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1
      True, the sticker was not using the word "theory" in the scientific sense. I would agree with that. But, it was stating the facts. And one might be able to make an argument that it is a justified reaction to the theory being taught as proven fact. I think I would be more than happy with just a mention that this is a theory, and explanation of what that means in scientific terms, and then move on. If the ultra-right isn't happy with that, then they never will be.

      A rewording of such a sticker would also be fine to me. But, I think a class room note would be better. It allows for questions and answers and a much better explanation of why it matters. After all we should be teaching kids what scientific theories are and the difference between them and proven fact, shouldn't we?

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    6. Re:Many Posts..... by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      What would be perfect would be the clear teaching in the science classroom that all scientific theories are just "theories": that all are falsifiable, and that in the presence of a theory that better explains the evidence, the current theory is in question or disproven. Any science student, before being presented with actual theories, should understand the scientific process.

      The problem with the sticker is that, by singling out evolution for this special caution about it's theoretical status, it unfairly prejudiced the teaching of evolution in the classroom. Gravitation is "only" a theory, but you don't see the parents clamoring for Aristotle's theory of natural motion to be taught, do you?

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    7. Re:Many Posts..... by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1
      What would be perfect would be the clear teaching in the science classroom that all scientific theories are just "theories": that all are falsifiable, and that in the presence of a theory that better explains the evidence, the current theory is in question or disproven. Any science student, before being presented with actual theories, should understand the scientific process.

      Totally agree.

      The problem with the sticker is that, by singling out evolution for this special caution about it's theoretical status, it unfairly prejudiced the teaching of evolution in the classroom. Gravitation is "only" a theory, but you don't see the parents clamoring for Aristotle's theory of natural motion to be taught, do you?

      While it's true that gravitation is "only" a theory, there aren't any commonly held counters to the basic principals. There are those who believe drastically differently, but they are so far and few between that they are little more than a statistical blip. On the other hand, those who don't believe the universe is an accident are numerous.

      As to the unasked question of what should be taught in schools on this subject, in science class I think that evolution as a mechanism for the improvement of species should be taught. It is very hard, if not impossible, to argue against that portion. However, evolution as the total force for creation of life is more of a theory. It should be taught as a theory, perhaps a strong one, but still a theory. I remember science class. I know in my class it wasn't taught as a theory, it was fact. And from a scientific perspective, that's wrong. Hell, I'm not sure if it was even referred to as the "Theory" of evolution. I seem to remember it was just "evolution", this is how we came to be.

      And this was in Kansas of all places!!

      Not really so much for you, but I've often found it amusing that hard core evolutionists often complain that creationists insist that God came from nothing, and since nothing can come from nothing, they must be wrong. But, don't evolutionists accept on faith that the material for the Big Bang, and subsequently everything else, sprang out of the nothingness?

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    8. Re:Many Posts..... by ezeri · · Score: 1

      I'm having trouble finding any theories (cosmology and anything dealing subatomic particles or behavior aside, and even most of them still pass) that could be considered a weaker theory than evolution. If you could please enlighten me, that would be great.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    9. Re:Many Posts..... by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      Are you suggesting that the theory of evolution isn't very strong in the scientific world? Virtually the entire field of biology depends on it.

      Off the top of my head, string theory isn't nearly as well established.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    10. Re:Many Posts..... by ezeri · · Score: 1

      Yes, that is exactly what I am suggesting, it's such a weak theory that high schooler who has taken biology could rip massive holes in it. And when you get a little further, and start learning a little about microbiology, genetics and carbon dating, it becomes very clear that by far, the stongest evidence for evolution is the presumption that with out it, we couldn't exist. Biology does not at all depend on evolution, you could easily take evolution out of the picture with very little effect on any fields.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
  182. Evolution can't explain THIS by melted · · Score: 1

    It's not like I'm a creationist or anything, but evolution still can't explain flagella motors.

    http://www.health.adelaide.edu.au/Pharm/Musgrave /e ssays/flagella.htm

    There's no evolutionary path that leads to something like this.

    1. Re:Evolution can't explain THIS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes there is.

      Get your facts from scientific journals sometimes. Hint: they actually know what they're talking about.

    2. Re:Evolution can't explain THIS by king-manic · · Score: 1

      It's not like I'm a creationist or anything, but evolution still can't explain flagella motors.

      http://www.health.adelaide.edu.au/Pharm/Musgrave /e ssays/flagella.htm

      There's no evolutionary path that leads to something like this.


      1-random collection of flexible protiens extrude from cell.
      2-unstable protien structure at base of exstrusion forms and is sensitive to atp.
      3-movement of the reactive structure causes extrusion to move. Happens to rotate.

      not too much there.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  183. actually, we've seen both by wotevah · · Score: 1

    Really all we've observed is the natural selection half of evolution- there's that other part in which one of two like organisms has to mutate first so that there's some difference to select.

    The rest of us observed both: in order for bacteria to become resistant to an antibiotic or another, a mutation was involved that happened to have that benefic effect, and was thus "selected" by all other strains dying or being overcome by the new strain in that environment.

  184. About cobb county georgia by Ledora · · Score: 1

    Well Cobb County is actually one of the more intelligent counties in georgia (I live in cobb) but there school system is 2nd to none when it comes to retarted things. BTW tell them they have a massive security hole in their network.... spend 7 days out of school.

    1. Re:About cobb county georgia by blackomegax · · Score: 1

      hey wait... I HACKED THEM AND GOT 7 DAYS! oh well. if anyone cares, this was in 01' and cobb county has since outsourced their networking and security departments. but a few sources say it still sucks.

    2. Re:About cobb county georgia by Frennzy · · Score: 1

      Do counties have intelligence? I think you should put a disclaimer sticker on your post, stating that you have a theory that Cobb County is actually one of the more intelligent counties in Georgia, but that it is only a theory.

      It would immediately be disproven by your improper use of the word 'there' in place of 'their' prior to the words 'school system'.

      Rest easy, this is a joke...and not intended to be taken seriously. We all make silly mistakes now and again.

  185. because nitpiclking is fun : ) by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    For one, the theory is that humans evolved from apes. Apes aren't monkeys.

    Actually, all current great apes evolved from the same ancestors as humans.

    I know you didn't specify "current", but let's not allow these implications to float around freely under these circumstances.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  186. What about letting people make thier own decisions by cyb0rg · · Score: 1

    Is it too much to ask that the school system present multiple "theories" and allow the people to make their own decisions?

    Does the school board or the courts have the right to deny a person the ability to make an informed decision?

    What right do we as a society have to say what is right and what is wrong?

  187. Quiz! by Peyna · · Score: 1

    Quiz time. Define "theory" as used in the scientific community.

    Stupid lame-ness filter. I mean really, who doesn't think that I can make a decent post in that few of characters. I'll show you some lame-ness. Okay, it's time to just ramble on about nothing, apparently this lame-ness filter has it in for me, considering the first 5 sentences weren't enough for it.

    --
    What?
  188. Good. by Transcendent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I totally agree with the ruling since it explicitly mentions a single theory, and does not give a good, general approach to the problem in whole.

    If it merely said "ALL theories about the origins of life are at best theories, and never facts or laws," then there would be no problem.

    Yes the sticker states the truth that evolution (Darwinism, I suppose... there ARE other theories) is only a theory, but it is the unique discrimination against a single theory that causes conflict, and thus I agree with the ruling.

    Would you have any problem with a sticker that said "[Gg]od cannot be scientifically proven to exist in any way, and the existence of [Gg]od should be approached with an open mind."? It does state a fact, but its intent is to in stow a specific mindset into the reader, thus skewing their perspective.

    1. Re:Good. by Mike+A. · · Score: 1

      The real problem is not that evolution is a theory, but that its would-be competitors (traditional creationism and intelligent design) aren't even theories.

      --

      --
      Do I look like I speak for my employer?
  189. We've already abolished it here, I see. by daymitch · · Score: 1

    The judge ruled on the sticker and the circumstances surrounding the decision to stick them in the texts. The religous bias in the stickers is perfectly clear considered in the light of the environment in Cobb County. The school board and certain raving local citizens set the table and then brought the stickers to it in a very public way.

    The judge showed wisdom by avoiding the same overly-literal interpretaion as the parent. The stickers were stuck in the midst of a chronic public controversy that is *explicitly* fueled by the creationism vs. evolution debate.

    Make no bones about it, the creationist viewpoint will only fit in rigid and literal brains. This argument (C v. E) is tired and old. Since the original furor after the origin was published, the theory of evolution has been refined and expanded while biblical lieralists have had to concede philosophical ground at a rapid pace, and all for good reasons.

    The literalist world-view is limiting, narrow and dangerous. It cannot concieve of a genuine spirituality that encompases rationality *and* a sense of the mysterious with equal comfort. News of this decision really birghtened my day. With the generally depressing political climate we labor under, it was so nice to hear of someone showing some genuine wisdom. Hooray.

  190. As if by michaelmalak · · Score: 1
    As if the $11,000/yr/child taxpayers pay in my county for secular education doesn't inhibit religion.

    For more on this redistribution of massive amounts of money inhibiting religion, see the position of a Vatican official

    [...] Archbishop Lajolo said limits on religious freedom exist almost everywhere.

    For instance, he said, government and taxation policies may limit the rights of parents to choose a religious education for their children [...]

    Also see my blog story States' "Blaine Amendments" prohibiting vouchers have roots in anti-Catholicism.
    1. Re:As if by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For instance, he said, government and taxation policies may limit the rights of parents to choose a religious education for their children [...]

      Well, paying taxes takes away one's ability to pay for many things (while giving the government the ability to pay for many things you may or may not want, such as a road through your property).

    2. Re:As if by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      As if the $11,000/yr/child taxpayers pay in my county for secular education doesn't inhibit religion.

      Yes, that's right. It doesn't. You can still send your children to Sunday School and to Church, and instruct them to read the Bible/Koran/Torah daily after school, can you not? You can choose to enroll your child in a religious school, can you not?

      Religion is culture; it should be transmitted through the family and the church. What could the motive for trying to insert religious teachings into our public institutions be, other than an attempt to theocracize our society, and to marginalize minority religions?

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    3. Re:As if by michaelmalak · · Score: 1
      What could the motive for trying to insert religious teachings into our public institutions be, other than an attempt to theocracize our society, and to marginalize minority religions?
      And what could the motive for trying to eliminate religious teachings from schools, other than an attempt to secularize our society, and to marginalize all religions?

      Such large sums of money should not be confiscated upon threat of jail for such purposes.

    4. Re:As if by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      Well, guess what? We live in a politically secular society! It was designed that way by the founding fathers. Separation of church and state was no accident, it is important for several reasons, not the least of which being that it keeps all religions on an equal footing, so that none may be persecuted for following a faith different from others.

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    5. Re:As if by michaelmalak · · Score: 1

      The governments in the U.S. should be secular, but secularism should not be forced upon the populace through heavy taxation.

  191. Bibles are bought by choice. by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Unless you attend a private school that requires them as a textbook, but attending a private school would seem to be by choice.

  192. I Enjoy It by bodius · · Score: 1

    Personally, I enjoy the sticker. I think the whole ordeal points to the fact of how incredibly clueless some people are about truth, theory, and proof. This is inherently a philosophical issue - how do we know what is true? How can we prove things? I find the sticker as an ironic epistemological statement, which works against the people who would use the sticker in the first place. I think the sticker is a great starting point for epistemological discussions regarding creationism, evolutinary theory, science, and religion.

    To me it is such a sad thing when science and religion are considered totally opposing viewpoints. Of course, Christian fundamentalism is in radical opposition to most of science (for its dogmatism), but science and religion both need to be recognized as pursuits for truth.

    The real questions that need to be debated are the epistemological ones which lie above both science and religion. I find it hilarious that a judge is demanding a sticker encouraging critical thinking to be removed. People need to stop seeing religion as science as oppoising teams like in football. It's incredible to me that many people enthusiastic about the scientific method have such immature attitudes. Now let's all study some philosophy and have critical discussions, rather than root for our team at the Science vs. Religion Super Bowl.

  193. Nonsense by jjohnson · · Score: 1

    Any decent scientist will tell you that evolution is a totally falsifiable theory, and that in 100 years, it will almost certainly be different than what we think it is now. The same would be said for any facet of science by anyone who actually understands the practice.

    The reason you think that there's certainty about evolution is that there's an almost perfect absence of *viable* alternative theories--meaning theories that offer, or may in the future offer, a better explanation of the existing evidence and more predictive power.

    Intelligent design isn't a viable alternative to evolution because it's not a better, or possibly better, scientific theory. There's no value at all to teaching it alongside evolution except to shield those who's faith might be weakened by failing to be reinforced by unrelated authorities.

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  194. Hmm.. by Macgruder · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure which is more disturbing;

    a) Supreme court telling a local school district (under control of the parents of the affected students) what to do say, effectively taking away local control of said school district

    b) Parents of school children in this district are disturbed enough that they feel stickers are needed to clarify their position.

    (disclaimer - I am a devout Christian. I see God as Perfection. The perfect Artist, the perfect Engineer. And in His creation I delight in the simple beauty of numbers, their relationship, and the way they effect and can describe the makeup of the universe)

    If anyone wants a reasonable discussion of Creationism and Scientific Theory and how they work together, feel free to respond to this post.

    Oh wait, this is Slashdot. My bad.

    --
    I'm not crazy,I'm actively irresponsible.
  195. Thank You by lack1uster · · Score: 0

    I've been searching the comments for someone who's said this. Bravo.

  196. What a sucky moderator. by absolutes · · Score: 1

    How on earth did this get modded to a FIVE Informative?! I wonder if any of you who throw the 'Creationist' card around realize what the court actually SAID. "ATLANTA, JAN. 13 - Despite ruling that "fostering critical thinking" about evolution "is a clearly secular purpose," and agreeing that the Cobb County, Georgia school district had secular, not religious reasons for adopting a textbook sticker dealing with evolution, a federal judge today struck down the sticker as unconstitutional."

    1. Re:What a sucky moderator. by Scrameustache · · Score: 0

      You can only mod a post once.
      So, that subject line there should have "moderators", plural, not cingular.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:What a sucky moderator. by absolutes · · Score: 1

      I guess I have no idea how the mod system works. Regardless, that should not be a five.

    3. Re:What a sucky moderator. by Scrameustache · · Score: 0

      I guess I have no idea how the mod system works. Regardless, that should not be a five.

      Well, it's now been incorrectly modded "flamebait" and "troll". Doesn't fit the requirements for either of these, but since there isn't a "-1: Blasphemous", the mods who disagree abuse the system.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  197. Re:Yay! by Loonacy · · Score: 1

    If it said "Evolution is a theory." then that would be okay. But stating that it is not a fact when nobody knows for certain whether it is or not seems rather ignorant to me.
    It could be fact, it could be wrong. Don't go saying it's not a fact if you don't know it isn't.

  198. RTFA by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

    if you bothered to RTFA, you'd notice it was the parents of students who had the stickers put in, and an outside group who had them removed.

    The stickers were added after more than 2,000 parents complained that the textbooks presented evolution as fact, without mentioning rival ideas about the beginnings of life, such as the biblical story of creation.

    Six parents and the American Civil Liberties Union then sued

    now tell me, what did the majority of parents want for their kids education?

    1. Re:RTFA by Jardine · · Score: 1

      now tell me, what did the majority of parents want for their kids education?

      Ignorance?

    2. Re:RTFA by Bobobob314 · · Score: 0

      If you notice, the material covered has not changed, the kids will come out no more ignorant than those in the rest of America.

    3. Re:RTFA by Boronx · · Score: 1

      What you have to ask yourself is why were the parents so upset? Why did they complain?

    4. Re:RTFA by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > why were the parents so upset?

      They didn't want to have to explain to their kids why the religion that was forced upon them does not mirror reality.

  199. a balanced viewpoint is important by xiggelee · · Score: 1

    This textbook contains material on gravity. Gravity is a theory, not a fact, regarding a physical force. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and wha -- whoaaaaaaaaaaaa SPLAT

  200. Of course, we have the "who created God" argument by supradave · · Score: 0

    This stupid idea of who created God leads us to the idea that either God has always been or God was created by another God.

    If God always existed, what did God do for the infinite period prior to creating the Earth (or the first thing)? What change in that infinite doldrum caused God to decide to create the Earth (or the first thing)? What will God do for the infinite amount of time after the Earth ceases to exist?

    Which leads to, if God created another Earth and it didn't succeed, that would make a failure by God. That makes God imperfect, therefore God cannot exist if God is not perfect.

    Which leads to, if God did nothing and nothing lead to the eventual creation of the Earth, that makes God imperfect because the perfection of nothing wasn't perfect enough, therefore God cannot exist if God is not perfect.

    Of course, putting human characteristics to God (God created man in his own image), floating around in nothing for more that a few hours can lead to severe insanity due to sensory depravation, which makes God imperfect because insanity would be an imperfection.

    If another God created God, that would make God imperfect because God had to be created in the first place and make the creating God imperfect because that God would have had to create something which then leads to God and infinity.

    Of course, there's that magic thing too, but I won't worry about that.

    As a pseudo-scientist, I ask anyone to think the thought of God and infinity because it just doesn't work out in any way.

  201. Re:Yay! by malfunct · · Score: 1

    Since when is the "theory of evolution" not a theory? Since when are theories ever proven? I agree that evolution is very much the accepted scientific theory and I do fully believe it to be very close to the way things happen. I will not however go so far as to say its the "truth". These stickers say what every good scientist should know already. Theories are not truth and you should always approach science with an open mind. Without context they seem harmless to me. Every science text I've ever read started out with the scientific method which pretty much states that you come up with an idea, test it, and so long as it continues to hold up to tests you use it as a model of how things work but you always keep in your mind that if its disproven it is not correct. I think banning the stickers was in some ways silly as they in no way affirm or deny either religious or accepted scientific messages and definitely don't seem to be an abuse of the separation of church and state. In fact they just seem like common sense to me.

    --

    "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

  202. Re:What about letting people make thier own decisi by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

    But if we did as you say, power hungry bastards wouldn't be able to manipulate us into maintaining their power over us! Genocidal bastards like Dubya would suddenly be rendered powerless! ... and we don't want that now do we?

    --
    George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
  203. I would like to know... by revery · · Score: 1

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

    I would like to know how the Cobb County Board of Education is Congress. Barring that, there is no way that those stickers are constitutional.

    This should terrify the religious as well as the atheists.

    I'd be glad to discuss this with anyone. Here or offline. Email me at churchill@datatek-net.com

  204. some fish have legs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some fish have short forelegs. They also have primitive lungs and can crawl some distances on the ground between ponds. They exist today.

  205. A suitable quotation: by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 1

    "There is no god but Truth, and Science is its prophet."

    (Quote is original to me. I used to wear a badge saying this.)

    Or, later translated into mangled Latin:

    Non est Deus nisi Veritas, et sapientia vates eius.

    --
    Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    1. Re:A suitable quotation: by r00zky · · Score: 1

      That quote sounds familiar

      La ilaha illallah Muhammad-ur-Rasulullah

      --
      I'm a chainsmokin' alcoholic sociopath, so-ci-o-path
  206. Sorry, dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make ID falsifiable and I might give it the time of day. Until then, have fun in the ghetto.

  207. Geeze the Courts are screwed up by DreamMaster · · Score: 1

    I RTFA and nowhere did it state anything about creationism; it only said, and with good reason, that the material was a *theory* and not a *fact*.. which is correct. If we don't take creationism as a fact anymore, why should be expected to take evolution as one, irrespective of how many people believe in it (and exactly the same used to be said of creationism as well).

    Likely the particular judge just had a bug up his arse about religion, and came down heavy on it because he, like many zealots, don't like their beliefs to be challenged, irrespective of whether they're religious or not.

    If I were in charge of that school, and had decided not to go through appeals, I'd first send the judge personally a bill for the removal of all the stickers from the books. I mean, if he wants them removed so much, he should damn well pay for it himself rather than expecting hard-worked teachers to spend hours of time doing it themselves.

    1. Re:Geeze the Courts are screwed up by Procrastinatron · · Score: 1

      Why make the hard-worked teachers to spend hours of time putting on the sticker in the first place?

    2. Re:Geeze the Courts are screwed up by LordBodak · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Even if the "separation of church and state" clause the courts love to use existed (which it doesn't, but that's a different story), the sticker NEVER mentions religion. The reason for it being there is irrelevant-- only the content matters, and the content is not religious so the judge is in the wrong on this one.

      --
      LordBodak's journal.
  208. Re:Yay! by Kleedrac2 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Thank goodness I live in Canada ... apparently stating the truth just became unconstitutional in the states!!

    Kleedrac

    --
    Sure we wang, can.
  209. Heh by Exiler · · Score: 1

    As a student in a Cobb high school, I'm amused.

    we just got back from our homogenized holiday break. So, we just started a new semester. The last of Cobb's highschools just switched over to 'block' schedules, meaning we just got four new classes for this semester...They juuust finished getting textbooks out today, looks like they've gotta take all these back. =)

    --
    Banaaaana!
  210. You mean not a _scientific_ theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is a religious theory. If it were to be taught as such I wouldn't really have a problem with it (comparative religion class or something). You are wrong that it isn't a theory though. It just has no business being taught as "science". I think people fail to understand the difference between observation, definition, fact, theory, hypothesis, conclusion, and law. They all have distinct meanings in science and have similar but different meanings in everyday language. A theory in science doesn't mean that something is untested, it just means it is an explanation rather than an observation. Science isn't about proving things true... it's a interative process where things are proven false and replaced. A law is not something which has been "proven" true... just an observation which has been universal.

    I think the proof that science education is poor in the US isn't just that creationism is considered science, but that even the critics in the papers and on TV don't understand the terms they are using.

  211. Re: IT IS A Theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    not to be picky with words, but I thought it WAS a theory; and that there are few laws.

    Evolution is not a law. Its a theory with a ton of backing, just like e=mc2 and thru the process they are refined and tested until a law can be found.
    When its law, you stop testing it (well most people stop.)

  212. Influenced?! by adeydas · · Score: 1

    Were the judges influenced by the Vatican City?!

  213. Am I the Only Christian Here? by Broadband · · Score: 1

    It seems like every post here is bashing the creation theory as if they are certain to it's non-existance.

    1. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by Famanoran · · Score: 1

      It is certain.

      If God existed, don't you think he'd have done something about Bush?

      Or maybe He'd have made a verifiable appearance of some description.

      Sorry dude, I like fantasy as much as you, but remember - God is exactly that - fantasy.

      That's my opinion anyway. This may not be yours, but I don't really care.

    2. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by gameboyhippo · · Score: 1

      Nope. I'm a Christian as well. But I think that Slashdot is a bit biased. If you speak well of Christ, you'll get a -1 for flamebait.

      If you feel that we came about by a brute force algorithm, they love you. It's silly that hackers will accept an idea as illogical that something as complicated as cells just came about by chance. I don't use a brute force algorithm to program, I design it.

    3. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is, if you go back and read Genisis, no where does it say how God created things, it just says why he did it. If you start with Creation and then add Evolution to the mix you will probably be closer to the truth than any extremist.

      Nothing from the minds of humans is 100% correct, because the only people who don't make mistakes are the ones that aren't doing anything.

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
    4. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by Atrax · · Score: 1

      If you speak well of Christ, you'll get a -1 for flamebait.

      I've said it before and I'll say it again.

      You only get modded flamebait because there's no option for "-1 Completely fucking batshit insane"

      When Taco adds that option, no problem, we'll stop modding you -1 flamebait for espousing loony theories.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    5. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by CharlesEGrant · · Score: 1
      f you feel that we came about by a brute force algorithm, they love you. It's silly that hackers will accept an idea as illogical that something as complicated as cells just came about by chance. I don't use a brute force algorithm to program, I design it.
      Two questions and a link:

      1. If the complexity of the natural world is evidence of intelligent design, then isn't the necessary complexity of the designer evidence that the designer was designed? Isn't this an example of the mutlipication of entitities that Occam warned against? I'm not trying to be flip here, this is a sincere question.

      2. Have you never heard of genetic algorithims?

      3. See http://dllab.caltech.edu/avida/ for some recent work in this area.
    6. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      2. Have you never heard of genetic algorithims?


      I have, and though they can sometimes prove pretty useful in computer programs or figuring out maximum and minumum efficiency problems, they are very limited in their use. Anyone who is intimately experienced with G.A.s would know this.

      And to answer your first question, if the designer wasn't all powerful and limitless in time, knowledge and power, then that entity couldn't be the supreme being of the universe.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    7. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by 0BoDy · · Score: 1

      NO, And I agree that there are few of our voices on slashdot. THose of f us more completely devoted to christ are more likely to to be imeshed in their bible than slashdot. If you'll think about it you'll relize it's true. THe world willnot be won or lost on slashdot, and evne though there are many who read it, slashdot has very little actual influence on the state of the world. Moreover, I'd like to point out that not all sects of christianity believe in Creation; the roman catholic church for example believes / typically teaches Divine evolution, and if I felt it worth My time, I'd argue this point with the Pope myself. However, I am eFree, and Believe that God created the earth in 3 literal 24 hour days. I cannot prove this except in the same way I prove my savior lives, and intend to do so as I have done, ever since I've been a sinner saved by grace. God Bless You - Remember that no one cares about the truth, except those that know it.

      --
      Can I be a Luddite too?
    8. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by gameboyhippo · · Score: 1

      This is a very common and a worthy question indeed. To sum it up, people often asked, "If God created everything, who created God?"

      Well Genesis 1:1 says "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth" (heavens can be read, "Universe"). John 1:1 says "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." I guess the point that is being made in these two books is that in the beginning was God.

      But this is all confusing and religious, so lets look at this from a logical point of view. If the Universe was created by chance, where did all this junk come from that the universe was accidently formed from? After all, neither matter nor energy can be created, just change form. So both ideas suffer from this problem, not just Creationism.

      Creationism, does however suggest a solution based upon the nature of this problem. God not only created the Universe, but created the physics of the Universe (time, matter, energy, how these things interact, etc...) Thus since before God created the Universe and it's physical laws, there were no Universe nor physical laws. God could just exist without being created infinitely in the past and future. It's mind blowing and difficult to grasp, but it is the only logical piece of the puzzle that explains why we exist in this otherwise impossible existance.

      God is an entity that exists beyond time/space. An entity that created time/space.

    9. Re:Am I the Only Christian Here? by CharlesEGrant · · Score: 1
      So both ideas suffer from this problem, not just Creationism
      Agreed, neither scientific nor religious thought can answer this question.
      God could just exist without being created
      But why is it any more satisfactory to say "Life was created by God, and God exists without being created" then to simply say "Life exists without being created"? Both statements require accepting that some thing could exist without being created, but the first statement introduces an additional entity, namely God. Occam's Razor tells us not to multiply entities needlessly, so what are your grounds for choosing the former over the latter?

      Not to beat the point into the ground, but on what logical basis do you choose among the following statments:

      "Life exists without being created"
      "Life was created by God, and God exists without being created"
      "Life was created by the demiurge, the demiurge was created by God, and God exists without being created"
  214. bacteria is a class by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Depends on your definition of "something else". A bacteria is an entire class of things that has evolved for millenia to get to its current form. Its purpose is to survive, and survive it will, by altering itself if necessary. Otherwise we'd still be able to kill them all with pennicillin.

  215. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Informative

    No, it's not a free speech issue. The Government -- whether that be in the form of the Justice Department or the Board of a public school -- doesn't have the "free speech" right to dictate that students have stickers on their books. The Government imposing views on you is not free speech in any way, shape or form.

    It's really simple:
    Student puts a sticker on their book: exercise of freedom of speech/religion.
    School Board puts sticker on every students' book: violation of freedom of speech/religion.

    I know this gets confused in both ways (e.g. disallowing independent prayer), but it really is quite simple.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  216. primordial VCR by 955301 · · Score: 1


    Yes. Yes VCR's did spontaneously arise out of the soup, in much the same way.

    See, life created teeth. Teeth aren't alive, but were useful at some point to solve a problem. Life also acquired higher level thinking. Thinking produced recognition of tools. A VCR is a tool to solve a problem. It's not alive, but it has been useful at this point to solve a problem. It all starting in the soup.

    That's the theory.

    --
    You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    1. Re:primordial VCR by king-manic · · Score: 1

      repeatitly take random electronics and recombine them in differnet ways, given 4 billion years you'll accidentally create a few thousand machiens that may operate as a vcr in different ways.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    2. Re:primordial VCR by MrNiCeGUi · · Score: 1

      Minor and offtopic contention point coming up:
      Teeth are alive, at least according to a stomatologue friend of mine. They are irrigated by blood vassels and have nerve endings through them. They even regenerate, albeit in an extremely limited fashion. Once the nerve is removed the tooth is truely dead and will be destroyed in a limited amount of time. A more appropriate example would be the hair, which is dead matter, although it is growing because the root keeps adding to it.

    3. Re:primordial VCR by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      Almost. A Creationist would say that and then scoff at the unliklihood of having something useful. And given that statement, they'd be right. The critical difference is that the only 'random' electronics that ever got recombined actually managed to do something useful already. Maybe not operate a VCR, but _something_. All the evolved boards that did nothing but release magic smoke got dumped on the scrap heap.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    4. Re:primordial VCR by 955301 · · Score: 1


      agreed. A much more appropriate example.

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
  217. Frogs. by Black+Acid · · Score: 1
    Yes, but where are the fish with legs?

    Frogs.
  218. Evolution is a SCIENTIFIC theory, like Gravity. by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1, Insightful
    It explains evidence, and makes predictions. The predictions have been bourne out in the laboratory countless times.

    Gravity is a Theory as well, and it explains certain evidence (things fall). And those creationist retards who think that something is a theory is less true, can just engage in some defenestration and prove to us all how The Theory Of Gravity Isn't True, because it's a THEORY.

    Meanwhile, the rest of us will collect on your dead pool.

    Fundie religious people make me ill. They really are the bottom of the barrel of humanity- right there with militarists, rapists, and the TSA.

    Oddly, enough, I have a "spiritual" side to me, but it's smart enough to know that Science answers the question HOW, while Religion and Art answer the question WHY. And it is high time people made the distinction.

    But then, an indication of how completely lost the USA is, is to simply look at who's president - and I immediately experience diminished trust or hope that such a real enlightenment is possible with the present and dominant demographic and the dullwitted political inclinations it exhibits.

    This is NOT a Troll, or Flamebait - it's simple facts. Ooops. I'm sorry - Theory.

    RS

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    1. Re:Evolution is a SCIENTIFIC theory, like Gravity. by TeknoHog · · Score: 1
      Agreed! This brings to mind a quote whose origins escape me...

      "Evolution is a theory, just like gravity. If you don't believe in those, go jump off a bridge."

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    2. Re:Evolution is a SCIENTIFIC theory, like Gravity. by LordBodak · · Score: 1

      No, gravity is a scientific law, not a scientific theory.

      --
      LordBodak's journal.
  219. Extra Extra by Progman3K · · Score: 0, Troll

    Printing the truth is unconstitutional!

    --
    I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    1. Re:Extra Extra by Atrax · · Score: 1

      Common misconception

      yes, it looks like the truth, but really it's just a weasely scheme to undermine science in schools.

      Look behind the curtain

      (yeah, I know you know this. can't let it stay unanswered though)

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    2. Re:Extra Extra by fossilstar · · Score: 1

      Only if it's a deliberately and grossly incomplete "truth" done specifically for religious reasons.

      --
      "Support our Oops."
    3. Re:Extra Extra by Progman3K · · Score: 1

      It IS the truth;

      Great thing about theories; they can be verified, myths can't be.

      We have record of humans controlling the reproduction of organisms like plants and animals and impacting on their breed.

      We also have fossil records of other, possibly intermediate forms of life.

      So we have empirical evidence passed down through centuries of observation.

      That doesn't deny the existance of a creator; the universe seems filled with all forms of molecules, and you have to wonder why any of these ever started biological processes and became sentient, if you want a mystery of God, look there.

      --
      I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    4. Re:Extra Extra by Progman3K · · Score: 1

      > [...] it's a deliberately and grossly incomplete "truth" done specifically for religious reasons.

      Certainly.

      But it has caused lots of discussion.

      I put myself in the place of a student seeing all the fuss this is causing.

      It would catch my attention and make me wonder.

      I expect many will be brave and seek the truth, it's in our nature, I believe.

      --
      I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
  220. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  221. Flamebait by SunFan · · Score: 1


    You are all wrong. The one true god is a small stone I found in my back yard. It's name is not prouncible in your measily human language, but it sends it's regards.

    --
    -- Microsoft is the most expensive commodity operating system and office suite vendor in the marketplace.
    1. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the Great God was a tortoise.

      Pssst - "The Turtle Moves!"

  222. Fair enough by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 0

    Ok if they want to force these stickers on to science books, would they also happily apply a sticker on every copy of the bible?

    "Creationism is a guess based on pure faith, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

    --

    eTrade SUCKS
  223. From abroad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not American.

    It seems frankly incredible that these issues are still, or again, being brought to the courts in the USA.

    In most of the civilised world they ended a long, long time ago.

    We look at the actions of your government and your army, listen to the speeches of your president, and all our human sympathy notwithstanding, it is hard for us not be terrified and disgusted at the same time.

    This case ended with a ruling in favour of the remnants of reason. How about the next one? Or the one after that?

    And then there are the other issues with your justice and enforcement system. Jury-rigging for sensational murder trials, like the Petersen case recently. Arbitrary detention of undesirables. Torture in Iraq. Concentration camps in Cuba. Maybe at home, as well?

    All this and prayer, prayer, prayer. To whom -- or to what -- are you praying?

    On balance, I thank God I am not an American.

  224. Re:Yay! by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

    Our understand of how evolution has occurred in the past is indeed a theory (a theory being a well-tested predicative model). But that evolution occurs is at least as much as a fact as your existence.

    --
    English is easier said than done.
  225. WHERE WAS GOD ON BOXING DAY!????? by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Hey how about that you religious loonatics?!

    Where was your precious magical being in the sky on boxing day?

    What terrible sin did those 150,000+ people commit, that DEMANDED they be killed for?

    Where are the people that not only refuse to help, but should be celebrating the deaths of all these people?

    Honestly I hate to break it to you, there is no Santa, there is no Easter Bunny, and there certainly is no g-d.

    1. Re:WHERE WAS GOD ON BOXING DAY!????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My god is evil.

      -- Cthulhu ---

    2. Re:WHERE WAS GOD ON BOXING DAY!????? by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 1

      ok, I'll buy that for $1.00

    3. Re:WHERE WAS GOD ON BOXING DAY!????? by lupin_sansei · · Score: 1

      Why do you think that a religous person would assume that people who died in the tsunamis would have committed a sin?

    4. Re:WHERE WAS GOD ON BOXING DAY!????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He had a hangover. Jeez, it was his kid's birthday, who wouldn't celebrate a little?

    5. Re:WHERE WAS GOD ON BOXING DAY!????? by CrazyTrashCanHead · · Score: 1

      In line at the Best Buy? Cuz I think everyone was there, seeing how big that line was. I know Jesus was there, clutching a 80%-off DVD player to his chest...

    6. Re:WHERE WAS GOD ON BOXING DAY!????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you Englishmen/Canadians/Australians continue to believe in Boxing Day without a shred of evidence for its existence? We in the United States are modern enough to know that there's no such thing.

    7. Re:WHERE WAS GOD ON BOXING DAY!????? by churchtechie · · Score: 1
      I'm probably sticking my head over the sand bank to be shot off but i'm surprised no one has said this yet so here goes (yes it's off topic to)

      As a Bible-believeing Christian i believe that we live in a fallen wolrd, cursed by God because of the rebellion of man. Jesus was faced with a similar charge and you can read his answer in Luke 1

      "Jesus answered, "Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans because they suffered this way? I tell you, no! But unless you repent, you too will all perish. Or those eighteen who died when the tower in Siloam fell on them - do you think they were more guilty than all the others living in Jerusalem? 5I tell you, no! But unless you repent, you too will all perish."

      We are all living under a curse and deserve to die because we cannot ever expect live up to God's laws. But, God sent Jesus to us so that we can be saved from death by his lack of sin (or righteousness), we simply have to take hold of that and believe.

      Yes, i know it probably flamebait, but be kind, it's my first post.

  226. evolution works on our side here by etaluclac · · Score: 1

    In the end, these people in Alabama are really only shooting themselves in the foot.

    They are so stupid in forcing this evolution disclaimer that any reasonable person would be scared to move to that state. In the end, anybody who wants a real education in science will have to move to a liberal state that can separate the creationist THEORY from the evolutionary FACT.

  227. Cue more lawsuits... by mkiwi · · Score: 1
    The mere statement that "evolution is a theory, not a fact" is in no way creationist, put on a textbook it's spun that way, but the words do not mention "God," "Adam," "Eve," etc.. There also could have been some other scientific process of which we have yet to understand that could alter greatly our current theory of evolution, making the sticker factuallly correct.

    If fact, the next generation of evolution theories could be refered to as Evolution++, Evolution#, or Objective Evolution. Heck if things really change, we might even see Evolution Java.

  228. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    What if, in San Francisco, they started putting stickers on textbooks...

    They don't need to do that when the ACLU already sues school districts for mentioning "God" outside of comparative religion classes (and how many high schools have a comparative religion class?). But, I agree that by doing so, they are motivated by more than a sense of fairly stating facts.

    Make no mistake about it; there is a cultural war, and the ACLU, the scientific community and the debate over evolution is being used in an attempt to exterminate Christianity in public life.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  229. You don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Science isn't about proving something is true. A theory is the best explanation we have based on observations. A theory has to be testable and based on observation. Saying that the big bang is a theory is true. Saying that is hasn't been proven is true. In fact, the big bang theory was disproved and replaced by inflation theory. That's how science works. Creationism doesn't offer a way to test itself and certainly isn't willing to step aside if something better comes along.

  230. Re:Yay! by EnderWiggnz · · Score: 1

    and its about fucking time.

    --
    ... hi bingo ...
  231. Re:Yay! by lucabrasi999 · · Score: 3, Informative
    this is only problably because this is a highly catholic community and they dont want their chilren believing otherwise.

    As a former Catholic, I feel compelled to point out (for clarification purposes only) that the Catholic Church is not opposed to the theory of Evolution. It does question some of the "ape-to-human" points in the theory, but, from what I have read, that appears more to be from a lack of evidence than from some overall dogmatic opposition to humans evolving from apes -- check these out link and link.

    Both links are very long articles that go into significant detail, but from the summaries I read, I interpret them to mean the Catholic Church is concerned where the human "soul" came from. They are not caught up in a creationistic point of view and they appear to be quite accepting in many of the finer points in evolution.

    And, to go a step further, the Catholic Church, unlike some of the Evangalicals, does NOT believe in a literal interpretation of the bible.

  232. Creationist/Intelligent Design theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to be on the fence about evolution and creation, being scientifically-minded but also raised Christian. This site helped clarify a lot of the "gaps" I thought were in the creationist theory by providing scientific explanation to why ID is a credible theory in today's scientific and intellectual circles.

    http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/qa.asp

    Enjoy!

  233. I have the solution by totallygeek · · Score: 1
    All science text books should have the following sticker:


    Science is the gathering ideas through standard processes. Constant review changes science as we draw better conclusions to hypothese from the data gathered. Of course, there is always some asshat out there that will say all discoveries are the work of the devil.


    What kills me is that these people think all scientists and doctors working on new technologies are simply mislead and need to find their way to perform work to glorify their creator. This has always been the case, as churches in the past have been against things such as a heliocentric solar system, vaccination, organ donation, psychology, world exploration, ending slavery, etc. That is, they were against it until they were losing membership to accepted practice. These people will tell you that modern physics is a bunch of hooey and then use their cell phone to call the hospital to arrange their MRI. They think doctors are inferior to the laying-on of hands, but rush to get flu shots and cancer treatments.


    But hey, if intelligent design is going to be brought up, I think we should examine which idea is more intelligent...

    • a perfect creation goes awry and God is powerless to fix it unless a son is born to die and is expected to return to end the world all-together, and we were originally formed from clay and we were already wiped out by a flood so an old drunk and his family could cause 'evolution' of various races so there would be turmoil, just to find out that most souls are bound to arrive in a place where God is absent?
    • There were these Titans and then Zeus tricked one Titan into thinking he was eaten, but it was really just a big rock....thunderbolts...Hercules...etc
    • Xenu...blah...blah...blah...90 million years ago...blah...blah...blah
    • etc
    • etc

    There are just too many stories. No one provides more evidence than any other that one is better evident than any other.
    1. Re:I have the solution by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 1
      a perfect creation goes awry and God is powerless to fix it unless a son is born to die and is expected to return to end the world all-together,

      Powerless? Where does the Bible say he was powerless do fix the world any other way? He could have fixed it by simply wiping out everything corrupt, but out of love and a desire to show his mercy, he chose to do it by paying for our wrongdoing, so we wouldn't have to punished when he inevitably does remove all imperfection. The only sense in which he was powerless is that in order to save someone, the price for their wrong and God's anger about it had to paid. He was only'powerless' in the sense that being perfectly just, he had to punish wrong. It's 'powerlessness' in the same sense that a perfectly good God cannot do evil. It's not a lack of a bility, but rather an intrinsic impossability.

  234. Re:Yay! by bsgk · · Score: 0

    Being from Cobb County, I can only correct you by saying that it is LARGELY Protestant community. There are no Catholics in the South (exaggeration for emphasis). Know your demographics.

    Plus, you will never win your Evolution argument against a person who believes in intelligent design.

  235. MOD PARENT UP by linoleo · · Score: 1

    Yes, evolution is a theory. Gravity is a theory. The big bang is a theory. Intelligent design isn't a theory; it's a story. There's a difference.

    Who modded this "flamebait"? SnapShot's absolutely correct!

    Note that in science "theory" is a technical term with a specific meaning distinct from its everyday use. In fact "theory" is the most solid status any body of scientific knowledge can ever attain - much stronger than "law", for instance. And ID doesn't come anywhere near qualifying.

    --
    Be faithful to your obsessions. Identify them and be faithful to them, let them guide you like a sleepwalker. JG Ballard
  236. Creationism doesn't rule out Evolution! by n0dalus · · Score: 1

    I am a Christian, I believe in both Creationism and Evolution. I believe that Genesis is poetic and not supposed to be taken literally.

    Religion discusses who created the world and why, where science explains how and when it happened. I don't believe that the big-bang, evolution or other popular scientific theories rule out any of that, and I'm a scientist.

    A lot of Christians I know do not rule out these scientific theories either. I fail to see how this sticker is 'creationist'. The theory that the Earth revolves around the Sun is not a 'fact' either, since we have no way of proving that the Earth isn't the central pivot point of the entire universe.
    In hundreds of years time evolution may be dismissed for a more accurate model.

    Thinking that you can be more right than someone else is a philosophical misconception.

  237. May I remind people of a recent poll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many countries have you been too? Well, shouldn't the south count as a different country?

    The south is the reason for:
    1. The death penalty in the US.
    2. Creationism in school.
    3. GWB.
    4. People believing that if we didn't attack Iraq, that we'd be muslims by now.
    5. People that believe torture is ok.

    The US is not one giant single culture. I dont agree with that stuff, but it definately is different, and it's strongly related to where you live.

    1. Re:May I remind people of a recent poll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, True, but without the south, we would have much less to laugh at ourselves about in this country. I for one find christians and republicans very entertaining. I also find voles interesting, they have morals, just like those damn southerners... pretty strange how just one hormone and some idiot parents passing on their genes makes such a difference....

  238. Not the only Christian... by CaptainPinko · · Score: 1
    ...but probably only amongst a handful of creationists.

    I myself am a spiritual atheist so I hang out with a lot of religuous people-- people from many different religions. None of them are creationists. Some of the are pretty strict Christians (scares me actually) but they are still not creationists.

    Creationism is not a central tenet of Christianity, and hell, even a bishop who was guest speaking warned against robbing the Bible of it's value by taking it literally. To quote Gallileio (a seriously devoted Catholic):
    "The Bible tells us how to go to the heavens, not how the heavens go."

    Frankly, creationism needs to go the way of phlogiston

    --
    Your CPU is not doing anything else, at least do something.
  239. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is only problably because this is a highly catholic community and they dont want their chilren believing otherwise.

    Uh, I'm gonna go out on a limb and bet you didn't read the article (or if you did, you didn't pay attention to where it focused on) or you don't know much about US Geological Religion disbursement. However, as one who has called Cobb County, Georgia "home" in the past, particularly during High School, I'd like to happily point out that if anything Cobb County (and indeed, most of Georgia) is hard-core Southern Baptist.

    (/flame)
    By the way, evolution has no concrete proof other than natural selection theories and adaptation to environment. The flaw in evolution lies in what you probably consider proof: there are no fossil records supporting a direct link from us to our presumable ancestors, the simians. Too, I'll have to ask you why if evolution is the exact science, why are there still monkies around?

    Shouldn't they have evolved as well?

    Why don't dolphins have thumbs by now?

    Why can't rats talk yet?
    (/end_flame)

  240. Bummer by BlueFashoo · · Score: 1

    I guess I won't get to use all these stickers I made up anymore.

    http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/cpurrin1/textbo ok disclaimers/

    --
    Nice Marmot
  241. Re:Yay! by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What truth? That because we didn't use antibiotics wisely, we now have strains of infectious pathogens that are all but immune to most/all of these drugs?

    I suppose they didn't involve, rather God stepped in and created new superior bacteria as a punishment for heathen textbooks.

  242. It's a hypothesis, not a theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A hypothesis is what you think the outcome is. A theory is what you have proven the outcome to be.

    How can evolution be a theory when there's no real test to which it can be subjected using the scientific method?

  243. I'm an American... by br00tus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...but this kind of crap embarrasses me. There are a lot of small things that are wrong with the US, but this goes a little over the line and pops up as an indication of how far things have gone. I know a lot of people who moved to Atlanta and work at tech companies down there, and are raising their children there. I couldn't imagine having a child and sending him or her to a school controlled by the same kind of fanatics that run madrasas in third world countries. I read in Mississippi, 10% of students receive corporal punishment at least once a year. This is about as far removed from the kind of Deweyist, scientific education I'd want my children to have if I ever have children. I have a little bit of an in at getting an IT job in the EU (I can get dual citizenship and work in the EU if I want). If I could get all my ducks in a row I'd leave the US in a heartbeat. The US has been on a downward spiral since the late 1960's/early 1970's, especially in relative economic terms. Looking 20-30 years out, I don't think it's going to be the kind of place a white collar family would want to be (or a blue collar one for that matter, but they're stuck here). The best global students are switching from US to European universities, third world countries are switching from the dollar to the euro, and I have a feeling Europe is where a lot of the coming biotech boom will be as well. Hopefully I can accomplish the big move in the next few years.

    1. Re:I'm an American... by kherrick · · Score: 0, Troll

      I hope you drop your American citizenship on your way out... PEACE!

    2. Re:I'm an American... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I wouldn't be so fast to leave. It seems those Mississippi school children have a standard of living comparable to school children in Sweden.
      Two Swedish economists recently published a study that asks how European countries would fare if suddenly admitted into the American union. The results? If the UK, France, or Italy became U.S. states, they would rank as the fifth poorest of the fifty, ahead only of Arkansas, Montana, West Virginia, and Mississippi. The richest EU country--Ireland--would be the 13th poorest. Sweden would be the 6th poorest. In fact, the study found that 40% of all Swedish households would classify as low-income in the U.S.

      This means that poorer U.S. states enjoy affluence comparable to that of richer European states--Denmark is equivalent to Kentucky--whether measured in terms of home ownership, or number of microwaves and cars possessed. "Material prosperity," the authors write of the U.S., "is high and not associated with the material standard of living which many people in Europe probably associate with poverty. Good economic development, in other words, results in even poor people being relatively well off."

      By the 1880s, the U.S. had become the world's richest nation (measured in per capita GDP). In the 1990s, U.S. growth was twice that of Europe's, and three times that of Japan's. The U.S. per capita income is now 55% higher than the EU-15 average, and 50% higher than Japan's.

    3. Re:I'm an American... by killjoe · · Score: 0, Troll

      Nah keep your american citizenship. Leech off of those motherfuckers in jesusland like they leech off of the northeast and california.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    4. Re:I'm an American... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I started reading your post I thought it was going to be just another America-bashing slashdot post. But unlike most other complainers, you seem serious to leave and go someplace better. I cannot count how many times I have heard someone say "There are so many better countries in the world than the U.S.", to which I ask why they don't get the hell out. It is refreshing that you are actually going to try to find a better place for you and your family. Still, I have a few issues that I'd like you to clear up for me:

      but this goes a little over the line and pops up as an indication of how far things have gone.

      Some small group of parents lobbying to get stupid warning stickers on books, only to be overturned in court shows how far things have gone wrong in the U.S.? It's really THAT bad? Ruins the country? Was it not corrected, at least?

      I read in Mississippi, 10% of students receive corporal punishment at least once a year.

      You do realize that parents have to fill out and sign a form allowing the school to do such things, right? It's not like the administrators are some right-wing nuts that go around beating children freely (although they may be right-wing nuts). So you could rip the form up and piss on it while another set of parents might opt to allow the school to be heavy handed. On a side note: I'd be very surprised to hear that you've never seen at least one child that really really needed a smack on the rear.

      I have a little bit of an in at getting an IT job in the EU (I can get dual citizenship and work in the EU if I want). If I could get all my ducks in a row I'd leave the US in a heartbeat.

      This is where your post really gets interesting to me. Try to compare the EU to Texas, for example. Some people might move in to Texas and not be able to stand the way people think and act. Their ideals, their beliefs, their politics. Some others might go down to Texas and fit right in. The EU, in my opinion, is the same way. Some (more liberal minded) people might go to the EU and find it quite to their liking. But what of people who hate high taxes? Or really like their guns? The reason I am drawing this comparison is because your post seemed awful certain that the EU is 100% better than the U.S. in every imagineable way. What it really comes down to, though, is the individual person. If you love Europe, more power to you. But there are plenty of people who would hate it. So I think it's great that you'd move to a place that you like better, while others can stay in the place they like best. After all, if you move, it means there is more room for me.

      he US has been on a downward spiral since the late 1960's/early 1970's, especially in relative economic terms. Looking 20-30 years out, I don't think it's going to be the kind of place a white collar family would want to be (or a blue collar one for that matter, but they're stuck here).

      No blue collar or white collar families will want to stay in the U.S.? What families does that leave, just the top 1% of the moneymakers? I may be wrong, but I think that's quite an overstatement. People are not yet starving, dying of curable diseases, and such yet in the U.S. What I think you mean to say is that no blue or white collar families from a particular side of the spectrum will want to stay, namely the left side. But you must remember that if the country is getting really horrible for liberals, it might be getting really great for conservatives. I can sum up most of your post by saying: Politics of late have become more polarizing than ever, so the side not in power wants to leave. To which I honestly say, good riddance. But don't get me wrong, if it were the Dems that had power right now, I'd almost certainly be posting in your place.

      Hopefully I can accomplish the big move in the next few years.

      Well, bye.

    5. Re:I'm an American... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah keep your american citizenship. Leech off of those motherfuckers in jesusland like they leech off of the northeast and california.

      Oh yeah? Want to compare state budgets? California comes first, then Texas. Texas isn't in the northeast, is it now? So logically the northeast must be leeching off California and Texas. You liberals up north steal money from us Texans. Fucking leeches. And then you complain that Alabama and hte like are stealing money from you. So keep your fucking mouth shut about the northeast, until I see Rhode Island or some other worthless liberal state with a bigger budget (besides California). Really... there is nothing worse than a thief who gets angry when others steal from him.

    6. Re:I'm an American... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares about budgets? I am talking about being on the federal welfare. Texas and all the other states in jesusland are leeches. They get more from the federal "gubmit" then they pay out.

      I figure you all need that extra tax payer money cos your trailers keep getting knocked down by tornados.

      Now go back to killing niggers and fags and fucking your sister, bubba.

    7. Re:I'm an American... by version5 · · Score: 1
      Oh yeah? Want to compare state budgets? California comes first, then Texas. Texas isn't in the northeast, is it now? So logically the northeast must be leeching off California and Texas.

      So wait... you think that state budgets get all of their money from federal tax dollars? Hate to break it you, but it doesn't work that way. Sure, state budgets get some federal money. Let's look at some numbers...

      --

      "It's Dot Com!"

    8. Re:I'm an American... by TorKlingberg · · Score: 1

      Timbro is a propaganda organization strongly opposed to the current government of Sweden. They release all kinds of "studies" trying to look objective, but they really are not.

    9. Re:I'm an American... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a load of nonsense! Ireland richer than the UK, France, Italy or Sweden? What are they basing their figures on... the number of leprechauns per capita?

    10. Re:I'm an American... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Keep avoiding the subject.

      Every state gets federal dollars. Every state contributes to the federal coffers. The states that take more then they give are the leechers in jesusland. States like CA, NY, NJ etc give more to the federal govt then they take.

      The people of jesusland leech off of the people of the northeast and CA.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    11. Re:I'm an American... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The poster you replied to was supporting your claim.

    12. Re:I'm an American... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      No, the slashdot threading system is all fucked up.

      --
      evil is as evil does
  244. Connotative vs denotative by SonicSpike · · Score: 1

    Yes you are correct! And I think the parent was being a smartass by pitting those who are ignorant of the denotative concept of a "myth" vs those who are only familier with the connotative term. On the flip side I think people should be more educated about things before they get pissed off over something which turns out to be as trivial as semantics.

    I am a Christian but yes I agree and understand that all of the Hebrew Bible is mythological, same as Gilgamesh, Oddesy/Illiad, etc etc... Does that mean it's all true and factual? Dunno... "Fact" and "truth" before the 1400's were not thought of as a logical, rational, objective idea that they are in the 21st century. Back then there was moral truth, spiritual truth, factual truth, etc however I am not a humanities major.

    I took a humanities course once in Hebrew/LateRoman/Medieval humanities and I learned more about my own faith and beliefs in that secular college course than I did in years and years of Sunday school.

    --
    Libertas in infinitum
  245. God ~IS~ Provable by alucinor · · Score: 1

    Just drink a glass of "special" kool-aid, and you'll see. Seriously, though. God ~isn't~ provable because no one can agree on what "God" is. To the Evolutionist, God is Time, since by this theory, enough time can seemingly create anything. It's also worth mentioning that Nothingness has never been proven to exist, either. So this whole argument over origins (what came from Nothing?) might be a moot point anyway. Even though we can prove the absence of particular something(s), we cannot prove the absence of anything and everything. And a final point: science is the study of the natural world; it has no concern of the supernatural. So unless the natural world/universe is self-regurgitating, not the product of a super-nature, then science will never be able to prove our origins. But does proof have only to do with science? Are there other forms of objective proof besides scientific proof? In the future, could there be "supernatural science"? Fun ideas. For now, best stick with what we have, and try to love each other. After all, God is Love.

    --
    random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    1. Re:God ~IS~ Provable by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

      Amen.

    2. Re:God ~IS~ Provable by E-Rock-23 · · Score: 2, Funny

      God is Love.

      And Love is Blind.

      Therefore, god is Stevie Wonder.

      Thank you, I'm here all week, try the lambchops...

      --
      Blog Prophyts - Right On, Man
    3. Re:God ~IS~ Provable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bats are also blind, therefore if Jesus weighs the same as a bat, he is a black entertainer!!!

    4. Re:God ~IS~ Provable by wherrera · · Score: 1

      But love is not a valid theory, and has no place in the public schools :).

      Seriously though, if you read the wording, the court decision was based on a legal notion of political fairness, not on scientific facts. That is to say, the sticker was felt to _demean_ those who do not choose to believe in any conscious creative principle behind human origins.

      I think that evolution school K12 textbook controversies suffer from being a proxy for theism versus atheism debates. That is the real reason they become so heated--the actual facts are twisted by both sides of THAT debate. For example:

      atheist: we see bacteria evolve to become resistant to antibiotics. Therefore natural selection explains everything, and there is no God. (I don't think God exists, and I select facts to support my view.)

      theist: we cannot explain how the improbable complexities of life came to be. Therefore God exists. (I believe in a God and select facts to support my view.)

      It would seem reading through the above debates here that neither side is willing to retreat from their own absurdity, preferring to just point out the problems of the other. Both emperors have no clothes. :)

    5. Re:God ~IS~ Provable by alucinor · · Score: 1
      God probably both exists and doesn't exist, depending on your point of view.

      Really, God has no place in textbooks because how can anyone really learn anything about God in that manner? I believe God exists only because I've embraced a form of proof that cannot be quantified, that goes with my instincts. This kind of proof has no place in textbooks. While it's certainly not a personal truth, as many many people can affirm, trying to "teach" this kind of knowledge in the conventional sense is very ridiculous, and is self-defeating.

      Just a bunch of right-wing nonsense. And die-hard athiests who spend all the time ~not~ thinking about God (how silly) just get the fuel they need from this kind of stuff.

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    6. Re:God ~IS~ Provable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      atheist: we see bacteria evolve

      Actually, no one has ever seen one species evolve into another species. What you're mentioning here is adaptation, and just like the other non-example of the light- and dark-colored moths, it has nothing to do with evolution and may disappear when the environment that produced it changes.

  246. Thank Bob. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One day there was a man named Bob. Alone in the void Bob wanted to understand how he came to exist so he turned on the light to his workshop and began fiddling with the materials at his disposal. After some testing and hard work he created some small machines that worked like some of the parts of his body. Unfortunately they were far from being as complex as he was. So he worked some more and created smaller and smaller parts that worked together more and more efficiently.

    The machines were still no closer to being like him and got him no closer to understanding his own existence. In frustration he decided the only thing that could be done would be to observe. Maybe by observing he would see something that clued him in to his own creation. Maybe some greater higher power would intervene and in doing so show itself to him.

    So he watched the small machines slowly build into larger machines, which in turn partnered to create even larger more complex machines, and on and on until one day a significantly complex machine stood up and looked to the sky and said "Who am I and why am I here".

    So to help himself understand how he came to be he looked around at the sticks and the mud at his disposal and began fiddling. Maybe through creation he would understand how he, himself, came into being.

  247. Re:What about letting people make thier own decisi by saddino · · Score: 1

    You're right: evolution is a theory, but creationism is not because it is not derived from the scientific method. And thus, as you say, evolution and any other scientific theory explaining the origin of life should be taught. Creationism (which is an explanation that cannot be disproved by scientific method, but is only accepted on faith) cannot be taught.

  248. Deicide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bastard Of Christ

    Bastard of the cross relentlessly
    Strike fear preaching of his coming here
    Scriptures, twisted words to provocate
    Rapture from the lord your god so great
    BASTARDS OF CHRIST - DIE!!!!
    He fucked himself to save you - put to death, masochist
    For this his words berate truth - agonized, prophecized
    Revive the book of fiction - blasphemy, gluttony, to
    decieve you and me
    In battled disposition - hang the bitch on the cross
    Entitle his conviction - blasphemous, lunatic
    Your heart is full of hatred - BASTARDS DIE,
    FUCK YOUR CHRIST, WILL SURVIVE,
    KILL YOURSELF......DIE!!!!!!
    Bastard, for your god you compromise
    Do without, search the truth you'll never find
    Scriptures offer little to relate
    Laughter from the lord into your face
    BASTARDS OF CHRIST - DIE!!!!
    You think your god will save who - I will see,
    just believe
    You fool, not true, no thank you - enemy of the cross
    His word installs deception - pray to god, not for me,
    for yourself, soon you'll see
    You'll die for your religion - holy shit, pacifist
    Untrue with choices given - nothing won, you are dead
    Describe the holy vision - BLACKING OUT, FINAL BREATH,
    MEET WITH DEATH,
    NOTHINGNESS, DIE!!!!!!!!!!!!

    _\m/

  249. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1, Informative
    This is only problably because this is a highly catholic community and they dont want their chilren believing otherwise.

    The Pope endorses biological evolutionary theory. There are many Roman Catholic priests working within the Roman Catholic Church to advance evolutionary theory. I attended a public high school of 3000 students--mostly Roman Catholic--and the Catholics had no trouble at all accepting evolution. On what do you base your claim that opposition to evolution in the Atlanta community comes from Roman Catholics? It could just as likely be that they are the ones advocating evolutionary theory!

    I think that these stickers shouldent have even been put there in the first place.

    It might open young minds to more than mainstream dogma.

    First of all, evolution has been PROVEN to take place in some form or another, from bones and fossles

    Actually, bones and fossils cannot prove evolutionary theory, and, in fact, the theory of common descent (which is the actual center of debate) is a deduction made after the fact. It cannot be proven in the true sense of the word, and there are alternative explanations possible.

    and whick would you be more inclined to believe - A modern theory with -=*PROOF*=-

    You obviously don't know what the word, "proof" means. You are confusing evidence with proof. They are not the same thing. It is tragic that our public school systems allow lazy thinking like yours to pass through the system without challenge.

    or a child's story that dates back c. 2000 years ago?

    You should explain what you have in mind, because no one is arguing for a 2000 year-old child's story. Saying such things makes you look like an ignorant bigot.

    This is a subtle example of church INFLUENCING our government,

    There is nothing wrong with churches influencing government. Of course, atheists want us to believe otherwise. That is part of the culture war.

    and the stickers should have been made optional or "opt out"able.

    The stickers state simple fact; evolution is a theory. It would be closed-minded and unscientific to state that no other theories could be made, or should be heard.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  250. Inconsistency by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

    So they can force people to say "One nation under God" but they can't put a sticker on a textbook?

    1. Re:Inconsistency by innerweb · · Score: 1

      The wording of the stickers is fine in its very own context. However, legal issues are almost never in the context of a single statement, and a single statement is almost never (unless crafted as such) in the context of only itself, and as that is the case with these stickers, the judge's decision is correct. The context these stickers are within is the relative strengthening of a religion under government order by the targeted weakening of thinking that the leaders of this religious sect believe to be against their religion.

      The one nation under God bit was added by the same type of individuals that want creationism to replace evolution without due study and proof (no the Bible is not a source of proof, it is a Book.) The original writer of the pledge actually was against adding those lines to the pledge that he (a baptist minister) wrote. If you really want proof of Darwin's ideas, read up on fruit fly and mouse studies, using genetic modifications to produce new flies and mice that have new characteristics. If you think this kind of random mutation does not/can not happen in the wild, without an intelligent hand, go back to reading on genetics. The genome and its environment are very capable of producing and culling random and not so random modifications.

      The lines in the pledge and on currency actually are unconstitutional. Those who would make this country a fundamentalist christian nation, like the Holy Roman Empire, only care for the constitution as a means of taking over. They are as bad as fundamentalist muslim terrorists: see Inquisition, Crusades, Witch Hunts ... These people think the same way as the people who allowed these atrocities in Christs name through the Church to happen in the past two thousand years. They still lost to reality. They killed millions of people in the process and forced millions more to suffer horribly. True, as far as I know, theese people have not murdered, but as ignorance and *blind* faith increases, then the old ways return, as *blind* faith is the power of the old way (terror and violence).

      Ignorance of the masses and fear of a greater being has alwyas been a way to mold the masses into obedience. Christ tried to break the hold of these people, but they even perverted his message to continue their hold on the world. It is really a power struggle between people that want to control what you can do, say and become and a thinking that wants you to have the freedom to learn new things and grow in new ways. These are the same type of people who at one point had proclaimed things like the Earth is the center of the Universe, or the Earth is not round and you will fall off the edges. When confronted with scientific proof contrary to their fanaticism, they turned to murder and destruction to keep the *harmful* science away. It boils down to churches making claims that are outside the scope of the their realm in the names of (social) control, ie where you come from (pre-birth), why and how you (should) live and where you go when you die (or why you should live a certain way). Making statements outside of these areas has always proven inherintly dangerous for a church and set up future conflicts when the religion's position prooves to be wrong. Many times, people pay the price for these *mistakes* in blood.

      I would ignore these people, but they are making it very difficult for me to raise my children in the knowledge of God. They are the false prophets the Bible (and many other religions' bibles) warned us about. Always trying to ban ideas and knowledge, these people represent the most morally corrupt amongst us. Though they hold high many good things, and they know not what they do, they use these good things in the pursuit of decidely immoral ambitions.

      As has always been said, the best lies are laced with strong portions of truth. These people are masters of this, though in many cases they do not even know it themselves.

      InnerWeb

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
    2. Re:Inconsistency by Alsee · · Score: 1

      So they can force people to say "One nation under God"

      Actually I think that case get cut short on a technicality. I really hope someone picks it up again and takes it to resolution.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  251. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That depends on what you mean by "evolution". There are certainly evolutionary theories that are simply theories. The mechanisms of evolution, its characteristics, the predictions that can be made for the future -- all theory. On the other hand, "change and differentiation of species over time" is not a theory, it's a fact that we've observed and even caused countless times.

    This is similar to how General Relativity, or Newton's Theory of Gravity, are just theories. Yet gravity -- the attraction between masses -- is not a theory, it's a fact. The cause and nature of that attraction is what is theorized. Say Einstein's theory is just a theory, but don't tell me gravity is a theory when I can toss a ball into the air and watch it fall.

    The problem with the "evolution is just a theory" sticker is that while, on its face, it may seem to be a simple statement of scientific fact (that theories are always theories and can only be disproven) with a much broader and stronger statement -- that speciation itself is just a theory, and that an alternative "theory" is that every species was created as-is six or ten or whatever thousand years ago in one day by God.

    So when they say "evolution is just a theory", they're saying it because the existence of changes in species over time spans much longer than six thousand years contradicts their "theory". It's not enough that Punctuated Equilibrium be a falsifiable theory; the very idea that a species could over time develop into a different species must be false because a literal reading of Genesis implies it. The statement is based on religious dogma and is therefore a religious statement and therefore a violation of the First Ammendment.

    Other than that political reality, you're absolutely correct.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  252. Re:. What? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

    Can you site sources that prove that evolution is a fact?

    Sure. Evolution just means that species change over time. Since this has been observed to happen, evolution is a fact. There are a few competing theories that attempt to explain how this change happens, but no one disputes that it does.

  253. Re:Yay! by c1ay · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder why they need a sticker in the first place to decree that the theory of evolution is just that, a theory. It's not like it's taught as the law of evolution or something similar. Imagine if they applied this concept to math books. They'd have to bind the books with lots of extra blank pages just to hold all the stickers to reiterate that each theory is just a theory and not a fact.

    --

  254. Re:Never mentions GOD, Creation, Intelligent Desig by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

    I think you do have a point, but the implication is still there. I don't like the ACLU's handling on several issues, or how they twist words, but their opponents twist words too.

    Consider the political motivations of the people that placed the stickers there. The people that place that sticker there are trying desperately hard to push creationism as science and as a valid theory. I don't believe it is, as none of their claims I've seen present viable facts that back up those claims, thus it is not elevated to the scientific definition of theory. Another sticking issue for me is that the creationists I've met not only tend to focus solely on picking apart evolution and and modern cosmology, they use flawed reasoning, incorrect facts, and don't present a sufficient argument that creationism explains all the facts better. Where a typical scientist should be willing to hone and refine knowledge so that it fits with reality, creationists tend to try to sledgehammer the square peg of their knowledge to the round hole of reality.

  255. you have it backwards by Phil+Urich · · Score: 3, Funny

    it's "thank goodness I live in Canada ... where there aren't so many people so rabidly fundamental that they try anything, everything, even silly things like stickers to try to make children ignore evidence!"

    --
    I remember sigs. Oh, a simpler time!
  256. How could a statement of fact be unconstitutional? by n2rjt · · Score: 1

    Evolution is, indeed, a theory.
    It happens to be widely supported, but it is still a theory rather than a fact.
    It seems bizarre that the judge would consider the sticker an endorsement of religion, when a proper understanding of science is all it takes to know that Evolution is a theory. Geesh!

  257. Dogma by AyeRoxor! · · Score: 1

    This is just trading one dogma for another dogma.

    The sticker was factual but was "damned" by those in power because it is against their dogma.

    The Catholic church can tell you how that turns out.

  258. A little tidbit by dantheman82 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There was a poll on the MSNBC website:
    Do you agree that officially mandated textbook stickers labeling evolution as "a theory, not a fact" are unconstitutional?
    *45% - Yes, it violates separation of church and state.
    *11% - The stickers are a terrible idea, but they're not unconstitutional.
    *42% - The board was right to put the stickers in, and the judge was wrong to take them out.
    3% - None of the above.
    For what it's worth, it seems like the reading audience is fairly divided. Or someone had fun with a script and their cookies... ;)

    Some people believe Newton's physics theories still explain the physics in the universe (rather than Einstein's). Some people believe everything they read in science textbooks rather than questioning things...

    --
    This sig donated to Pater. Long live /.
    1. Re:A little tidbit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even? Clearly a majority believe the stickers should not have been placed. If you believe the 42% are correct, then we owe it to kids everywhere to put similar stickers in every textbook of every school in the USA. In that way, we can teach our kids that we're not sure of anything, and they can go through life saying, "doh" because they lack skills of critical thinking and being able to commit to something being probably true or probably false. Pretty soon, 1+1 will not equal 2.

    2. Re:A little tidbit by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      A little lesson:

      Truth isn't a popularity contest

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
  259. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    I'll have to ask you why if evolution is the exact science, why are there still monkies around?

    The monkeys are supposed to have evolved, too. The common ancestor of apes and humans was neither ape nor human. An alternative question you might ask would be, "If evolution is an exact science, why are evolutionists still making major changes to the human evolutionary tree?"

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  260. Yeah yeah. But was it a scratch'n sniff sticker? by momus_radar · · Score: 1

    And if so, what did it smell like?

  261. Creationism in a Cheap Tuxedo by ConsciousObjector · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The Intelligent Design is an attempt by pseudo experts to hijack legitimate scientific skepticism and use it to further a religious dogma. Do a search for I.D. and you'll find a bevy of fundamentalist evangelicals supporting research to find SOME way that the Christian Bible is more literally true than most give it credit for.


    The really sad thing is that religion and science are NOT antitheses of one another. Millions of Americans, and billions around the world, are able to reconcile the theories of evolution with the respective faiths.


    Interestingly, the Islamic fundamentalists, Christian fundamentalists, Jewish fundamentalists, etc., etc. can all agree on this one thing. That and that everyone else is wrong too.


    Ridiculously large numbers of people polled say that "The theory of evolution doesn't explain everything." as if that somehow discredits the entire theory. In order for a theory to be widely accepted, it only has to be the best holistic explanation for phenomenon. So while it might be altered or improved upon in the future, it should be done by legitimate scientists, not crackpot jokers with ties to the Flat Earth Society.

    1. Re:Creationism in a Cheap Tuxedo by alucinor · · Score: 1
      The book of Genesis, while saying that God created living creatures, also indicates that he created them indirectly, by telling the land to create creatures. Some have interpreted this as the Bible's endorsement of evolution.

      Gen. 1:24 And God said, "Let the land produce living creatures according to their kinds ..."

      Evolution is marvelous, anyway, and is shared by only two things in the universe: galaxies and life. Galaxies have been arranging themselves in ever-more complex configurations, and life has been doing the same -- both against the grain of every other physical phenomenon in the universe.

      It's also worth noting that evolution is driven by mutation, and mutation by radiation, which is light -- another connection between life and galaxies.

      What's my point? That "God" is light.

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    2. Re:Creationism in a Cheap Tuxedo by oneiron · · Score: 1

      Interesting... The scientific take on god being light... Been waiting for this one. Thanks.

    3. Re:Creationism in a Cheap Tuxedo by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      Here we go again, with the re-interpretation of this book called the bible. It seems religious people can twist, slant, and spin any sentence to fit whatever they wish it to be.

      Yeah sure god created the world in 7 days. "Well a day can be a wee, a month, or a million years".

      Well geeze pretty soon we'll be finding out that homosexuality and murder are indeed endorced by that book also.

      Nonsense.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    4. Re:Creationism in a Cheap Tuxedo by bentcd · · Score: 1

      There's no shortage of accepted murder in the bible. Of course, most of it is done by god so I suppose that makes it ok.

      But then, I never really could figure out why early Christians decided to hang on to so much of the old testament ...

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
  262. Evolution: both theory and fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with the sticker is that evolution is both a theory and a fact. When Newton's theory of gravity was replaced with Einstein's theory of gravity, apples did not suspend themselves in mid-air during the process. Gravity is a fact and a theory. The theory describes how gravity works and the fact is that it exists. Anyone who thinks a sticker that says "Gravity is a theory not a fact" is a good idea should go jump off the nearest building and do us all a favor. The belief "evolution is a theory not a fact" is the belief of an idiot. School is not the place to endorse idiotic beliefs. Church is.

    1. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly my point. There is nothing to prevent a theory from being a fact.

    2. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While at times a theory can become a fact, usually what is required is scientifically proven evidence to support a theory before it becomes a fact. To say there is nothing to prevent any theory from being fact abandons science and reason completely.

    3. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by ultranova · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Gravity is a fact and a theory.

      No. "Things fall down" is a fact - an observed phenomenon. "Things fall down because there's a force called gravity that causes an attractive force between any two masses" is a theory.

      As for the sticker, "evolution" means "species change over time". This has been observed, so it is a fact. "Theory of Evolution", on the other hand, says that "All species on Earth were born from a common ancestor through evolution", which may be true, partially true ("some, but not all, species developed from a common ancestor through evolution") or completely false. Therefore, it is not a fact.

      It should also be noted that one of the reasons that the Theory of Evolution gained so much support was simply a counterreaction to the centuries of oppression by religion and the then-fashionable atheism; scientists, being humans, aren't any more immune to letting fashion influence their thinking than anyone else. It was fashionable to deny the existence of God, and the authority of church, so any theory that would allow people to do so seemed inherently better than it's merits might have allowed.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    4. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by AVee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is indeed the important distiction. And altough it could have been phrased better, 'Theory of Evolution' is what the sticker refers to:
      "Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

      While it talk about evolution without making this distinction, it means to speak about the 'Theory of Evolution'. Now anyone who thinks it could have been clearer on that point is right, but i really don't see how it's intended to promote some religious point or to argue a fact.

    5. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by MrNiCeGUi · · Score: 1

      The fact that it specifically mentions evolution shows clearly that it was intended to promote a religious point. That is why it was declared unconstitutional. The degree of hypocrisy from religious people never ceases to amaze me.

    6. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Flaming+Foobar · · Score: 4, Insightful
      but i really don't see how it's intended to promote some religious point or to argue a fact.

      Then you must be stupid or blind.

      Why not drop evolution from the sticker completely. Just "This book should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered." It could be stamped on EVERY book. Including religious ones.

      --
      while true;do echo -e -n "\033[s\n\033[u\134_\033[B";done
    7. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by uohcicds · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'll second all of that.

      In addition I would say that, as a theory, it has stayed around so long because it explains observation better than any of the alternatives offered so far (my emphasis). That is the purpose of a theory; to construct a model of the world that we can use to explain what we observe. For example, light is neither a particle or a wave, it is something that can sometimes be modelled one way to describe its behaviour and sometimes the other. for each purpose, either model will explain the behaviour adequately. In a sense, it doesn't actually matter what it really is, merely that the model can describe and predict it. This echoes Richard Feynman, who once said something along those lines (I forget the exact quote).

      Theories are not foolproof and set in stone, which is precisely what positivists like Popper said about empirical science: nothing could be proved, only disproved, because the set of data for such things is infinite and there may always be some condition to disprove just around the corner. This is precisely how the Laws of Thermodynamics were presented to me in my first year of a Physics degree: a set of "laws" making up a theory about thermal energy that seems to hold up with the observational data we have so far.

      From Britain I look at the sticker and think, OK, have your sticker with the message written on it, just so long as those who don't think the same can put the following on bibles:

      The Bible is a story, not a collection of facts, regarding the origin of living things. The material was written by many people over hundreds of years in many different languages. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered.

      Somehow, I don't think the Creationist lobby will go for that though...

      --
      It's not you: I'm just this horrifically socially awkward with everybody.
    8. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by krosk · · Score: 1

      Hmmm I've got a problem with your thinking. First of all, gravity has been proven over and over again, every day life proves that gravity exists, there's no doubt about that. But evolution as the origin of all life today has not been proven. That is the root cause of these stickers. Evolution, to a certain extent, does exist. But only in limited amounts and mostly regarding small changes within a species. No species has EVER evolved into something different. There are no intermediate fossils. Many experiments that have claimed to have reproduced the start of evolution have since been discredited. Evolution is a theory, it has not been proven just as much as creationism has not been proven. Both are more of religions, they must be believed through faith.

    9. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nah the Bible should have:

      Disclaimer. The events and characters depicted within are fictitious and any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

    10. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by 75th+Trombone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When every student in a school district is required to have a Bible as a textbook, I will wholeheartedly agree.

      Until then, how dare you conflate required school textbooks with privately printed, published, and sold overtly religious texts? No one's asking to paste these stickers on all the evolution books at Barnes & Noble.

      (Full disclosure: I'm a Christian who believes in a four zillion-year-old universe, but who's aware that most of the evidence that Evolution (capital E) predicts should be found just isn't being.)

      --
      The United States of America: We do what we must because we can.
    11. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by 75th+Trombone · · Score: 1

      More disclosure because I like to walk on eggshells. I don't find Evolution to be threatening to my beliefs. So far as I'm concerned, the Bible says "God created stuff," while science says "Here's what it might've looked like when it happened." So I believe it's possible that macroevolution created the human body (although I think it probably required direct-from-God zapping to make us what we are, rather than just another animal). But, it's sorta like Einstein and quantum physics. He came up with this cool Theory, and the Theory predicted entanglement. Einstein said "That can't happen, my theory sucks," but lo and behold entanglement DOES happen. We've seen it. Whereas Evolution (capital E) says "Ah-ha, we rock, and here's how the fossil record is gonna prove it," but the fossil record really isn't doing such a bang-up job so far. THAT's what I look for in a "Theory." What does it PREDICT and how good are the predictions? Relativity stands up. Evolution, IMO, not so much. It's all just funny. Idiot arrogant Christians had the monopoly on genesis theory, then scientists got mad enough to say "Yer mom!" and now everyone's shouting their best come-back jokes at each other. I can't wait for the day when either Christians OR scientists care about truth or facts when it comes to this stuff.

      --
      The United States of America: We do what we must because we can.
    12. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by dcw3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      School is not the place to endorse idiotic beliefs. Church is.

      The parent's last comment should be labled flamebait.

      I was in full agreement until he had to go and add that last sentence. Just because you don't believe in something doesn't make it right for you to go slaming other peoples beliefs. I'm no church-goer, but I respect peoples rights to believe in what they want...as long as they'll respect mine, and not call me (or others) an idiot.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    13. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by pjt33 · · Score: 1
      The Bible is a story, not a collection of facts, regarding the origin of living things.
      Two chapters on the origin of living things. If you want to sum the subject matter of the Bible up, "regarding the dealings of God with man" would seem more apt.
      The material was written by many people over hundreds of years in many different languages.
      Many people, yes, but three languages (Hebrew, Aramaic and Koine Greek) isn't many.
    14. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it isn't. You're starting with the assumption that God exists. And follow up with the assumption that such a creature would have dealings with man.

      I propose therefor the following: "This is just another belief system, none of it necesarily true or True."

    15. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Sirch · · Score: 1

      Many people, yes, but three languages (Hebrew, Aramaic and Koine Greek) isn't many.

      That would be the "original" texts. Translation into other languages (English, Latin etc.) includes the possibility of not only errors in translation, but intentional corruptions of messages to suit the translator / commissioner.

    16. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but it follows the holy Open Source model of "many eyes viewing the source" making any bugs shallow or some such. If there ARE in fact errors in translation, or more importantly intentional corruptions, then don't you think they'd have been found by now by all the anti-religious zealots who spend their lives fighting any kind of religious teaching anywhere? But there haven't been any such claims made that I'm aware of.

      In the case of the Bible, the original texts do still exist, there are tons of copies all over the world, anyone who doubts the veracity of any of the translations is free to go back to the "source code" of the Bible and read it for themselves (of course the original didn't come with an MD5 hash or digital signature, so how do you verify it's genuine?). I'm not denying the possibility (nay, even probability) of such things, but if they were there, do you not think that in 2,000 years with all the skeptics in the world that they would not have been painfully brought to the attention of everyone everywhere?

      This is a little bit flamebait and I'm sorry for that but it's late and i'm irritable so please read this with a grain of salt and forgive me if this is more attack than food for thought, it's not intended as such.

    17. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by maniac1860 · · Score: 1

      Don't know if you were kidding, but I think this is actually a great idea. Put that kind of sticker on all books in school that deal with theories be they biology or literature. It might just lead people think about what they believe more often.

    18. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      Spoken like someone who studied evolution at Bible school.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    19. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by ratboy666 · · Score: 1

      The "Theory of Evolution" *DOES NOT* say "All species on Earth were born from a common ancestor through evolution".

      Ratboy

      --
      Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
    20. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 1
      Translation into other languages (English, Latin etc.) includes the possibility of not only errors in translation, but intentional corruptions of messages to suit the translator / commissioner.

      That is why the best translations are done from the original languages by large teams of experts in the languages, who check each other's work for accuracy. Additionally, a lot of theology students and scholars, Christian and otherwise, study Greek and or Hebrew so that they can read in the original language themselves.

      Because it didn't translate from the original language on every occasion and translation was poorer a few centuries ago, the King James Bible had various errors, but they are of little doctrinal consequence and are well known. Modern translations such as the NASB and ESV are pretty much as close as you can get to the original, while still being in English. Nevertheless, quite a few people have Greek or Hebrew Bibles, along with good lexicons and dictionaries. While I was a t university, quite a few Christians bought interlinear Greek Bibles and dictionaries to learn it themselves. Anyone getting ordained ends up studying Greek.

    21. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Things fall down because there's a force called gravity that causes an attractive force between any two masses" is a theory.

      Wrong. That's just a true statement, given the definitions of "force", "mass", "gravity", etc. Of course, if you look at the definitions, you'll notice certain circular references, of the type: "gravity is an attractive force between masses" and "the mass of an object is a measure of its gravitational effects", or "a force increases the acceleration of a mass" and "the mass of an object can be measured by the acceleration it experiences when subject to a known force."
    22. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by FiloEleven · · Score: 1
      In addition I would say that, as a theory, it has stayed around so long because it explains observation better than any of the alternatives offered so far (my emphasis).


      I think, since this is a comment written by you, stating that the emphasis added is indeed yours is a bit redundant. =)
    23. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "... which may be true ... Therefore, it is not a fact."

      What?

      If it only may be true, it might not be a fact. But if it may be true then it certainly might be a fact and the idiots who says it isn't are, well, idiots.

    24. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by 75th+Trombone · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, but most Christians I know would string me up for even intimating that Evolution isn't evil.

      I'm here saying that I believe in an old universe, believe science and my faith can coexist, and that in fact I actively think it's possible, and you're throwing me in the box with everyone else?

      People like you, sir, are half the problem. Any Christian who speaks on the subject is an idiot in your world. The other half of the problem is the Christians who spout "evil" and "Bible-contradicting" whenever the word "evolution" comes up in any context.

      I actually get madder at the Christians. The Bible says God created Adam from the dust; heck, that SOUNDS like Evolution, and I don't even really think Evolution happened. (I also don't think Genesis 1 and 2 are a scientific paper.)

      But yeah, yeah I'm just another wacko Christian who learned about evil Evolution from other wackos on Sunday morning. Mmhmm.

      --
      The United States of America: We do what we must because we can.
    25. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by DShard · · Score: 1

      english, spanish, german, french, hindi, japanese and every other major language man reads and speaks. These are all translated and modified to suit the langauge and sect of the christian. I.E. The king james is different in a substantive way then the catholic canon. As these are also different in different langauges and _all_ have changed with time because _language_ mutates and adapts as does the bible.

    26. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Don't look at the fossil record, look at genomics. Evolution predicts that every living being ultimately has the same ancestor. More related animals have a more recent ancestor. Thus it predicts that the carrier of heritage should show similarities between species. This was stated long before this carrier, DNA, was discovered. Now looking at DNA we see that absurdly high percentages of the DNA are common in living (and fossilized) animals. As predicted. This DNA creates proteins and we see that although proteins in different animals are structurally slightly different, they still are functionally equivalent. Again predicted, but now through the neutral theory of evolution (in 1969, before efficient protein sequencers were available). Now drugs are being developed on the basis of similarity of function of different proteins. Without Evolutionary Theory there would not be a point in trying to use a protein from a chicken to test a drug for a human body. This can be done and all ultimately because of the predictive power of Evolutionary Theory.

    27. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      People like you, sir, are half the problem. Any Christian who speaks on the subject is an idiot in your world.

      You're not an idiot on the topic because you're christian. You're an idiot on the topic because you say idiotic things like...

      Whereas Evolution (capital E) says "Ah-ha, we rock, and here's how the fossil record is gonna prove it," but the fossil record really isn't doing such a bang-up job so far

      This is typical Creationist bullshit; they figure that because they have to make stuff up and selectively ignore facts, scientists must be doing it too. Well gee whiz, they aren't.

      Idiot arrogant Christians had the monopoly on genesis theory

      You are an idiot on the topic because you actually referred to Genesis as a theory. It's not. It's not even close. It's not even a hypothesis. It's a mythology, and a pretty lousy one at that.

      then scientists got mad enough to say "Yer mom!" and now everyone's shouting their best come-back jokes at each other

      You are an idiot on the topic because you know absolutely nothing about how scientists work and just how brutal they are to each other about veracity and evidence. You assume that because your Christian friends have nothing better than insults and death threats, scientists must not either. Half an hour on, say, talkorigins.org pretty much debunks every statement you uttered.

      I don't even really think Evolution happened

      Thank you for sharing your wisdom with the rest of us. Unfortunately, "I think" all by itself doesn't cut it in any scientific field I know of, so we'll leave your wholly unsupported opinions outside the door where they belong.

      I'm just another wacko Christian who learned about evil Evolution from other wackos on Sunday morning

      Well you certainly bear all the trademark characteristics of one: 1) continually makes claims that have been debunked for decades and on this very forum; 2) considers faith to be as important, if not moreso, to knowledge as evidence; 3) misuses scientific language in an attempt to give their beliefs legitimacy; 4) demonstrates a considerable ignorance of the current state and practical applications of evolutionary theory; 5) makes laughable attempts to rationalize 3000 year-old fairy tales to match available evidence; and 6) suggests that scientists have no motives beyond stealing god's thunder by any means necessary. It was, IMHO, a fairly reasonable deduction. If I was wrong, and you actually had a high school biology teacher who didn't spout scripture all year, then I do apologize for that mistake. But my assessment about you being an idiot when it comes to evolution still stands.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    28. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      From Britain I look at the sticker and think, OK, have your sticker with the message written on it, just so long as those who don't think the same can put the following on bibles:

      The Bible is a story, not a collection of facts, regarding the origin of living things. The material was written by many people over hundreds of years in many different languages. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered.

      Somehow, I don't think the Creationist lobby will go for that though...


      The problem is, I pay (through my taxes) for the textbook. You didn't send me a single penny to help pay for my Bible. Now you can put any sticker you want on YOUR Bible, just as I should have a say in what goes on the books I help pay for.

      That said, the a sticker is a little silly. A court case surrounding it is a circus.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    29. Re: Evolution: both theory and fact by gidds · · Score: 1
      Excuse me, but most Christians I know would string me up for even intimating that Evolution isn't evil.

      That's a sad comment. Most Christians I know take a very different view (and I include myself in that).

      --

      Ceterum censeo subscriptionem esse delendam.

    30. Re:Evolution: both theory and fact by vanners · · Score: 1

      I am a church goer and I forgive him for his lapse in judgement - I just hope it doesn't continue so long he loses his job over it. ;)

  263. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1

    Then let loose the dogs of war! We will fight to the last man.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  264. Re:Yay! by Kleedrac2 · · Score: 1

    Didn't realize this was such an inflammitory remark, but all right. There is evidence of minor evolution, yes. There is no evidence that evolution is responsible for the life we see around us. There is also no evidence for creationism, but it is foolhardy to declare evolution the truth and tell students that everything else is wrong. The sticker said nothing of creation at all but told students to keep an open mind!! That's not bad advice and maybe you two guys could take it as well :)

    Kleedrac

    --
    Sure we wang, can.
  265. Wrong Perspective by Aguila · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I must disagree with the parent's statement that religion and science are the antithesis of each other. I do wholeheartedly agree that religion and science are not the same, however, I do not believe that they are opposites, or must be opposed to each other. If they were, I'd have a major problem, because I am both a professional scientist, and a devout Catholic.

    In order to observe how science and religion are not opposed to each other, let me rename science and religion. I will call science the search for the truth about the universe. I will call religion the search for truth about creation, and worship of the Creator. (I admit that the way I phrased my definition of religion does not include all religions, as it should to be a proper defintition, but I don't know how to phrase it to be inclusive yet still specific.) I suspect that most people will agree that these definitions, while not perfect, are reasonable descriptions of what science and religion should be. Looking at these definitions, we see that science is compatible with religion. The universe is part of creation, and hence science is one part of the quest for Truth. (It can, perhaps, be argued that science can exist independant of religion, from the above definitions, but clearly they need not be opposed to each other.)

    Some may be inclined to counter this argument by expanding upon the parent's claim that "Religion demands adherence without proof," perhaps by providing examples. However, that still is not the true opposite of the statement that "Science demands adherence only with proof." For religion to be the true antithesis of the parent's definition of science, religion would demand adherence only with DISproof. You may be able to find religions that have tenets of their faith that have been disproved. I can also provide you evidence of improper science (cold fusion, ...). This merely shows that there is nonideal religion and nonideal science.

    Ideally, science and religion are not only compatible, but are both aspects of the search for Truth. While faith is an important part of religion, reason should be as well. Scientific inquiries will have a slightly different focus than religious inquiries, and should not accept certain sources (such as the bible or sacred Tradition) as proof. That is not a problem, as science is not religion. Nor, since religion is not science should it matter if religion has different standards for acceptance of a fact. As long as religion does not hold beliefs directly contrary to scientifically proven fact, the two remain compatible. For this reason, I can state, without compromising my integrity as a scientist or a Catholic, that I believe that God created evolution and man.

    1. Re:Wrong Perspective by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Kids believe in the tooth fairy, easter bunny, santa claus, etc. They (along with the help of grownups who foster these beliefs...) believe them to be "facts", and most are crushed when they learn the "truth" about them eventually.

      "Religion demands adherence without proof"? Until we have another "Lazarus", it could be said that there is no proof in "life after death", and strict adherence to this is...well...

      Religion is used to deny truth. Tell me again why a woman cannot be a Catholic priest, or why confession needs to be told to a priest.

    2. Re:Wrong Perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm glad someone said this. I think science and religion are two different ways of looking at the same thing. One is rather more abstract than the other, though which that is I'm sure could be argued either way...

  266. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    It's not like it's taught as the law of evolution or something similar.

    Yes, it is. The common formula is to proclaim that evolution is both a theory and a fact. Even without that formula, evolutionists commonly reject alternate theories of biological origins, even though no one has ever been able to explain or demonstrate how natural processes could have produced our modern biosphere without external design.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  267. Re:Yay! by Mattcelt · · Score: 1

    You obviously don't know what the word, "proof" means. You are confusing evidence with proof. They are not the same thing. It is tragic that our public school systems allow lazy thinking like yours to pass through the system without challenge.

    The ironic thing is that these stickers might have actually encouraged some of these kids to be less lazy in their thinking. To bad they didn't have them when "fossle" guy was in school.

    <sigh>

  268. Re:Yay! by Kleedrac2 · · Score: 1

    Sorry ... I also meant to add that the truth that was being made unconstitutional was that evolution is still a theory ... last time I checked it still is a theory :)

    Kleedrac

    --
    Sure we wang, can.
  269. I wonder by MrLint · · Score: 4, Interesting

    if the bibles in Cobb county have stickers advising people to consider other belief systems?

    1. Re:I wonder by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course not... you think these people are out to be fair?

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    2. Re:I wonder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would hope that any bible being used in the public school system would have just such a sticker.

  270. ACLU wins case on its idea of 'intended meaning'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The ACLU getting a statement removed from a textbook based in its interpertation of what the stiicker may lead the reader to think is completely wrong and should be overturned.

    I hate to see this type of ruling because it will allow future rulings to be based on not offending anyone instead of facts and logic.

  271. Re:Yay! by some+damn+guy · · Score: 1

    You don't see the problem in that? You don't see "The theory of gravity is a theory, not a fact" on physics textbooks, do you? Should there be a warning label on my number theory textbook? Why are people so worried if terrorists get a nuclear weapon- atomic theory is just a theory, right?

    The labels are wrong because they abuse the word theory. Most non-scientists use the word theory to imply something that hasn't been proven. The word theory as it is used in the scientific community is actually very neutral as to the amount of supporting evidence. Think theory = explaination.

    This label misleads people into thinking that there isn't a great deal of scientific evidence that supports evolution, which there is. There is so much in support, and so little against it that saying that evolution is not a fact, without qualification, is out and out deceitful.

    Saying that it is possible that evolution is not correct, is a true statement, and if the sticker had said that it would have been at least factually correct, but it didn't. The way it was written was just shameful.

  272. Democracy in its prime... by niXcamiC · · Score: 0
    Lets see here, 2000 for, 6 against, 6 definantly wins.

    Evolution is just as much a religion as anything else, it has finatics, that will shout out its truth in the face of facts stating that its wrong, and its being pushed as absolute truth, often with its teachers hiding its flaws and preaching on its fiew semi-provable points. If that doesnt scream religion to you, I dont know what does.

    That and it wasnt even a religios sticker, next thing you know youll be sent to jail for not beliving every crap-filled hole-ridden theory that the goverment dicides to adopt.

    --
    Chances are any disscution on Slashdot will degrade into a flamewar about ID/Christianity within 14 posts.
  273. This is written for those of you who can't READ. by absolutes · · Score: 1

    "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered." DID ANYONE ELSE SEE THE PART WHERE IT SAYS "REGARDING THE ORIGIN OF LIVING THINGS."? Anyone who says that the putative 'first cell' arose by random chance in the 'primordial soup,' and that we know this through observation, or good scientific inquiry, is probably the biggest idiot to ever grace these forums. Failed Stanley-Urey experiments anyone? Does anyone realize that fundamentally the statement "we arose by blind natural causes" is NOT scientific but religious in form? I wouldn't want my kids being taught a philosophical or religious position, especially when the science behind it is complete junk.

  274. Only in the States by Whiteout · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... could such an issue arise. I'm sympathetic, my left-wing intellectual American friends, but the world is laughing at you just a little bit harder.

    1. Re:Only in the States by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh? Australian villagers are running around chopping eachothers heads off for practicing black magic and you're laughing at the U.S.?

    2. Re:Only in the States by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As part of that world I'm laughing at the idiocy of the right-wing that wanted those stickers to begin with. So solid in their faith that they fear alternative viewpoints.

  275. Re:Yay! by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

    I completely agree that this is a culture war. And in this case, I quite strongly side with the ACLU. What business does God have in any other class than a religious class? Do you not believe in the seperation of church and state? Parents can give their children all the religious education they want, or even send them to an outright religious school. But what is taught in public schools needs to be as bias-free as possible, no matter how widely accepted or (in the eyes of very many) very important those religious teachings may indeed be.

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  276. That is incorrect. by lysium · · Score: 1
    You call atheism a lack of religion, but that is actually agnosticism. Atheists firmly believe that Dieties do not exist, and since their faith cannot be proven or disproven it is, by definition, a religion.

    --
    Together, we will drive the rats from the tundra.
    1. Re:That is incorrect. by Blind+Joe+Death · · Score: 1

      In the future, when you feel the need to assert that something is true "by definition," could you please at least look up the definition? Just this one time, I did it for you, to save you the effort, but next time you're on your own.

      • Belief in something sacred (for example, gods or other supernatural beings).
      • A distinction between sacred and profane objects.
      • Ritual acts focused on sacred objects.
      • A moral code believed to have a sacred or supernatural basis.
      • Characteristically religious feelings (awe, sense of mystery, sense of guilt, adoration), which tend to be aroused in the presence of sacred objects and during the practice of ritual.
      • Prayer and other forms of communication with the supernatural.
      • A world view, or a general picture of the world as a whole and the place of the individual therein. This picture contains some specification of an over-all purpose or point of the world and an indication of how the individual fits into it.
      • A more or less total organization of one's life based on the world view.
      • A social group bound together by the above.
      Source: Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    2. Re:That is incorrect. by lysium · · Score: 1

      ...and you can't see how those qualifications are met by atheists? Better go talk to the google monkey again, he'll tell you more.

      --
      Together, we will drive the rats from the tundra.
  277. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    On the other hand, "change and differentiation of species over time" is not a theory, it's a fact that we've observed and even caused countless times.

    The theory of common descent has not been observed, at least by humans, as that would have required (at the least) humans to pre-exist themselves. That species change over time is not contested by most Creationists. It is, rather, the theory that our modern biosphere is the result of natural processes differentiating a common ancestor.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  278. Backwards logic by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

    I think you're missing the GP's point. He is saying that given:

    A) Organisms are expressions of their genes.
    B) Genes are inherited.
    and C) Genes mutate.

    That it must logically follow D) Evolution work. In order to claim "evolution doesn't work", then either A, B, or C must be false.

    Let me give you a simpler, abstract example:

    X) All 'foos' are also 'bars'.
    Y) I am a 'foo'.

    It logically follows then that:
    Z) I am also a 'bar'.

    If you want to dispute that I am a 'bar', then you must disagree either with X (me being a 'foo'), or with Y (all 'foos' being 'bars'). But if you accept both X and Y, the Z has to be true.

    That said, the GP's logic was missing a step:

    L) Organisms follow their genes.
    M) Genes are inherited.
    N) Genes mutate.
    O) Beneficial mutations increase survival.

    Therefore,
    P) Some organisms who inherited beneficial mutations will out-survive other organisms who didn't.

    That is called evolution. If you disagree with it, then either L, M, N, or O must be false.

    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    1. Re:Backwards logic by DarkSarin · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it doesn't necessitate the belief in Macro Evolution, or the development of humans from single-celled organisms or amino acids over billions of years.

      There is no "logic" that requires that step in belief. Many people believe it, but it doesn't make it so, and I think that is the crux of the argument.

      The stickers in question are both true (in the sense that evolution is a theory), and misleading (disclaimer: I am a devout Christian). Evolution, as described in the LMNO (and even P) scenario above, occurs as nearly as we can tell. There are many data points and data sets that seem to confirm this, and I believe that the preponderance of data is in favor of micro-evolution.

      There is nothing, however, in that theory that *requires* macro-evolution to be the method by which sentient life arrived on this earth. Natural selection (as a concept of survival of the fittest) doesn't even require macro evolution.

      The sticker, as worded, is technically true--evolution is a THEORY, not a fact. But that only sounds bad if you don't like theories, and don't like dealing with probability. Theories are systems or mechanisms that describe a process. Many theories are well known, and used to good effect (gravity, relativity, etc), and very few credible folks take umbrage over them being called theories (Theory of General Relativity).

      Evolution, however, is a sticky thing, and I'm not sure why some scientists take umbrage over it being called a theory, when that's exactly what it is. If you don't like that, figure out a way to unequivocally prove it (and good luck). You'll quickly find that even the most carefully controlled experiment shows some slight variation, and someone will take issue with that.

      Does evolution need to be a "fact" before it is taught in schools? No. But I think that young children should be taught more important things, such as logic, reasoning, math (calculus, algebra, statistics), and reading/writing long before the sciences are presented, so that when such things as the theory of evolution are presented, or relativity for that matter, they can actually evaluate them properly, and understand what the real relations between laws, data (facts), and theories are.

      As for this sticker being unconstitutional, I disagree. It is perhaps unwise, but it encourages a skeptical approach to evolution. This is a good thing, since it is unwise to accept any theory, or assertion at face value. Even religion (remember, I am a devout Christian who believes that the earth was created (although organized is a better word) in 7 periods, including a single period for rest) should be evaluated carefully.

      This whole debate about proof of macro-evolution is rather silly, however. It only matters if you think that proof of macro-evolution would disprove the existence of God, and that it is important to you to prove that. Since I don't think that proof of macro E would disprove God's existence (talking about my personal beliefs now, not what you may believe), then macro is a non-issue.

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    2. Re:Backwards logic by Alsee · · Score: 1

      As for this sticker being unconstitutional, I disagree. It is perhaps unwise, but it encourages a skeptical approach to evolution.

      Can you think of any constitutional purpose to impose such a regulation targeted strictly at evolution? If not then this regulation fails.

      it is unwise to accept any theory, or assertion at face value.

      Sure. And had they mandated such stickers covering all fields of science then the evolution sticker in conjuction with the hundred other stickers would have been perfectly legal. Attempting to improve science education is a perfectly valid and constitutional purpose (even if that particular approach would be quite lousy).

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    3. Re:Backwards logic by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      This whole debate about proof of macro-evolution is rather silly, however. It only matters if you think that proof of macro-evolution would disprove the existence of God, and that it is important to you to prove that. Since I don't think that proof of macro E would disprove God's existence (talking about my personal beliefs now, not what you may believe), then macro is a non-issue.

      Of course macroevolution being true would not disprove God. It is not logically possible to disprove God's existence, and that is why God is not a matter of science - it's not falsifiable. Anything science can come up with, one can claim "God made it work that way". It doesn't add anything useful to the theory, and since most true scientists try to rest their theories on as few axioms as possible, they don't consider whether or not God had anything to do with their theories unless there is some evidence to suggest that he did.

      Now, if archaeologists discovered some walled-in garden in the middle of Iraq, blocked from the east by a giant flaming sword, that might be reason to start considering whether certain ancient texts mentioning such things might have some contribution to the theories proposed about it. But unless you've found something like that, there's no need to suppose God had anything to do with anything - but if it makes you feel better to take whatever science and add "because God said so", go right ahead.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    4. Re:Backwards logic by DarkSarin · · Score: 1

      I understand the premise of science and falsifiability as well as the next person, and that's why I think the whole debate is silly. But I hear atheists and others saying that xyz scientific discovery proves there is no God, and I think about how foolish they are.

      You are absolutely correct--I can't prove/disprove God, and as a devout believer, I have one perspective on why that is, and those who are not believers have another. I am okay with that. It makes me sad, at times, because of my belief of what will happen to those who refuse to believe, but generally I find that my belief makes me happier and gives my comfort. I think it makes me a better person.

      Fortunately, I am not trying to prove the truth of my position to the world, but rather, I am trying to prove the worth of my beliefs by showing that they make me more tolerant, more free, more accepting and more interesting to be around.

      By nature, I am not a very accepting person, but I find that my religion, and the God that I worship, wants me to be more accepting of others and their viewpoints, so I try.

      But I'm rambling. I guess my whole point is that they reasons that you point out is what makes the whole religion vs. science debate rather silly. Hugh Nibley, who taught ancient (Middle Eastern and Egyptian) history at BYU for many years was once asked if religion and history conflict. His answer was in two parts: first, whose religion and whose history--if both were perfectly accurate, there would be no discrepancies; second, why does it matter? There is no need for the debate in many ways.

      From a man who spent many hours researching historical proofs of the Book of Mormon, this is an interesting tidbit. The point is that the whole debate is academic, and when it comes down to it, the point of religion is to make people better.

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
  279. Creationism vs Evolution by E-Rock-23 · · Score: 1

    Wanna get technical? They're BOTH theories. One is based purely on faith and one book that says it's the way to go. The other has a little more scientific basis to go on, such as the Galapogos Islands.

    Personally, I think Creationism is a bunch of crap...

    --
    Blog Prophyts - Right On, Man
    1. Re:Creationism vs Evolution by DannyiMac · · Score: 1

      To add to that, there are more theories other than Creationism and Evolution. Evolution isn't the only scientifically supported theory.

      --
      - Danny
  280. theist axiom vs. fallibility by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1
    I'm glad you brought that up. You're right, Creationism is not a hypothesis, it's an assumption. An axiom in religious peoples' system of reasoning. This is why it cannot be disproven: it is not based on something else. Or is it? In terms of developmental psychology, it seems as though this assumption is fundamentally rooted in fear and respect for trusted authorities such as one's parents. That's how we've always done it. Indoctrination.

    The scientific method, on the other hand, presupposes a different cardinal axiom: fallibility, the assumption that there are things that you do not know. Not necessarily that they are unknowable, but that you do not know them. This is why, thus far, there have been no scientific arguments for the credibility of the theist axiom: most such attempts rely on the implication "I do not know X ==> not X holds," which is not sound reasoning if you assume there are things which you do not know (this is sometimes termed a false dichotomy).

    An earlier poster essentially said that they don't know how the Grand Canyon could have formed such steep walls over the course of millions of years, hence it must instead have been formed much more quickly. But no evidence was presented that these are the only possibilities. Moreover, in the strictest sense, there is no evidence for the veracity of history -- maybe we just suddenly appeared with fabricated (but mostly consistent) memories and all? Thus perhaps instead we should look at the motives for making a particular claim. The Grand Canyon poster made his claim in order to assert a particular worldview which affirms his theist axiom. I choose not to accept this claim not because I think it is false, but because I see no benefit in accepting it nor penalty in rejecting it, but a potential for the opposite if later evidence contradicts the claim. Science isn't about finding objective truth, as, assuming our own fallibility, that is too grand a claim. Science is about making useful explanations -- useful in that they allow us to make predictions which are consistent with further observations. Religious explanations are useful, too, but for a different reason -- they make people feel good. Are the correct? I don't know. The most I could judge is whether they are consistent with my perception of my experiences.

  281. Re:Yeah yeah. But was it a scratch'n sniff sticker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pussy. Thats really a large part of re-production, evolution, creation, etc....

    Plus it smells good.... at least the high school text-book ones....

  282. *groan* by REDSECTOR1 · · Score: 1


    Debating such things just seems to be so depressing and unresolvable. Do something constructive would ya people? In the end no one has the answers, so just accept it. Live life and enjoy it, it's pretty short you know? Make the best of what you've got.

    What's the worst thing that could happen? I guess you could end up in hell and have regrets for eternity, or you might come back as a fly spending your day chillin' out on a piece of horse poo ... or you'll just cease to exist, never having any recollection of your previous existance.

    Good times! =/

  283. And the controversy contiues by redsilo · · Score: 1

    I will say up front that I beleive God created everything. That said I do not believe that evolution excludes creation. The problem with all the fuss between creationists and evolutionist is that it is the work of the Devil: It pits perfectly good Christians against each other in a dispute with no end. And even in the painfully secular Slashdot the controversy continues.

    1. Re:And the controversy contiues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that, sir, is a theory, not a fact.

    2. Re:And the controversy contiues by tloh · · Score: 1

      The Devil dwells only in the growing dark corners of our heart when we loose the courage to pursue enlightenment. Be curious, ask questions, seek knowledge, for the truth shall set you free! We now return you to your normal secular discussion.

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
  284. "In the first place God made idiots. by myth_of_sisyphus · · Score: 1

    This was for practice. Then he made School Boards." --Mark Twain

  285. Re:Yay! by bluekanoodle · · Score: 0, Troll
    From a purely scientific standpoint, many of the teachings of evolution as put forth in High school and even college textbooks, use evidence and theories that have been discredited by the scientific community.

    The fact that many "experiments" that tend to reinforce evolution has been shown to have disproved are still being taught to naive students is enough reason alone to put these stickers on the textbooks.

  286. Re:Yay! by kjamez · · Score: 1

    no one could have complained if it said 'both creation and evolution are possible answers to the unanswered question of our existance'. but it was bias, so the other extreme whined.

    --
    you can't have everything, where would you put it?
  287. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    What business does God have in any other class than a religious class?

    It is impossible to understand our system of laws and human rights without understanding our Judeo-Christian foundation.

    Do you not believe in the seperation of church and state?

    I believe the only seperation the Founding Fathers intended was freedom of individuals to express their religious beliefs, not the extermination of religious beliefs from the public domain.

    Parents can give their children all the religious education they want, or even send them to an outright religious school. But what is taught in public schools needs to be as bias-free as possible, no matter how widely accepted or (in the eyes of very many) very important those religious teachings may indeed be.

    That would be an argument for the elimination of the public school system.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  288. That's ok as long as I can add my sticker... by disntrstd · · Score: 0

    Religion is bullshit, not a theory.

  289. electromagnetism is also a theory. by ydra2 · · Score: 1

    They ought to have a sticker saying "electromagnetism is a theory not a fact" too. Oh wait, then they might have to stop electrocuting prisoners.

    1. Re:electromagnetism is also a theory. by be-fan · · Score: 1

      Or gravity :) Interestingly enough, man sent a spaceship to the moon using knowledge that was only theory and not fact, and quantum mechanics (again, a theory not a fact), enabled the creation of the multi-billion dollar computer industry.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  290. Re:How could a statement of fact be unconstitution by Frennzy · · Score: 1

    Because it's a theory. It's called the 'Theory of Evolution'. Redundantly emphasizing that fact serves to discredit it, and no matter how you slice it, the sticker was put into the book by those of a religious bent, with an agenda. That agenda is to discredit the Theory of Evolution, in order to minimize questions about the apparent discord between evolution and creationism.

    Because the school is a state run institution, they have a mandate not to endorse any particular religious institution. This sticker was deemd to be such an endorsement (rightly so, in my opinion...but that's my opinion). Thus, it's unconstitutional.

  291. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Make no mistake about it; there is a cultural war, and the ACLU, the scientific community and the debate over evolution is being used in an attempt to exterminate Christianity in public life.

    Don't be moronic. Yes, the ACLU has gone too far in enforcing separation of Church and State by hindering individual and consensual religious expression. No, the scientific community and the debate over evolution do not have anything whatsoever to do with exterminating Christianity. Sure, a lot of scientists are not Christian, but many are.

    The only reason evolution and the scientific community can be considered enemies of Christianity is because certain subsets of Christianity insist on promoting a dogmatic view of the world that contradicts basic facts. It's a silly as calling Galileo an enemy of God, when really he was only an enemy of the Church because he contradicted their dogma and thus undermined their secular authority. In reality the Church was simply wrong, not to mention hubristic in assuming that earth was the center of the universe.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  292. oh man I gotta respond to this one... by SilverStreak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    what makes you think God should save innocent people from dying?

    1. Re:oh man I gotta respond to this one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to the Protestant Archbishop of Sydney, Australia, this was actually God's retribution on non-Christians.
      (http://www.crikey.com.au/columni sts/2005/01/06-00 01.html)

      Do you claim to know more about God's will than an ordained Archbishop?

    2. Re:oh man I gotta respond to this one... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      If he said that, then yep.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  293. Re:Yay! by llamaluvr · · Score: 1

    My biology teacher in high school told us that it was a fact.

    Gosh, if the teachers aren't going to make it clear what separates scientific fact and theory, SOMEBODY has to...

    --
    Insightful: 76, Off-Topic: 379, Flamebait: 24, Funny: 152, Interesting: 201, Underrated: 55, Troll: 9, Total: 896
  294. Re:Yay! by schmink182 · · Score: 1

    The stickers state simple fact; evolution is a theory. It would be closed-minded and unscientific to state that no other theories could be made, or should be heard.
    While it is certainly true that evolution is a theory, introducing a topic with a statement pretty much saying "everything I'm going to present might be wrong" -- which I claim this is equivalent to -- is not a way to get students to think they are learning something important. This is like putting a sticker on a math book saying "1+1=2 is only true according to some beliefs. Proceed with caution."

  295. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... no one has ever been able to explain or demonstrate how natural processes could have produced our modern biosphere without external design.

    They can explain it very easily. And you can go watch various stages of it if you happen to own a really good submarine. They can't demonstrate it because very few scientists live to be more than a million or two years old, and these things take a while.

  296. scopes by johnnyringo · · Score: 1

    Scopes "monkey" trial. Look it up here: http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/f trials.htm

    (I highly recommend this site- it even scales down to a palm quite nicely so you can tote it to show the folks in the bible belt if you happen to pass through)

    Who spent the money to make these stickers? Who let some group with an agenda disrupt the public school forum? If there were stickers on every book preempting the information inside, how can kids be expected to absorb facts with an open mind? These are the people stunting their own children's potential to contribute great things to the world. Let them absorb! Teachers are there to offer explanations, inspire and challenge- the greatest job in the world. Text books are there to reflect where we have come as a culture and a race (the human one) and build a foundation for students to help explain and discover the world around them.

    I really can't stand these people. Reminds me of the lunatic judge that commissioned an expensive sculpture of the 10 commandments and put it on the courthouse steps! I bet he was one of the kids in school with a sticker on his book! I mean, really!! The courthouse steps!!

  297. not sure who said this, but... by Atrax · · Score: 1

    ... It's good to keep an open mind, but not so open that your brains fall out

    --
    Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
  298. Is evolution falsifiable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For something to be a "theory" in science it must be falsifiable.

    So if evolution is a theory, then is must be able to be proven false. The only way it can be proven false is if there are exceptions that evolution said were impossible. But any exceptions I've ever heard of are brushed off as either fakes or cause evolution to change slightly to fit the new data.

    You may call creationism mythology, but have you ever considered the faith that your own "theory" requires?

    Entropy always increases, except when you add sunlight and meteor dust. Then an ape will eventually become a man.

    Mutations are rare and usually sterile, except for sometimes, when a fish with leg-type fins will be able to reproduce to create other fish with leg-type fins.

    Evolution is slow, with minor changes each time, but all the minor stages between Ape and Human died out for some reason.

    Our bodies have evolved and unnecessary parts have made way for better parts, but don't ask me what the appendix is for or used to be for.

    1. Re:Is evolution falsifiable? by roju · · Score: 1

      or cause evolution to change slightly to fit the new data.
      That's the scientific method at work. In light of new facts, a theory is either discarded or improved.

      That said, the entropy argument against evolution is a new one to me. On the surface, it's neat. Any reference for a more in-depth study of it?

    2. Re:Is evolution falsifiable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, most standard thermodynamics textbooks discuss entropy. Many of them include a problem something like:

      "It is often argued that the evolution of living creatures violates the second law of thermodynamics, and thus evolution as a theory is flawed. Using what you have learned in this chapter, explain the flaw in this reasoning, e.g. explain how the theory of evolution and the second law of thermodynamics can be reconciled."

      I even saw this on one of the old qualifying examinations at the University of Maryland.

      The answer is remarkably simple. The second law does state that in a closed system, entropy never goes down. However, if the system absorbs and radiates energy, the only contraint is that the entropy of the incoming radiation's source, the system, and the outgoing radiation must never go down. All living things radiate massive amounts of energy, and the resulting entropy more than makes up for any local entropy dip that occurs due to evolution.

    3. Re:Is evolution falsifiable? by srleffler · · Score: 1
      Entropy always increases, except when you add sunlight and meteor dust. Then an ape will eventually become a man.

      This argument is provably false, and the fact that creationists keep using it is one of the best proofs that creationism is not a science. A scientist does not continue using an argument that is known to be false. I am a physicist. Physics does not say that entropy always increases. Entropy must increase only when you have a closed system: no energy or matter goes in or out. So yes, when you add sunlight the entropy on Earth decreases. If this argument had any validity all life would be impossible. The process of growing from an embroyo to an infant to an adult human involves continuous decrease in entropy, fueled by energy entering the system. The people who told you the argument based on entropy are lying to you, which is neither scientific nor Christian.

      Mutations are rare and usually sterile, except for sometimes, when a fish with leg-type fins will be able to reproduce to create other fish with leg-type fins.

      Pretty much. You do know that there are fish with leg-type fins still alive today. And they can breathe air for short periods of time--long enough to flop from a pool that is drying up to a larger body of water.

      Evolution is slow, with minor changes each time, but all the minor stages between Ape and Human died out for some reason.

      Yeah, so? Why would that be a surprise? Most of the species that have existed on the Earth are extinct. Our last living relatives (that we know of) seem to have died out less than 13000 years ago. Too bad they couldn't have stuck around a bit longer to prove to you that they existed.

    4. Re:Is evolution falsifiable? by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      Mutations are rare and usually sterile...

      This is too simplistic a statement. Mutations as seen in the general population are rare. Other types of mutation (point mutation, indels etc.) are relatively frequent but there are mechanisms to mitigate these mutations. In fact it is estimated that approx. that every new human cell contains some 120 new mutations. But these mutations have little effect because of repeated DNA sections, junk DNA etc.etc.
      Not all are sterile, of course. In fact, in just a short time, beneficial mutations can be seen.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    5. Re:Is evolution falsifiable? by caridon20 · · Score: 1


      Evolution is slow, with minor changes each time, but all the minor stages between Ape and Human died out for some reason.


      This is a common misconception. The Apes we have today are not the apes we evolved from.

      both humans and apes have evolved in parrallel over the years.

      and all the "old" wersions have dissapeard because we New and improved pushed them of the map. :)
      /C

      --
      You dont have to be an analretentive nitpicker to be a tester.... But it helps :)
  299. How science works by dangermouse · · Score: 1
    Creationists and ID advocates: hark!

    The reason evolution is taught (and taught almost as though it were accepted fact), while other theories (not ID, which does not qualify as a theory for reasons others have mentioned) are not, is that evolution is the prevailing paradigm in the field. That paradigm will be adhered to, and the horse of evolution flogged like you wouldn't believe, until such time as it is proven or it ceases to explain the evidence collected in the pursuit of its verification-- and likely for some time afterward, until a new paradigm that does accomodate that evidence is established. If neither proof nor disproof ever happens, and the body of evidence supporting evolution continues to grow, then it can only be said to be increasingly more likely that the theory is correct than that it is not.

    That's a brief summary of Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions, which has been a pretty standard text for scientists for forty years. Grab a copy and read it, if you haven't-- it's a short, easy read, and gives you the broad view of how science works, and why. Why the hell I wasn't exposed to it until college, I don't know.

  300. AIYAH, MUTHAFUCKAZ!#$!!!1!11 by Digital+Avatar · · Score: 0, Troll

    Fuck the creationists! www.mchawking.com, motherfuckers!

    Fucking creationists. Fuck them.

  301. Gov't too anti-religious by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 0, Troll

    Perhaps we should amend the Constitution and only prohibit government from forcing people to profess a belief to avoid punishment.

    Because as it stands, we are removing morality from public life. We are hyper-secularizing the country.

    As for evolution, it is often used not just as a theory, but to "prove" God does not exist, we are just slightly improved MONKEYS (you included!) and we have no soul and that life is just genes and environment and that after death there is permanent lack of consciousness.

    There is no morality, people aren't responsbile (genes and environment are) so we shouldn't put anyone in jail since they aren't at fault for anything.

    The school district should print up new stickers, which explain that they had stickers which added a disclaimer to evolution, and they were ordered to remove them.

    Making a factual statement about a court order HAS to be legal, and people reading it would be inclined to think twice about a theory which the courts prohibited attacks of.

    As for the credibility of evolution without any divine influence, how about I get a few pounds of sand, copper and plastic, and throw it in a pile and see if a Pentium 4 3.0 GHz PC will just evolve out of it. Even if I could wait a billion years, I don't think I'd be successful.

    --
    Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    1. Re:Gov't too anti-religious by 808140 · · Score: 1

      Lord almighty, I hope to god you're trolling. You're on Slashdot, for crying out loud! It's perfectly ok for you to disagree with or not believe in evolution (at least, it's ok with me), but at least make a token effort to actually educate yourself as to what it is. Your whole sand and pentium 4 analogy demonstrates that you have a seriously misguided understanding of the mechanics of evolution, and what is required for it to take place (hint -- inert, non-reproducing materials like sand, lacking the need to compete for scarce resources, will not evolve).

      The spontaneous generation of life from non-life (not actually so spontaneous), is not evolution, but rather a process called abiogenesis. The mechanics of this are still heavily disputed. But evolution, which presupposes the existance of life and deals with concepts like speciation and its ilk, has little to do with abiogenesis.

      As for not having a soul, well... that's pretty much a function of your definition of soul, isn't it? Science is a pedantic thing. Christianity tends supply relatively vague (but nonetheless meaningful to christians) definition. Just what is a soul? If you can't even really explain it in a scientifically testable way, then science has nothing to say about it. Including that it doesn't exist.

      As for permanent lack of consciousness, well, no one is making any claims one way or another. At least, I believe it, but it's a belief, and it's not any better or worse than any other belief, including belief in an after-life. There's no proof, either way. So science doesn't get in the way of this, either.

      The biggest issue I take though is with your stance on morality. Are you suggesting that without religion, without a fear of reprisal or punishment, people wouldn't be moral? I'm a moral person, even by the standards of my religious friends, but I don't do it because I'm afraid to go to hell, because I don't believe in hell. I just do it because I feel it's the right thing to do. Your indirect implication that religious people are moral only because of their religious beliefs, and not simply because they're intrinsically good people, bothers me some.

      There have been, lest we forget, some incredibly immoral people in our past, and many of them were religious (Hitler, for example) and many were not (Stalin). I don't see religion as having been a guiding force for good or evil, particularly -- people that want to be immoral will find ways to convince themselves that their religious or moral code condones their behaviour, regardless of what faith they attribute to themselves.

      Anyway, your suggestion about putting a new sticker on the books is silly, because it would simply have the same effect as the original sticker, an effect ruled unconstitutional in a US court of law. Some other posters have suggested that this may be appealed and overturned anyway (and have presented good arguments to that effect).

    2. Re:Gov't too anti-religious by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      As for evolution, it is often used not just as a theory, but to "prove" God does not exist, we are just slightly improved MONKEYS (you included!) etc.etc.etc....

      Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong and wrong...
      1. Evolution is neutral. It gets as far as it can to do a reasonable job. Otherwise, for example, we would have MUCH better eyes than we have. Octopodi (octopus pl.) have better functioning eyes than do we. In other words,there is no notion of improvement in the ToE.
      2. Evolution implies we and any other currently existing animal had a common ancestor. We are not improved monkeys (or apes or horses etc.)
      3. The ToE makes no assumptions about the existence/non-existence of God. It is a theory about evolution. If you wish to hypothesize a 'starting line' God, then the ToE does not stop you from doing so.
      4. To me, the notion of a soul is illogical and contradictory but this has nothing to do with the ToE.
      5. Morality has nothing to do with the ToE. Two sub-points: a. From a secular point of view, you can argue that, as life is the one and only thing you own in the brief moment of its existence, this is the one thing you truly respect. b. The ToE makes no assumptions about free will. Looking at an ant, however, it is easy to argue that its genes and environment determine its behaviour precisely. Anything 'immoral' that an ant performs is then excusable. For us humans, of course, it is far more tricky but the ToE makes no pronouncements on that subject.
      6. As to a blind mechanism (ie no creator) causing an evolutionary process, I can recommend no better book than: 'The Blind Watchmaker' by Richard Dawkins.

      --
      Did he inhale?
  302. Beyond shadow of doubt... by rmdyer · · Score: 1

    Here is what we know to be true beyond the shadow of doubt... Evolution. Why? Simple.

    If the world were to end today, and there were only 1000 men and 1000 women alive, and all their memory was erased, and all the books on the planet were burned including science and religous texts, then this is what would happen. In the far future, if man still survives, there will be new religions of various kinds having no relationship at all to any of the known religions of today. The believers of such religions will still have creation stories that they hold to be true, and that some sort of god, or gods exist. However there will also be those who rediscover science. And after a time those who are scientists will stumble back upon evolution. It may have a different name, but it will be the exact same concept, and then a "theory".

    Evolution is true because it isn't something that needs to be believed to be true. Anyone actually looking, trying to discover the way things really work, will find evolution again and again. Evolution describes the mechanism for understanding how things come to be the way they are. Evolution is true because reality is governed by rules of logic and reason, not fantasy. You cannot believe things into being the way you want them to be. Otherwise the word "truth" would have no meaning. Something is "true" when your world view of the way things are "agrees" with the way things really are...in reality. There is a world external to your own consciousness that allows us to define whether some things are true, or not.

    Obviously I'm beginning to ramble on. The point is that the world isn't flat, it's round. Put all the "The World is Flat" stickers on all the textbooks you want. It won't change a thing. Evolution will be discovered and rediscovered again and again in any environment that nurtures a scientific method.

    1. Re:Beyond shadow of doubt... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Well, to play Devil's advocate.... errr, I mean to play God's advocate.... errr, same difference.

      If the world were to end today, and there were only 1000 men and 1000 women alive, and all their memory was erased, and all the books on the planet were burned including science and religous texts, then this is what would happen.

      God would send his only begotten son... errr, I mean his SECOND begotten son.... errr, or his only begotten daughter.... or something.... and give us the One True Word. Errr.... again.

      But less than one-third of the people would be able to spot the Divine Perfection of the One True Word, with the rest of the people instead believing various other fraudulent error riddled texts written by pathetic fallible humans. And the reason the vast majority of people would fail to see the Divine Perfection of the One True Word is because god is UTTERLY INCOMPETENT and INCAPABLE of writing a simple bloody text that's any better than crap any random schmuck with a quill can crank out.

      Or something.

      And then people would start killing each other over the different texts. Errr, but that's not really relevant to your question.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  303. it's a states rights issue by Dr+Kool,+PhD · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    If the elected state legislature determines that the stickers should go in the books then no court should be able to otherwise. Nobody could ever interpret the constitution to ban stickers such as these except for liberal activist judges.

  304. Of course you should read the entirety by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1
    of what the court said. While the board may have adopted a secular message there is no doubt the motivating force behind the whole thing was Creationists.

    Just as citizens around the country have been aware of the historical debate between evolution and religion, an informed, reasonable observer in this case would be keenly aware of the sequence of events that preceded the adoption of the Sticker. See Capitol Square. 515 U S at 780 (O'Connor, J , concurring) (noting that the reasonable observer is "presumed to possess a certain level of information that all citizens might not share") . Based on justice O'Connor's description of what the reasonable observer would be deemed to know, the Court believes these events are key to ascertaining the primary effect of the Sticker Specifically, the informed, reasonable observer would know that a significant number of Cobb Country citizens had voiced opposition to the teaching of evolution for religious reasons The informed, reasonable observer would also know that despite this opposition, the Cobb County School District was in the process of revising its policy and regulation regarding theories of origin to reflect that evolution would be taught in Cobb County schools Further, the informed, reasonable observer would be aware that citizens and parents largely motivated by religion put pressure on the School Board to implement certain measures that would nevertheless dilute the teaching of evolution, including placing a disclaimer in the front of certain textbooks that distinguished evolution as a theory, not a fait Finally, the informed, reasonable observer would be aware that the language of the Sucker essentially mirrors the viewpoint of these religiously-motivated citizens .

    While the School Board may have considered the request of its constituents and adopted the Sticker for sincere, secular purposes, an informed, reasonable observer would understand the School Board to be endorsing the viewpoint of Christian fundamentalists and creationists that evolution is a problematic theory lacking an adequate foundation.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  305. Re:How could a statement of fact be unconstitution by be-fan · · Score: 1

    Yes, evolution is a theory. But so is all of science. Should we put stickers on chem and physics textbooks too? It's well understood among people knowledgable about science that it is all theory. The fact that religious dumbasses who think they know absolute truth can't comprehend the idea that science doesn't claim to speak absolute truth doesn't surprise me at all.

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  306. Re:Yay! by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

    Just looking at the theory as I understand it, I cannot figure out where all the half-apes have gone. Survival of the fittest is fine, but the fact is the half-fit and mostly fit also survive most of the time. There should exist animals that have some human qualities, but not all.

    For example, why not a humanoid with our brain capacity, but with an apes feet? Why did every animal that got changed feet also get an enlarged brain? It would seem that evolution would lead to a wide spectrum of animals, much like the bluring of dog breeds. When breeding programs are not imposed on dogs by humans, instead of purebred dogs you get mutts (half-breeds). Why then does evolution lead to the survival of separate lines instead of more blurred speicies.

    Really, the theory of evolution seems to lead to this. Does anyone know the current theory why it doesn't? Is it the "pockets of change" theory?

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  307. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 2, Interesting
    introducing a topic with a statement pretty much saying "everything I'm going to present might be wrong"-- which I claim this is equivalent to -- is not a way to get students to think they are learning something important.

    Nevertheless, that should be the general statement made before teaching any branch of science. What you are suggesting is psychological manipulation to ignore that fact. This is like putting a sticker on a math book saying "1+1=2 is only true according to some beliefs. Proceed with caution."

    No, in that you are wrong. Bertrand Russell spent several years and actually proved, in the real and rigorous sense of the word, that 1+1 = 2. Indeed, it may be that only logical statements (such as those expressed in mathematics) can be proved; almost nothing in the physical world can be.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  308. Why exactly is the court wrong? by michaelepley · · Score: 1
    You may or may not argue with the semantics of whether evolution is a theory, fact, postulate, or other concept. Thus you may conclude the sticker was right. However, the analysis of the constitutionality of placing this particular sticker on school textbooks** involves many considerations other than the truthfulness of the statement on the sticker. See this post for more details.

    ** I emphasis this, since courts traditionally analyze religous entanglement with schools very critically.

  309. Re:This is written for those of you who can't READ by Sebastopol · · Score: 1

    Anyone who says that the putative 'first cell' arose by random chance in the 'primordial soup,' and that we know this through observation, or good scientific inquiry, is probably the biggest idiot to ever grace these forums.

    The only people that say this are Creationists who now zero about evolution: e.g, you.

    Silly child.

    --
    https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
  310. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    The theory of common descent has not been observed, at least by humans, as that would have required (at the least) humans to pre-exist themselves.

    Only as it applies to humans. We have observed speciation in other species. It happens, it is fact. Did it happen with humans? Well, that's just a theory, but the only objection to the idea that humans evolved similarly to other animals including those we have obsereved is dogmatic.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  311. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Plus, you will never win your Evolution argument against a person who believes in intelligent design.

    Yes, for the same reasons that you cant win an argument against a person who believes in any of a myriad of stupid things, like tooth faries, Jebus, or Santa.....

    BECAUSE THEY'RE FUCKING IRRATIONAL.

  312. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1, Interesting
    what are you trying to say, that ID, is an actual "theory" ?!?

    It would be well to point out another development on this front:

    "NEW YORK Dec 9, 2004 -- A British philosophy professor who has been a leading champion of atheism for more than a half-century has changed his mind. He now believes in God more or less based on scientific evidence, and says so on a video released Thursday.

    "At age 81, after decades of insisting belief is a mistake, Antony Flew has concluded that some sort of intelligence or first cause must have created the universe. A super-intelligence is the only good explanation for the origin of life and the complexity of nature, Flew said in a telephone interview from England."

    ABC News: Famous Atheist Now Believes in God

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  313. Suckers by Kenrod · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Wow! When I read this headline, I knew the liberal /. crowd would be creaming in their jeans over this one. But this is beyond my wildest dreams - it's geek ORGY time!

    First of all, I think evolution is a fact - clearly, natural selection has been observed, beneficial mutation has been observed, the there's the fossil record where more primitive organisms are found in older strata - many posters here are arguing the fact vs. theory angle of this story. It doesn't matter, you're all missing the point.

    You've been suckered. All of you gloaters.

    Don't you KNOW how this plays in Anytown USA?

    Liberal judges telling our kids what they can learn. Dictating that our communities can't be critical of secular humanist dogma. Silencing the will of the people. Good, hardworking, tax-paying people - all told to shut up and sit down.

    They are the kind of people who will remember this on election day. They will remember who is trying to run their communities from the Bench.

    SUCKERS. Republican margins just went up another 0.5%.

    You should have let them have their little sticker - what did it hurt, really? Afraid a few kids might reject evolution in favor of some religious alternative? Guess what, they were going to do it anyway.

    Instead you have given the Right ANOTHER rallying point.

    And you wonder why you lose elections. SUCKERS.

    --
    Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
    1. Re:Suckers by Kenrod · · Score: 1

      Wow, modded troll for the first time...didn't bother to read my post, obviously.

      Note to self: don't put SUCKERS in all caps next time. Also, less whitespace.

      --
      Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
  314. Re:Yay! by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

    It is impossible to understand our system of laws and human rights without understanding our Judeo-Christian foundation.

    No, it isn't. And regardless, no matter what the foundation of our laws may indeed be, that does not mean you should require that those foundations be taught outright. Foundations are just that - foundations. A pagan society could also determine similar laws, even though the foundations may seem very different. And keep in mind that there were advanced civilizations long before Christianity.

    I believe the only seperation the Founding Fathers intended was freedom of individuals to express their religious beliefs, not the extermination of religious beliefs from the public domain.

    And this is not a case of an individual being denied that freedom, now is it? This is a public institution which, in theory at least, should strive to be as bias-free as possible. No creed should be put before another. I reiterate - no one should be denied religious expression, and we should all fight and die to protect that right if necessary -- but that is NOT what is at issue here.

    That would be an argument for the elimination of the public school system.

    I think this point is only valid if you do not see the difference between a religous belief and a scientific one. I think that the only groups that would oppose scientific teaching are those that fear scientific teaching - because they have something to lose. The great thing about science is that it is open to anyone. If you do not like the theory of evolution - by all means, dispute it. But do so in a manner that does not require others to share you faith. If it does require someone to share your faith, I am still not convinced why that should be taught in public schools.

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  315. Re:What about letting people make thier own decisi by reverius · · Score: 1

    LOL, not only that, but without -any- criteria for what constitutes a theory, and how it differs from a myth (would creationism pass any such criteria?), you can have an effectively infinite number of potential theories to teach, and given the number of religious "theories" out there that explain the origin of life, that class would take many, many years.

    a simple equation we can all enjoy:

    (infinite number of potential theories) / (amount of time available in the class) = WHOOPS

  316. Just to be Safe by irefay · · Score: 1
    Ok,

    I have a scenario.

    Two men...

    One believes in the natural adaptation process of all living organisms but also believes that God created all of this. He cannot understand why but the concept of time is proof enough for him (there is a beginning and end to everything, why not a beginning and end to this universe) He believes that when he passes away that he will be taken to be with his God in heaven.

    The Second man believes that religion is stupid and irrational. He cannot understand it and science has not been able to fully explain it either (by the way there is evidence that God does exist http://www.godandscience.org)

    The consequences for the two men's beliefs if the first man is right: the first guy goes to heaven for eternal bliss... the second man goes to visit Bill Gates for eternity. The consequences for the two men if the second guy is right: there corpses just rot away as usual.

    Now just to be safe wouldn't you want to be the first man... you have nothing to loose right?

    1. Re:Just to be Safe by aderusha · · Score: 3, Insightful

      google up "pascal's wager" - you've made one of the oldest (and throughly disproven) arguments for religon ever.

      do you really think that the best reason to believe in a god is to treat it as a hedge bet against eternal damnation?

    2. Re:Just to be Safe by tloh · · Score: 1
      no

      The scenario implies the religous man has a correct understanding of religious "truth". Of all the different variations of monotheism (to say nothing of the rest of the world's religions past and present) how do you know which one is the correct version? In life the religious man must rely on faith to guide his actions based on what his believes about the afterlife. If the second guy is right, the religous man has lost the opportunity to live life to the fullest (while alive) without the constraints of his religion.

      Another thing, a bit tangential perhaps. morality != religious piety. Which means it is perfectly possible for a person to be virtuous without accepting Christian dogma or any sort of indoctrination.

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
    3. Re:Just to be Safe by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      And another question for the grandparent: is your faith really so weak that you have to turn to science in an attempt to prove it's right?

    4. Re:Just to be Safe by erlorad · · Score: 1
      One problem in your argument is that if your God can be fooled by ones "just in case" belief, he is not really allmighty and allknowing - one truly believes or not. Belief out of fear is the worst and the most common replacement for faith I can imagine.

      Another problem is that Christian God is the God of infinite love and forgiveness and not the God of infinite punishment and damnation, so when you die whatever you have done and whatever you have believed in - you will be forgiven.

    5. Re:Just to be Safe by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 1

      The God of the Bible makes it very clear that he is a just God who punishes wrong. that's why the central message of Jesus' teaching was 'repent' and why there are so many warnings about a need to ask God's forgiveness and turn back to him, or face an eternity in hell. It is God's great love of goodness and justice that demands he remove and punish evil.

    6. Re:Just to be Safe by Tonytheloony · · Score: 1

      Just to be safe, are you stupid?

      --
      The quickest way to become an atheist is to study the Bible thoroughly.
  317. God was a space alien by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To a primative society, advanced technology appears as magic. To the limited minds of early humans, DNA manipulation was sculpting the clay of the earth.

  318. Intelligent Design and Complexity by Luthair · · Score: 1

    The sticker is part of an attack on evolution by anti-evolutionists now operating under the alias 'Intelligent Design.' Wired had a good article on this several months ago (I believe November, try here) Basically they've realized they cannot win the battle by pushing the bible and have switched to pushing 'theories' (Aliens, Omnipotent Beings, etc.) that are at best hypotheses. All in an effort to confuse the population into thinking there is a division in the scientific community.

    As for the complexity of life and the chance of it occurring, perhaps you've heard the universe is a [i]really[/i] big place; if thats not enough quantum theory predicts that there are an infinite amount of slightly different ones! So while the chance of life existing is small, it's had a lot of chances. An easy example of a similar situation: if I'm holding a single card the chance of it being a specific card is low, if I'm holding most of the deck its probable to have a specific card.

  319. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There is no evidence that evolution is responsible for the life we see around us."

    So have you taken a class that covered evolution, or are you just believing what the Creationists say? What you stated is *entirely* untrue. Even in Darwin's time, there was lots of evidence to support evolution. (Read his book, he took a lot of time and care to bolster his theory carefully.) The data are now even stronger in favor of evolution. For one there, there's the fossil record showing a nice chain of ancestors. There is also biochemical evidence and similarities between some species, but not others.

    There is plenty of data there. Creationists have apparently managed to trick the general public into believe otherwise, but all the pretending in the world won't make that data go away.

  320. to prove or not to prove by paperclip2003 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Science is the process of elimination:

    1) I have a theory
    2) Poke holes in theory (Try to disprove, not prove anything)
    3) Make the theory better -- fit the facts that distroyed my first theory, then repeat until hopefully we got it right!

    Religion:
    1) I believe something -- therfore it is!
    2) See 1

    I would say that is like comparing Apples to Oranges. Science is great because it is ever changing. Religion is great because it is comfortable and never changes (much). With that said, if you are going to teach evolution and creationism, which versions do you teach and how? Wouldn't it better to teach children to think instead of ideas?

    1. Re:to prove or not to prove by misterpies · · Score: 1

      You can't compare Apples to Oranges! Steve Jobs is the living reincarnation of God! Wait...oh, I see. Sorry. Was in the wrong fundamentalist forum.

      --
      The author of this post asserts his moral rights.
  321. Re:Yay! by zrobotics · · Score: 1

    I don't know what kind of science education YOU had, but i was taught in middle school the difference between a "hypothesis", a "theory", and a "law". In case you don't know, a hypothesis is basically an educated guess, a theory has been supported by repeated experimentation, and a law has, basically, been "proven". however, it was ALWAYS stressed that anything in science can be disproven, even laws. this is one of the most BASIC principles of science-nothing can be proven to be 100% true. this is very important, because, as we advance culturally and scientifically, things that were previously thought to be true can, in fact, be completely incorrect. this sticker is, in my opinion, a very good idea, even if it was made for different reasons that the ones i have put forth. the sticker doesn't say ANYTHING, ANYTHING AT ALL about creationism. as far as the message goes, the sticker could be supporting the extraterrestrial origin of life on earth. the point is, the sticker didn't support or strike down anything. it just stated a FACT-evolution is a theory, and theories can, and sometimes are, wrong. it doesn't matter if i believe in ID, Evolution, or any other religion. this is just basic science, that kid's should be taught. In my opinion, the one most important thing that kids should take out of high school is the knowledge that science is fallible, and scientists aren't always correct. if they don't know this, that just makes them even easier to manipulate, as they will accept anything told to them by a scientist as "the gospel truth", and that is never a good thing. a bit of skepticism never hurt anybody, and is often a very desirable quality.

  322. But... by Atroxodisse · · Score: 1

    VCRs haven't had billions of years to evolve...

    --
    Read my short stories - You won't regret it.
  323. Re:Yay! by EvanED · · Score: 1

    It would probably not be unconstitutional if they also put "Christianity is a Religion, not a fact, about the universe..." stickers on the Bible, "Islam is a Religion" stickers on the Koran, etc. because then the law is treating everything the same. Let's see what they think about the first one there.

    Though this still doesn't seem right, and certainly you could find countless other books that should require the sticker I didn't mention. So it's a pretty stupid idea all around.

    I agree with the other poster that prohibiting mandating the stickers isn't really a free speech issue.

  324. prayer in school [n/t] by sum.zero · · Score: 1

    sum.zero

  325. Technicaly by SBGLinux · · Score: 1

    But it is a theory...a very good theory...but a theory none the less.

  326. UpChucking. by absolutes · · Score: 1

    No Chuck, sorry. Not religious reasons, SCIENTIFIC ones. There are many SCIENTISTS who do not agree with the way evolution is taught or presented in textbooks. And no, I am not talking about OBSERVED instances of bacterial resistance to antibiotics etc...I am talking about HISTORICAL aspects such as the origin of life. Did you read the disclaimer Chuck? It speaks of the ORIGIN of life as not being fact. If you think it's fact, and is backed by sound scientific evidence, you are an idiot, or perhaps a pseudoscientist who likes to sensationalize bad science.

    1. Re:UpChucking. by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what you think you are replying to. Your initial post seemed to be suggesting that Creationists had no part in placing the sticker.

      I was merely pointing out that an informed, reasonable person would conclude that the sticker was placed on the books to satisfy creationists. That is what the Judges findings state.

      Your peculiarly capitalised response seems to address my thoughts on evolution and it's teaching which is funny because I didn't mention them and you evidently don't know what they are. I did mention them here though, you might be pleasantly surprised.

      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    2. Re:UpChucking. by cartzworth · · Score: 0

      And it seems the teaching of evolution was to satisfy evolutionists. As a believer in evolution I still find something inherently wrong here.

  327. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    The only reason evolution and the scientific community can be considered enemies of Christianity is because certain subsets of Christianity insist on promoting a dogmatic view of the world that contradicts basic facts.

    No, that is not the only reason. Another reason--the one that I spoke of in my post--is that people who hate Christianity are using evolution and the scientific community as tools in their attack against Christianity. It does not matter at all to these enemies of Christianity that the very sources they are using are Christian sources. What matters to them is that they can exclude or eliminate the reference of God from public discourse.

    The legal system isn't intended to be anti-Christian, either, but the enemies of Christianity certainly try to force that use!

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  328. That's a good call, dude by IdahoEv · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'll be the one screaming "medic!" at the top of my lungs. Modern medicine may just be a theory but I reckon it's statistically a better bet than relying on His strength.

    And you'd be absolutely right. In the current conflict in Iraq, the death rate from battle wounds is only 1.6%, whereas in vietnam it was 3.68%, more than twice as high. The army, at least, attributes this huge increase in survivability to modern medical technology and improved practice.

    looked at as a ratio of wounded (but survived) to killed, the current ratio is 7.6:1. Going backwards in time, counting only U.S. soldiers:
    Vietnam: 2.6:1
    WWII: 1.7:1
    WWI: 1.8:1
    US Civil War: 0.74:1

    In other words, a trend consistently shows more people surviving war wounds as time goes on.

    Meanwhile, the evidence is not that there has been a massive (factor of twenty) increase in religiosity in the United States since the Civil war. Certainly, available data show that people self-identifying as Christian have decreased significantly between 1990 and 2004.

    So the evidence would seem to indicate, unless God has consistently increased his tendency to save the lives of wounded soldiers despite no significant increase in their faith, that improvements in medical technology are in fact a good bet for saving your life when you're lying bleeding on the battlefield.

    Good call, mike260.

    --
    I stole this sig from someone cleverer than me.
    1. Re:That's a good call, dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is it that the US civil war had more deaths from wounds than wounds?



    2. Re:That's a good call, dude by offpath3 · · Score: 1

      Not that I have any desire to defend the religious argument, but another interpretation of those stats is that modern weapons are better at injuring a large number of people without necessarily killing them.

    3. Re:That's a good call, dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You did read about George Washington's death by sore throat right? Sounds like those kinda doctor's might've done it :)

    4. Re: That's a good call, dude by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > How is it that the US civil war had more deaths from wounds than wounds?

      First, make sure you understand that the numbers are "wounded and survived" vs. "wounded and died".

      Then read up on bayonettes and the .84 miniball.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    5. Re:That's a good call, dude by Darth+Cow · · Score: 3, Funny

      Actually, reduced mortality rates are better correlated to the increased righteousness of our cause.

    6. Re:That's a good call, dude by bentcd · · Score: 1

      It would be more interesting to investigate if the percentage of religious soldiers has increased since they're the ones doing the dying (or not).

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    7. Re: That's a good call, dude by IdahoEv · · Score: 1

      > Then read up on bayonettes and the .84 miniball.

      Indeed, and the lack of sterilization procedures coupled with the re-use of bandages after a patient had died. They efficiently transmitted infection from patient to patient.

      No vaccines, no antibiotics, no germ theory.

      --
      I stole this sig from someone cleverer than me.
    8. Re:That's a good call, dude by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      In the current conflict in Iraq, the death rate from battle wounds is only 1.6%

      Obviously, God helps soldiers on a holy crusade. Islam must be destroyed.

      (I'm kidding, of course.)

  329. Hate to tell you... by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    ...but you should probably make those air travel reservations to Europe, because this country has always been, and will likely always will be, deeply religious. You can lament that all you want, but it's the truth. "Jesusland" isn't going away. If you want a "Deweyist" education for your children, I'd suggest France, with all of their hostility towards faith. No danger of those wackey Christians there. Of course, you've got hundreds of thousands of MUSLIM fanatics to deal with there...

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:Hate to tell you... by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      France's hostility to faith?? (And yes, I have lived and worked there for several years - and more than once). France is pretty heavily Catholic and has a large Muslim population - but hundreds of thousands of fanatics? You mean the sort that bomb and invade whole countries? Oh wait....

      --
      Did he inhale?
    2. Re:Hate to tell you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm maybe you don't know this but there are strict laws in France about displaying religious symbols on ones own person in schools, meaning that you are not allowed to do something as simple as wearing a cross, or a Muslim wearing a headscarf.

      I'm a rabid secularist, and even I think that France goes too far. I could see why you would not want a teacher or a policeman adorning symbols, but every student in a public school?

  330. Re:Yay! by bechthros · · Score: 1

    "No, in that you are wrong. Bertrand Russell spent several years and actually proved, in the real and rigorous sense of the word, that 1+1 = 2."

    Only if you believe that two comes after one. There are underlying assumtions (axioms?) that any rational thought is predicated upon, be it mathematical or spiritual.

  331. Adendum to the stickers. by Associate · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Evolution is a theory, not a fact.
    Creationism is a superstition, not a fact.

    --
    Someone hates these cans.
    1. Re:Adendum to the stickers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Also add

      Science is not a belief system

      while you're at it.

    2. Re:Adendum to the stickers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is dog breeding a fact?

    3. Re:Adendum to the stickers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it's a fucking fact. :)

  332. this is my box by courseB · · Score: 1

    science cant really live up to its name. look at how many people here are still arguing over definitions of words? damn people, like someone said up above: '-1 free speech'

    it shouldnt matter whats on a text book, nor whats in a text book. just let it be data.

    learning to sift through the data is what we should be worried about. instead everything is a straight 'scientific' argument. this scares me, for i dont want my (future) kids thinking in black/white lines in this grey world.

    a grey world where little particles can be in two! places at the same time.

    1. Re:this is my box by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Teaching your progeny to acknowledge and respect bogus data is quit an effective way to remove your legacy from humanity. ^_^

  333. Sorry. by absolutes · · Score: 1

    No, it is people like you who do not understand the current controversy, and who do not know how to read. "and that we KNOW this through observation, or good scientific inquiry." I wonder if you have studied this at all. Do you have any idea of the difficulties surrounding such an event? Crying "time can produce anything!" is not scientific my friend.

    1. Re:Sorry. by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      "Crying 'time can produce anything!' is not scientific"

      Please cite your scientific source for this quote. Or any scientific source that comes anywhere NEAR it. Thanks in advance.

      Spontaneous self-organization can be seen by anyone with a few basic, non-living elements, and you can see it on a timescale of days. It's a very basic process. It's not a great stretch of the imagination to see how life could have self-organized from non-living elements. Take a look at the contents of your salt shaker sometime.

  334. Re:Yay! by eno2001 · · Score: 1

    I don't want my child being poisoned by religious fools. I came from a mixed catholic/protestant background and I can tell you that most people involved in any christian religion are fools. Fortunately, I was able to escape the clutches of those anti-intellectual religions and learn the truth about the world. I am not an aetheist either. I have my own personal set of beliefs and they have nothing to do with being religious.

    If any religion in the world is "the answer", then why do they all put up barriers to learning truths from outside of that particular religion? Perhaps because they are all based on the idea that you need to keep members uninformed? Trust me... I remember weirdos in the protestant church I went to claiming that they could tell when people were posessed by demons just by looking at them. And this was NOT in the south! It's a good thing I finally shed my religious shackles and read up on buddhism, demonology and witchcraft, judaism, astrology, etc... Learning about things from "the other side" really helps you to discover what the truth really is. I found that most christians are deceitful hypocrites. Especially the ones who are more involved with the church.

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
  335. Re:Yay! by WhiplashII · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do you not believe in the seperation of church and state?

    I believe in it very strongly, and in a perfect world it would not be a problem for all theories to be taught in school, including the theory that NASA uses earthquakes to overrun minor dictators. In that perfect classroom, the teacher would explain all available information, and then teach critical thinking - and let the student interpret the facts.

    This perfect classroom is not the norm, however. In most classrooms (and for most students), what the teacher teaches is not to be questioned - it is just to be accepted. This leads to discussions like the one we are having here - where you are convinced that anyone that does not agree with you is wrong, and I am convinced that I am right.

    In a democracy, we have decided that moral decisions should be made to favor the majority. The majority does not think that evolution has less "evidence" than deity. The reason you disagree is that you throw out their "spiritual evidence", because you believe it to be faulty. That is your right as a sentient being... however using the courts to overule the decisions of the majority is wrong. Most people believe differently than you do. You think you are right, and everyone else is wrong, fine. But then you try to enforce your superiority on others - that is the ultimate arrogance.

    Of course, these comments are not directed to you as a person, more to the group (such as the ACLU) that seems to think the way you do.

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  336. Re:Yay! by some+damn+guy · · Score: 1

    Just because you don't understand the theory, doesn't mean it isn't true. A nice into to biology class as your local college will answer all of there questions quite well for you. You just have to give it a chance. The fossil records are incomplete, and people are finding new stuff every day. We've probably found only a small part of what is out there so far.

    Don't confuse evolution with becoming more human-like. It's all about survivability. Cochroaches, for example, are in some ways much more evolved than us. They preceeded us by millions of years, and if a meteor smacked the planet tomorrow, they might outlive us by millions more.

  337. Religion by spiritraveller · · Score: 1

    What is truly sad is the way in which these people--who consider themselves religious--have focused on this very materialistic argument.

    The argument itself betrays a misunderstanding of spirituality. It assumes that if we are seeking spiritual fulfillment, that we must all believe the same thing... that somehow if we believe the WRONG thing, that we will be unable to attain spiritual fulfillment.

    It is a very flawed approach to understanding the world. If you want to seek happiness, oneness with God... whatever you want to call it. The origin of humanity should be the least of your concerns. And what other people believe about it should be even less of a concern.

    We are humans. The point is to get used to it, and not to fret about how it happened or didn't happen. It is an interesting question, but not one that religion should be involved in.

  338. Re:Yay! by qeveren · · Score: 1

    Well, if you take all the weird breeds of dog that we've deliberately created, and let them breed freely, in the wild, without our intervention, you end up with something like a coyote-ish mutt. Funny how all those look the same, too. Kinda like all the smart apes look the same.

    --
    Don't just stand there, get that other dog!
  339. "who the hell decided ?" by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    The Board of Education, backed overwhelmingly by the parents of the children in the school system.

    I know this is Slashdot, and that religious faith causes readers to foam at the mouth and go into convulsions, but you DO realize most of the country is deeply religious, don't you?

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re: "who the hell decided ?" by JesusCigarettes · · Score: 1

      I know this is Slashdot, and that religious faith causes readers to foam at the mouth and go into convulsions, but you DO realize most of the country is deeply religious, don't you?

      I know this is America, and religious faith causes Americans to foam at the mouth and go into convulsions, but you DO realize that the country was founded with the Establishment Clause, don't you?

    2. Re: "who the hell decided ?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As many people have previously pointed out, religious beliefs do not function as a democracy. So what if most of the country is deeply religious? What if the Pledge endorses a single religion? It doesn't make it RIGHT, or TRUE.

      You have to realize that the general populace also need to practice what they preach: Do the best that you can do; learn from your mistakes. Well, the best that we can do right now is evolution, and we are working extremely hard to try to DISprove it. Progress is learning from your mistakes. Modern science does it's best to exploit every hole in every theory so that we can learn from the mistakes of the past. But religious fundies aren't budging, and are consistently claiming that they're right, and everyone else is wrong. Which group, do you think, is even attempting to make progress in our education and knowledge?

    3. Re: "who the hell decided ?" by unfunk · · Score: 1

      I'm not American, thankyou for assuming that I am.

  340. Blaaah. by tehdaemon · · Score: 2, Insightful
    First, you are seriously mixing scientific definitions and common english definitions of 'fact' and 'theory'. Scientific theories never become scientific facts. Scientific facts are 'I let go of the lead weight 26 times, and it fell down 26 times.' Scientific theories are 'lead weights always fall because their mass is attracted to the mass of the earth' Neither Newton's nor Einstein's theories have, or ever will become scientific facts. They may become common english 'facts', but from a scientific standpoint that is meaningless.

    Second, Evolution is both a scientific fact and theory. It is a fact in that we have observed fruit flies, bacteria, and to a much more limited extent, plants and animals evolve. There are documented cases of new species arising.[1] These are observed facts. Evolution is a scientific theory in that scientists use the fact of evolution and say that that is how all species came about, and eventually life itself.

    Whether or not the evolutionary theory is correct or not is not even a scientific fact. All scientific facts are 'observed'. No one was around to observe the beginning of life, or the origin of all species. Hence, where and how they started are not, and will never be, scientific facts.

    "What else is a fact but the best possible conclusion based on the evidence?"

    Not a bad common english definition of fact. However, in science, this kind of 'fact' is called 'the best theory so far'. The scientific 'facts' are the evidence you talked about, not the conclusion.

    [1]The one in particular that I remember is a plant that was a weird genetic screwup hybrid of two related species. The result has more chromasomes than it's parents, cannot polinate them or be polinated by them, and is successfully propogating on its own. Lab expieriments comfirmed that this new species was the result of crossbreeding.

    --
    Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
  341. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree, to an extent. Sure, evolutional thoery is not a truth, that of course, would be the conclusion of any rational mind. We simply don't have the evidence to say it's the truth, but from a scientific standpoint, the use of ockham's razor makes sense. Is it simpler that some being created the whole universe, or that the universe simply existed the whole time, and we were born of it, not by a supreme will--but through a process spanning billions of years?

    The fact is that when a southern state puts a sticker on everyone's books, you KNOW what they're up to. They could've said "this book contains theories, theories are not truths, but are a simplified view based upon...whatever...keep an open mind", and not singled out the thoery of evolution, and hey I wouldn't have had a problem with it. Sure, I'd still know where they were going with it, but they wouldn't be openly showing a bias. That they went out of their way in defacing government property with government money to discredit one theory in particular is troubling.

  342. My problems with both creationism and Darwinism by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 2, Informative

    is that people are starting to look like the ones who prosecuted Galileo. They used the Bible as a SCIENTIFIC BOOK (which wasn't meant to be), distorting all science. Geocentrism anyone?

    Worse. These creationists want their version to be the truth so much, that they've dismissed carbon-14 testings, astronomy, quantum physics and everything that tells us the universe is older than 6 days, as lies, etc.

    I remember a joke in a creationism book: "The answer book", it's a pink one (review and rebuttal).
    Student: So, those 6 days could have been 6 microseconds?
    Teacher: Yes.
    Student: And 6 billion years?
    Teacher: Yes.
    Student: And 6 days?
    Teacher (outraged) SIX DAYS NO!!!!

    This ridiculization of science gets me scared at the whole creationism.

    Now, on the other hand, I have something against Darwinian Evolution. I find it hard to believe that mere "random mutations" and a couple millions years have managed to create symbiosis and parasitosis. You know, an organism depending upon another (and possibly supporting it).

    Take a look at the discovery channel. Is it really logical that random mutations will make a spider look EXACTLY like a species of ants, use EXACTLY the same pheromones to hunt them? Or how about this little worm which produces some kind of food that ants like? Or how about the orchid Mantis?

    Symbiosis means SYNCHRONIZED evolution, and I don't think that random mutations can do that. Furthermore, HOW are these mutations produced?

    I rather think that possible mutations are already hardwired into DNA, and there are some ways to trigger specific changes - genetic memory or something... since we don't even know what the rest of "garbage" DNA is, I believe that there are still many mysteries in genetics that we haven't even SUSPECTED.

    Evolution? Yes. Darwinism? I doubt it. (And I do believe God designed DNA :)

    (Note: As a plus, i'd like to point out Genesis 1:20-27. First God filled the waters with living beings, then birds, then the big sea monsters and all water beings, and then earth animals, reptiles, and wild animals. And lastly, man.

    So, this kinda fits evolution, in that life came first from water, then evolved into sea creatures (sharks, fish), then dinosaurs, mammals, and finally mankind. Of course, this is just an interpretation, but I'd say it's quite accurate for a religious book. In any case, interpretation should follow Science, and not the opposite.

    1. Re:My problems with both creationism and Darwinism by zmollusc · · Score: 1

      D00d, read 'the blind watchmaker'. It addresses those points.

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
    2. Re:My problems with both creationism and Darwinism by tfoss · · Score: 2, Informative
      Take a look at the discovery channel. Is it really logical that random mutations will make a spider look EXACTLY like a species of ants, use EXACTLY the same pheromones to hunt them? Or how about this little worm which produces some kind of food that ants like? Or how about the orchid Mantis?


      Symbiosis means SYNCHRONIZED evolution, and I don't think that random mutations can do that. Furthermore, HOW are these mutations produced?

      Dude, you just don't get this whole natural selection thing do you? Ya know, how good traits are selected for...and the random noise is not?

      -Ted

      --
      -=-=- Quantum physics - the dreams stuff are made of.
    3. Re:My problems with both creationism and Darwinism by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

      Now, on the other hand, I have something against Darwinian Evolution. I find it hard to believe that mere "random mutations" and a couple millions years have managed to create symbiosis and parasitosis. You know, an organism depending upon another (and possibly supporting it).

      Dogs and homo sapiens?

      You refer to Discovery Channel; I have seen a documentary there about dolphins in the wild. Somewhere (Brazil IIRC) there is a bay where dolphins gather and drive all the fish in a certain location. When the fish are driven together a dolphin jumps out of the water in a special way and the fishermen that are also in the bay immediately cast out their nets. Those nets are of course filled with fish. A large number of the fish that try to escape make a good meal for the dolphins.

      This is clearly an example of symbiosis between species. Who started it? We can only guess now, but I can image a few dolphins gathering in the bay, one jumping out of the water for fun and one of the fishermen thought it was a sign from his god and cast his net. The dolphins detected the nets as well as the fleeing fish which were an easy target. Dolphins are not stupid, so they could find out the link between jumping out of the water and the nets being cast (Pavlov). Over time the dolphins and the fishermen would become more tuned to each other and exactly know where the nets should be.

      This hypothesis can of course not be proven or dismissed, but certainly fits the facts. Anyway, it is a clear case of symbiosis. Given enough time and environmental stress, I can see the advantage for both species becoming a necessaty where both actually need the other species to survive.

      On Discovery there was also something about a symbiotic relation which was sort of changing to a parasitic one; something with birds eating both tics and blood from large mammels or something like that.

      Symbiosis means SYNCHRONIZED evolution, and I don't think that random mutations can do that.

      Unfortunately, in a scientific discussion, what you think has less weight than what the facts state.

      Furthermore, HOW are these mutations produced?

      Radiation and chemicals have been proven to change DNA, both in and outside labs. Changes in DNA can easily cause mutations. These are hard facts.

      I rather think that possible mutations are already hardwired into DNA, and there are some ways to trigger specific changes - genetic memory or something.

      Unlikely. There is no genetic memory; DNA is a blueprint and hence can be seen as the memory. Having all possible mutations already encoded in DNA would mean that DNA would have severe restrictions in adapting. Besides, if DNA has hardwired which mutations are possible, then that hardwired information would also be in DNA. Would we then also have hardwired information on how the hardwired information on mutations can mutate?

      (And I do believe God designed DNA :)

      That is religion. As it is impossible to scientifically (dis)prove the existence of an omnipotent superbeing I cannot and will not scientifically comment on that. IMHO you are free to believe whatever you want, as long as you do not hinder other people in their beliefs or hinder science.

      You take words from your holy book and instead of taking them as rigid facts you interpret them and think about them, and probably have a bit of criticism here and there. If all religious people were like you the world would be devoid of people claiming their god wants them to dominate or kill other people. It certainly means that you do not bury your brain but choose to develop it (Matthew 25:14-30 ;-).

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    4. Re:My problems with both creationism and Darwinism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I find it hard to believe....

      It isn't about what you believe. It is about what you can CONCIEVE to EXPLAIN what you OBSERVE.

    5. Re:My problems with both creationism and Darwinism by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      "Take a look at the discovery channel. Is it really logical that random mutations will make a spider look EXACTLY like a species of ants, use EXACTLY the same pheromones to hunt them? Or how about this little worm which produces some kind of food that ants like? Or how about the orchid Mantis?"

      So either you have a lazy God who plagiarized his own work multiple times, or you have natural processes which tend to conserve energy (and we can show this very simply in the lab) and use the same (successful) blueprints multiple times. Which is more plausible?

      "Random" mutations have very little to do with natural selection, except in the sense that a successful organism that happens to have a mutated gene is more liekly to pass that gene on.

    6. Re:My problems with both creationism and Darwinism by vidarh · · Score: 1
      Take a look at the discovery channel. Is it really logical that random mutations will make a spider look EXACTLY like a species of ants, use EXACTLY the same pheromones to hunt them? Or how about this little worm which produces some kind of food that ants like? Or how about the orchid Mantis?

      Have you ever thought you saw something, and then looked closer to discover what you thought you saw was something different?

      That is a perfectly plausible explanation to your problem. If a spider sometimes, maybe once in a trillion times or less, got an advantage over other types of spider because it happened to have a trait that made it look more like a species of ant, then that trait would (if genetic) gradually become more common. If once in a trillion times or less, in a population of spiders with those features another feature that made them look even more similar to ants arose and gave the spider an advantage, their looks would start converging even more.

      Same for food. If once in a trillion times an ant with a specific gene got an advantage out of being able to live on what the worm produces, then that gene would be likely to spread, and other mutations might eventually arise to give advantages to ants that got more benefits out of what the worm produced.

      What you are questioning is the very foundation of evolution: Natural selection through environmental pressure.

      Symbiosis means SYNCHRONIZED evolution, and I don't think that random mutations can do that. Furthermore, HOW are these mutations produced?

      Symbiosis requires no such thing. It requires that one species evolve to take advantage of something from another species because it is available, making itself an integral part of the other species environment and thus making it possible for mutations in the other species to spread that are only beneficial because of the first species, creating a bond that may gradually grow into symbiosis.

      It is again trivially explained using only natural selection.

      As for how mutations are produced, consider that cells in your body mutate all the time as a result of radiation, chemical reactions, errors in replication of DNA etc.. Sometimes this affects reproduction, and sometimes the mutations do something without causing the reproduction to fail.

      Again, it would be more remarkable if mutations didn't happen as it would indicate a completely flawless, 100% fault tolerant system.

  343. Amen! by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

    Amen, brother! (Seriously)

    Unless your'e blinded by a literal interpretation of a frickin' BOOK based on heresay and lore, the only conclusion creationsist can come to is that the universe was created by god and not by natural processes. Well, what's the difference? I don't believ in any god, but I'm pretty sure if there was one, it'd give me the faculties to understand myself and my place in the universe through empirical evidence.

    And why wouldn't a "god" intend us to evolve into something greater? No matter how you slice it, evolution happens. It's just a matter of how much you want to shut yourself off to logic and give yourslef to "belief."

    Sad. I'm glad some people still believe in logic instead of fanatical belief.

    --
    "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    1. Re:Amen! by swillden · · Score: 1

      I'm glad some people still believe in logic instead of fanatical belief.

      What about those with a fanatical belief in logic?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    2. Re:Amen! by martinX · · Score: 1

      What, like Spock?

      --
      When they came for the communists, I said "He's next door. Take him away. Goddam commies."
  344. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Everything we need to know about this topic has been eloquently and concisely discussed in the song by artist MC Hawking (rap persona of physicist Stephen Hawking).

    Fuck The Creationists

    Trash Talk
    Ah yeah, here we go again!
    Damn! This is some funky shit that I be laying down on your ass.
    This one goes out to all my homey's working in the field of evolutionary science.
    Check it!

    Verse 1
    Fuck the damn creationists, those bunch of dumb-ass bitches,
    every time I think of them my trigger finger itches.
    They want to have their bullshit, taught in public class,
    Stephen J. Gould should put his foot right up their ass.
    Noah and his ark, Adam and his Eve,
    straight up fairy stories even children don't believe.
    I'm not saying there's no god, that's not for me to say,
    all I'm saying is the Earth was not made in a day.

    Chorus
    Fuck, fuck, fuck,
    fuck the Creationists.

    Trash Talk
    Break it down.
    Ah damn, this is a funky jam!
    I'm about ready to kick this bitch back in.
    Check it.

    Verse 2
    Fuck the damn creationists I say it with authority,
    because kicking their punk asses be me paramount priority.
    Them wack-ass bitches say, "evolution's just a theory",
    they best step off, them brainless fools, I'll give them cause to fear me.
    The cosmos is expanding every second, every day,
    but their minds are shrinking as they close their eyes and pray.
    They call their bullshit "science" like the word could give them cred,
    if them bitches be scientists then cap me in the head.

    Chorus

    Trash Talk
    Bass!
    Bring that shit in!
    Ah yeah, that's right, fuck them all motherfuckers.
    Fucking punk ass creationists trying to set scientific thought back 400 years.
    Fuck that!
    If them superstitious motherfuckers want to have that kind of party,
    I'm going to put my dick in the mashed potatoes.
    Fucking creationists.
    Fuck them.

    Check out the great MC Hawking tunes at his website.

  345. Re:Yay! by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

    As I said in a previous post, the problem is that what we can see of evolution (bacteria, etc.) always results in a more diverse population, not a less diverse one.

    For example, dogs and cats are completely separate animals - there are no half cats. Why? Why are there thousands of breeds of dogs (which all survive), but everything that was half-cat, half-dog died during prior evolution?

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  346. Not religion? by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    I agree, the scientific community should not be all painted black just because some who participate let their egos get in the way of science or let their own work become a cause of fashion.

    Likewise religion.

    Last time I checked, real religion required an active faith, active pursuit of truth, and the moral strength to not be swayed by every wind of fashion.

    Show me your faith without works, and I'll
    show you my faith with works.
    (James)

    And this is the true, pure religion, to
    visit the widows and the fatherless.
    (Paul? to the Hebrews?)

    You shall know the truth and the truth shall
    make you free.
    (Jesus)

    Repent!
    (Jesus)

    (Some people think repentance is just moaning and groaning about how bad we are, but if you study the scriptures, it's essentially step-wise refinement, or conscience-directed personal evolution. At very least, it's a willingness to quit doing what's wrong and start doing what's right.)

    Any lacking wisdom should ask of God, ...
    but should ask with real intent, otherwise will
    be just like a boat with no rudder, blown about
    by every fashion of doctrine.
    (James, again)

    (God, being by definition, the source of all truth, which some might forget.)

    Paraphrases, but there should be enough there for the curious to find the references.

    The argument is not religion vs. science, but religionists vs. sciencists. (Scientificists?)

    People who do true religion and people who do true science and ignore fashions (and dabates about them) are the real heros, even if they push us to think more deeply into what seven days, or in the case of this debate, creation, actually means.

    1. Re:Not religion? by elmegil · · Score: 1
      Don't you think putting stickers in books to push a "religion is right, science is wrong" agenda is just a "current fashion"?

      Personally, I just don't understand people who think that religion and science are opposed to each other. They're trying to make a fight where there is none. Just because stories that amount to oral history of early humans include teaching stories that aren't "scientific" doesn't mean 1) that those stories have nothing to teach nor 2) that those stories mean science is just flat wrong.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
  347. No, *that* is incorrect by fluxrad · · Score: 1

    Atheists firmly believe that Dieties do not exist

    You have bundled two distinct sets of atheists into a single group. The former being the strong atheist, i.e. one who believes that god does not exist. The later, of course, is defined as weak atheism. It is a lack of belief in God, but with the acknowledgement that a lack of evidence does not conclusively prove that God does not exist.

    However, neither of these are "religion" by any sense of the word. Your above statement can and should be reworded: Strong atheists do not believe that God/Gods exist. Essentially, the two phrases are the same, but when viewed together reveal the underlying (and decidedly incorrect) premise; that belief or the lack thereof by itself is tantamount to religion.

    --
    "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
    1. Re:No, *that* is incorrect by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      "It is a lack of belief in God, but with the acknowledgement that a lack of evidence does not conclusively prove that God does not exist."

      There is almost no difference between this and the agnostic 'I don't know if god exists.' The only difference is that the 'lack of belief' part is specified. The agnostic does not believe either. For all practical purposes this is agnostic, not atheist.

      However, 'do not believe' and 'believe he does not' are two very different things. For example, compare these statements

      • I do not believe erpsquiggles grunt.
      • I believe erpsquiggles do not grunt.
      I can honestly say the first, but not the second. Why? What the heck is an erpsquiggle? I have never heard of them before, and neither have you. ('cause I just made the word up) Because I have no idea what erpsquiggles may or may not be, I have no beliefs about them, including whether or not they grunt. But if I say the second statement, I imply that I know, or at least believe enough about them to conclude that they do not grunt. Very different. Since these are different, you cannot use this to conclude "that belief or the lack thereof by itself is tantamount to religion." is incorrect.

      Saying atheism is or is not a religion says a lot about what you mean when you say atheism or religion, and almost nothing about atheism or religion themselves. An inaccurate (or accurate!) definition of religion does not change the nature of religion, any more than calling a rose a skunk cabbage changes the nature of the rose.

      (you can apply this fact to my own definitions of atheist and agnostic if you choose - in fact you should, the english definitions of words are often too vauge to convey meaning unambiguously.)

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
  348. Where was God when the water rose? by REDSECTOR1 · · Score: 1

    "On Dec. 26, God who controls the world slipped beneath the waves.

    As a spiritual leader, I receive calls, letter and messages from people who have been touched deeply by the magnitude of the disaster. Even as we do what we can - giving generously to bring relief, keeping vigil with those still frantic to account for loved ones, trying to contemplate the rebuilding - we cannot escape this: We are dismantled inside.

    We know how the englufment happened. There was a shaking of the foundations of the Earth and a rising of the waters of the sea. It did not take 40 days and 40 nights; it took littlemore than 40 minues to engulf worlds. That much is explicable, if not imaginable.

    We do not know the why of it. No one is responsible. There is nowhere to lodge the meaning or lay the blame, except at the doorstep of God. Who else can shake the foundations of the world? At least the grief is deep, strong and true. Grief is best when only God carries the blame. It liberates the heart for clean anger.

    And here is something I know about the broken-hearted. They are the blessed, for they have loved and been loved. They know that this world is no paradise, but somewhere along the way they have encountered the greatest of the gifts. If it were not so, they would expect little and grieve less. Great grief can only produce great love.

    One young mother wrote to tell how she is haunted by the television images of parents holding their dead babies. Her words carry me to the deep into which all caring people have been cast. She is singing in the ancient lament of Jeremiah for the one who has lost her children: 'Her sun went down while it was yet day.' This has happened. The sun has gone down while it is yet day.

    I cannot speak for God, although I have spent many years trying to listen for God. What I hear today is the sound of weeping. What I taste today is the salt of God's tears. What I remember is a day, we call it Good Friday, when God's sun went down while it was yet day. What I know today is that if there is a presence in all creation that is crying, that presence is God.

    I have come to believe that God's ultimate commitment to the world and its creatures is not a commitment to control but a commitment to love. I believe that between control and love God must have had to make a choice. This is the same choice we all make. My own life as a parent of four has taught me this.

    Perhaps Margaret Atwood was right to say that we see the world clearly when we see it through tears. Broken hearts are the best companions on a day when the sun goes down.

    Now we must do what we can to help. When our common and frail humanity moves us to work side by side we may become aware in spite of ourselves that the One who loves the world is rising from the deep."

    - Right Rev. Peter Short, Moderator of the United Church of Canada

    Hrmmm ... God loves us, so by choice he gave us free will, otherwise we'd just be robots ... and that wouldn't be a loving thing to do would it? But free will has consequences, it's a result of the choice. Better to have loved though, than not love at all don't you think?

    LOVE > *

  349. Re:Yay! by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

    You haven't answered my question, why did the apes survive and the humans survive, but the half way points did not?

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  350. A typo I am sure ;-) by tehdaemon · · Score: 1

    You meant "...more on defence than every other country..." Right? 'Cause that is much closer to the truth. (The U.S. might still be off by a couple of percent, but the recent drop in the dollar probably took care of that.)

    --
    Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
  351. not quite the same by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Math is definitely different: Barring actual errors on the part of the mathematicians, mathematical theorems are proven to be correct. The most accepted and important ones have been checked over by many, many people, and so are exceedingly likely to be factual statements.

    Chemistry has more room for error, but there are quite a few "facts" in Chemistry that are known to a high degree of certainty. That water is H2O can reasonably be called a "fact", rather than merely a "theory", as it's pretty much 100% likely to be true.

    Explaining evolution, on the other hand, is an enterprise more akin to coming up with a theory about the fall of the Roman empire, or a model of global warming. There may be plenty of evidence, but it's difficult, at least given what we currently know, to prove it the way one might prove a mathematical theorem, or even know it to the certainty that we know the results in chemistry commonly called "facts".

    1. Re:not quite the same by merdark · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And DNA evidence, showing *absolutely clearly* that evolution is taking place is not good enough for you? While we may not know all the details of how evolution works, there is abundant evidence showing that evolution is a good theory. FAR more evidence than global worming or theories about the fall of the Roman empire. It's used every day to make better drugs and understand how desieases work. There is no alternative theory which can take it's place.

      In that light, arguing over how much evidence there is for evolutoin is actually besides the point. The people who want these stickers want to teach a non-scientific idea that has no place in a science class.

      Creationism is *not* an alternative theory. It can't be used to make any sort of prediction which makes it utterly useless as far as a scientific theory. Just like other philisophical ideas, it should be taught in a philosophy class.

  352. Re:Yay! by BFaucet · · Score: 1

    Well those half apes are probably all dead like the dinosaurs and we like to call them things other than half apes... like australopithecines and stuff. It kind of makes sense that organisms would evolve as a group until that group is split up for some reason and there is a branch on genetic threads. For example, where are the other members of the homo genus? A lot of folks think we killed out the other homo members and others think we interbred with them... then there's the ones who think we did a bit of both. Either way they aren't going to pass on their genes and we are.

    --
    -Derick
  353. well it is... by ALpaca2500 · · Score: 1

    evolution is a theory and not a fact. but it's a pretty fucking good theory. unlike creationism, which is a theory founded on bullshit and make-believe. repeat after me: God does not exist, and he did not make people. (but that is just me theory...)

  354. both are theories by xtermz · · Score: 1, Insightful

    both are theories. two strike one down over the other is outright wrong....

    in other news, the word of God is real. What he said may have just been transcribed so our simple minds, at the time, can comprehend it.

    I'm a man of science, yet I am also a man of faith. The two are NOT mutually exclusive... ...i await the negative karma this post will endure

    --


    I lost my concept of community when my community lost all concept of me.
    1. Re:both are theories by ultramk · · Score: 1

      I'll tell you what: I'll consider you a "man of science" when you demonstrate that you can understand the difference between "two" and "to".

      And actually, yes: they ARE mutually exclusive. One relies on empirical, demonstrable fact.
      The other relies on an untestable belief in an invisible man who lives in the sky.

      Science is science because you don't have to believe in it to make it work.

      m-

      --
      You catch enchiladas by picking them up behind the head and holding them underwater until they don't kick anymore -VeGas
    2. Re:both are theories by tweek · · Score: 1

      Yeah evolution is a theory.....
      Know what else is a theory?

      GRAVITY

      I'm not going to flame you but I think the problem that many people who have strong fundamental beliefs (myself in another life included) is that the issue is not which idea is real or right. It's about SCOPE CREEP. The religious ideas are best in a philosophy or religion class. Keep the scientific ideas in a science class.

      I don't want my doctor learning faith-healing in a medical class any more than I want my child learning about christian creationism in a science class. Maybe the general concept of intelligent design but not a specific religious belief.

      Let me clarify. I graduated from one of the most deep woods schools in Cobb County - North Cobb High School. I remember the first time evolution came up in a class while I was in the throes of fundamentalism. I also know the environment of Cobb County.

      I think the author of the book really nailed it when he said (at least in the AJC article I read) that "SCIENTIFIC theory is not the same as a stupid hunch" that some TV detective has. The whole thing is definition, pure and simple.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    3. Re:both are theories by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      As a man of science, you should be able to tell when a theory offers a viable alternative to explaining the evidence, and when that theory is nothing but a doctrinaire response to an external threat.

      The reality of the word of God doesn't impact the quality of a scientific theory.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    4. Re:both are theories by vidarh · · Score: 1
      So if I claim it is my theory that you are a dimwit that would be better off if I had power of attorney for you, and you claimed otherwise would it be wrong to striking one down over the other? Regardless of what evidence you might have that you are capable of running your own life?

      Hmm.. I see possibilities here.

      I will consider creationism a valid scientific theory when somebody presents a version of it that is written in clear, unambiguous language coupled with predictions that can be logically inferred from the language that can be checked, and will fail if the theory is incorrect. Anything short of that, and creationism is pure conjecture with no scientific value whatsoever and giving it any sort of attention as part of science education would be just as wrong as presenting the existence of Santa Claus as a valid theory worthy of consideration.

    5. Re:both are theories by condensate · · Score: 1

      I think in fact science rules out religion in the whole. If you are to believe things, then you are not investigating them, and if you are to investigate, you are striving for an understanding of things, not just for some other sort of belief. The assymetry here is that science nowadays never uses god or whatever spiritual being you believe in as an ultimate reason or authority, whereas religion and its institutions are trying to control science for more than one millenium. Let me state it like this. To science (and evolution for that matter), it does not really matter whether Eve was carved out from Adam or vice versa. The two sexes just *are*. To religion, as a philosophic/ideologic framework, things like that matter, and don't give me the stuff about symbolisms and images in the Holy Bible. At the time it was written, people seemed to believe in babys being born from a virgin, or humans turning to stone and whatnot. So I don't think there was a symbolic meaning behind this. The problem is that there is no such thing and that's it. Women were designed to bear *after* having sex, because that is how nature works, and she did so for ages and will continue to do so. Yet religion states one instance where nature must have been on holidays. I am a scientist and like accurate numbers, but even for those of us more comfortable with estimates: How small, given a population of roughly 6000B People (today, not taken into account all those being born since the first Christmae) do you think the probability for such a thing to happen is? Come on. Let's get real. Science will never be able to provide us with all the answers, but religion states things just plain out wrong.

      --
      Black holes were created when god tried to divide by zero
    6. Re:both are theories by GeorgeH · · Score: 1

      Both are theories, you are correct, but that doesn't make them equal. Only one of those theories provides falsafiable claims. One is widely accepted by the scientific community (a pretty cutthroat community at that - if someone did disprove evolution their name would be up there with Newton and Einstein, so there's plenty of incentive to try) the other has not passed peer-review.

      Without being able to test a theory, it doesn't help us determine the nature of the universe.

      As a man of faith, don't you think that's what God wants?

      --
      Why can't I moderate something "Wrong" or at least "Grossly Misinformed"?
    7. Re:both are theories by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

      in other news, the word of God is real.

      Although I'd never be so brash as to say that god doesn't exist (although I have no use for the concept of god, and hence, reject it), I don't understand Christians who are arrogant enough to claim beyond the shadow of a doubt that god is real.

      The only existence of god that we have is god's word. The conclusion is the premise. There is no logical reason to believe the word of god. There is no reason not to believe it, if it suits you, as well, but to say that it is true is just silly.

  355. Re:Yay! by qeveren · · Score: 1

    Silly. It will always be a theory. Outside of pure mathematics and logic, there's no such thing as laws. Please don't confuse theory and hypothesis.

    --
    Don't just stand there, get that other dog!
  356. Re:Yay! by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

    Well, not to nitpick, but we are a Republic - not a Democracy. And I disagree wholeheartedly that, as such, a simple majority should be able to dictate religious beliefs in a public school. That is, in essence, a complete undermining of the freedom-of-religion pillar that we Americans hold so dear. If you agree that people of all sorts of faiths attend public school, I honestly do not see why it is so difficult to see why teaching any one creed over another violates that principle.

    As you somewhat mentioned, we either have to teach all creeds with perfect equality (which is, of course, utterly impossible) or stick to testable, scientific methods to explain our existence.

    The thought that a majority could simply outvote and instill their religious beliefs on my children in a public school scares the hell out of me - and if you support this, I don't think you really understand what freedom of (and from!) religion means.

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  357. better ideas are always good by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    and kids tend to come up with more better ideas when science is also enencumbered by the fear that any of a certain class of re-thinking will be automatically labeled "that old superstitious religion".

    1. Re:better ideas are always good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Science is not encumbered with anything like that. And which "more better" ideas are these ? Some neo-christian garbage old-wine-in-old-bottle ? WHy is it that I don't see any new ideas at all except "gawd created man and thats the way it izz.." kind of crap.

  358. Re:Spelling by MmmDee · · Score: 1

    Words to spell, don't forget: privilege, knowledge. Both use to drive me crazy developing AI systems on VMS years ago.

    --
    No man's an island, unless he's had too much to drink and wets the bed.
  359. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Pooua: "It is impossible to understand our system of laws and human rights without understanding our Judeo-Christian foundation."

    WKJ: "No, it isn't."

    Pooua: If you do not understand our Judeo-Christian foundation, you will be unable to understand a simple phrase like,

    "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

    In terms of a godless, natural-force-only Universe, statements such as the heart of the Declaration of Independence have no meaning. I could cite many more examples, but this one example is sufficient to show that you are incorrect.

    WKJ: And regardless, no matter what the foundation of our laws may indeed be, that does not mean you should require that those foundations be taught outright.

    It wouldn't be much of a school system if it did not teach the foundations. But, more to the point, it would be a very bad school system if it forbade the teaching of the foundations, as is the case on this topic.

    WKJ: A pagan society could also determine similar laws, even though the foundations may seem very different.

    There may be the occassional simularity, but it would not be our system of laws and our understanding of human rights. In particular, our understanding of human rights differs greatly from those who claim that people--whether governments or the majority of voters--are the source of human rights, as we see in the culture war.

    WKJ: And keep in mind that there were advanced civilizations long before Christianity.

    Yes, and we regard most of those civilizations to have been brutal and barbaric, though those practices did not bother their contemporaries until Judeo-Christianity came along. Examples are numerous (the games of the Coliseum, human sacrifices of the Incas and Aztecs, the practice of Sati, etc.).

    WKJ: I reiterate - no one should be denied religious expression, and we should all fight and die to protect that right if necessary -- but that is NOT what is at issue here.

    Then why did you bring up the issue of separation of Church and State? You asked me a question, and I answered it, and now you say that issue has nothing to do with this issue.

    Pooua: That would be an argument for the elimination of the public school system.

    WKJ: I think this point is only valid if you do not see the difference between a religous belief and a scientific one. ... If it does require someone to share your faith, I am still not convinced why that should be taught in public schools.

    I am unconvinced that children should be taught in classrooms in which discussion of God is banned.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  360. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Too, I'll have to ask you why if evolution is the exact science, why are there still monkies around?

    Shouldn't they have evolved as well?


    They did.

    Why don't dolphins have thumbs by now?

    Why would a dolphin need thumbs? They are perfectly well adapted to their environment. They are the top of their food chain.

    Why can't rats talk yet?

    Why should rats be able to talk? Rats are superbly adapted, and will probably outlast us. We couldn't wipe out the rats if we tried, so what evolutionary pressure is there to drive them to talk?

    These are all questions based on a naive understanding of evolution based on the simple phrase "survival of the fittest". The seems to imply to people that if some adaptation (e.g. thumbs, speech, being able to fly, mutant super-powers) is or would be helpful, then that adaptation will necessarily arise and dominate. This is simply untrue.

    A more accurate and revealing phrase might be "survival of the sufficiently fit". If a species is able to find food and procreate successfully then there is little pressure to change. Most mutations and new features are detrimental, not beneficial. Even if a "good" feature arises it will not necessarily spread and dominate if the rest of the species is able to do fine as they are. Even flaws -- sickle cell anemia, our vestigal appendix -- can survive if they aren't sufficiently damaging that they prevent survival (or in the case of sickle cell, can have benefits such as increased resistance to malaria).

    You might as well ask why humans can't fly. We do just fine on the ground, thank you very much.

    On the other hand, environmental pressure can quickly result in adaptation. Here is a fascinating example: poisonous toads imported to Australia were multiplying like crazy and killing the local predators that tried to eat them. Since their arrival in the 30's, a couple species of snakes have adapted to be able to more saftely eat these frogs. You see, snakes without the correct trait were not sufficiently fit and the pressure to change was huge.

    Evolution is not an exact science -- the main theory for new features arising is random mutation of DNA! Questioning evolution because rats can't talk or because monkies can't fly and don't have laser eye beams is misunderstanding the point.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  361. Stupidity should be unconstitutional by Magickcat · · Score: 1

    There's nothing quite like a fundamentalist to stand in the way of the pursuit of truth and science. It just never gets old for them.

    Dear God, please protect me from your insane followers.

    --

    Si tacuisses philosophus mansisses. If you had kept quiet, you would have remained a philosopher.

    1. Re:Stupidity should be unconstitutional by klang · · Score: 1

      Another /.'er once suggested, that we should just remove the warning stickers on everything and let the problem of stupidity solve itself.

    2. Re:Stupidity should be unconstitutional by Magickcat · · Score: 1

      Now that's a brilliant idea.

      --

      Si tacuisses philosophus mansisses. If you had kept quiet, you would have remained a philosopher.

    3. Re:Stupidity should be unconstitutional by klang · · Score: 1
    4. Re:Stupidity should be unconstitutional by Magickcat · · Score: 1

      hehehe - what a useful piece of advice.

      --

      Si tacuisses philosophus mansisses. If you had kept quiet, you would have remained a philosopher.

  362. 29+ Evidences for Macroevolution by Degrees · · Score: 1
    That link had nothing to do with a record of macroevolution, and everything to do with use in the english language of the word "evidences".

    The fifth citation is Shakespeare. What? That Shakespeare wrote a play that says some girl is the daughter of the king is suddenley proof of macroevolution?

    I cannot tell if you are trying to mock macroevolution, or are just really clumsy in trying to support it.

    I still don't see any written record of "last year/decade/century, animal species xyz lacked trait abc and this year/decade/century, the trait appeared. This new trait is such an improvement, that the old species will likely not survive." Mankind has 10,000+ years of written history - surely there should be a written record somewhere....

    --
    "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    1. Re:29+ Evidences for Macroevolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      google for Finches Galapagos and Evolution. After sorting through all the old references to darwin, you should find a more recent observation about how a food shortage led some of the finches to develope large beaks so they could eat more difficult seeds.

      Then of course there are the well known examples of drug resistant bacteria. And should you be of a pedantic bent a colony of bacteria can be very macro.

      Dogs of course.

      The transition of maze into corn.

      Rats evolving the ability to eat large quantities of poison.

      From your last thought on the matter, you don't even grasp even the most basic elements of evolution. It's not a zero sum game, there can be more than one. And your moronic comment about the time scale involved. Ugh. Let's just say it takes certain kinds of well developed economies to support the kind of specialization which has become common over the last 200 years or so. But never mind that, plenty is written about the record of macroevolution, and the role humans have played in it intentional and otherwise. But you haven't read it. And you claim that because you're ignorant of it, it must not exist. Further more, it's trivial for anyone to look into it.

      But there's one thing that should give you comfort, you're in the majority. Which is quite the indictment of our species and how close we still are to rooting for grubs with sticks.

    2. Re:29+ Evidences for Macroevolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "a food shortage led some of the finches to develope large beaks so they could eat more difficult seeds."

      micro

      "Then of course there are the well known examples of drug resistant bacteria."

      micro

      "Dogs of course."

      Of course..what about them? Did some of them grow wings and turn into birds?

      "The transition of maze into corn."

      Sounds interesting, link? Are they still within the same genus?

      "Rats evolving the ability to eat large quantities of poison."

      micro

  363. Missing the real issue... by Tekoneiric · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm not religious but it seems to me that the religious people are missing the real issue. It's not creation vs evolution; it's controlled evolution vs uncontrolled evolution. Evolution is a fact but the real question is if it was directed by an some unknown entity(s) (god, aliens, etc) or by chaotic enviromental conditions.

    --
    *It's not what you can do for the Dark Side but what the Dark Side can do for you!*
    1. Re:Missing the real issue... by tloh · · Score: 1

      What if this unknown entity/higher order turns out to be the laws of physics as expressed through probability and quantum mechanics?

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
    2. Re:Missing the real issue... by bentcd · · Score: 1

      The problem is that a subset of the religious crowd insist on taking the bible literally. And since it nowhere says explicitly that "and God told them that He was in charge of Evolution and when they asked Him what Evolution was He said unto them: ask you the great prophet Darwin who shall walk the earth and give you great knowledge of My grand designs", it's a no-go from the start.

      A more sensible Christian might be closer to Thomas Aquinas and reserve only a few topics for unquestionable faith (e.g., the trinity, the sacraments, judgement day, etc.) and leave the easily disprovable topics to the realm of science. This way, at least he may be able to avoid insanity. And, as you point out, he is now in the desirable position where he can attribute all of existence's clever bits to his god.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    3. Re:Missing the real issue... by Tekoneiric · · Score: 1

      It's possible that there might be some kind of quirk in the laws of physics that makes the organization of life an inevitable process under the right conditions. As much as religious people discount science when they don't understand it or find it in opposition to their view; they are quick to embrace it when it's compatible with they're views. Religion by nature, especially the predator religions are very two faced. They would embrace any knowledge of a quirk like this as proof of god.

      --
      *It's not what you can do for the Dark Side but what the Dark Side can do for you!*
    4. Re:Missing the real issue... by tloh · · Score: 1

      However way you slice it, the laws of physics have nothing to do with an omnipotent bearded old man and his alleged semitic (but suprisingly caucasian) mortal son. With out a single piece of scientific knowledge in the bible, there isn't any way for a fundamentalist to explain that away.

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
  364. They're not mutually exclusive, dammit! by DavyByrne · · Score: 1

    Do people really not understand that creationism and evolution are not mutually exclusive? Do people really not understand that science develops theories about how things happen whereas theology gives us reasons why things happen?

    Why do so many people persist in conflating these two?

  365. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    There are underlying assumtions (axioms?) that any rational thought is predicated upon, be it mathematical or spiritual.

    What is proof? It is the logical form showing the only correct answer based on given propositions. This is fundamentally different from scientific theory, in which one of several possible models that fits data is preferred. 1+1=2 is proved because that is the only logical conclusion based on the initial propositions. Common descent with modification is not proved, because there are too many alternatives possible.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  366. Because they strongly believe in it ... by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    People who deal with faith understand that real belief tends to engender an ability to let others believe what they will. The need to defend is derived from a weak position.

    That's not necessarily a bad thing, either, because defense often refines and strengthens understanding.

    But this business about courts preventing school systems from stickering textbooks with a reminder that science is not the be-all and end-all of truth is attempting to use law to prevent the sciencists from having to defend their point.

    1. Re:Because they strongly believe in it ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya. May be the bible should come with a disclaimer: This is book written by man/men and may be full of crap.

      Its very clear that the school singled out evolution and also avoided stating that evolution is backed up by tons of evidence.

    2. Re:Because they strongly believe in it ... by elmegil · · Score: 1
      The need to defend is derived from a weak position.

      That's why we're in Iraq, right? Because of our "weak position"? Give me a break.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
  367. Open mouth, insert foot by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1
    ~ mathematical theorems are proven to be correct.
    Evolution has been proven to be correct, bub. That's why it is called a (scientific) theory.

    When the unwashed, sweaty cows hear the word "theory," they believe the speaker is really saying, "guess," which is incorrect. But then, those cows have never even bothered to read the Origin of Species (it is not a hard read), so WTF do they know?

    --
    Yeah, right.
    1. Re:Open mouth, insert foot by mpe · · Score: 1

      When the unwashed, sweaty cows hear the word "theory," they believe the speaker is really saying, "guess," which is incorrect.

      Similar things happen with the term "conspiracy theory".

  368. Time Cube by CaptainPinko · · Score: 1

    I've got another theory that needs equal time too!

    --
    Your CPU is not doing anything else, at least do something.
  369. Re:Yay! by srleffler · · Score: 1
    Actually, they could. In general, it's perfectly fair to say that 'both creation and evolution are possible answers to the unanswered question of our existence'. These stickers, however, were on science books, for use in a science class. Creationism is not a valid scientific theory, and as such a sticker claiming that both creation and evolution are possible answers has no place on a science textbook.

    The wording of the actual stickers in this case, however, were much more neutral than this. The problem with them seems to have been that independent of what they said, they were put on the books with the motivation to support a particular religious view. The government is not allowed to do this.

  370. Re:Yay! by PureCreditor · · Score: 1

    this is not about free spech -1. Free speech is the freedom of self-expression. TEACHING creationism is forcing those knowledge onto the students. If a student in Georgia cannot choose whether he wants to be taught creationism or evolution, then the teacher is violating his rights as a student, therefore, freedom of speech no longer applies.

    The right to speech freedom cannot be viewed solely independently - other laws have to hold too. Sure you can yell "I will kill you Bush" at the inauguration due to "free speech," but you will be arrested for "conspiracy of murder against the president."

  371. Please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    May I have milk and cookies?

  372. Re:Yay! by foooo · · Score: 1

    Text books belong to the school.

    School Board puts sticker on THEIR books. It's just labeling their property.

    The statement on the sticker is true... so what's all the fuss about? Even the most rabid proponents of evolution still call it a theory. (As all good scientists should)

    This quote is just silly:

    By denigrating evolution, the school board appears to be endorsing the well-known prevailing alternative theory, creationism or variations thereof, even though the sticker does not specifically reference any alternative theories,&#148; U.S. District Judge Clarence Cooper said.

  373. Devolution. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    The process observed in the parent post, whereby a human turns into a monkey.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  374. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    They can explain it very easily.

    If it is very easy, it isn't correct or useful. Life is far more complex than simple chemistry. What evolutionists do, instead, is present schematic models. However, these models break down on closer examination.

    And you can go watch various stages of it if you happen to own a really good submarine.

    If you think so, then you don't know what you are seeing.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  375. Re:Yay! by abigor · · Score: 1

    Go fuck yourself, you utter, utter fool. And get off Slashdot; you clearly don't belong here.

  376. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    No, that is not the only reason. Another reason--the one that I spoke of in my post--is that people who hate Christianity are using evolution and the scientific community as tools in their attack against Christianity.

    If fundamentalist Christians would not insist on a foolish dogmatic literal interpretation of a translation of Genesis then that attack would be toothless.

    It is exactly like Galileo -- the only reason his observation of the world could be used against the Church is because the Church refused to drop their dogma. If they had accepted the truth Galileo presented, what then could anyone have said?

    In the same way the Creationists are their own worst enemy. The "attack" is to say: look, the Creationists deny facts that we observe every day because a religious text says different (according to them)! It'd be rather hard to say that if Creationists weren't denying facts, wouldn't it? So, might I humbly suggest trying that?

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  377. Great, we have judges deciding science... by CptNerd · · Score: 1

    "Constitutionally correct" science that is.

    Just what we need.

    --
    By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
    1. Re:Great, we have judges deciding science... by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      Would you prefer judges to rule that science is invalid because it conflicts with preconceived religious notions? I prefer that the judiciary knock down religious limitations on science, myself.

      But that's just me.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    2. Re:Great, we have judges deciding science... by CptNerd · · Score: 1

      If the judge was a qualified scientist, maybe but not ideally.

      Activist judges on the right or left who believe they have a duty to change society are dangerous. Those that interpret laws based on their feelings or personal opinions are even more so.

      Several SC justices have already spoken publicly stating that they aren't going to just use the Constitution to decide whether laws are constitutional, and will use international legal precedents.

      All we need are judges deciding what is and isn't allowed in textbooks, first science, then who knows, history, philosophy, law? Will a judge claim that a school or public library cannot constitutionally allow Bibles or any other religious books of any kind be available? Will a judge decide that a Christian cannot run for office, due to the appearance of not separating church and state?

      Given a precedent, and willing legislators, executives and voters who go along with it, judges can rule on anything, and will.

      --
      By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
  378. Dodging the question by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    Who says what is "fittest"? Who said that survival is some sort of fitness? Fit for what? Survival for how long? What happens when the human race, chasing short term survival, extinguishes itself?

    More important question -- who, or what, deemed that survival should occur in the first place? Why is survival a principle that matters?

    If you wave it off as just chance, you're still dodging the question. Who or what determined that chemical chance should have the necessary biases to produce life?

    The answer is that whatever you say created the world and all that is in it is your god.

    But science has to keep its hands off that question, and for very good reason. If it doesn't, it gets into the business of telling each and every person they have to believe in the same ultimate creator. And that is not science.

    1. Re:Dodging the question by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Who says what is "fittest"?
      More important question -- who, or what, deemed that survival should occur in the first place?


      No one, you anthropomorphizing addict.

      Who said that survival is some sort of fitness?

      Darwin.
      Sheesh, that one was easy.

      Fit for what?

      Reproduction of your genes.

      Why is survival a principle that matters?

      Because those that do not survive are not here anymore to matter.

      This is a very basic principle, your pathetic need for a finality, for a leader to have made it so, for a purpose, is preventing you from understanding it, apparently.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Dodging the question by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      You call him an "anthropormorphizing addict". You kiss your mother with that mouth?

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    3. Re:Dodging the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's been discovered, recently, that a significant proportion of the population of western Africa seems to be genetically endowed with resistance to malaria. What are the odds, do you imagine, that in another dozen or so generations that proportion of the population will be larger?

  379. Surviving war. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Great post, but the best way to survive war is to avoid it alltogether.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    1. Re:Surviving war. by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      Total, abject surrender avoids war. For anyone interested in survival above all else, it's the way to go.

    2. Re:Surviving war. by cL0h · · Score: 1

      "Survival above all else

      War does not determine who is right. Only who is left.
      - Bertrand Russell

      --
      cL0h
  380. Re:Catholicism & Science Creationism vs. Evolu by maxkennedy · · Score: 0

    Actually, I believe He created the heavens and earth in six days, and rested on the seventh day. This is quite apart from believing that macro evolution is a hypothesis as to a means to explain the origin of life. I would believe this regardless of being saved or not, since it is clearly not well proven.

  381. Then why laud the court for siding with the those who are making the biggest noise right now?

    If they should be limiting themselves to law, they should be limiting themselves to law, and not trying to tell the board of education that they can't stand up for a group of people who want their kids to know that there are a lot of pretend scientists out there saying theory is better than fact.

    1. Re:LAW! by databyss · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure the judge reads /.

      "they should be limiting themselves to law, and not trying to tell the board of education that they can't stand up for a group of people who want their kids to know that there are a lot of pretend scientists out there saying theory is better than fact."

      The board of education has a responsibility to provide an unbiased education to the citizens of it's district. Specifically targetting the theory of evolution because alot of parents believe god is the answer is biased. So yes, they should be telling the board of education that they can't stand up for a group of people who want it their way.

      There are alot of pretend scientists out there, luckily for most of us, they don't get into textbooks. Evolution happens. The theory involved is how, why and when. Evolution is as theoretical as the pavement that connects the ends of the road you live on.

      --
      Hmmm witty sig or funny sig? Maybe elitest techy sig!
  382. Armageddon Days Are Here (Again) by klang · · Score: 1


    If the real Jesus Christ were to stand up today
    He'd be gunned down cold by the CIA
    Oh, the lights that now burn brightest behind stained glass
    Will cast the darkest shadows upon the human heart
    But God didn't build himself that throne
    God doesn't live in Israel or Rome
    God doesn't belong to the yankee dollar
    God doesn't plant the bombs for Hezbollah
    God doesn't even go to church
    And God won't send us down to Allah to burn
    God will remind us what we already know
    That the human race is about to reap what it's sown

    Islam is rising
    The Christians mobilising
    The world is on its elbows and knees
    It's forgotten the message and worships the creeds

    "It's saying that God doesn't commit these evil acts. The things that are committed in the name of God are not God's doing. They're just mankind's doing. All this wickedness is the animal nature of man being expressed. There is no Satan. The Devil lives in the human heart. The only devil is the human ego or the lower nature of man. The God that inspired the prophets is the one God no institution or religion has a monopoly on. That same force is here today for anyone to use it. God is not a relic from the past. It's a human birthright. I feel very strongly about the misuse of God as a tool for suppressing humanity, which is what it's been used for throughout the centuries."

    -Matt Johnson/The The
    Melody Maker 1989

  383. Um, no, you look again. by coyotecult · · Score: 1
    1. Re:Um, no, you look again. by Atrax · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... OK. maybe you're right.

      It's just painful to look at for too long.

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
  384. Re:Yay! by abigor · · Score: 1

    Hooray! When do you think they'll finally succeed in wiping out those superstitious fools? O happy day!

  385. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Only as it applies to humans.

    There is no theory of common descent that does not include humans.

    We have observed speciation in other species.

    Most of these events are actually the formation of sub-species. At this point, this argument becomes one of semantics; what is a species? Rather than argue along that line, I will point out that my original statement has not been negated by your statement, because you are not addressing common descent, but only subsequent speciation. It remains unknown whether all forms of life evolved from a common ancestor, though that is the claim of the theory of common descent.

    It happens, it is fact.

    It is a fact that one type of bird has been observed to give rise to another, slightly different type of bird. This is not the same thing as common descent, and it remains unproven whether common descent is even possible, much less whether it actually occurred.

    Did it happen with humans? Well, that's just a theory, but the only objection to the idea that humans evolved similarly to other animals including those we have obsereved is dogmatic.

    That would be a sloppy way of thinking in other branches of science; it is not sufficient to claim that a theory must be accepted as an historical fact simply because no one has produced an alternative theory. Claiming that observed examples of speciation (or sub-speciation) demonstrates the process that led to humans is an argument by a hyper-extended analogy.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  386. Re:Yay! by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

    In terms of a godless, natural-force-only Universe, statements such as the heart of the Declaration of Independence have no meaning. I could cite many more examples, but this one example is sufficient to show that you are incorrect.

    No, not quite, because the true meaning of the declaration of independance lies in our laws - not in this (admittedly beautiful) line. Again, the best thing about our founding fathers is that they seperated the foundation from the implementation. Yes, I agree that the basis of our laws is the Judeo/Christian tradition. That does not logically indicate that such belief systems should be instilled on the populace, if you believe in the seperation of church and state in public arenas, which I certainly do.

    But, more to the point, it would be a very bad school system if it forbade the teaching of the foundations, as is the case on this topic.

    Not if you view the foundations as somewhat arbitrary. Yes, our foundations are X... but that does not mean that the same conclusions could not have been met if they weren't Y. Again, advanced civilizations have existed long before X ;) Just because X played an important role in our (what I believe to be) somewhat advanced society does not mean X is the only path, and hence, should be instilled over the populace. I believe the founding fathers emphasized freedom of religion because they knew exactly how dangerous and horrible public enforcement of religion could be, and I am happy to take their word for it (our country was born from the need to escape from religious persecution, after all). Just as we should fight to protect freedom of religion, we should also fight to make sure no one attempts to instill a religious belief on us or our children.

    Yes, and we regard most of those civilizations to have been brutal and barbaric, though those practices did not bother their contemporaries until Judeo-Christianity came along. Examples are numerous (the games of the Coliseum, human sacrifices of the Incas and Aztecs, the practice of Sati, etc.).

    Wow, brush up on a bit of your history and I think you will find quite a few atrocities commited in the name of Christianity. As for regarding those civilizations as brutal and barbaric - I agree... and I also think that, unfortunately, not all that much as changed since then. I can think of a few brutal and barbaric practices that are being enforced by our goverment at this very instant.

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  387. NOT a real site! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "Objective Christian Ministries" site is *not* for real. It's an elaborate joke. The members pictures are clearly fake and the content is over the top. If you spend some time reading the contents, it's clear that it's a joke.
    If you are still not convinced, look up the names of counties, towns, churches, schools, etc. mentioned and you will not find them anywhere. (I recall I looked up the county mentioned a couple of years ago and couldn't find it in any state.)

  388. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Holy shit, you're an embarrassment to Canada.

  389. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    If fundamentalist Christians would not insist on a foolish dogmatic literal interpretation of a translation of Genesis then that attack would be toothless.

    If secular humanism only attacked fundamentalist Christianity, I might be inclined to think you are correct. However, that is not the case. The anti-Christians proceed by removing reference to God in all aspects of public life, not just in the classroom or in discussions of biology. Hence, God is not to be mentioned in government; the Ten Commandments are not to be allowed in courthouses (despite the fact that it is one of the foundational documents of our civilization); presidents are not to be given an oath of office that references God or uses a Bible; the Pledge of Allegiance is not to mention God; and so forth.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  390. Someone mod this parent up ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Best thing I've seen written on /. for years - elegant and concise. Thanks :)

  391. A law does NOT mean this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... a law can be absolutely proven

    This is not true. The fact is, nothing in science can be absolutely proven. A law is something like an axiom in math - it is always observed to be that way, and it is simple enough to just accept at face value. However, look at Newton's second law of motion. It turns out that at speeds approaching the speed of light, F does NOT equal MA. However, most of the time, F=MA is a good enough approximation. The worst thing about these stupid stickers is that is shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the scientific process and what science is.

  392. One big fuji apple plus one crabapple == two apples?

    One key for a symmetric crypt + one key for an asymmetric crypt == two keys?

    On a single digit readout voltmeter, 1V + 1V == 2V?

    The world is a huge place, and there are places where the rules just don't seem the same.

    And there are people who believe in a God who wants them to be free to take a break from work once a week, rather than a god who wants to burn for stepping out of line.

    (Actually, the burning in hell is for the bosses who insist on planning the schedules as if one eighty hour week were just as productive as two forty hour weeks, month after month after year.)

  393. Re:What about letting people make thier own decisi by cyb0rg · · Score: 1

    Yes, but I have seen quite a few scientific theories (which (gasp!) use the scientific method) to support the existance of "god" and/or the vailidty of religious texts such as the bible.

    This seems to be to be a very fuzzy gray area. "Elites" like to pass off religious people as simply uninformed or ignorant. Realisticly, this is not the case. There are a huge number of very smart religous people who are capable of critical thinking and applying scientific principles. The two ideologies are not necessary mutually exclusive.

    Saying something can not be taught because it can not be "proved" to your acceptance is not a good criteria. Everyone used to think the world was flat. Refusing to teach that it was round simply because it (at the time) it required a small leap of "faith" is ridiculous.

    Moreover, many of us put our faith in science. There are fundamental "laws" which we believe to be true based on our observations. Does that mean they are unequivically true and can never be violated? No. Is science constantly evolving as we learn new things? Yes. Everyone who believes in science MUST put their faith in what we have learned and simultaneously know that it is subject to change as we learn more.

    Religion is an organized set of believes. Science falls into this category.

  394. Divine experience? by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    I have had things that could be called divine experiences. The only problem was, while I had observed them, and others reported having similar experiences, none of that proves the existance of God.

    All it proves is that there is something beyond what we can easily observe. This is generally accepted -- ever hear of dark matter/energy?

    To have a "spiritual" experience and then dust off a 2000-year-old self-contradictory, hyper-violent, judgemental, hypocritical text and using that to explain something is missing an incredible opportunity.

    The opportunity is to observe what you experience, scientifically. You may be disappointed and disenchanted to find that it all came from indigested pepperoni. But you may also find something far more incredible than anything the Bible tells you, and far more real and accessible.

    That, to me, is the difference between a religious person and a spiritual person. A religious person "believes" something they have no basis for, and are usually quite closed-minded about it. A spiritual person has an open mind and is far more willing to believe in the reality of things they experience which haven't been explained by science.

    I think I know why there are more religious people than spiritual people. Spiritual people, being open-minded, don't impose their beliefs on others, and will more readily believe the beliefs of others. Religious people are not only steadfast (read: stubborn, pigheaded) in their beliefs, but tend to impose them on everyone.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  395. Two out of three ain't bad. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    I will start with the last question first:

    What does any of that have to do with evolution?

    If you are talking about the evolution of life on earth then the GP post is explaning the implementation of evolution. If you are talking about the evolution of a galaxy then it may only be significant to humans.

    I can only assume the other two questions are rhetorical.

    What are you talking about?
    Are you just making stuff up?


    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  396. Does this also mean.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...we have to take the "Pure Conjecture" stickers off all the Bibles?

    1. Re:Does this also mean.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod +1 hilarious but seriously, this is a good idea! Maybe religious texts *should* be explicitely labeled as such.

  397. Clue? Not you, apparently. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guess what's behind evolution? DNA, lipids and proteins. Guess what's behind that? The interactions of atoms.

    IAABiologist, and evolution is a FACT. Sorry to burst the bubble, but the whole "God" thing is a myth. Surprise, surprise, random chemical interactions caused life to arise. Big hairy deal. People need to get over themselves and their prehistoric ideologies. We aren't special, we're just one fluke in a long series of flukes.

    All it will take is one little fluke to wipe us out of the cosmos. Guess what? It doesn't matter. Our entire purpose here on this planet is to procreate. That is what life DOES. Frankly, people need to spend less time jabbering about archaic values and more time trying to get our species off this rock before we bite the big one.

    1. Re:Clue? Not you, apparently. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      We aren't special, we're just one fluke in a long series of flukes.

      You may be a fluke, but I'm definitely a halibut.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:Clue? Not you, apparently. by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      Now if only your name was Eric. /Obscure

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    3. Re:Clue? Not you, apparently. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Believe it or not, it is. Chuckle.
      But if you check the routine carefully we never actually learn the halibut owner's name. It's the shopkeeper and the pets that are named Eric. The routine seems to hint the owner's name probably isn't Eric when it mentions another (differently named) owner who also had same-name-pets.

      I'm posting anonymous to allow that little tidbit of personal info vanish when Slashdot closes the story and archives. Negative and zero score posts don't archive.

  398. Reasonable? by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1
    My, my, how reasonable you sound.

    Can't imagine why you would say so.

    I think you mistake breeze for steam. But that's you're privilege, you insignificant little speck of carbon, you.

    I, at least, know that I am less than the dust of the earth.

    ;-/
    1. Re:Reasonable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, at least, know that I am less than the dust of the earth.

      Wow ! So is that a "fact", theory or hypothesis. Any evidence to support it or just plain "god's honest truth".

  399. What Ever Happened to the "Free Exercise" Clause? by davide+marney · · Score: 1

    What the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution really says is, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;..."

    Why do people always forget the part about free exercise of religion? If religion is so full of @!$# as so many seem to be saying here, what have you got to fear from someone exercising a little freedom?

    Furthermore, the logic of this ruling totally escapes me:

    Some religious people don't believe in evolution.
    All scientists believe that evolution is a theory supported by the facts.
    Therefore, to agree with the scientists and say that evolution is a theory is to impose a religion.

    Huh?

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  400. On science and religion. by levin · · Score: 0, Troll

    A lot of non religious people like to belittle others who blindly believe what people with degrees in divinity tell them. These persons get this authority because they blindly believe what people with degrees in chemistry, biology, or physics tell them.

    Sadly, neither of these sets of people are any more enlightened or less gullible than the other. One can be convinced of anything within a reasonable limit because they have faith that what a certain authority tells them is true. The other group can be convinced of anything within a reasonable limit because they have the knowledge that what a certain authority tells them is true. Frankly, unless you independantly confirm what scientists tell you through your own experimentation, you're no better off than someone who believes someone elses interpretation of a religious text. You're possibly even worse off since scientists are more likely to be alive than your average religious figure and consequently more likely to spin the truth a little for personal gain. See also: dog and pony show.

    Let me put it another way: would you consider either of the following people more or less foolish, and if so, who. Person one is someone who believes that something they read in a certain book is probably true without doing any investigation of their own. Person two is someone who believes what they read in a certain book is not only true, but can be proven, and is backed up by several independant, trustworthy, and living persons without doing any investigation of their own. Think about this next time you read a chapter in a math or physics text and instead of getting on slashdot or some other forum and proclaiming the superiority of your beliefs, prove it by backing up what you've read with independent evidence, or better yet, your own experimentation or logical proofs from more fundamental concepts.

    One final thought: just because you don't believe in typical interpretations of religious texts doesn't mean that they don't contain a lot of really good advice. At least take the time to read what these books say before dogging them based on some nut's wacko interpretation of them.

    --

    `which fortune`
    1. Re:On science and religion. by zmollusc · · Score: 1

      Interesting point regarding blind acceptance of other people's theories, it is a good thing to encourage people to think for themselves.
      However, the theory of evolution is a self contained 'explaination' for how we came to exist and how the world is the way it is, while any religious 'explaination' simply replaces the problem of 'where did we come from?' with 'where did god come from?'.
      Also, religion is not subject to the same level of criticism and argument as scientific theory. Any attempt to analyse a religion quickly runs into "Because God says so, and He is God so there!" styles of response. Sometimes followed by riots, fisticuffs, wars etc.
      My final observation is that the supreme being seems to require more donations from me than I would expect from the creator of the universe.

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
    2. Re:On science and religion. by levin · · Score: 1

      Also, religion is not subject to the same level of criticism and argument as scientific theory.

      This fact, and the fact that the loudest people supposedly on the side of science rarely take advantage of it, was more or less the point of my post. This is not so much a response to evolution, either, as much as the people saying "yay for evolution, down with religion" (I paraphrased there) because they're talking about perhaps five completely unrelated things. I guess Bertrand Russell said what I meant to say best with the words, "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." Bearing in mind that religious fanatics aren't the only kind of fanatics out there.

      --

      `which fortune`
    3. Re:On science and religion. by zmollusc · · Score: 1

      Ooopsie. Thought you were pushing the "You are accepting someone elses word for it either way" view.

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  401. This is the tip of the iceberg by Thangodin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Telling school children that scientific theory is just theory is a game of dishonest semantics. The sense of the word theory in a scientific context is quite different from its common usage. In everyday usage, theory means an opinion based upon sketchy evidence. In science, a theory remains a theory no matter how well founded--even when everyone agrees that it is a fact. Gravity is a theory. Changing your mind about it will not give you the power to fly. To confuse the two meanings deliberately in a children's textbook, as this does, is a deliberate lie.

    All over the world, religious adherents are using the old arguments of postmodernism to try to discredit science wherever it contradicts their beliefs. They are not engaging in scientific debate, but in meta-debates, using methods from literary criticism to paint science as mere opinion and orthodoxy. They are not talking about evidence. They are arguing that evidence itself is irrelevant. And they are not talking to scientists, who have already heard all their arguments and refuted them soundly. They are talking to people without any scientific knowledge, preferrably as young as they can get them. From the sound of some of the responses on this post, they've been talking to a lot of the people here. The goal is political. They can't refute science, but if they get enough votes, they can outlaw it.

    I'm not kidding about this. The strategy is called The Wedge, and the long term goal (we're talking in terms of generations here) is to encourage a widespread attitude of distrust towards science and skeptical thinking. The have identified science, quite correctly, as the greatest threat to the type of magical thinking required for fundamentalist religions. Muslim and Hindu extremists have come to the same conclusion, as have a horde of New Age con men and fortune tellers, and are fighting for the same goal; the disparagement of science and the scientific method.

    Anyone here who does not think that the scientific method works, throw out your computer now. And your car, all your appliances, hell, you should probably burn your house, because all of these things, the way they're made, the materials they are made of, are possible because of science. You probably would not be alive without the medicine and food that scientific advances have made possible. Think of the number of people who just died in the Asian Tsunami who would have lived if there had been an early warning system. Ignorance kills.

    And if you think that evolution is just a theory or 'pseudo-scientific propaganda', that there are lots of arguments against it and its on shaky ground, then you haven't bothered to read the literature. I'm sorry, but all the arguments against it advanced by ID theorists and Creationists have been answered, and there is no alternative theory that has anywhere near the same volume of evidence to support it. If you don't know this, I suspect you either don't care to know it, or would refuse to acknowledge any evidence no matter how sound.

    1. Re:This is the tip of the iceberg by xSauronx · · Score: 1
      Telling school children that scientific theory is just theory is a game of dishonest semantics. The sense of the word theory in a scientific context is quite different from its common usage. In everyday usage, theory means an opinion based upon sketchy evidence.

      I was sent to a christian school as a child, from kindergarten up to the 11th grade; and that is exactly the kind of "Education" i recieved in regards to evolution and creationism.

      I was taught that evolution was a theory in that people just believed in it even with a lack of evidence, or a "missing link". They taught us that the geologic table was a lie, and scientists use rocks to date fossils, and fossils to date rocks. They called that "circular reasoning" and said it couldn't possibly work.

      For a while, as young as I was and being brought up in it, I believed them. Until one day I realized they use the same circular reasoning with their faith in god: The bible tells us theres one god, and he created everything, and we know it's true because god said so...in the bible.

      The thing is, had I not had access to the internet that allowed me to examine other people's ideas and beliefs, I would have still believed in the bible, and that evolution was a lie, despite the fact that there's no actual proof of the existence of god, and there's enourmous amounts of evidence to support evolution.

      I dont think some people understand that "belief is contagious", especially when one belief is all you are allowed to be exposed to. It makes it very difficult to think or learn about new things when you can't even get to a place to hear about them. After all, muslims believe in Allah and only (and certainly) allah, and other religions believe in their deities and creation stories, and only that it happened that way....because for hundreds of years that's all people have been taught.

      It's a shame, really. Critical thinking could bring so much to some places or peoples, and yet sometimes they refuse to have much, or anything, to do with it.

      --
      By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth. -- George Carlin
    2. Re:This is the tip of the iceberg by Robocoastie · · Score: 1

      >>To confuse the two meanings deliberately in a children's textbook, as this does, is a deliberate lie. Finally! Another person that understands this fact. What a travesty that an education board mucked around with the use of that word. They were basically useing the word to mean "hypotheses" when in fact evolution is no longer a "hypotheses" it is a theory (the closest biological science will come to saying something is a fact). In the vernacular it would be accurate to say: "Evolution is a fact, the juries still out on HOW it occurs." The scientific way is to say: "Evolution is a theory with many hypotheses and some theories as to how it occurs." Both mean the same thing but to those too stubborn to pick up a dictionary they appear to be quite different.

    3. Re:This is the tip of the iceberg by jasonmicron · · Score: 1

      Gravity is a theory. Changing your mind about it will not give you the power to fly. To confuse the two meanings deliberately in a children's textbook, as this does, is a deliberate lie. Actually, it is a law. We don't say the Theory of Gravity we say the Law of Gravity. Once a theory becomes law it is a known 100% disprovable fact throughout the known Universe.

      A Theory is always disprovable, whether it is by another theory or what have you.

      You also don't hear about the Law of Evolution, you hear about the Theory of Evolution. Once again, it is either not 100% provable or it is challenged by another Theory.

  402. evolution by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    I agree that there's evidence for genetic change, for example in bacteria, but the specific claim that humans evolved from previous mammals is backed up mostly by circumstantial evidence. It's likely to be true, but it's not very well documented, and the actual claims keep changing every decade or so.

  403. Re:Yay! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

    But aren't you describing microevolution? I think the strongest debates come when we talk about macroevolution. Where is the physical proof for new species coming from a predecessor?

  404. what? by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Scientific theories are not things that have been proven to be correct. For example, the theory of relativity was called such long before it was experimentally verified.

  405. Re:Yay! by thecsharppro · · Score: 1

    ...to what benefit to you or the world in general?

  406. E = A + B + C. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    IANAM

    If E = X

    it does not imply that

    A=X, B=X or C=X.

    Unless the sum of the other two values is known to be zero.

    Since A,B & C are all true, all you can say is E=X=A + B + C.

    The X, like your post, is redundant.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  407. Re:Yay! by Atrax · · Score: 1

    Famous Atheist Now Believes in God? At age 81?

    anybody tested this guy for Alzheimer's?

    --
    Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
  408. Critical Thinking? by Rekkr · · Score: 1

    "The textbook stickers are a reasonable and evenhanded guide to science instruction and encouraging students to be critical thinkers," the board said. :D

  409. MOD BACK U P by macdaddy · · Score: 1

    Why in the world was the parent modded down to 0? I know that there are a lot of trolls with mod points but damn. This guy's comment is certainly not deserving of a negative mod of any sort.

    1. Re:MOD BACK U P by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religious nutbags often mod down posts they disagree with (nearly as often as liberal nutbags do).

  410. Re:Thanks for the laughs... by MmmDee · · Score: 1

    I haven't laughed so hard in quite awhile... thanks.

    --
    No man's an island, unless he's had too much to drink and wets the bed.
  411. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Pooua: In terms of a godless, natural-force-only Universe, statements such as the heart of the Declaration of Independence have no meaning. I could cite many more examples, but this one example is sufficient to show that you are incorrect.

    WKJ: No, not quite, because the true meaning of the declaration of independance lies in our laws - not in this (admittedly beautiful) line.

    The laws we have are based on our theory of government and rights. If you believe that human rights come from sets of people, then you will produce very different laws than if you believe that human rights come from God.

    Again, the best thing about our founding fathers is that they seperated the foundation from the implementation.

    The implementation must derive from the foundation. If you do not understand the foundation, then you cannot completely understand the implementation.

    Yes, I agree that the basis of our laws is the Judeo/Christian tradition. That does not logically indicate that such belief systems should be instilled on the populace,

    I believe that the preservation of our Liberty depends on the understanding of our people as to the theory behind our laws.

    if you believe in the seperation of church and state in public arenas, which I certainly do.

    I don't, especially if it requires leaving the public ignorant of how we got where we are!

    Pooua: But, more to the point, it would be a very bad school system if it forbade the teaching of the foundations, as is the case on this topic.

    WKJ: Not if you view the foundations as somewhat arbitrary.

    I don't so view it, and you don't give me any reason that I should. Yes, our foundations are X... but that does not mean that the same conclusions could not have been met if they weren't Y.

    Quite to the contrary, if you believe that human rights come from popular opinion, then you can justify the denial of certain rights by saying that the majority opposed. Some people make such arguments, but that is not the basis of our government. Our outcome is not arbitrary; it is a logical extension of its foundations. Logic is not an arbitrary practice!

    Again, advanced civilizations have existed long before X ;) Just because X played an important role in our (what I believe to be) somewhat advanced society does not mean X is the only path, and hence, should be instilled over the populace.

    An academic point is that this rootlessness you describe is the heart of historic Liberalism.

    Outcomes are the results of preceding actions. Though there may be a few simular conclusions reached by various civilizations, none of them will reach all the same conclusions we hold dear, because they have different principles.

    I believe the founding fathers emphasized freedom of religion because they knew exactly how dangerous and horrible public enforcement of religion could be, and I am happy to take their word for it (our country was born from the need to escape from religious persecution, after all).

    Wouldn't it be horrible to suffer under unjust laws? Does that mean that all laws should be disbanded? I do not believe so. Nor do I believe that our Judeo-Christian foundations should be expunged from public view under the guise that this protects religions or our society.

    Just as we should fight to protect freedom of religion, we should also fight to make sure no one attempts to instill a religious belief on us or our children.

    We should also fight attempts to force a religious vacuum. Morality and law cannot exist in such a vacuum, as they are the expression of religious belief.

    Yes, and we regard most of those civilizations to have been brutal and barbaric, though those practices did not bother their contemporaries until Judeo-Christianity came along. Examples are numerous (the games of the Coliseum, human sacrifices of the Incas and Aztecs, the practice of Sati

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  412. You missed a couple by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 1

    - The theory that genetic characteristics, not acquired characteristics, are what is inherited (ie: no Lamarckism).
    - The theory that the mutations are random and undirected.

  413. Re:Yay! by mr+i+want+to+go+home · · Score: 1
    You are almost right.

    Although I wouldn't claim to be reading at the forefront of evolutionary theory, there is quite a common understanding now that evolution is not a constant ongoing process for most cases, but rather happens in quite fast jumps or leaps. Or rather there is a slow on-going process, but most of the action happens in irregular spikes.

    Although I wouldn't have the faintest what the exact process is, these jumps tend to end with a number groups rather than a myriad of individual variations. This seems to be more due to 'chaotic process' rather than anything specific to evolution.

    Your point about the dogs would probably challenge this evolutionary theory if it wasn't for the fact that there are very very few real 'original' dog breeds. Most dogs are the product of centuries of human-controlled breeding for specific traits. The sheer number and variation of breeds is really due to this than any evolutionary process.

  414. validity of empirical theories by kardar · · Score: 1

    An empirical theory can be called into question as far as in regards to it being empirical if there isn't at least some way to attempt to prove it wrong.

    That's not to say that evolution is wrong, only that there needs to be a possibility that it can be challenged - it's not an absolute truth.

    All science is a theory - the only absoulute truth is that there are no absolute truths. This includes things like medical science (a.k.a. the church of modern medicine), which people treat more like a religion than they do science.

    It's not wrong to say that evolution is a theory - it's an empirical theory. It's not wrong to say that creation is an absolute truth for those who are members of certain Christian congregations - it is, creation certainly isn't being presented by the religions that believe in it as an empirical theory (you can't prove it wrong - it's just something you have to take on faith.)

    So it's not that evolution isn't a theory - of course it is, but all of science is - duh. That's what students are supposed to be learning. There has to be the presumption that any scientific theory could theoretically be proved wrong; any empirical theory that claims to be the absolute truth no longer really qualifies as being an empirical theory.

  415. Re:Catholicism & Science Creationism vs. Evolu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What!? You reply to yourself to correct misinformation from your own nonsensical post?

  416. Re:LAW! (and textbooks) by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    The judge may be right. He's closer to the problem than we are.

    But the parents are closer than the judge, so I tend to side with the parents when I'm watching from here.

    Evolution as the principle that created life is a theory. It's a well supported class of theories, but not proven.

    If the textbook does a good job of exploring evolution as a biological principle and the potential role of evolution in bringing life about, then it probably should not need the label. But that is an ethical issue, and the judge should not be judging ethical issues unless either the book or the label or both is being used to intimidate people.

    I can't see how anyone would be intimidated by that label. Possible, sure. Maybe those 2000 parents are using that label to threaten those seven parents and force their kids to pray in school. But I didn't see any mention of that.

    The only thing I can read out of the article is that seven parents were agast that the merest hint that there might be something non-mechanical going on in the universe, and the judge said their rights trumped the rights of the 2000 parents to want something a little less sterile for their kids.

    (Unfortunately, pretend scientists do get into textbooks. Since we don't have the textbook in question, it's hard to say if that is the case here.)

  417. Stop Whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolution is still a theory. There is no real proof, as is with a lot of the science that we learn today. Deal with it. It is just your puny little effort to understand the world around us and how it came into being. If you want the truth, you are all mindless wanderers stumbling upon little discoveries which you think matter. You really dont know anything at all. (Insert evil laugter here)

    1. Re:Stop Whining by I(rispee_I(reme · · Score: 2, Funny

      /me prints out a roll of "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact" stickers...

    2. Re:Stop Whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only difference being that Gravity isn't a theory and can easily be tested and demonstrated.

      Thanks though, Idiot boy.

    3. Re:Stop Whining by compro01 · · Score: 1

      well, technically, gravity is still a theory, as we haven't been able to test all applications of it in the real world, but as far as we've been able to test, it's been pretty much bang on

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    4. Re:Stop Whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is absolutely right. And this decision is going to get reversed on appeal.
      The decision hinges on the "effects" prong of the Lemon test, which is essentially a pure legal issue. Thus, review will be de novo, meaning it is very easily reversed.
      Evolution (and gravity for that matter) are just theories. They are the best scientific explanation of things we observe and are based on the best evidence we have, but they are still just theories.
      Providing a sticker that simply states such a fact is not a violation of the Establishment clause plain and simple.
      And even if this case isn't reversed, the school board can simply revise the sticker, make it generic but also list several "theories" including evolution in the sticker. Such a revision would probably pass muster even with the judge that decided this case...

    5. Re:Stop Whining by lgw · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a theory.
      Gravity is a theory.
      Electromagnitism is a theory.

      You keep using that word, but I don't think it means what you think it means. ;) There is no such thing as "just a theory" in science. Theory is as good as it gets. Some theories are called "laws", but the distinction is not one of credibility: a law is usually a theory that can be concisely stated.

      Some theories are more credible than others, having made more predictions which turned out to be true, and having larger piles of evidence behind them.

      Evolution and general relativity are problably the two best-tested and most predictive theories in all of science. It doesn't get any more credible.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    6. Re:Stop Whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, fine. How about every high school student is required to take a seminar on the scientific method, in which they learn what a scientific theory is and how it differs from the colloquial meaning of "theory." Then it's all taken care of, no need for stickers, all your bases are covered. But no one's going to fight for that, because no one REALLY cares about teaching students to question scientific results, but only about laying the foundation for the claim that there is nothing in science that discredits a totally literal interpretation of the bible.

    7. Re:Stop Whining by compro01 · · Score: 1

      exactly as i just said "as far as we've been able to test it, it's been pretty much bang on"

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    8. Re:Stop Whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! The sticker was stating a fact.

    9. Re:Stop Whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You guys keep stroking each other, if it helps you both feel better about believing in an evolutionary world-view of the origins of life.

    10. Re:Stop Whining by Bouncersplace.com · · Score: 1

      I got a question for you. Please give us an explanation layman or technical on ID or Creationisms theory of the origins of life?

      --
      Post what you want when you want @ Bouncersplace.com No poofs no banning.
  418. Theist gene by eAspenwood · · Score: 1

    I can't wait until they identify and promptly remove that silly theist gene from the human gene pool.

    Replace it maybe with something more useful like gills or a third nipple.

    1. Re:Theist gene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gills would be nice and useful. But what good is a third nipple?

    2. Re:Theist gene by eAspenwood · · Score: 1

      bad joke - i was implying it would be more useful than the theist gene.

  419. retarded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "law" of gravity is actually a theory as well. It has not been "proven", it the sense that nothing can explain why or how it works yet.

  420. If I were G_d... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I were G_d, I might just create a "biological system", which enables "self-learning", "self-correction", what people will call later evolution.
    I would smile when people would try to prove with the existence of evolution that I did not create the world, including evolution itself.
    The funny thing about evolution, is that evolution itself is a highly sophysticated "system", which could have evolved from nothing - only if some system pre-existed to develop evolution.
    If I were G_d, evolution would also be my demonstration how much I like variety, freedom and randomness.
    Those ideas all seem to undermine my importance, but I am wiser than worry about that.
    I am proud, how the universe, I created works all by itself, based on my design principles, and without my active involvment.
    This is all very important. Some day my creatures may actually find me, destroy me. So it is very important, that my creation can go on - even without me.

  421. Standard creationist claim #CB200.1 by geekotourist · · Score: 1
    The article you cite ends with "but it does seem that a fully detailed evolutionary explanation for eubacterial flagella is not so distant." Can scientists currently give every detail of every step along the path? No. Can they make a path? Yes. Quoting from the always useful Index of Creationist claims [and it'll be interesting to count how many of them are found in this thread. Better yet if the arguments come from the arguments even creationists say to not use.]:

    Bacterial flagella and eukaryotic cilia are irreducibly complex
    1. This is an example of argument from incredulity, because irreducible complexity can evolve naturally. Many of the proteins in the bacterial flagellum or eukaryotic cilium are similar to each other or to proteins for other functions. Their origins can easily be explained by a series of gene duplication events followed by modification and/or cooption, proceeding gradually through intermediate systems different from and simpler than the final flagellum.

    One plausible path for the evolution of flagella goes through the following basic stages (keep in mind that this is a summary, and that each major cooption event would be followed by long periods of gradual optimization of function)...

    (see site for seven step path)

    2. The bacterial flagellum is not even irreducible...

    3.Eubacterial flagella, archebacterial flagella, and cilia use entirely different designs for the same function. That is to be expected if they evolved separately, but it makes no sense if they were the work of the same designer.

    But anyways, science has barely finished the human genome, and it doesn't yet have enough mammal genomes to reconstruct the mammalian last common ancestor. I wouldn't expect them to have all the genomes needed to show the most likely flagella pathways. On the other hand science / evolution has explained:
    • Why humans and chimps don't just share nearly all of our genes, but nearly all of our broken genes (and why human gene 2 looks like exactly like chimp genes 2p and 2q fused together, nonfunctioning broken bits of telomeres right at the fuse point).
    • Transitional forms like reptiles to mammals, dinosaurs to birds, and, yes, apes to human.
    • Atavisms, Biogeography, Convergence of independent phylogenies and the other 26+ evidences detailed in 29 Evidences for Macroevolution"-- each one individually usable for predictions about (or for falsifying) evolution.
    1. Re:Standard creationist claim #CB200.1 by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "...but it makes no sense if they were the work of the same designer. "

      This statement seems to say that one tool is good for all circumstances and diversity of adaptation is merely a side effect of multiple evolution lines rather than a result of selection of those species that are better suited to teir environment. Simplistic at best, downright daft is more likely.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
  422. Religion does not demand adherance without proof. by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 0

    Some of its adherents do, but then the same can be said of science.

    Actually, either way, when you don't have proof and are just out testing the waters, you have to adhere for a little while until you get some proof. So, I take it back, but only if you'll admit that science has similar issues.

    One difference is that religion allows non-quantifiable proofs, where science is supposed to disallow such.

  423. hmm by courseB · · Score: 1

    my high school biology text books never talk about the 100th monkey thingy

  424. Why a sticker? by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    I mean, shouldn't it be in the book?

    Although, technically, "The Theory if Evolution" is a theory, and not a fact, which I assume is what they meant, as a lot of people use "Evolution" to colloquially indicate the longer phrase. Evolution in itself is an observed fact, and the theory of evolution is an explanation of the what and why of evolution, just as gravity is a fact and the theory of gravity is the what and why of gravity.

    Just my 2 cents on the semantics of it.

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    1. Re:Why a sticker? by tloh · · Score: 1
      I mean, shouldn't it be in the book?

      It isn't in the book because the books author(s) has nothing to do with it. This whole business was the regional school board's idea. It is in the article. Summary: The board had to appease a bunch of parents who complained about the lack of alternatives to evolution in the text. Board came up with the stickers. Another bunch of parents sued with the help of the ACLU.

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
  425. Re:Yay! by bechthros · · Score: 1

    "What is proof? It is the logical form showing the only correct answer based on given propositions."

    Right. Based on given propositions. It's turtles all the way down.

  426. This textbook contains material on religion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This textbook contains material on Christianity|Muslim|Hinduism|etc.

    Religions are theories, not factual, regarding the origin of living things and so-called 'life after death'.

    This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.

    Anyone claiming to know the will of God or any other non-human entity should be approached with extreme caution and should be asked 'how do you know?' questions until they realize they presenting opinions, not facts.

    Anyone claiming that book(s) written by man, thousands of years ago, revised and translated countless number of times by countless number of individuals, is an accurate/literal description of the will of God should be approached with compassion and pity.

    Anyone claiming to know what happens after death should be approached with a healthy dose of skeptism.

    I, for one, choose to believe in God. And I don't need to be afraid of science, believe in obviously flawed religious text, or throw away facts in favor of wishful thinking.

    Religious fanatics, like the ones historically responsible for terrorism in the middle-east or the ones responsible for spreading racism in southern USA should be prevented from spreading their diseased memes to the general population.

  427. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bertrand Russell spent several years and actually proved, in the real and rigorous sense of the word, that 1+1 = 2 based on a set of axioms that he believed.

  428. Science != Religion, but... by the_skywise · · Score: 1

    They both serve similar purposes. Science is a tool for telling us what the physical world is. Religion is a tool for telling us what's going on in the human heart and mankind (arguably an irrational subject to begin with).

    And frankly...your example sucks. ONE Religion demands faith. Many others do not (IE Buddhism) Science doesn't demand anything. At best it should be just *is*. I don't want ANYTHING demanding adherence of me. I'll make my own decisions, thank you. (And if the bullet kills me when I shoot myself because my magic +5 shield of invulnerability didn't work, that's my fault).

    1. Re:Science != Religion, but... by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      Science doesn't demand anything of you. But it does make demands on those who identify themselves as being "scientific".

  429. this must be... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...how they convinced you to believe in a religious system that is inconsistent with itself and reality.

    Otherwise you wouldn't be able to say in the same breath that you can have a new generation with a modified gene set in which there's been no genetic change.

    mind-boggling.

    1. Re:this must be... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Your inability to read and comprehend written language must be how they convinced you to believe the absolute truth of something that is still a work in progress.

      When an individual is born that contains a geneset composed of genes from both his parents, there has been no genetic change in the population. Read what I wrote. I'm talking about the gene pools of populations, not individuals.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  430. You are tremendously disingineous.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... pretending there is no agenda in such an sticker.

    THe court sought through it and rightly smacked the idea down as the offensive nonsense it clearly is.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  431. Re: IT IS A Theory by LordLucless · · Score: 1

    No, most theories do not become laws. Laws must be provable mathematically. While in most other areas (law, history, etc) proof can be taken to mean a preponderance of evidence, thats not the case in science. The sort of topics addressed by theories generally contain so many variables that we are unlikely to ever be able to understand them fully enough to formulate a mathematical proof - just a limited, mathematical model.

    --
    Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  432. Christianity != creationism by Tony · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Most posts seem to bash special creationism, not Christianity. Last I checked, they were different things. Or did I miss the memo?

    As many, many posts have stated, faith and science are complementary, not congruent. One describes the workings of the universe; the other gives reason to our existence within the universe.

    Science is merely an epistomology, a method of discovering truths. We are not perfect at it, as we are human and completely fallable. We often think one thing is true, only to learn later that we were wrong. And unfortunately, some cling to disproved beliefs in the face of contrary evidence.

    But... See, that's where science is strongest. It is possible to gather contrary evidence and disprove an hypothesis. Sometimes even theories are disproved or addended, such as Newton's Laws
    (which was superceded by relativity and quantum mechanics in the extremely small cases of size, or very great speed).

    The problem with faith when used to interpret the mechanics of the universe is simple: you cannot disprove anything, since all assertions are taken on... faith.

    Yes, I am aware of Micheal Behe and his ilk. They have the uncanny knack of ignoring all contrary evidence. They seem to cherry-pick only the evidence they desire, like actors on a stage, and frame their hypothesis on a stage with a single spotlight. And like the actors in a play, the script is worked out beforehand.

    Their arguments, although they wear the trappings of science, lack science's primary strength: they are not disprovable. There is no way to disprove that some Divine Hand is not directing the play. And so, when they make assertions that God has created us (ignore those pesky bones in the earth), they are presenting not science, but faith in a play about fake science.

    That is why so many here are strongly vocal against those that would subvert true knowledge for a faith-based political agenda. We speak out not against the faith, but against those that would promote willful ignorance under the banner of faith.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  433. In science... by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1
    The whole point is that in science a theory is a hypothesis which practitioners have gone to some rigorous lengths to disprove, without success, and which consequently is regarded as a de facto fact.

    It has nothing to do with the typical conversational use of the word, along the lines of "in theory, pigs could fly, if only...".

  434. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    There is no theory of common descent that does not include humans.

    So? That wasn't my point. My point is that you say we can't have observed the evolution from human-precursor to human, and I say no but we can observe something very similar happening with other species. Pre-human -> human is theory, but some species -> some new species is not it is observed fact. It is possible that humans came about through some other mechanism, but the mechanism we know and have observed explains it just fine.

    In other words, change in species over time isn't a theory, whether it specifically resulted in humans from a common ancestor is.

    Most of these events are actually the formation of sub-species. At this point, this argument becomes one of semantics; what is a species?

    Generally considered to be separate populations which cannot interbreed and produce fertile young. Horses and donkeys are different species because their offspring, the mule, is sterile. Things are tougher in the world of asexual reproduction.

    Rather than argue along that line, I will point out that my original statement has not been negated by your statement, because you are not addressing common descent, but only subsequent speciation. It remains unknown whether all forms of life evolved from a common ancestor, though that is the claim of the theory of common descent.

    That's rather confusing... You're saying we know that species can diversify into different species now, we're just not sure if that actually happened in the past? Again I'm willing to accept common ancestry as a theory, but it sounds like you're suggesting that while speciation exists now it might not have in the past even though that would explain where all the species came from.

    It is a fact that one type of bird has been observed to give rise to another, slightly different type of bird. This is not the same thing as common descent, and it remains unproven whether common descent is even possible, much less whether it actually occurred.

    Fine. You accept, then, that the fundamental mechanism by which evolution is theorized to occur -- random mutation and environmental pressure -- can give rise to new adaptations and new species, correct? You understand that the fossil record includes many middle grounds between species, including between homo sapiens and apes. Okay, we don't know that they are middle grounds, but it is consistent with observed speciation. Our bodies have traits very similar to apes, very similar to all mammals, very similar to reptiles. Our eyes have a crazily inefficient design that is shared by huge swaths of creatures from mammals to birds to amphibians, while cephalopods have a different design. Birds have many common traits in common with dinosaurs -- are you telling me you don't think it's possible one could have evolved into the other, despite the existence of archeopteryx? Is our vestigal appendix not a clue?

    Actually, now you have me interested. What is your theory for how all of these species from wildly different phylums and classes of animals have such similar featurs -- livers, pancreas, appendix, thyroid gland, the ordering of layers of blood vessels, ganglia, neurons, and photo receptors in the eye -- without common ancestry? If there is no common ancestor between humans, apes, and monitor lizards then why do our brains, apes' brains, and monitor lizards' brains share common features?

    That would be a sloppy way of thinking in other branches of science; it is not sufficient to claim that a theory must be accepted as an historical fact simply because no one has produced an alternative theory. Claiming that observed examples of speciation (or sub-speciation) demonstrates the process that led to humans is an argument by a hyper-extended analogy.

    I didn't say you had to accept it as historical fact; I am saying it is a theory. The only thing I'm saying is fact is speciation, which we have obser

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  435. Um.... by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    No. No, it isn't... really can't say any more than that.

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  436. Yeah sure. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Thankfully you got tired of typing, otherwise you would have continued with all the half assed alleged "holes" in evolutionary theory.

    As time passes those "holes" are firmly closed, but there will always be people too blinded to accept scientific gained knowledge if it contradicts the teachings given down to them by Asian sheep or camel herders....

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Yeah sure. by mpe · · Score: 1

      Thankfully you got tired of typing, otherwise you would have continued with all the half assed alleged "holes" in evolutionary theory.

      The stickers are about playing political word games to mislead due to popular misunderstanding of what the word "theory" means in the context of science. The point about a "theory" in science is that it is a logically consistent explanation of as many observations as possible. Observations which do not fit existing theories either result in a revised theories or completly new theories.
      There is nothing especially special about the theory of evolution within science.

      As time passes those "holes" are firmly closed, but there will always be people too blinded to accept scientific gained knowledge if it contradicts the teachings given down to them by Asian sheep or camel herders....

      It's not as if all Jews, Christians and Muslims make a fuss about this anyway.

    2. Re:Yeah sure. by Chris+Z.+Wintrowski · · Score: 1

      ...The point about a "theory" in science is that it is a logically consistent explanation of as many observations as possible. Observations which do not fit existing theories either result in a revised theories or completly new theories.

      That's not quite true. The point of a scientific theory is not only to explain a natural phenomenon in a logical manner, but also to allow scientists to make accurate predictions about how the natural phenomenon will behave in the future.

      There is nothing especially special about the theory of evolution within science.

      Well, apart from the fact that it's only half a theory, and cannot be used to accurately predict how a species will evolve - as such, Darwinian evolution is a pretty useless "theory".

      Also, can one prove that Darwinian evolution isn't just a case of selectively choosing those points which fit a desired regression curve? In other words, what level of confidence can I have, as a scientist, that the model actually describes all of the data, and isn't just a case of over-interpreting the data, or describing microphenomena in a highly non-linear chaotic system?

      --
      - Chris Z. Wintrowski -
      [ Site ]
  437. Avoid the controversy!! There is a better answer!! by FriedSpam · · Score: 1

    I'll give the answer first: The answer is DNA.
    When you really examine the evidence for macro-evolution, it is rather thin. So many suppositions have been made based upon single fragments of skeletons that it really becomes almost a belief system in and of itself. If that is true, then who is to say that one belief system has merit over another? People compare theories of evolution with theories of gravity or even relativity, but the level of experimental proof for evolution as the origin of species is virtually non-existent. On the other hand, one can design and perform experiments that show other scientific theories to be true to the extent of our scientific perceptions.
    That's where DNA comes in. DNA has been shown to be the basis of all life as we know it. One can do DNA experiments as simple as the level of a 4th grader, all the way up to the multiple-PhD bio-engineer. It doesn't challenge religion, and it meets any scientific scrutiny one could throw at it.
    So, teach DNA as the basis of biology!

  438. Maybe they on't understand science.... by TapeCutter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...but with a rapid 1500 comments so far, they sure do understand thier audience.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  439. flu = virus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "flu" is usually caused by a virus, not by bacteria. It's an important distinction, because people tend to want to dump loads of antibiotics on them when they get the flu, which of course don't work on viruses, but they might spawn other antibiotic-resistant bacteria strains in the process.

  440. Change to human *chromosome* 2 looks like chimp... by geekotourist · · Score: 1

    Human chromosome 2 looks like chimp 2q and 2p fused together. more details here.

  441. Oh, the sheer intellectuality of it all... by Nate4D · · Score: 1

    Okay, time for a very lengthy comment that no one will read, AND that will be modded down because I'm not an evolutionist (after all, if you don't believe that all of existence happened at random, you're a nutty Bible-thumper who can't think, right?).

    First of all, the question that ought to be raised by this story isn't a scientific one. It's actually a question of constitutionality. If you read the article, you would see that the judge declared the stickers unconstitutional because "By denigrating evolution, the school board appears to be endorsing the well-known prevailing alternative theory, creationism or variations thereof, even though the sticker does not specifically reference any alternative theories."

    The mere fact that you believe creationists are stupid does not mean you should cheer every time creationism is knocked as a theory of origin. If the courts decide now that creationism should be censored all the time, imagine how you'll feel if Bush gets the appointees he'd like for the Supreme Court, and they make the opposite decision twenty-three years down the road...

    That aside, let's look at the constitutionality issue.

    Essentially, the judge said this: By not presenting evolution as fact, the school district was supporting creationism as a theory of origin. Further, the judge reasons, a school district supporting creationism as a theory of origin is breaking the separation of church and state.

    The question, then, is, "Is the judge's analysis correct?"

    Putting a disclaimer on one theory does not necessarily imply that you agree with an opposing theory. The image of the disclaimer shown in the article reads: "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

    Yep, that definitely states that evolution is a theory, not a fact. However, it doesn't indicate that there are any facts about the origin of living things, nor does it even indicate that the suppliers of the textbook (that is, the school district) thinks there's a better theory. All it states is that evolution is a theory, not a fact.

    denigrate
    tr.v. denigrated, denigrating, denigrates
    1. To attack the character or reputation of; speak ill of; defame. 2. To disparage; belittle: The critics have denigrated our efforts.

    As far as I can tell, that does not 'denigrate' evolution as a theory of origins. Nowhere does this sticker say, "Evolution is probably wrong," or "Evolution is a bad theory." It just says that evolution is not proven to be the way life originated in our universe/on our planet. That may or may not be a true statement; I haven't addressed that question yet. But, that is what the disclaimer says.

    It also says to consider the material with an open mind, and to analyze it critically. We'd all agree that this is the way to view a mathematical proof, or a proof of correctness for an algorithm. I think the average Slashdotter would definitely say that one should do this when examining religious material, such as the Bible, the Qu'ran, or perhaps the Bhagavad Gita.

    So why would it be wrong to give this advice to students who are studying theories of origin? Shouldn't every decision we make be based on careful thought and analysis?

    If evolution is so solidly proven to be true, and so obviously the only valid view, then advising students to come to the material on evolution analytically and with an open mind will help evolution out, if anything. A few of those "fundamentalist right-wing idiots" may just take the advice, see how the massive preponderance of the evidence supports evolution, and change their beliefs.

    If, after having thought about evolution analytically, students decide they don't believe in it, one can only say, "Well, they're individuals, and they have the right to believe what they like."

    We

    --
    "Oh, I like geeks way better than I like humans." - Mari Sarris
    1. Re:Oh, the sheer intellectuality of it all... by gaijin99 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Ok, I'll bite even though I've sworn before not to get involved in debates with Creationists.

      Yes, evolution is a theory. So is gravity. Non-scientists use the word "theory" to mean "an idea I just now came up with and doesn't really have any relation to objective reality". As in "I have a theory about that", or "well, it works *in*theory*". Scientists use the word in a completely different way. What the layman calls a theory a scientist would call a "hypothesis". In order for a hypothesis to become a theory it has to survive attempts to prove that its wrong, offer a good explination for observed facts, etc.

      Gravity is a theory, not a fact. And again, we see the difference between lay use of words and scientific use of words. The layman uses "fact" to describe both concrete observations and the explinations for connection between those observations. Scientists use the word only when describing concrete observations, not the connections between those observations. So, on the subject of gravity we see the facts are merely the orbits of planets and stars, and the fact that (some) things fall when they aren't supported. Gravity is a theory invented to connect these facts. F(g) = G * ((m1*m2)/(r^2)). That's "the theory of gravity". We furthur embelish this by theorizing that gravitation is caused by a distortion in space. Evidence seems to back this up, but new evidence could utterly shatter our current theory of gravity. The only things that can't really be disproven are the baren "facts": (some) things fall when they aren't supported, and things orbit other things.

      Which brings us to evolution, thories, and the stickers. The stickers were clearly intended to use the term "theory" in the lay sense, meaning "some harebraned idea", not "a rigorusly tested explination for a connection between facts".

      The only facts in the whole issue are that a) humans are here today, b) the fossil record contains several species that are no longer living. We theorize that the layers of the fossil record indicate that the lower layers are generally older (baring earthquakes and other things which might rearrange thousands of tonnes of rock). We theorize that since the layers show lower (earlier) periods without trilobites, and later (newer) periods with trilobites, and finally that there are no trilobites today that trilobites must have appeared after a time when they did not previously exist. Evolution is the only theory that connects these facts.

      Creationists contend that a) life is so self-evidently complex that it could not arise through any natural process, and b) their book says it all happened 6000 years ago over the course of six days. Neither of those statements are either an alternate theory that explains the observed facts, nor a refutation of the theory of evolution.

      If you want to get evolution out of the schools (or even just get equal time for a different theory) there is a very simple way to do so: useing the scientific method establish an alternate theory that explains the observed facts as well as (or better than) evolution does. Creationism (either the so-called "Scientific Creationism", or "Intelligent Design") does not actually do either of those things. In both cases they began with their conclusion and cherrypicked what facts they could to support that conclusion, which is not the way science works. In both cases they ignore rather large bodies of evidence, and they have steadfastly refused to publish their papers in peer reviewed journals.

      On that final note, I'll quit: Creationists will often whine that there is a massive conspiricy to keep them out of scientific journals. This is not true (or, as we say in Texas: that is a lie). Creationists have never actually offered their papers to any scientific journal. On a few occasions a journal has actually *requested* a paper from a Creationist only to have the Creationist demand special treatment (usually that no one be permitted to respond to or criticize their paper). Since Creationists so steadfastly refuse to participate in the scientific process I can only presume that they secretly acknowledge that they are not really scientists, which means that their theories (in the lay sense) have no place in a science class.

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
  442. Re:LAW! (and textbooks) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a well supported class of theories, but not proven.

    Clearly, this is proof of how science education is going down the drain in this country.

    By the way, why is the theory of gravity not treated the same way ? How about the theory that "germs can kill humans" ? Is that proven ? If not, we should all start drinking dirty water.

    2000 people wanting a school to teach garbage does not make/unmake any theory. Science is not decided by vote. Try voting against the gravitational force.

  443. "studied carefully, and critically considered"? by EEBaum · · Score: 1

    "The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

    Those idealist sticker writers are up to it again!

    The rest of the sticker...
    Individual results may vary. The material may be paraphrased by the teacher and made into a transparency for happy fun copy-over time. Students will be assigned reading, but it's likely that the book will never be opened. Key words will be memorized by the students for the exam, after which time they will be promptly forgotten by most, aside from trivia junkies and the two future science majors of the class.

    --
    -- I prefer the term "karma escort."
  444. it's not even about monkeys by rhizome · · Score: 1

    No, what these people are clinging desperately to is the Adam and Eve creation story. Why? I think it's because they can't bear the thought that we're descended from lower life forms. To them, that thought is terrifying because they think it diminishes what we are.

    it's not even that complicated. they cling to adam and eve because if that part isn't true, then the old testament loses its integrity. adam and eve (in this instance) are necessary for a belief in the seamless worldview that the bible provides. the bible doesn't account for itself possibly being wrong, so what are its practicioners to do? when they see a tear in their worldview forming, they rush to sew it up.

    "sew, sew like the wind!"

    --
    When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
  445. You don't read even National Geographic.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2, Insightful

    .... but here you are talking about biochemistry and the fossil record, and more shamefully, asking about predictions based in evolutionary theory.

    Just for starters:

    Darwin's moth. This appeared in National Geographic magazine a few months ago.

    I better refer you to a better explanation that puts your claims to shame

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:You don't read even National Geographic.... by Richard+Allen · · Score: 1

      jota - From your link:

      "Evolution predicts that simple, valuable features will evolve independently, and that when they do, they will most likely have differences not relevant to function. For example, the eyes of molluscs, arthropods, and vertebrates are extremely different, and ears can appear on any of at least ten different locations on different insects.

      In 1837, a Creationist reported that during a pig's fetal development, part of the incipient jawbone detaches and becomes the little bones of the middle ear. After Evolution was invented, it was predicted that there would be a transitional fossil, of a reptile with a spare jaw joint right near its ear. A whole series of such fossils has since been found - the cynodont therapsids."

      Please read the first paragraph, and keep it in mind when reading the second. That being said, notice the second paragraph mentions a pig, and then uses a reptile as a transitional animal for that pig('s ear development).

      This sounds to me a lot like word-play hogwash on the part of the author. (pun intended)

  446. Science is not a set of beliefs by Tony · · Score: 1

    Religion is an organized set of believes (sic). Science falls into this category.

    This shows your ignorance of the scientific method.

    There are really two things meant by "science."

    The common meaning of "science" is the body of knowledge gained by observation, logic, and experimentation as required by the scientific method.

    The most fundamental meaning refers to the scientific method itself, which is an epistomology used to learn about the workings of the universe. This epistomology is based on two human abilities: the ability to observe, and the ability to organize observed information logically.

    The absolute most important aspect of the scientific method is simply this: an hypothesis must be disprovable. It's as simple as that. When I make a statement of hypothesis, people must have the ability to make further observations that may disprove that statement. So, I can say things like, "If the theory of evolution by natural selection is correct, we should see a remarkable amount of speciation after a long-term cataclysmic event such as an ice age." This is one of the many ways that the theory of evolution by natural selection could be disproved.

    And that is the key.

    There is no way to say, "If the theory of God is correct, the believers should lead longer, healthier lives than non-believers, because God favors them." Oh, I could say it all right, but if it turns out to not be the case (which it isn't), does it disprove the Theory of God? In fact, I claim that there is no such statement of prediction that can be made against any religious belief.

    That's why it's called "faith."

    Further, I claim that every single scientific hypothesis and theory can be disproved. I'm not saying that they will be disproved; many are correct, and so no evidence exists contrary to the statements of prediction made by those hypothesis and theories. But, for every one, you can design a test that will discover (or not discover, if the theory is wrong) new information predicted by the theory or hypothesis.

    Science is not a religion, no matter how many people raise their voices in halleluiah chorus. Religion is not a science, either. They both have their place, and stepping on each other's toes is not one of them.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  447. Let Me Put It To You Morons In Another Way! by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 0, Flamebait


    (In the immortal words of Don Rickles...)

    You Christians, Muslims, Jews, and assorted other religious assholes are all going to die.

    We Transhumans aren't.

    In fact, in all probability, we're going to have to kill you all - not just let you drop dead - courtesy of your inane opposition to our "ascension." The only way you're going to avoid this is if we ascend so far and so fast that we don't NEED to waste all you assholes.

    Don't count on that happening.

    And your moronic attempts to set back the development of technology are going to have absolutely no effect on this fact.

    Have a nice day.

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    1. Re:Let Me Put It To You Morons In Another Way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi I'm Dark Angel the transhuman (star of a tv show) and *I*'m going to kick *your* ass!

  448. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You haven't heard of Bigfoot before, have you?

  449. Re:Yay! by rdwald · · Score: 1

    From what I remember of high school science, the first chapter of the text was always titled "What is Science?", and discussed how all scientific theories are just hypotheses which explain a whole bunch of observations. The repetition sort of annoyed me at the time, but judging from the state of science education in America today, more of it may be needed.

  450. Re:Thank God! - consider this by skinfitz · · Score: 1


    Ok so we replace the stickers with ones that say

    Remember - creationism is only a theory and not a fact. No deity has ever been proven to exist.

    And lets see how long those last.

  451. Science class by Tony · · Score: 1

    This is science class, after all, so why don't we teach scientific theories? There are well-defined criteria for scientific theories.

    Then, we can teach religious theories in... oh, say, religion class. Or church.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  452. Re:Yay! by rdwald · · Score: 1

    What was that classic saying? "Old people tend to be more religious because they're cramming for the final exam." Besides, what does one person's opinion matter?

  453. it is by wotevah · · Score: 1

    Look at the phylogenetic tree (the species which have evolved from a common ancestor). Something that might pose a problem to current evolution theory, would be if a fossil is ever discovered of an animal type with features that were evolved later in different branches from the common ancestor. Like a mammal with feathers or some such. There are other examples but I'm too tired to look for them.

  454. Re:Yay! by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

    The laws we have are based on our theory of government and rights. If you believe that human rights come from sets of people, then you will produce very different laws than if you believe that human rights come from God.

    Maybe, maybe not. We as a country (I am assuming you are American) got our "murder is bad" belief from Christian tradition. This same belief can be derived (and has been) from other sources long before Christianity existed. Whether those previous cultures came to that conclusion from the Sun God or Tree God or just plain logic seems rather arbitrary to me. Others think that such laws can be derived on a purely logical basis, simply by looking at what helps and what hurts society. I won't advocate that any one of these are correct - but neither would I say that Christianity is the only source of such laws when clearly it is not.

    The implementation must derive from the foundation. If you do not understand the foundation, then you cannot completely understand the implementation.

    The implementation is what it is. It can be perfectly understood regardless of one's religious background.

    I believe that the preservation of our Liberty depends on the understanding of our people as to the theory behind our laws.

    I agree - but I think the theory behind our laws is to not let anyone impose their beliefs on you :)

    I don't, especially if it requires leaving the public ignorant of how we got where we are!

    This is obviously the main point where we disagree. Yes, we got here because of X, but many implementations of X in the Old World were downright evil. Our founding fathers (despite being influenced by X) realized that society would benefit from not having religious beliefs imposed on its citizens. It's that simple... People are certainly free to practice X, just as they are free to practice Y. The point is that no one religous belief should be imposed on others... Such is a more advanced society than one that imposes X or Y or Z on its citizens.

    Though there may be a few simular conclusions reached by various civilizations, none of them will reach all the same conclusions we hold dear, because they have different principles.

    Civilizations are alike in some ways, different in others. In many ways, we have progressed. In others, we have not. But if you believe, as I do, that our society is more advanced than a theocracy, I struggle to see how you could credit our Christian tradition with that advancement, as Christian history has always been one of imperialism and expansion. There are certainly other factors at work here... Some advancements come from a different, more secular place, and I think our founding fathers respected this.

    Wouldn't it be horrible to suffer under unjust laws? Does that mean that all laws should be disbanded?

    Your logic does not follow, so I have to ignore the rest of your comment in this section. Yes, it is horrible to suffer unjust laws, and no, that of course does not mean all laws should be disbanded. That is some faulty logic if I have ever seen any...

    We should also fight attempts to force a religious vacuum. Morality and law cannot exist in such a vacuum, as they are the expression of religious belief.

    We do not exist in a religious vacuum - we just don't want to impose religious beliefs. There is a difference. People are free to teach their children and personally practice anything they want. They can enroll their children in strictly relgious schools. What we are talking about are public schools - the schools that are, in theory, for everyone. If you don't understand this concept, just try a simple reversal. What if your kid was being taught Buddhist beliefs in a public school? I know enough history to know that the atrocities committed by various branches of Christianity were opposed by other branches of Christianity. Even in Roman Catholicism, there were those who opposed certain practices

    --

    my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
  455. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Right. Based on given propositions.

    Unfortunately, your focus on contradicting me has rendered you unable to grasp the difference between a proveable statement of logic and an unproveable model of the world.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  456. maybe their parents... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but not the unsuspecting children!

  457. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Informative

    School Board puts sticker on THEIR books. It's just labeling their property.

    You mean OUR books. It's a public school, it is government run, and therefore it is ultimately responsible to the people and must abide by the restrictions the people have placed on their government, specifically the Bill of Rights.

    The statement on the sticker is true... so what's all the fuss about? Even the most rabid proponents of evolution still call it a theory. (As all good scientists should)

    Because it says evolution, and not Relativity, or Quantum Mechanics, or Boyle's Law, or the Second Law of Thermodynamics. It doesn't say "science is based on the principle of falsifiability; a theory is accepted so long as it matches observation and discarded when experimentation shows it wrong". No, they made a point of saying that evolution is just a theory without any statement about the evidence behind it, and this was clearly politically motivated.

    This quote is just silly:

    By denigrating evolution, the school board appears to be endorsing the well-known prevailing alternative theory, creationism or variations thereof, even though the sticker does not specifically reference any alternative theories," U.S. District Judge Clarence Cooper said.


    Yeah, real silly. Except that you, me, the Judge, the School Board, and the 2000 parents who complained all know that it is true.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  458. Re:How could a statement of fact be unconstitution by jjohnson · · Score: 1

    The judge recognized that singling out evolution for the "theory, not fact" treatment was prejudicial to it. Gravitation is a theory, not a fact, but it wasn't noted as a sticker on the front, which makes evolution appear more speculative and hypothetical, when in fact the basics of evolution are as solid as any other "theory, not fact".

    The judge recognized the sticker as a subtle play on the common misunderstanding of what a scientific theory is, and rightly quashed it.

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  459. It's not by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    Using technical definitions, god's existence is not a theory. It's a myth. You have to use a word that's technically correct, but sounds more judgemental than it actually is.

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  460. Re:Yay! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    If secular humanism only attacked fundamentalist Christianity, I might be inclined to think you are correct.

    No, I'm entirely correct that the evolution-based attack only exists because of the fundamentalist creationism viewpoint. If the fundies had gotten on board with scientific reality like most other branches of Christianity, we would almost certainly not be having this conversation today.

    However, I am well aware of the fact that Christianity in general is attacked, whether by extension of our connection to the fundies, or for other reasons. It's human nature to generalize that way, and I'm not claiming the attackers are better in any way. But I'm not going to pretend that I'm unaware that a lot of the attacks are brought on by ourselves.

    The anti-Christians proceed by removing reference to God in all aspects of public life, not just in the classroom or in discussions of biology. Hence, God is not to be mentioned in government; the Ten Commandments are not to be allowed in courthouses (despite the fact that it is one of the foundational documents of our civilization); presidents are not to be given an oath of office that references God or uses a Bible; the Pledge of Allegiance is not to mention God; and so forth.

    You're confusing public life with government. Sorry, but all of those examples are not just reasonable but necessary. Religion and politics should not mix. Separation of Church and State is necessary for a free society in which religion can flourish -- or do you not understand that a the crossing of religion and government for so many years is part of why there have been general backlashes against Christianity since the Renaissance? Fleeing from government-specified religion was part of how our nation was born! The Pledge is a great example. It did not contain the words "under God" when it was originally written by a Baptist minister. The words were added in the 50s by a Congress that wanted to make some gesture against the atheist Soviet state. Religion and cold war politics crossing is not in any way a good thing. Giving the people the right to choose whether they pay homage to (a particular) God is.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  461. Problem with view of science courses by EEBaum · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Perhaps the problem is that, since modern science has been around a while, it is now ingrained in academia, and viewed, especially by school boards, as "This is the way things are." Rather, if science is treated as an investigation, a solving of mysteries, the problem may not be so pronounced.

    If a class is taught from the point of view of, "Oh dear, look at all these different animals! How on earth did they all come to be? Here is a set of ideas that have been proposed by people who know a lot about such things, and they've provided evidence. Therefore, it's worth us looking into. Wow, their rules seem to explain things quite well, as far as we can tell", then the spirit of science is preserved.

    However, in our modernist society, we cling to science's supposed ability to prove everything HERE AND NOW, to tell us the one and only way that things are. Perhaps it stems from ancient thought, a la the royalty in Galileo's time, where it was ingrained into the populace that this is THE WAY THINGS ARE, and there exists such a way things are that we are completely positive about.

    If our society was willing to accept concepts of "we don't know for absolute sure, but this one set of rules seems to fit pretty darn well, so that's what we're going with" and not consider it a BAD thing, I think we'd all be a lot better off.

    --
    -- I prefer the term "karma escort."
    1. Re:Problem with view of science courses by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      Do you realize how difficult it would be for science to be taught and argued, if at every sentence or assertion, there be a full disclaimer? It'll be like reciting a law document.

      Most of these concepts such as "theory" are covered in basic science. Once that's taught, moving forward there really is no need to continually qualify every assertion.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    2. Re:Problem with view of science courses by vidarh · · Score: 1
      Your suggestions are fair, as long as no theories are singled out as "suspect" just because they are controversial with people that are unable to come up with valid criticism.

      The problem is not that people are looking at evolution with a critical eye, but when this is being used to a) make evolution look suspect compared with all the other theories that students are expected to accept without question, and b) to promote the idea that if evolution isn't 100% undeniable and irrefutable no matter what, then somehow magically creationism/intelligent design is a valid, well supported theory worthy of consideration.

      Since I fully expect the odd creationist to pop out of the woodwork at this time (this isn't directed at the poster I'm replying to personally): If creationsts were to a) provide a clear, unambiguous statement about what they believe, and b) provide a series of unambiguous predictions that can be logically inferred from the theory that will hold true if the theory is valid and fail if the theory is not valid, for instance in the form of outcomes of experiments, or in the forms of specific observations, then I would have no objections to that being presented to students as long as it would be covered together with a discussion of what important predictions of creationism and evolution have been met and which have failed.

      The reason I'd consider that is because it would be a good training in science criticism - as opposed to the typical creationist method of using principles of science to cast doubt on evolution while expecting creationism to be taken on faith with no scientific scrutiny.

    3. Re:Problem with view of science courses by EEBaum · · Score: 1

      I'm not in favor of including disclaimers. That would be extremely irritating, I agree. I suppose the problem may be that concepts such as what a theory actually IS aren't usually covered until college, and parents who haven't taken such courses in higher ed *and paid attention* can get very fussy.

      --
      -- I prefer the term "karma escort."
  462. PROOF OF GOD!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We'll talk when some god or another makes a Honda Civic."

    Its a well known fact (to anyone who has owned one) that Honda Civics are the work of Lucifer. Lucifer couldn't exist without God to create him, therefore Honda Civics are proof of the existence of God.

    Equally, Jaguars are evidence of Zen motoring.

  463. Re:Yay! by nuklearfusion · · Score: 1
    No, that is not the only reason. Another reason--the one that I spoke of in my post--is that people who hate Christianity are using evolution and the scientific community as tools in their attack against Christianity. It does not matter at all to these enemies of Christianity that the very sources they are using are Christian sources. What matters to them is that they can exclude or eliminate the reference of God from public discourse.

    The legal system isn't intended to be anti-Christian, either, but the enemies of Christianity certainly try to force that use!


    I cannot speak for all atheists or non-christions (althogh i am sure that these are the beliefs of the ACLU) as there are a lot of people out there, and it pains me to see some of the anti-religious posts on this and other boards, and i doubt that you would make excuses for those who think that everyone should be forced to convert. however, i can tell you, as someone who supports the kinds of actions you are misrepresenting that i would never seak to take away a person's right to express their own opinions or their own religion (nor would i seak to keep them from practicing that religion).

    I think that there is mostly a miscommunication between parts of soceity that make for a very heated culture war. one of the man miscommunications involves the issue of seperation of chuch and state. i (and i've heard members of the much hated ACLU make simular statements - after i formed my opinions btw) believe people are not really free to choose and excersize their religion when the state officially endorses or denounces any religion (including atheism.) The things that are challenged, if you notice are cases where shcools, teachers, or laws attempt to force religion on people. Just so you know, the ACLU has sued over students being disiplined for excercising their right to express their religoin.

    the real culture war, as i see it (between moderates) is about where the line is drawn as far as the goverment forcing religion on the people (or denouncing it). the atheists/non-christions tend to believe the line has already been crossed, and that forcing people to acknowldge the existance of any god/goddess/deity crosses that line (it would also be crossing that line to force people to deny the excistance of any god/goddess/deity).

    it is my opinion that these stickers constituted an attempt to discredit a scientific theory by way of belittling it (the word ONLY is the really objectionable wording, although, if the district bought decent books, evolotion should have been presented as a theory, and reminding people of that is, itself an attempt to belittle the already stated theory). furthermore, these stickers, being implimented by a branch of the goverment, were an attempt by the goverment to influence peoples' religion.

    --

    There's no such thing as a stupid question, but there sure are a lot of inquisitive idiots.

  464. Face it, god was made by man by Gallowsgod · · Score: 1

    Well how about a warning sticker on all christian textbooks that explains that the god in the bible was in fact made up by the old hebrews?

    The old hebrews din nothing but take stories from older religions and piecing them together to make a religion of their own.

    For those interested an interesting article can be found here

    --

    The belief in a biblical god is an ignorant one
    1. Re:Face it, god was made by man by bentcd · · Score: 1

      The old hebrews din nothing but take stories from older religions and piecing them together to make a religion of their own.

      I really don't see how this is relevant at all to the question of whether or not the Hebrew god exists. Believing in god is a fundamentally irrational position and there is little chance you are going to make any dent in that by logical means. All logical refutations are trivially put to death by the sheer irrationality that is at the foundation of the religion.

      As a case in point, all your refutation does is suggest that the people who did the collecting were prophets directed by god to pick all the right pieces from other religions so that the new Hebrew religion became the correct one.

      Likewise, there is sporadic criticism of the fact that the modern translations of the bible are faulty in a number of places and that this invalidates modern Christian faiths. That is, when the bible was translated to latin or greek or whatever, lots of translation errors crept in. But all this does, in the irrational world of the religious zealot, is promote the translator to the status of prophet, reinterpreting the word of god under His direction. Thus, the bible wasn't mangled in the translation, it was updated.

      I believe that the best way to unprogram Christians is probably to teach them critical thinking, not to try and argue against their delusions.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    2. Re:Face it, god was made by man by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points to give, I'd give them all to this post.

      Mod Parent UP!

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
  465. Trolls abound by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand what's going on here...

    What's the deal with all his hostility towards religion - especially Christianity - in all these comments? Most of the comments I've read from people who hold creationist views have not been inflamatory, yet a great number of evolutionists have taken it upon themselves to taunt, belittle, and berate those who don't think the way they do. I read comments about how bad fundamentalist Christians are, but what about how bad those fundamentalist evolutionists are when they take it upon themselves to lead a personal crusade against anything and everything they consider to be illogical or no worthwhile? They criticize and stereotype religious/spiritual people for accepting dogma but then they turn around and accept all sorts of scientific dogma as accurate and unfailing.

    1. Re:Trolls abound by Squalish · · Score: 1

      This is hostile territory, and they know it.

      The geek community is one of the most openly athiestic in the country, as the postcount demonstrates.

      Viva la groupthink!

      --
      People in Soviet Russia, however, appear to be afflicted with amusing juxtapositions of the aforementioned situation
  466. Re:LAW! (and textbooks) by databyss · · Score: 1

    The parents are closer than the judge to what? The constitution?

    Having a concentration of close-minded, biased parents doesn't mean that we should cater to their desires. That would be akin to keeping slavery in the south, but not the north, or allowing hitler to kill the jews in Germany but not anywhere else.

    "If the textbook does a good job of exploring evolution as a biological principle and the potential role of evolution in bringing life about, then it probably should not need the label."

    The theory of evolution doesn't say how life was created, it says how life changes once it exists.

    "the judge should not be judging ethical issues"

    The judge isn't judging ethical issues, he's judging the illegal actions of of a public group that affects the education system. That's his job.

    "I can't see how anyone would be intimidated by that label"

    Stating that a theory is not a fact is in every science text book, it's in the glossary with all the other scientific definitions. Putting a label specifically to target evolution, is intended to intimidate. For example, teaching kids that having promiscious sex could lead to disease is a good thing to say. Saying "Don't have sex with TIffany because she could have sexual diseases." is a different story.

    --
    Hmmm witty sig or funny sig? Maybe elitest techy sig!
  467. You are so ignorant.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    ... that I despair about humanity. If somebody moderately technologically capable to use a computer and a web browser can be so tremendosuly ignorant, what hope is there for the masses or the willfully ignorant people?

    People seeing evolution happening? Epidemiologists. The measure mutations of viruses and bacteria in home many of there are per unit of time. The HIV that causes AIDS has mutated in several strains since it was first discovered. Many diseases are becoming resistent to our treatments in a typical Darwinian example of suvival of the fittest.

    Intermediate forms? Google for "whale evolution". You will deny all what you find, and will argue that all the clearly related beasts have nothing to do with each other. Well, many people insisted that the Earth was the center of the universe, so rest in the comfort of knowing that ignorance is not a solitary place to be.

    Your questions about dating are preposterous. Carbon dating is based in measurable physical facts, they did not invent it ouf of thin air. The rate of change of mythocondrial DNA came to confirm this. To keep harping at this is beyonf comprehension.

    I leave it here, it is frankly depressing to find every time this issues comes along people using the same old, disproved crutches.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:You are so ignorant.... by fcw · · Score: 1
      ...mythocondrial DNA...

      ITYM mitochondrial. No need to look like your Freudian slip is showing, it'll only encourage the buggers.

  468. not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's actually not reasonable at all when we're talking about science. I can believe we're all made of dust til I'm blue in the face - that does not mean quantum physics books need to have disclaimers that atoms are just a theory since nobody saw one so far.

  469. No Choices by Tony · · Score: 1

    ID fails to address specifics, but what it does point out is that the complexity of certain biological systems cannot always reasonably be explained by evoluation, as evoluation should choose the _simplest_ mechanisms to accomplish a goal.

    Uhm... there is no choice. Per the theory, natural selection works on the phenotypes that are available. Within a given population, there is divergence of phenotypes. This divergence is the raw materials which power the engine of evolution. There is no "choice," nor is evolution directed. We are not evolving toward some goal. We are not getting better. We are merely changing, as our environment pushes the phenotypes one direction or another.

    How the divergence occurs is up for debate; the "classical" view of mutation is almost certianly a fringe case at the most, and genetic combination is limited to sexual reproduction or transcription errors (SEE mutations). There is a promising line of investigation into the role of viruses and bacteria in genetic recombination. It could be that we are all built of Legos, and we are merely the playground of microscopic creatures.

    Intelligent Design fails the basic scientific requirement: it is not falsifiable. And, it fails the basic test of logic: it's not even necessary. It adds an element that must be taken on faith-- the "intelligence."

    That, in and of itself, makes it a much more complex and unbelievable "theory" than evolution.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:No Choices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just IMO, but I think you are nitpicking. Of course there is a "choice", but it is only insomuch as we view the course of evolution in hindsight.

      For example, it would not have been any violation of the laws of physics for life to never have evolved here at all... that is one "choice" that history could have taken. It didn't, but it _could_ have happened.

      Of course, if one tries to assert the premise that the eventual rising of humanity on this globe was a certainty, that the conditions which existed on this planet would _inevitably_ lead to our existence, then that's another matter... although the premise that everything in the universe is deterministic can fairly easily be disproven by illustrating the unsolvability of Turing's Halting Problem.

  470. Mystical Wizard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe that the mystical fluffy wizard of Groern changes the fate of humanity every time he injects himself with ether laced with acid. Then he dances around on the treetops and says "hrmff!" while puking on the neighbors' cat.

    Accept it, this is the way of things and there's nothing you or anyone else can do about it.

    Hey Georgia, see you in Hell.

  471. Half-creationist? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Not sure what you mean by that, agnostic?

    The reasoning of an agnostic is, I don't know all the details so maybe "God did it". Dig deeper, who created God?

    All faiths have the same answer God "just is", so why can't the Universe "just be"?

    You are spot on with the "fundamental problem". Probably the #1 mathematical breakthrough of the 20th century was Godel's incompletness theorem, "proof" that the "fundamental problem" will never go away.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  472. Popper by karnat10 · · Score: 1

    Evolution is a theory, right, but there's a lot of evidence in favor of it and none against it so far. As soon as there's one one proof evolution theory is wrong, it'll we dropped immediately. Scientific theories need to be falsifiable (thanks to Popper).

    In contrast, creation is a belief. There are no proofs whatsoever. For a belief it doesn't matter whether it's provable or not. The point is that you're believing it. And that's good, as long as you keep it for you.

    However, serious problems arise when those who believe try to impose their beliefs upon others who don't. That's religious intolerance and has caused the death of millions in the past. That's why we have secular states. Those people are trying to turn back time and act at the same level as those islamic fundamentalists who persuade young people of committing suicide attacks. Both lack the most fundamental respect for others.

    To blabber about creationism at work or school is like picking one's nose in public. I had a boss who would start "casual" discussions about "scientific" topics at any occasion. Now, that was a serious asshole! Once he gave me a book "about information" (I'm a software engineer and therefore interested "in information"). The book looked somehow suspicious though, and a quick googling of the author revealed his creationist background.

    So, if you come across a creationist without manners, inform him of his misbehaviour, or run.

    1. Re:Popper by Squalish · · Score: 1

      A proof or disproof of something as complicated as an entire ecosystem, including detail down to individual amino acids and proteins, is quite impossible/impractical.

      We observe patterns, we speculate oversimplified theories to explain these patterns. There is a biosphere of evidence on this particular topic. Some of it, we don't understand how to explain with our current theories of evolution.

      Example: The gap between an animal without certain features (say, a rat), to an animal that has evolved certain features that add incredible compound utility, but have next to no marginal utility as they are being evolved (a bat).

      Perhaps this is why we call it a theory - although 99% of the evidence is on one side, there is still evidence to the contrary.

      Our theories of gravity, for example,[even when you take into account relativity] don't explain observed cosmic movements. Some have attempted to change the theory at its roots to explain this, some have ventured to create absurd Standard-Model-defying things like Dark Matter, and even stranger, Dark Energy. Meanwhile, the String Theorists attempt to revise gravity (along with all the other forces) at its core with a mathematical proof.

      The scientific community takes this into account by saying that hey, our understanding may be imperfect. We might be wrong. Come up with something better. If your facts support it, perhaps we might try to verify it, and poove our our previous understanding wrong, humiliating as that may be. You will be hard-pressed to find a religious community that does the same, that DEMANDS evidence for each and every THEORY that is put out.

      --
      People in Soviet Russia, however, appear to be afflicted with amusing juxtapositions of the aforementioned situation
  473. 5 words... by benjaminchoate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Science and religeon can coexist.

    Honestly, in these forums I see so much religious ignorance that it makes me sick.

    I don't agree with the sticker of course, because I believe that what Darwin observed does exist. I don't believe that man originated through evolution, but I believe that God created the earth and the things on it with a certain level of tolerance and adaptability. To do otherwise wouldn't make much sense from a scientific point of view, would it?

    1. Re:5 words... by Forbman · · Score: 0, Troll

      If God created man in its image, then why are there now over 6 billion different images of God right now?

      Why didn't God create the Platypus in its image instead?

      Why, in non-insectoid, non-fish life on Earth, are 4 limbs pretty much the pattern, when 6, 8 or more are good for insectoids?

      Were they created by something else, then?

    2. Re:5 words... by tdemark · · Score: 1

      God created the earth and the things on it with a certain level of ... adaptability

      So, what you are saying is God believes in the theory of evolution?

    3. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If God created man in its image, then why are there now over 6 billion different images of God right now?


      What does the population have to do with God creating man in His image?



      Why didn't God create the Platypus in its image instead?


      He did.



      Why, in non-insectoid, non-fish life on Earth, are 4 limbs pretty much the pattern, when 6, 8 or more are good for insectoids?


      Because more limbs would not serve a useful purpose in non-insectiod, non-fish life? Actually this is a better question for evolutionists to answer. Here is a hint: they cannot. There is absolutely no reason under evolution why some creatures would have 6 or 8 limbs while others have four. But when we consider that each creature was designed for its niche, then the differences make sense.



    4. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've got 5 words for ya:

      Separation of church and state!

      A fantastic idea of the Founding Fathers who incorporated in into the Constitution; perhaps you should read about it...

    5. Re:5 words... by Sj0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      God created this world. It's arrogance and ignorance of the highest degree for men to say they understand how He did it.

      I'm not talking about the evolutionists, I'm talking about those who don't even want to look at the world God created for clues about how He did it before declaring that they know how the world works because of literalist interpetations of the bible.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    6. Re:5 words... by SharpTenor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Separation of church and state!" 1. Even though we know the subtext of the sticker, keep in mind there are many more "theories" out there aside from intelligent design and evolution. (I hate seeing the word "theory" too because I know it means something different in science then it does in a laypersons definition.) 2. What religion is endorsed in that sticker? Where does it reference Genesis 1:1 or John 3:16? Does it give you the address of the church it's endorsing?

    7. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right! Science creates the weapons. Religion uses them.

    8. Re:5 words... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the theory I've read is that insects, bacterium, and vertabates evolved from three different forms of life under the sea with different cell configurations, which evolved into the different forms of life we see.

      Of course, I like your theory that god created everything as it is right at this second, too. I mean, giving an omnipotent, omniscent being the small-minded shortsighted attributes of men by telling people that he wouldn't possibly have created life as an emergent system in the universe, because even though the evidence strongly points to such an occurance, a minister somewhere says it couldn't happen, that's a good theory too.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    9. Re:5 words... by benjaminchoate · · Score: 1

      And tell me again where religion is mentioned on the sticker?

      Again, I don't agree with the sticker, I think it's silly that they felt they needed to put them onto the books. But I think it's sillier that some court felt it necessary to rule that all the stickers must be removed. Sure, the stickers were very likely put there by someone because of their religious belief, but does it actually mention religious ideas or God? No, it says to take a certain idea with a grain of salt.

      To paraphrase you, my friend:

      Freedom of Speech!

      A fantastic idea of the Founding Fathers who incorporated it into the Constitution; perhaps you should read about it...

    10. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So, what you are saying is God believes in the theory of evolution?

      Why is this such a stretch? Which shows a more farsighted, all knowing God?

      a.) you make everything static and you are done

      b.) you start a process that you know will eventually lead to what you want to create, but get see all the interesting things that happen along the way

      to assume a, then God must believe that the destination is all that is important, in which case, why not skip right to the end and why even create man as he was created. The eventual goal is to be united with God, according to most faiths. To even have us living on earth, would imply that it is not the destination that that is most important to a God would have creted man, it is obviously the destination that matters, in which case, evolution only makes sense, it is the process that is more important, and perhaps more interesting to him. By creating a process that has the possibiity of some random results, God is running a few "What if" scenerios. If this is true, then I think man really was created in God's image. (And for those who have made stupid comments earlier, it is not a literal exact duplicate image. Man was made in God's image in the same way that your child will be created in your image.)

    11. Re:5 words... by JFitzsimmons · · Score: 1

      Evolution and creation can coexist. Some philosophers reason that evolution could simply be a tool of God, used to manipulate his creations. I think it is a load of crap, personally, but it is logically feasable.

      --
      Beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master. -Anonymous
    12. Re:5 words... by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      Funny. You state that as fact. Were you here when God created this world to see it occur with your own eyes? If not then how could you possibly be so certain?

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    13. Re:5 words... by Decaff · · Score: 1

      There is absolutely no reason under evolution why some creatures would have 6 or 8 limbs while others have four. But when we consider that each creature was designed for its niche, then the differences make sense.

      Evolution has to make do with what it has got. A long time ago a certain group of animals with a certain number of limbs happened to do better than others, and that group survived. From then on, evolution was stuck with that number of limbs from then on. The number of limbs is the result of a chance event a long time ago. If that chance had led to six-limbed fishes, then reptiles and mammals, I'm sure that some religious folk would say that 6 was the best design!

    14. Re:5 words... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Science and religeon can coexist.

      I don't agree with the sticker of course, because I believe that what Darwin observed does exist. I don't believe that man originated through evolution, but I believe that God created the earth and the things on it with a certain level of tolerance and adaptability.


      Well, your religion is evolving to survive the age of enlightenment. You have to let go of thousands of years of philosophy about perfection and god and the world he created, but whatever it takes, eh?

      Anyway, you're allowed to believe what you will, and unlike them sticker-making folks, you seem willing to accept compromise and other points of view. So I like your religion... it seems less inclined to setting me on fire when the revolution comes : )

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    15. Re:5 words... by sarlen · · Score: 1
      Freedom of Speech!

      Interestingly enough, Freedom of Speech doesn't apply to the government - it applies to ordinary citizens. That's like saying the government can say whatever they want, including outright lies, because of "freedom of speech." That's not true.

    16. Re:5 words... by 88NoSoup4U88 · · Score: 1
      I'm not talking about the evolutionists, I'm talking about those who don't even want to look at the world God created for clues about how He did it before declaring that they know how the world works because of literalist interpetations of the bible.

      I am looking at the world daily ; And I think He fucked up... Or took his hands off at least.

    17. Re:5 words... by Decaff · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not talking about the evolutionists, I'm talking about those who don't even want to look at the world God created for clues about how He did it before declaring that they know how the world works because of literalist interpetations of the bible.

      This is because scientists look at the world with an open mind. We don't go out looking for clues about how He did it, because we don't assume anyone did it - if we did assume that, it would not be a useful scientific approach.

      The problem with assuming that there are these clues is that almost all the discoveries that were thought to be clues of God's work have turned out to be false, and could be explained far more simply. There comes a point where there is no more room for these clues, as almost everything can be explained - we are very close to that stage with evolution and biology.

      Have you heard of the 'God of the Gaps' argument, and why it is flawed?

    18. Re:5 words... by snorklewacker · · Score: 1

      Some philosophers reason that evolution could simply be a tool of God, used to manipulate his creations.

      That would be the Catholic Church. Pope Pius XII's encyclical in 1950 wasn't a ringing endorsement of evolution, but it specifically mentioned that it was not incompatible with Catholicism. Pope John Paul II reiterated the viewpoint, and emphasized the allegorical implications of the bible, as opposed to literal. The Presbyterian church has also done the same thing.

      Mostly it's just the evangelicals who cling to creationism as dogma. It's not even a majority of Christian traditions.

      --
      I am no longer wasting my time with slashdot
    19. Re:5 words... by Sj0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not saying ANYTHING as fact in the domain of science or God. I'm talking about why the creationists opinions are further from the reality set forth by God than the scientists. The former rely on an interpetation, a philosophy divorced from the world and created by man in an attempt millenia ago to explain what God had done, but the latter relies on examining this earth, created by God, and trying to understand the processes which lead to this moment and the processes which run the world.

      If you start with the proposition that God created the world, then you cannot follow with arguements that observing and learning about world won't help you learn more about the world god created.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    20. Re:5 words... by fitten · · Score: 1

      Here's some more words... Have you actually *read* The Constitution? The Declaration of Independence?

      Here's the FIRST two paragraphs of the Declaration of Independence (also made by our Founding Fathers).

      When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. --Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain [George III] is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.


      The last paragraph of The Constitution:

      Article. VII.
      The Ratification of the Conventions of nine States, shall be sufficient for the Establishment of this Constitution between the States so ratifying the Same.
      done in Convention by the Unanimous Consent of the States present the Seventeenth Day of September in the Year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and Eighty seven and of the Independence of the United States of America the Twelfth In witness whereof We have hereunto subscribed our Names,


      Our Founding Fathers opposed a state sponsored church. They did not conceive the USA in absence of religion. In fact, the documents and such all but declare the country to be Christian. At meetings, our Founding Fathers prayed and were religious. Look at all of our governmental ceremonies... the Innaugural Prayer, prayers before/after meetings of different governmental bodies, etc. Those have always existed and were a part of the governmental ceremony.

      Our Founding Fathers didn't want a government based on religion or a state sponsored religion. They did not say that religion was 'bad' and/or 'should be avoided'. In fact, the Founding Fathers embraced religion and used it quite a bit, even in governmental functions. ...or did you think the phrases like "In God We Trust" were recently put on USA coins and monies by Jimmy Swaggart?

    21. Re:5 words... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      The problem in my eyes is that dogma overrode the world, if that makes any sense. If god created the world, then investigating the world should give insight into god, shouldn't it? If you disregard the world and speak only from dogma, aren't you disregarding the greatest work of the creator, and in doing so making your own religion not related to the one which would describe the creator?

      --
      It's been a long time.
    22. Re:5 words... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Fuck yeah, man. Way to be.

      That's why I love science -- I believe completely in this basic postulate of Creationism: God did it. What he did is what I see science as discovering -- and the more we learn, the more complex, beautiful, and amazing God's creation becomes. Belief in God is a motivation toward scientific curiosity for me, not a discouragement as many atheists (and Christians!) believe.

      That's why dogma is to be feared and rejected: It is always about the hubris of humans who want to set up themselves as authorities. Those who follow dogma blind themselves to the truth and thus disservice God.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    23. Re:5 words... by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      In the sea you could probably find an animal with any number of limbs, but when the first vertebrate crawled out of a swamp and decided not to go back in, chance would have it that it was a tetrapod. Once its decendents had evolved proper lungs, there was no chance at all of any other larger animals folowing it as they could never compete with the tetrapods, cos thier primative gill/lungs were outstripped by the tetrapods' lungs. And the tetrapods couldn't evolve extra limbs as it is too large a change, it would offer no imediate benifit to have another tiny set of limb stubs. Insects, arachnids and other things you would not like to find in you bathtub are different, because they have no lungs, so transition between water and land is a bit easier, so many invertebrate forms were able to come onto land. The idea that extra limbs would not be useful is not very good, I sure wouldn't mind an extra pair of hands, and Im sure plenty of other animals would find it an advantage to, a 6 legged zebra would be able to run on 4 legs, reserving the back 2 for kicking lions, and a 6 leged rodent would be able to carry extra food and run at the same time, and im sure ostritched would be better off if they didn't have any wings at all, if I was God, I would certainly have been more creative, rather than just using the same shape over again.

    24. Re:5 words... by Phillup · · Score: 1

      If God created man in its image, then why are there now over 6 billion different images of God right now?

      Who said that humans where created in god's image?

      ;-)

      Maybe... we did develop via evolution... then we kicked the shit out of the big G's little experiment and sent him packing.

      Yeah... that's the ticket... I mean... shit, if you're going to start questioning "established fact" (as the sticker suggest) then the best place to start (IMHO) is the weakest link.

      That would be the Bible.

      Personally, I would love to be in a school like those stupid Bible thumpers want. That way I could make their life a miserable hell hole every day when they come to school and want to "debate" reality.

      Debating science vs. religion is like bringing a knife to a nuclear war.

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    25. Re:5 words... by Phillup · · Score: 1

      Then, he sent his son... and we killed his wimp ass.

      Dear God,
      Got any more? We are bored.

      Sincerely,
      Your fucked up little experiment

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    26. Re:5 words... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > does it actually mention religious ideas or God? No, it says to take a certain idea with a grain of salt.

      Then why don't they put stickers all over it, pointing out that MANY of the theories in there should be taken "with a grain of salt?" There are theories taught to children that are on shakier logical grounds than Evolution, but because evolution is in contrast to some peoples' religion they feel that it is a personal insult and must do everything they can to discredit it

      And, IMO, to keep not only their own children ignorant, but everyone else's children as well.

    27. Re:5 words... by Phillup · · Score: 1

      Religious people don't want to coexist.

      I think that they are right... problem is, they won't all "go to heaven" willingly.

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    28. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this such a stretch?

      It's not (for me, at least) ... it just seems like most creationists view evolution as exclusive of God.

      - Tony

    29. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God created this world. It's arrogance and ignorance of the highest degree for men to say they understand how He did it. I'm not talking about the evolutionists, I'm talking about those who don't even want to look at the world God created for clues about how He did it before declaring that they know how the world works because of literalist interpetations of the bible.

      How in holy FUCK did this get modded up to "+5 Insightful"??!!?!

      It's looking like this whole thread is the vicitim of a Falwell-esque astroturfing campaign.

    30. Re:5 words... by perlmunger · · Score: 1

      Wow! No fear. Yer in trouble now! heh heh heh. ;-0 -Matt

    31. Re:5 words... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      b.) you start a process that you know will eventually lead to what you want to create, but get see all the interesting things that happen along the way

      But God already knows the interesting things that happen along the way, so why bother?

      The only saving point for that theory is that he setup a process in which even he CANNOT see the outcome...but then he's no longer all knowing is he?

      If you need to change your faith to adapt to real evidence, isn't that admitting your faith is wrong to begin with?

    32. Re:5 words... by Decaff · · Score: 1

      God created this world. It's arrogance and ignorance of the highest degree for men to say they understand how He did it.

      But isn't that exactly what 'creationists' are doing? They are saying that God could not have used evolution.

    33. Re:5 words... by Tonytheloony · · Score: 1

      Saying "God created the world" is arrogance on your part, unless you have a very wide definition of "God".
      It would be better to just say no one knows what happened.

      --
      The quickest way to become an atheist is to study the Bible thoroughly.
    34. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the hell is that 'insightful'?

    35. Re:5 words... by JFitzsimmons · · Score: 1

      Have you ever heard of a fanatical athiest? I think you are one. Take a step back and realize what you just said. You're being just as closed-minded as "they" are.

      --
      Beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master. -Anonymous
    36. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hundreds of millions of Roman Catholics agree with you.

      We accepted evolution as credible theory a long time ago. It's only really the Fundamentalist (read: Biblical literalist) Protestants that adhere to the old notions that evolution is counter-Christian. I stand with them on this one, though, because "keeping an open mind" is something to which I'd hope the government would not be in opposition.

      I don't represent the opinions of all those Catholics, but I do sympathize with both sides to this story because of what we believe as a majority.

    37. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Naw, you're just a moron.

      The problem here is that atheists are being dogmatic themselves, which is really fscking stupid. Nobody died to justify our(atheistic) beliefs, nobody has to steadfastly accept only our conclusions, and nobody is judged post mortem for being correct about the nature of the universe.

      In this case, the religion is irrelevant next to the dogma. There are atheists and theists alike who curse science(some atheists consider most science unnatural!), and rather than let theism become the dividing factor, why not instead try to focus on the real issue here, that dogma is trying to reach it's way into the classroom where science, whether a description of an atheist universe or a description of a world created by God, should be?

    38. Re:5 words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's having a little bit of respect for other peoples beliefs, because in this case, you're not supposed to be fighting them. Just because you and I are atheists doesn't mean the world has to be and frankly, it's irrelevant to the discussion.

      At stake here is more important than Christianity or your opinion of it; it's whether we let something proven to be false ( the dogma that states that everything was created at once by god in a literal sense, and there has been no deviation since day 1 ) override something that may not be perfect, but is at least based on observations about the world, whether our world was made by chance or by design.

    39. Re:5 words... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I hear you, but this isn't the time to be arguing for or against the existance of God. In spite of what the fundamentalists would have you believe, this isn't some "athiest vs. christian" debate here, it's an "loud fundamentalists vs. everyone else" arguement. Rather than just point at anyone with the opinion that god created the world in the creationists sense and shout "RELGION BLOWS!", it's more productive to argue against what is really wrong here, the support of an incorrect dogma and the weakening of the credibility of one which may or may not be 100% correct, but is at least based on real-world study rather than a literal interpetation of scripture.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    40. Re:5 words... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Where in those quotes of yours does it say anything about a Christian god? I see a reference to "Nature's God", which doesn't sound Christian at all, instead very pagan. I see a reference to a "Creator": I don't hear Christians talking about their god as the "Creator" much. Any religion could use that term. And as for "Year of our Lord", that's what they called it back then, because everyone in western society used the Gregorian calendar. That doesn't indicate any adherence to any religion, just that they used the calendar that everyone else used.

      Further, there's a lot of evidence that many of the Founding Fathers were not Christian at all, but Deists. They believed in a Creator, but not much more. No holy books, special ceremonies, etc.

      You say they prayed at meetings. Well, I've noticed Muslims pray a lot. Does that mean they're Christian? I don't think so. Hindus pray too, and they don't even believe in a single god.

      There's plenty of evidence that the Founding Fathers did believe in a creator of some kind, but there's none that I've seen that they believed Christianity should be the default religion.

    41. Re:5 words... by fitten · · Score: 1

      OK, back to the original point... religion (of some kind, even if not necessarily Christian) has been a part of the USA government since its creation. The "seperation of church and state" phrase that some folks tend to use in an effort to strike out all religious references (of any kind) from governmental things, such as the Pledge of Allegiance and removal of the 10 Commandments from judicial buildings, is somewhat faulty. The separation of church and state is about not having an official state supported religion. Having religious ceremony (regardless of belief system) has long been a part of the USA government and is even present in the founding documents.

    42. Re:5 words... by Paul+Jakma · · Score: 1

      God created this world. It's arrogance and ignorance of the highest degree for men to say they understand how He did it.

      Rubbish, if God created this world and all in it, there is nothing to say he did not also give man the ability to slowly figure out /how/ God created the universe. (Whether or not God, or Gods, exist and if so whether he or they or it created the universe is another question..).

      Also, science does not claim to understand everything. If we understood everything, we'd have no need for science, as science is about the process of gaining understanding about the world about us. We likely never will have all the answers.

      I'm talking about those who don't even want to look at the world God created for clues about how He did it before declaring that they know how the world works because of literalist interpetations of the bible.

      Looking at the world, then trying to explain how it works, then seeing if the explanations hold up or need to be improved is exactly what science is about.

      Personally, I wish those who take the bible so literally as to argue that creation according to Genesis trumps science would be as literal about their interpretation of "Thou shalt not kill", "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone" and "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you". The world would be a much better place if the bible thumpers would follow the morality taught by the new testament as literally.

      --
      I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
    43. Re:5 words... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Praying is not "religious ceremony", at least if it's done individually.

      Like most Christians, you seem to be equating Christianity with "religion", as if there were no other.

      There's no specific "state and religion shall be separate" phrase in the Constitution, but there is a clause that the government shall not sanction any particular religion.

      How is the 10 Commandments anything but a sanctioning of Christianity? The Hindus don't recognize them. The Buddhists don't.

      As for the Pledge, that only had "Under God" added in the 1950's. Again, if the state isn't supposed to endorse a specific religion, why does it seem to be endorsing monotheistic religions here?

      It's simple: you can't avoid having a state-endorsed religion and still have official Government references to a specific religion.

    44. Re:5 words... by mink · · Score: 1
      I'll bite.

      "In God We Trust" was only seen on certain money (some coins) before McCarthyism. When the commie witch hunts began, it was added to the rest of our money.

      If you dont believe me try the US Treasury.

      Personally I think that motto being on money is insulting to GOD, I mean think about what money gets used for. Jesus would kick some serious American ass over it if he were here today.

      As for the founding fathers and religion thats way off topic from where we are even now.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    45. Re:5 words... by Decaff · · Score: 1

      Rather than just point at anyone with the opinion that god created the world in the creationists sense and shout "RELGION BLOWS!", it's more productive to argue against what is really wrong here

      I had hoped that was what I was doing. I was not arguing against religion at all.

    46. Re:5 words... by fitten · · Score: 1

      Praying is not "religious ceremony", at least if it's done individually.

      I guess this is a matter of opinion. I think it is a ceremony.

      Like most Christians, you seem to be equating Christianity with "religion", as if there were no other.

      I guess you assume that I'm a Christian.

      There's no specific "state and religion shall be separate" phrase in the Constitution, but there is a clause that the government shall not sanction any particular religion.

      I know... but the phrase that most people say is what I quoted, quite intentionally called out.

      How is the 10 Commandments anything but a sanctioning of Christianity? The Hindus don't recognize them. The Buddhists don't.

      Arguably, but even some atheists that I know say that the 10 Commandments isn't that bad of a set of rules to live by. In all actually, my belief is that these rules were given as religious doctrine because they simply are good rules for a community to live by and not necessarily because they were decreed by some supreme being as a way to holiness. If you look at them, they list out things that can quickly tear a community apart. Living by those rules isn't necessarily a 'bad thing'.

      As for the Pledge, that only had "Under God" added in the 1950's. Again, if the state isn't supposed to endorse a specific religion, why does it seem to be endorsing monotheistic religions here?

      Well... techincally, you can interpret "under God" to mean whatever god you want ;) I don't see it explicitly saying "under the Christian God".

      It's simple: you can't avoid having a state-endorsed religion and still have official Government references to a specific religion.

      I agree. However, I also think that even the Founding Fathers didn't hold to this point as evidenced by some of the documents they wrote. They say that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof". They didn't say that religion couldn't be practiced by government bodies. For example, I believe that there should not be a law that mandates prayer or any religious ceremony in any public school. However, I also believe that Congress cannot pass a law that prohibits anyone from exercising their religious beliefs in public school as long as they don't interfere or harm anyone else. If the religious students want to get together before school starts and have some ceremony without subjecting anyone else who doesn't want to be there to the ceremony, I think that is OK.

    47. Re:5 words... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Arguably, but even some atheists that I know say that the 10 Commandments isn't that bad of a set of rules to live by. In all actually, my belief is that these rules were given as religious doctrine because they simply are good rules for a community to live by and not necessarily because they were decreed by some supreme being as a way to holiness. If you look at them, they list out things that can quickly tear a community apart. Living by those rules isn't necessarily a 'bad thing'.

      That's funny, I've heard Muslims say the exact same thing about Sharia Law, and that's why nations should adopt Sharia Law. In case you don't remember, this is the set of rules that include stoning women to death if they so much as bare their arm in public.

      The 10 Commandments are nothing special; every society throughout history has had something somewhat similar. Don't murder, don't steal, etc. You don't need to reference a Christian holy book for this. But some of the commandments are certainly not for everyone, namely the one about worshipping false gods. That one pretty much excludes any other religion. Some of the others are debatable too. Honor your father and mother... what if your father molested you or your mother abandoned you? Don't work on the Sabbath? Why not? Vacations days are good of course, but if I want to spend my Sunday doing extra work to pay the rent, or working on my car, why shouldn't I? Just because some people 6000 years ago thought these rules were good doesn't mean they can't be altered.

      In all actually, my belief is that these rules were given as religious doctrine because they simply are good rules for a community to live by and not necessarily because they were decreed by some supreme being as a way to holiness.

      I'm sure that's why a lot of stuff is in the bible, such as the part about not eating pigs and bats. So why do people insist that these were decreed by some supreme being instead of just admitting that primitive people thousands of years ago wrote these down as "scripture" in order to convince others to follow them for their own good? Aren't we advanced enough now that we can follow guidelines for our own good (and change them when necessary), rather than needing to believe that they were "divinely inspired"?

    48. Re:5 words... by fitten · · Score: 1

      I'm sure that's why a lot of stuff is in the bible, such as the part about not eating pigs and bats. So why do people insist that these were decreed by some supreme being instead of just admitting that primitive people thousands of years ago wrote these down as "scripture" in order to convince others to follow them for their own good? Aren't we advanced enough now that we can follow guidelines for our own good (and change them when necessary), rather than needing to believe that they were "divinely inspired"?

      Heh... oddly enough, it was probably easier to get people to do these things by telling them that God told them to rather than try to convince them of the obvious/measurable benefits. Kind of like the "because I said so" reason, puts an end to the rationalization.

    49. Re:5 words... by benjaminchoate · · Score: 1

      I hardly think that putting a little 2-inch sticker on a book qualifies as keeping everyone's children ignorant. Their objection to the book's (apparent) portrayal of man's origin through evolution as a fact is a valid one. It flies in the face of something that they believe in, and so far no one can prove that it is correct. It's easy for you to agree with the judge's decision because you believe in evolution. Have you considered the possibility that there is such a thing as a creator? If that were the case, and you were privy to that information, what would you think about this book? If this were a computer text book that made mention of Microsoft Windows as being the "only operating system of consequence" you'd probably be up in arms, but most people (the unwashed masses) who have computers probably believe that.

      The sticker says "This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." How dare they!

      Honestly now, if the 2000+ people who complained about the book really want a sticker emphasizing that theory is a theory is it *that* big of a deal?

    50. Re:5 words... by acidrain69 · · Score: 1

      The church has said the same thing for the last 2 millenia. You are the only ignorant one, denying science and denying fact.

      If it were left up to the church, we'd still be farming peasant land owned by some rich asshole.

      --
      -- Having a Creationist Museum is like having an Atheist place of worship
    51. Re:5 words... by barawn · · Score: 1

      Funny. You state that as fact. Were you here when God created this world to see it occur with your own eyes? If not then how could you possibly be so certain?

      I can make it fact for you!

      It's just a redefinition issue.

      God: (n) - That which created the Universe.

      By inclusion, then, God created the Earth.

      The problem is whether or not God is a process, or a being. And the separation between those is unprovable (you can't prove the difference between a sentience and nonsentience unless you are the sentient being) and is a matter of belief.

    52. Re:5 words... by barawn · · Score: 1

      The problem with assuming that there are these clues is that almost all the discoveries that were thought to be clues of God's work have turned out to be false, and could be explained far more simply. There comes a point where there is no more room for these clues, as almost everything can be explained - we are very close to that stage with evolution and biology.

      Consider a computer intelligence, constrained inside a virtual world, with *no input* from the outside.

      Could it deduce the existence off an outside world? No. Its existence could be entirely self-contained, and it could deduce that its existence is purely self-consistent, that it exists the way it does because the world is constructed the way it is. (This is the "weak anthropic argument", reformulated slightly).

      Could it deduce that an intelligence created that world? No, of course not. Its "big bang" would be "moment of first execution", but everything after that followed rigidly defined rules, that are consistently followed inside its framework.

      In precisely the same manner, we can't determine if an intelligence created this Universe, or if it simply was forced to evolve the way it did on its own. We have no "other Universe" to compare to.

      We don't go out looking for clues about how He did it, because we don't assume anyone did it - if we did assume that, it would not be a useful scientific approach.

      Ah, but here your journalism fails you. "Who" and "How" are two independent questions. Scientists don't look for a "who". They look for a "how". The answer to one does not answer the other.

    53. Re:5 words... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      It's like you read my post, then managed to completely misunderstand it.

      Here goes the cliffs notes version:

      -God created the universe (I know, just stay with me here)
      -God uses processes to create the universe as we know it

      *** Scientists ***

      -Scientists study universe, try to understand said proceses.
      -Scientists try to understand how god creates universe.
      -Therefore, scientists are using the work of god to understand Gods work.

      *** Creationists ***

      -Creationist creates philosophy
      -Creationist ignores universe if it conflicts with philosophy
      -Therefore, creationists are using the work of creationists to "understand" Gods work
      -Therefore, the creationists are "those who don't even want to look at the world God created for clues about how He did it before declaring that they know how the world works because of literalist interpetations of the bible."

      Would you like me to draw you a picture?

      --
      It's been a long time.
    54. Re:5 words... by fbjon · · Score: 1
      If god created the world, then investigating the world should give insight into god, shouldn't it?
      Fuck yeah, man. Way to be.

      That's why I love science -- I believe completely in this basic postulate of Creationism: God did it. What he did is what I see science as discovering -- and the more we learn, the more complex, beautiful, and amazing God's creation becomes. Belief in God is a motivation toward scientific curiosity for me, not a discouragement as many atheists (and Christians!) believe.

      This has to some of the most insightful stuff I have ever seen on this site. You two are like SO my friends now!

      To me it seems that most people are narrow-minded. (Shock!) Some people are even so narrowminded, as to narrow themselves out of their own religion. I wonder why it is so hard to accept a broader view of God, such as this one. Will God be offended? In that case, he must be severely pissed of by now. Will someone else be offended? Not if one has the common sense to shut up.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    55. Re:5 words... by idommp · · Score: 1
      So, what you are saying is God believes in the theory of evolution?

      I asked God this very question. She said She didn't give a damn what we called it but that She wasn't about to reinvent life from scratch every time She needed a new critter to fill a niche somewhere.

    56. Re:5 words... by Paul+Jakma · · Score: 1

      But some of the commandments are certainly not for everyone, namely the one about worshipping false gods. That one pretty much excludes any other religion.

      Not really.

      God, Allah, Jehovah are all the same god. Jews, Christians and Muslims all worship the same "one" - hasnt stopped us killing each other in the name of that god though. ;)

      --
      I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
    57. Re:5 words... by Paul+Jakma · · Score: 1

      It's like you read my post, then managed to completely misunderstand it.

      Here goes the cliffs notes version:


      Ah, I did indeed completely misunderstand you. Thanks for the clarification.

      --
      I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
    58. Re:5 words... by JavaRob · · Score: 1

      This is a much better explanation of your view (thank you), and I totally agree with the flaws in the Creationist argument (not hard to find flaws there), but it still bugs me that you're assuming the existence of God, which is very anti-scientific. We have no way of knowing, of course (the supernatural is untestable), but when you add up the evidence it seems very unlikely that there is a God in the traditional sense -- i.e., all-loving, involved in human affairs, listening (and sometimes answering) prayers, encouraging worship, etc..

      I'm not sure where you fall in the spectrum; I'm okay with people who choose to believe in a power that "set everything up" in the beginning, but it's hard to assume much about that power, and you're assuming that there actually *was* a beginning.

      It's a much more scientific approach to assume all forces are explicable, and there are no super-natural forces (the God category). Bringing God into any equation is cheating, actually -- because you are invoking unobserved and unpredictable forces, you could reach any conclusion you wanted. It'd be handy ("...then God steps in, and we have fusion!"), but not useful.

    59. Re:5 words... by Decaff · · Score: 1

      In precisely the same manner, we can't determine if an intelligence created this Universe, or if it simply was forced to evolve the way it did on its own. We have no "other Universe" to compare to.

      There are several totally separate points confused here. The question of whether or not an intelligence created the universe has no relevance to whether or not the subsequent universe was forced to follow a certain path. We do have other universes to compare to - we hypothesize about them and make mathematical models of them. We can show that some of them can't exist.

      It looks like the universe at the point of origin was simple. Intelligences are complex. To go from a simple origin to a more complex origin (who created the intelligence?) is bad logic.

      "Who" and "How" are two independent questions. Scientists don't look for a "who". They look for a "how". The answer to one does not answer the other.

      This is all irrelevant to the matter being discussed. This was about the presence of clues in evolution about a creator. This implies that when you look at the 'how', you will see signs of a 'who'. If you look at the 'how', and you see NO signs of a 'who' (the whole thing can have happened without intervention), the answer to one definitely does answer the other.

      Eventually, if you look at enough of the 'how', you find there is virtually no need left for a 'who'. What do you conclude?

    60. Re:5 words... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'm an atheist myself, but I'm respecting the beliefs of those who aren't. In this case, it's not atheists vs. christians, it's everyone vs. idiots. Because of that, there's no reason to attack the idea of god creating the universe because all that does is turn off people who would have otherwise listened to reason.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    61. Re:5 words... by JavaRob · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'm an atheist myself, but I'm respecting the beliefs of those who aren't. In this case, it's not atheists vs. christians, it's everyone vs. idiots.

      Okay, but you said:
      God created this world. It's arrogance and ignorance of the highest degree for men to say they understand how He did it.

      Suggestion:
      If you take as assumed that God created this world (as billions of people do), then it's arrogance and ignorance of the highest degree for men to say they understand how He did it.
      ----------------

      The trouble with this either way (unfortunately) is that the fundamentalist counter-arg is that the Bible is God's word, directly, and it's arrogance and ignorance of the highest degree to pretend we know better than GOD what God did.

    62. Re:5 words... by barawn · · Score: 1

      We do have other universes to compare to - we hypothesize about them and make mathematical models of them. We can show that some of them can't exist.

      Nah, that's just ways to discover more about our own current Universe, because the modeling is based upon the rules of our own Universe. It's a self-consistency check. In other words, we're making mathematical models of modified versions of our own Universe. Not new Universes altogether.

      It looks like the universe at the point of origin was simple. Intelligences are complex. To go from a simple origin to a more complex origin (who created the intelligence?) is bad logic.

      I'm not talking about an intelligence, I'm talking about a will. Wills aren't complex or simple. They just are. This isn't an Occam's Razor issue in the tiniest bit.

      I can't prove that you are a being in the same sense that I am. There's no possible way to do that - you would act exactly the same if you were a being whose actions were completely deterministic from the world around you rather than a being whose actions are determined by choices.

      If, in fact, beings with will are simpler than beings without will, then I would conclude, by Occam's Razor, that all humans other than myself are not beings with will. I can prove that I have will (well, it's a postulate of one's existence: "I am") but not anyone else.

      (It gets even worse when you try to bring Occam's Razor into it because of the different points of view involved.)

      This was about the presence of clues in evolution about a creator.

      It's completely relevant. The point that I'm making is that clues regarding a creator must be explainable via other methods. In other words, you can say "they're not clues", and I can say "they are clues", and we'd both be right. Both viewpoints are equally, unprovably, correct. "Random" implies a point of view.

    63. Re:5 words... by Decaff · · Score: 1

      Nah, that's just ways to discover more about our own current Universe, because the modeling is based upon the rules of our own Universe. It's a self-consistency check. In other words, we're making mathematical models of modified versions of our own Universe. Not new Universes altogether.

      I have to disagree. Some of these models have nothing whatsoever to do with our universe (such as those with additional time dimensions).

      I'm not talking about an intelligence, I'm talking about a will. Wills aren't complex or simple. They just are. This isn't an Occam's Razor issue in the tiniest bit.

      It is, as having a will is more complex than not having a will - it's adding another factor.

      The point that I'm making is that clues regarding a creator must be explainable via other methods. In other words, you can say "they're not clues", and I can say "they are clues", and we'd both be right.

      No, as calling these 'clues' is to make a whole load of assumptions. It's not up to me to prove that they are not clues - it's up to you to prove they are. Having no assumptions is simpler.

      Both viewpoints are equally, unprovably, correct. "Random" implies a point of view.

      They are unprovable, but one is more sensible. If something can be explained by randomness, there is no need for another explanation. To add further explanation is to complicate things and requires a lot of work to prove.

    64. Re:5 words... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > It flies in the face of something that they believe in

      Forcing your belief over science is, IMO, keeping them ignorant. The statement stands.

      > and so far no one can prove that it is correct

      Oh, but you CAN, OTOH, prove Creationism? What, you can't? There is infinitely more proof of Evolution than Creationism (or I.D. if you prefer one word over another, it's the same): that is LESS reason to put a God sticker on all SCIENCE books.

      NOTHING THAT TALKS ABOUT GOD FALLS UNDER THE REALM OF SCIENCE. PERIOD. To claim otherwise is to be a liar or an idiot.

    65. Re:5 words... by barawn · · Score: 1

      I have to disagree. Some of these models have nothing whatsoever to do with our universe (such as those with additional time dimensions).

      The simple fact that you're saying "additional time dimensions" should clue you in that you're talking about a modified model of our own Universe - one with more time dimensions. You start with our own Universe and perturb it. That's all you can do. Without knowing anything about any other possible Universes, you don't know from where else to start perturbing.

      If something can be explained by randomness, there is no need for another explanation.

      "Random" is not an explanation. It is merely a statement that an explanation is not possible given the information available. That is, you've figured out the how, but you can't figure out the why.

      Given that, if something is shown to be fundamentally random, than any explanation for its occurance is a postulate, not a hypothesis: it's a fundamental assumption which, while it has no provable basis, contradicts nothing.

      Take something like the Schrodinger's cat gedankenexperiment, where you take open the box after 5 minutes, so it's fundamentally random whether or not the cat died. There is no explanation possible for why the cat died. It died because an atom decayed randomly.

      I can't come up with a hypothesis for why the atom decayed to kill the cat, because there fundamentally is no information available to determine why. I can't use Occam's razor, because the "there is no reason" explanation requires as many assumptions as the "there is a reason" explanation - that is, it requires the assumptions that there is nothing capable (or equally, nothing capable that chose to interact, but that's just a modified version of the other explanation) of choosing it to decay. You might response "but there is no evidence for anything capable of choosing it to decay", which is true - but in this case, evidence of absence doesn't help, because there can not be any evidence anyway!

      To add further explanation is to complicate things and requires a lot of work to prove.

      But what you're adding isn't a provable statement, nor is it an explanation. It's a postulate, and that's the point. Both the postulate "God created the Universe" and "The Universe evolved randomly to where it is" lead to the exact same Universe we have to day - either by God's choice, or the weak anthropic principle.

      And, as an aside:

      It is, as having a will is more complex than not having a will - it's adding another factor.

      No, it's not. Admitting that, for instance, a person has will doesn't add complexity, because it doesn't change how that person acts. It just changes why that person acts. You're not adding any factors into any hypothesis you make regarding how the person acts.

    66. Re:5 words... by Decaff · · Score: 1

      By the way... thanks for a stimulating discussion!

      You start with our own Universe

      I disagree. Many models of universes start with assumptions which may, or may not, have anything to do with our universe (holographic models, string theory etc.). We don't know. They are just models. As we don't even know what our universe is, how can our models be based on it?

      "Random" is not an explanation. It is merely a statement that an explanation is not possible given the information available. That is, you've figured out the how, but you can't figure out the why.

      I would say that it is a statement that there is no necessity to figure out the 'why'. I would say that it means there IS no why! Anyone looking for a 'why' is wasting their time.

      It's a postulate, and that's the point. Both the postulate "God created the Universe" and "The Universe evolved randomly to where it is" lead to the exact same Universe we have to day - either by God's choice, or the weak anthropic principle.

      Yes, so why even bother with the more complicated (God) postulate? It serves no purpose. If you say 'God created the Universe', you might as well say 'two Gods created the Universe' etc, and so on. Best stick with the simplest option.

      You're not adding any factors into any hypothesis you make regarding how the person acts.

      That's not what I was saying. What I meant was that adding 'will' added complexity to the whole situation, not just why something happens.

      (Personally, I believe that there are good philosophical reasons to believe that will DOES change how a person acts).

    67. Re:5 words... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      And tell me again where religion is mentioned on the sticker?

      It isn't mentioned. But if you can find a group powerful and spiteful enough to get them placed on books in the US that aren't Christians, you'd have a point. Just because they don't say "Believe in Jesus, as I do" doesn't mean that they aren't religious fanatics forcing their beliefs on others through the government.

  474. Oh, God.... by Tony · · Score: 1

    If you examine the creationists arguments, they mostly come down to NOT WANTING TO BE RELATED TO MONKEYS.

    Good Lord. So you've met my family?

    Sorry about that.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  475. Typical religious nut's mistake. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    You are equating morality with religion.

    Very pius and devoted male Muslims can have not one, not 2, but up to 4 wifes. This is immoral according to Christian beliefs.

    So please, don come with this bullshit about needing religion to have morality, if anything having religion just muddles the waters of what is moral and what is not.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Typical religious nut's mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the first mandates from god to moses was the extermination of a neighboring community and the captivity of their females for sexual slavery. Immorality isn't limited to non-Christians.

    2. Re:Typical religious nut's mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? where?

  476. The example of the eye. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The evolution of the eye is claimed to be reproduced in a simulation. Of course we can not know how it happened, but the fact that a simulation shows that there exists a stepwise process starting with no eye, and ending with one eye, is an indication that evolution of the eye is not so far fetched.

    I dont have the scientific reference, but it is mentioned in the book "the science of discworld", written by two phycisists, and Terry Pratchett.

    1. Re:The example of the eye. by jesser · · Score: 1

      http://wiki.cotch.net/index.php/Eye_evolution links to some relevant papers.

      --
      The shareholder is always right.
  477. gene/genome duplications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you did not bother to even glimpse at a textbook, did you?

    The fact is that there are few proven mechanisms which do create duplications of genetic material. One is unequal crossing over another are mobile genetic elements (jumping genes/transposons) which can move things around in the genome.

    There are plants which can survive whole genome duplication, same thing did happen in zebrafish and most likely in a step somewhere between chordates (like Ciona) to vertebrates (like yourself).

  478. Molecular parahomology? Neutral mutations? by geekotourist · · Score: 1
    If you look at the 29 Evidences for Macroevolution section on molecular parahomology and on 4.1 Protein functional redundancy you'll see that:
    • Mutations are very often neutral. "Decades of biochemical evidence have shown that many amino acid mutations, especially of surface residues, have only small effects on protein function and on protein structure (Branden and Tooze 1999, Ch. 3; Harris et al. 1956; Lesk 2001, Chs. 5 and 6, pp. 165-228; Li 1997, p. 2; Matthews 1996). A striking example is that of the c-type cytochromes from various bacteria, which have virtually no sequence similarity. Nevertheless, they all fold into the same three-dimensional structure, and they all perform the same biological role (Moore and Pettigrew 1990, pp. 161-223; Ptitsyn 1998).

      Even within species, most amino acid mutations are functionally silent. For example, there are at least 250 different amino acid mutations known in human hemoglobin, carried by more than 3% of the world's population, that have no clinical manifestation in either heterozygotic or homozygotic individuals (Bunn and Forget 1986; Voet and Voet 1995, p. 235). The phenomenon of protein functional redundancy is very general, and is observed in all known proteins and genes.

      With this in mind, consider again the molecular sequences of cytochrome c. Cytochrome c is absolutely essential for life - organisms that lack it cannot live. It has been shown that the human cytochrome c protein works in yeast (a unicellular organism) that has had its own native cytochrome c gene deleted, even though yeast cytochrome c differs from human cytochrome c over 40% of the protein. [emphasis added]"

    • Parahomology explains going from 300 to 301 genes:

      "One major consequence of the constraint of gradualism is the predicted existence of parahomology. Parahomology, as the term is used here, is similarity of structure despite difference in function. When one species branches into two species, one or both of the species may acquire new functions. Since the new species must recruit and modify preexisting structures to perform these new functions, the same structure shared by these two species will now perform a different function in each of the two species. This is parahomology. It follows that parahomologous structures have a history that should be explicable from other lines of evolutionary evidence, since derived characteristics (which is what these new functions and structures now are) have evolved from more primitive (i.e. older) structures..."

      "...A stunning confirmation of these evolutionary predictions has come from an analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast) and Caenorhabditis elegans (a worm). The genomes of both these organisms were sequenced very recently (Barrell 1996; Caenorhabditis elegans Sequencing Consortium 1998). The genes used by the yeast, a unicellular organism, are mostly genes dealing directly with core biochemical functions that all organisms must perform. From an evolutionary perspective, we would expect these genes to be ancient. Thus it was expected and shown that the worm contains a great majority of these genes. In contrast, the extra genes used by the worm, which deal with multicellularity, should be more recently evolved. Phylogenetic analysis has shown that this is exactly the case. The vast majority of extra genes in the worm appear to be directly derived from genes providing core cellular functions, in accordance with evolutionary prediction (Chervitz et al. 1998).

      An even larger study of the known eukaryotic genomes has further demonstrated that parahomology is rampant in nature, and that true structural innovation is relatively rare (Rubin et al. 2000).

    Of course, neutral mutations and parahomology aren't inconsistent with a designer. On the other hand,

  479. Re: Agnosticism by fluxrad · · Score: 1

    There is almost no difference between this and the agnostic 'I don't know if god exists.' The only difference is that the 'lack of belief' part is specified. The agnostic does not believe either. For all practical purposes this is agnostic, not atheist.

    This is pretty much a connotative defition of agnosticism you're using which has come about in the past few years as a way to appear hip and/or duck the argument in its entirety. Agnosticism is philosophical chic or, as I always say, agnostics are the Mac fanboys of philosophy. Please research the actual origins of agnosticism (hint: It's more than simply "I don't know"). Also, I would advise you to read the atheist manifesto and some of Sagan's works if you haven't yet.

    BTW - If I'm coming across as a dick I apologize. My tank is on empty and I need some sleep.

    --
    "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
  480. Evidence "for Evolution" by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    For natural selection:
    (1) All of agriculture (imposition of human seleciton criteria to produce new strains of crops of livestock is big business)
    (2) Penicillin now does approximately jack to any bacteria on the planet.

    For genetic mutation:
    (1) cancer: mutated genes resulting inirregualr growth patterns.
    (2) Frogs in polluted areas (third legs, etc.)

    For the guidance of an unseen hand spontaneously making changes to entire populations:
    OK, you got me on this one... Unless the unseen hand is that of an evil bastard that enjoys twisting organisms in a way to cause them pain and suffering, and occasionally does something nice to make up for it.... hey, I think I just invented a religion!


    Anyhow, though, there's your evidence. What do I win?

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    1. Re:Evidence "for Evolution" by lieut_data · · Score: 1

      (1) Changes *within* species.
      (2) Changes *within* species.
      (1) Changes *within* species.
      (2) Changes *within* species.

      Please don't confuse micro-evolution, which is a known, observable, and tested fact, with macro-evolution.

    2. Re:Evidence "for Evolution" by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      Please explain what is to stop micro evolution from becoming macro evolution given enough time. I want hard facts about genetics that would keep one species from changing into another.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    3. Re:Evidence "for Evolution" by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      Chickens can no longer mate with wildfowl. Horses and donkeys can no longer produce fertile offspring. Corn doesn't successfully cross-polinate with seed grass (I think... not sure on the last one). Thus, by the definition of "species", new species have been formed. Merry Christmas.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  481. Ooo Lordy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I seriously long for the introduction of time travel , so that all those who choose to live their lifes according to a hotch-potch of Ancient Hebrew fairy stories can be shipped off to the middle east circa 3 thousand years ago, and leave the rest of us to enjoy the milk and honey of the 21st Century....

  482. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So why don't they teach things like this in school. Why dont we learn about enuma elish (early version of the creation story from the bible) or gilgamesh (early version of the flood myth)??

  483. Welcome to Europe by klang · · Score: 1

    Before all the Anonymous Cowards tell you to get the hell out of The States, I will be the the first European to welcome you.

  484. Ugh... Ugly, ugly ugly. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Birds evolved after, and more likely from, reptiles (dinosaurs).

    There were reptiles that were sea creatures as there are mammals today. It is a proven fact that whales, sea creatures, evolved much latr than fish.

    Sorry to burst your bubble, but trying so stupidily to fit facts to a mythological account is an exercise on futility.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  485. well... by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    religion is a believe, not a fact.
    is _can_ cause people to stop taking medication or commit murder.
    please approach religion with the greatest care and an open mind.

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
  486. IT is REally SAD by eadint · · Score: 1

    I notice that the aithiest are no more than barbarians. the arguments posted here are shamefull and horrifying. if i had a choice between being secular and a christian i would be a christian ( i am a Soto Zen Bhudisim) i dont quite understand why there is such blind seething hatred of christianity, any real scientist or critical thinker would accept such a sticker as a healthy chalenge. science is sopose to be questioned and chalenged, a scientist should not be afraid of an oposing viewpoint. then there are also the points made about christians and muslims being crased fanatics, this is like saying that statistically men are child molestors so all men should be locked up for being actual or potential child molestors. from what i know about christianity, is is a faith based on being kind to your fellow man and living a moral life, and choosing good instead of evil. what is wrong with that. from some of the posts that i have read i dont see athiest being any better than savage animals. here is a thought, in christianity they teach you that you have a divine soul and it is your DUTY to honer that and live up to its potential. in evolution they teach you that you are nothing more than a savage animal with a big brain whos only purpose is to survive and procreate. if somebody took me back in time and showed me without a shadow of a doubt that evolution is true i would still choose to believe that i have a divine soul and my duty is to live up to its potential. i truely feel pity for athiest and evolutionist it is such a bleak existance dark and filled with hatred and animosity.

    1. Re:IT is REally SAD by MikeySquid · · Score: 1

      Actually, women child abusers outnumber men child abusers nearly 2 to 1.

      If the Christian Moralists were actually living the morality they preach. but statistically protestant born againg Christians are as or more likely than their secular counterparts to get divorced and nearly as likely to look at porn online.

      You judge atheists and evolutionists life rather harshly, and without insight.

      A Zen Master lived the simplest kind of life in a little hut at the foot of a mountain. One evening, while he was away, a thief sneaked into the hut only to find there was nothing in it to steal. The Zen Master returned and found him. "You have come a long way to visit me," he told the prowler, "and you should not return empty handed. Please take my clothes as a gift." The thief was bewildered, but he took the clothes and ran away. The Master sat naked, watching the moon. "Poor fellow," he mused, " I wish I could give him this beautiful moon."

    2. Re:IT is REally SAD by vidarh · · Score: 1
      I am happy to accept that I am just a savage animal, just like the rest of humanity, you included. Humanities actions, particularly in the name of religion should be demonstration enough of that point.

      I am also happy to be an atheist and live my life to the fullest and to choose to live ethically and without hatred of my own free will and choice instead of because I feel forced to or compelled to by the belief in a deity that could strike me down or send me to hell to burn in eternity if I make the wrong choices.

      Living up to your potential under threat of punishment if you don't, or under the fantasy of a heavenly reward (or bribe) is not virtue, it is cowardice.

      And as much as you might like to think, few atheists believe life is all about surviving and procreating. If you bothered to open your mind you might see that instead most of us believe life is there to make the most of it because we don't believe there'll be a second chance. I have no reason to believe there will be anything more for me after death, so if I am to fulfill my potential and make a mark on the world, I must do it by living my life well. Contrast that to most religions, who preach that as long as you live a life worthy of getting you into paradise you'll have eternity, or who preach reincarnations and implicit second chances.

      My life is full enough that I don't need a deity to justify my existence or the existence of the world or as an alibi for my actions any more than I need Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy.

    3. Re:IT is REally SAD by eadint · · Score: 1

      Sounds like you already have a god
      Yourself. and i think that that is more pathetic. i don't believe that there is a second chance i know that this is m y only chance. if you can actually live by these goals, i think this is Honorable. although my experience and observation has shown that people who are their own god generally tend to make and change what is right and wrong to please ther own view of the world. i have no intentions of arguing with you. i was an atheist and i can even submit my mathematical proof that god doesn't exist ( i keep it around for laughs ). finally i will not wast my time trying to convince you or trying to convert you, as others had wasted on me.

  487. Intelligent recursion by Arru · · Score: 1
    I have come to believe that life on this earth is not a random occurence driven by simple statistical probability. Instead, I find it more likely that the universe was created with intelligence.
    And this intelligence must be magnificient indeed no?

    Then surely, the designing intelligence cannot have occured randomly by simple statistical probability really? No, it must have been created with intelligence.

    And this intelligence-creating intelligence has to be even greater in it's power, right? Well it has to have been created by intelligent design, I'm sure. And being so great, of course it has been intelligently designed...

    Lather, rinse, repeat. You can really feel the probability rising!

    --
    There's no 'on' position on the Slacker switch!
  488. Re:Creationist? - The debate is too muddied. by Mawen · · Score: 1

    Since when does motive constitute a violation of the constitution? Is that really what you yanks have in your law?

    IMO, preventing encouragement to think critically about something that may otherwise be presented to as indisputable, completely and comprehensible and knowable fact (to impressionable kids), is defense of dogma, and is dogmatically religious in my books.

    ID has taken a lot of hits in this discussion for being dogmatic religion in disguise, but this dogmatism in favor evolution also needs to be separated from the state in favor of true critical thought, which if the evolutionists are right will lead to evolution anyway. Stooping to dogmatism is not how to beat dogmatics -- being calmly reasonable is how.

    School should be about fairly presenting kids with a reasonable spectrum of information, teaching them to discern fact from theory from fiction, and letting them decide on their own.

    Force-feed a kid evolution as fact, and that everything else is crackpotted brain-poison that he/she shouldn't even consider, and you'll have a zealot. You ravenous evolutionists who all seem to be modded up in this article might not having more zealots on your side (their zeal can be handy), but in the long run, zealots are not in anyone's interest and if you believe in social darwinism, will be weeded out at some point. ..Build critical thinking and information assessment skills, and you'll have an intelligent person who can see for themselves that natural selection and many other facets of the theory of evolution carry a lot of support in the form of direct evidence.

    As grammar fascist says, this debate is such a mess, with both sides being arrogant and muddying the waters. I respect evolutionists and non-evolutionists who are cool-headed, fair, and rational, and am pretty fed up with the rest of the population. I am a Christian who stopped following the evolution vs whatever debate a long time ago, largely because whether you're an atheist, evolutionist, ID'er or creationist, this ridiculous debate has made monkeys/sinners out of a lot of people and we have a long way to evolve/find love and wisdom to become civil and reasonable.

    In the end I think the chasm in schools of reason (basically physical empiricism vs personal experientialism) comes down to science vs religion, and will never be resolved until science learns all the things religion knows, or religion gets replaced by scientific knowledge (which are both the same thing, IMO.) The downsides to each approach are that science is missing out on things religion knows, ruling out having a meaningful understanding of some or a lot of things that exist, and religion is prone to believing some or a lot of extra things, which interfere with having an accurate understanding of reality.

  489. You need to belive nothing. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    The scientific facts speak for themselves.

    Look at a chimp. Look at yourself.

    Now deny we are not somehow related.

    End of discussion.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  490. Re:Yay! by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    Actually, the example in the parent to your post resulted in a less-diverse population. Before there were bacteria resistant to penicillin and bacteria that weren't. The latter group no longer exists. Traits don't come into existence as a result of selection pressures; pre-existing traits come into prominence in a population because of selection pressures.

    Assuming that there isn't a genetic average of a cat and dog still existent (and there could be, I surely wouldn't know), I imagine that a set of circumstances came along that made it preferable to be either a cat or a dog. For instance, primitive humans might have gone out of their way to kill large ground-dwelling predators that did not form packs. I know I would. (this being hypothetical, naturally, as neither cats nor dogs existed before man developed domestication)

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  491. What what what? by strider_starslayer · · Score: 1

    America, good decision?

    Just kidding, you yanks make a bunch of good decisions, but you also make a lot of bad ones, which is of course what gets the press, and international ire.

    --
    -Millions of Monkeys, Millions of typewriters, 6 hours of sorting through faeces encrusted pages to find: This post
  492. A Better Sticker by xgamer04 · · Score: 1

    I believe I should be the guy that puts stickers on textbooks. My past work includes:

    -realist philosophy: "This book just exists"
    -anti-realist philosophy: "This book does not exist"
    -home ec: "This book not edible"
    -physics: "This book is not touching the table"
    -gym: "Why do you have a book in this class?"

    thanks, I'm here all week...

    --
    When you look at the state of the world, how can you not become a radical, liberal anarchist?
  493. Tell you great Engineer..... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    .... to stop messing with Tsunamis.

    Honestly, has he (because it is a he, isn't he?)nothing else better to do than to kill 200000 innocent people?

    There is no posibility of reasonable discussion with you, since from the start you have thrown reason ouf of the window by stating your religious belief.

    As soon as reason oposses your faith you will stick to faith, no matter what the facts could be saying.

    How can a reasonable discussion be kept on such shaky grounds?

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  494. Closemindedness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always like to challenge conventions. I like to question, question, question. That is science.

    It is disturbing to read all of the angry responses of people here that are so quick to defend their comfortable positions from the relative safety of accepted norms.

    Many people here (certainly not all, I have seen a few people that actually know what they are talking about) just jump up and seem to scream "Evolution is proven! OMG! Scientists have created life and actually evolved stuff into humans! OMG the scientific method!11!! LOL1!!" when in all actuallity and fairness, evolution is still being argued over even among those that believe in it.

    There is no one theory of evolution. Some think it happened really fast, some think it happened really slowly, etc. While it is still being examined, and constantly modified, it is still being defended rabidly by many quarters, and far too many people laugh out of town, and deride perfectly nice folks that have their own theories, many of which are arrived at by the scientific method, or another, equally valid technique.

    Seriously, the kind of fervour seen here can easily be termed "religous".

    I happen to believe that various scientific theories are just "theories", and enjoy challenging the ideas of Einstein, Newton, Bernoulli, etc. I had thought that in the world of hackers/freethinkers that I would find more revolutionaries, people that felt the need to question everything. So what if ID or creationism seems silly? Maybe there is a third option, or a fourth. Problem is, it will never be found, or taken seriously by 80% of the mental bigots that posted here. These are the people that told Columbus that he was a fool.

    Evolution and Creation both are faced with the same facts, and see different solutions based on the world view of the individual. There is a theory for every world view. Many other theories (like gravity, for example) aren't dependant on your world view. It doesn't matter what your religion is, you still accept gravity. Origins are completely different. Your personal philosophies can affect it mightily. Lots of well respected scientists have conflicting views regarding every aspect, from the Big Bang, to the evolution of the bird, but none are ridiculed so much as the poor slob that says "hey, maybe there is a God.", proving that there are other reasons to believe in evolution other than the reasons given.

  495. Relativity is a theory. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    But it gave your country (your blantant ignorance shows you more likely are USian) the power to destroy two town in japan completely.

    Evolution is a theory in the same sense. Oh, and microbiologists use it in day to day research to save your fucking sorry ass from diseases like AIDS.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  496. An alternate solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've read quite a few of the posts and it seems like there is a "flamewar" going on, between the Creationist's and the Evolutionist's.

    Here is a suggested solution:

    The stickers, "'Evolution is a theory, not a fact", should remain on the textbooks and then they should place the following stickers on the Bible!

    "A Collection of short FANTASY stories"

    Hmmm, not a bad idea if you think about it, with all the little Harry Potter Fans out there, you might end up with whole new generation of readers! ;)

    Just a thought...

  497. Is that a trick question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where is the physical proof that you come from your mother?

    1. Re:Is that a trick question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      There's a cord that joins my belly to her lady parts.

      We have to travel together, of course, but I never have to eat, drink or go to the toilet.

  498. We're just keeping the Force balanced by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    I mean, we have most of the people who're actually trying to figure this kind of stuff out, if we didn't place half of the country in fairy land we might be in danger of forming an intelligent society, or discovering truth, and then the rest of the world would be forced to nuke us.

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  499. Well, doh... by Kjella · · Score: 1

    All science is theory. Even observations are theory. Let's say I imagine I observed an apple falling upwards, in clear violation of Newton's "law". Any or all of the following may be true:

    1. I may be dreaming.
    2. I may be on drugs.
    3. I may observing an optical illusion.
    4. There is no apple. Reality only exists in my mind.
    5. I may be trapped in the Matrix.
    6. The apple may move through some force I can't observe.
    7. For some reason, gravity works differently on this apple at this time.

    In science, you eliminate as many of the reasons above as possible (within reason), and if it is still wrong, you try to find a different theory which matches the observations better.

    Arguably, you can never recreate the exact state of the universe at any observation, and thus you can never predict with absolute certainty either. But predictions can be proven wrong, if not true.

    God can not be proven wrong. You can't argue with omnipotence. He could have created the universe 5 seconds ago, and filled it with ourselves, everything we observe and believe to have observed. That is a possiblity, regardless of all observations. But it is not a theory.

    Evolution could be proven wrong. But that still would not make creationism a theory. I admit, that would have to lead to some rather exotic theories (aliens introducing new species?), but creationism could still never be one of them, because it is not a theory.

    On that note, people argue whether or not atheism is a religion. It is. But here's a scientific theory:

    The universe has been goverened by the same laws of nature without exception since the Big Bang.

    How Big Bang came about, by God (de-ism, god snapped his fingers and went away), by nature (atheism, we don't know what, but it wasn't god) or agnosticism (we haven't got a clue) doesn't really matter. From Big Bang, that is a observable, falsifiable scientific theory against a creation myth.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  500. idiots in arms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was initially a good idea to let all the religious wackos and other rejects of society move to the new colonies. It was a bad idea to let them run around with weapons and not to supress their insurgency. I blame british royals that now we have an idiotic religios know-nothing with his fat hands on his WMDs. And no excuses like "we didn't voted for him", enough of you in fact [i]did[/i].

  501. Evidence? by Tony · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It certainly seems premature to throw out a very successful theory on the basis of this evidence.

    What evidence? ID proponents present irreducible complexity as if it were evidence, but it is not. IC is merely an example of a structure that we don't yet understand how it evolved.

    That's not evidence. Just because we can't explain why gravity works doesn't mean it's powered by a creator.

    The eye is a perfect example. We have a great evolutionary path set up for the eye, from light-sensitive spots on the backs of certain single-cell organisms (great for detecting sudden changes in ambient light, such as the shadow of a predator), to the pinhole camera of the nautilus, to the human eye, to octopus eyes (thanks, other poster in this thread).

    We didn't understand them once, and creationists used them to "prove" (as "irreducibly complex") the existence of God.

    To sum up, I will state once again: Our ignorance does not prove the existence of God! There. Was that loud enough? 'cause I can make it all caps if you like.

    Now, when the ID folks start spouting Micheal Behe at you, you can refute them with vigor and glee.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Evidence? by jesser · · Score: 1

      Was that loud enough? 'cause I can make it all caps if you like.

      Or maybe you can't. You never know, thanks to Slashdot's lame filter.

      --
      The shareholder is always right.
    2. Re:Evidence? by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Our ignorance does not prove the existence of God

      Very true. However, the goal of the ID promoters is not to prove the existence of God, but to cast doubt on a theory that they find repugnant. The best-case scenario for them would be to find a true case of irreducible complexity and have the evolutionary theory conclusively disproven.

      That doesn't mean that they'd be able to start teaching creationism, but it would mean that the chapters on evolution would have to be struck. It would mean that their children wouldn't be subjected to a theory which explicitly contradicts what they are taught at home.

      Personally, I don't bother refuting the ID folks, no matter what they spout at me. Evolution is a theory of such extraordinary explanatory power and such vast evidence that the ID people are clearly not interested in listening to reason or evidence. My goal right now is to understand and work around their political machinations, which are extremely clever. They're not stupid, at least the strategists aren't. They're merely supersitious.

  502. Open mind by BenJaminus · · Score: 1

    argghh, I think they should have left the stickers on. I know it implies for them that it's religion intruding on state school but what it actually says is nothing of the sort. "The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered" - That should be put on ALL science books - this is probably the most important thing for a scientist to do anyway and this is the only example of a science book I can remember that actually SAYS it. What it really implies is "question everything" which is sensible.

    Oh, plus, everyone in western societies seems to believe that the theory of evolution is a fact so what's wrong to point out that it is a theory - my school teachers certainly didn't. Why does it get evolutionists so upset?

    1. Re:Open mind by vidarh · · Score: 1
      The judge did not complain about the contents of the stickers, but that the use of it only for evolution implied that evolution should be viewed as less certain than other theories. Singling evolution while students gets everything else presented without any "disclaimers" is what gets "evolutionists" upset.

      What if it wasn't evolution that was singled out, but anything related to chemistry? It would seem ridiculous to everyone - why should I question theories of chemistry any more than I should those of physics? The only point of those stickers is to make people doubt evolution by pretending that there are more reasons to doubt it - in fact enough reasons to doubt it to warrant a specific warning from the school board - than any of the large number of other theories they are presented with.

      (why is it only in the US this ever even becomes an issue? if anybody suggests putting creationism/intelligent design in school books here in Europe, they usually get ridiculed and ignored, even in countries like Norway where Christianity is the official religion and taught in schools)

    2. Re:Open mind by BenJaminus · · Score: 1

      > What if it wasn't evolution that was singled out
      I think it's because people just don't question evolution (I live in the UK btw). Whereas it's more understood that theories in (for example) Physics are constantly being worked on.

      Maybe that's just a hard concept for teachers to get across (that the science they're teaching is sometimes just theories that seem to fit) and that's why it's never emphasised and why everyone just believes it without question. Evolution most of all because it deals with our very existence (hence why it becomes an issue).

    3. Re:Open mind by vidarh · · Score: 1
      I absolutely don't agree. Any good text book on evolution should cover how the theory has evolved (no pun intended) since Darwin and until present day. Certainly my science text books at school did so. It was not presented any more as undisputable fact than any of the physics or chemistry or theories in any other subjects were. In fact, many theories in other subjects were never explained or presented in a way that would allow us to raise questions over their validity.

      The ongoing debate over evolution in the US is certainly more than enough to make it clear to everyone that there are dissenting viewpoints, so this is nothing but an attempt to make people question evolution more than they're expected to question anything else.

  503. Re:This is written for those of you who can't READ by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    Evolution doesn't say anything about the origin of living things in general. Evolution theories explain the differentation of organisms into various types, an ongoing process which continues today. You'll note that Darwin's book was called "the Origin of the Species", not "the Origin of Life".

    While I find your method of "making things up, then claiming my opponent claims them" interesting, I'm afraid it doesn't prove anything.

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  504. Why all the fuss? by samvinci · · Score: 1

    Whoever put the stickers in the books has their own freedom of speech which the courts should not be able to take away. Yet if one of the students had written the message in pen inside a bunch of books, I'm pretty sure noone would have taken much notice.

  505. What's the problem? by the+bluebrain · · Score: 1

    I don't see what the big deal is. The sticker itself could have been written by a steadfast athiest scientist.

    Of course, to be fair you'd have to add the same sticker to all science books, perhaps with an additional clause as to the difference between the definitions of a law of nature and human laws. And for math and geometry ... "Euclidian geometry is only one of many possible geometries, and should be approached with an open and critical mind ..."

    The sticker for the bible (or koran, ar whatever), now that would be more than a couple of paragraphs. ("Now this is what our father's father's father's great grand father observed, as reported throughout the chain of generations. It's up to you to judge whther there just might have been someone along the line who had some ulterior motive or agenda ...")

    --
    yes, we have no bananas
  506. Russian Proverb by hayden · · Score: 2, Funny

    "Pray to God, but keep rowing to shore."

    --
    Nerd: Derogatory term typically directed at anybody with a lower Slashdot ID than you.
    1. Re: Russian Proverb by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > "Pray to God, but keep rowing to shore."

      Theists like to claim that "there aren't any atheists in foxholes", but the fact that someone is in a foxhole shows where they really put their trust.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  507. evolution.invalid read on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1 WHY IS THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION NOT SCIENTIFICALLY VALID?

    THE theory of evolution maintains that life on Earth came about as the result of chance and emerged by itself from natural conditions. This theory is not a scientific law or a proven fact. Underneath its scientific façade it is a materialist worldview that Darwinists are trying to impose on society. The bases of this theory, which has been disproved by science in every field, are suggestions and propaganda methods consisting of deceptions, falsehood, contradiction, cheating, and sleight of hand.

    The theory of evolution was put forward as an imaginary hypothesis in the context of the primitive scientific understanding of the nineteenth century, and to this day it has not been backed up by any scientific discovery or experiment. On the contrary, all the methods employed to confirm the theory have merely proven its invalidity.

    However, even today many people think that the theory is a proven fact, like the force of gravity or the law of buoyancy. Because, as stated at the beginning, the true nature of the theory of evolution is very different from what is usually supposed. For this reason, some people do not know what rotten foundations this theory has, how it is disproved by science at every turn, and how evolutionists are trying to keep it alive in its death throes. Evolutionists have no other support than unconfirmed hypotheses, biased and unrealistic observations, and imaginary drawings, methods of psychological suggestion, countless falsehoods, and sleight-of-hand techniques.

    Nothing was known in Darwin's time about the complex structure of the cell

    Today, such branches of science as paleontology, genetics, biochemistry, and molecular biology have proven that it is quite impossible for life to come about as a result of chance and to emerge by itself from natural conditions. The living cell, it is commonly agreed by the world of science, is the most complex structure that mankind has so far encountered. Modern science has revealed that just one living cell has a much more complex structure and mutually interconnected complicated systems than a large city. Such a complex structure can only function if all its separate parts emerge at the same time and in full working order. Otherwise, it will serve no purpose, and will fall apart over time and disappear. We cannot expect that its parts developed by chance over millions of years as claimed by the theory of evolution. For that reason, the complex design in just one cell clearly shows that God created life. (For more details, see Harun Yahya, The Miracle in the Cell)

    However, those who defend materialist philosophy do not want to accept the fact of creation for various ideological reasons. That is because the existence and spread of societies living in the light of that beautiful morality that true religion offers to man by means of God's commands and prohibitions is not in these materialists' interests. Masses devoid of any spiritual and moral values suit these people far better, since they can manipulate them for their own worldly interests. For this reason, they try to impose the theory of evolution, which encourages the lie that mankind was not created but rather emerged by chance and evolved from animals, and to keep it alive at whatever costs. Despite all the clear scientific proof that destroys the theory of evolution and confirms the fact of creation, they abandon all reason and logic and defend this nonsense at every available opportunity.

    It has actually been proved that it is impossible for the first living cell, or even just one of the millions of protein molecules in that cell, to have come about by chance. This has been demonstrated not only by experiments and observations, but also by mathematical calculations of probability. In other words, evolution collapses at the very first step: that of explaining the emergence of the first living cell.

    Not only could the cell, the smallest unit of life, never have come about by chance in the p

  508. refuge of the anti-intellectuals by jeif1k · · Score: 1

    Hiding behind calling things "theories" seems to be the lastest fad amongs anti-intellectuals. Yes, evolution is a theory. It happens to be a very-well supported theory, which also makes it as much a fact as most of the other pieces of knowledge we rely on every day.

    Contrast that with assertions by the political right, like "homsexuality destroys families" or "guns defend our freedoms" or "tax cuts for the rich strengthen the economy". Those are also theories, albeit poorly formulated ones, and ones that are completely lacking any factual support.

    What matters is not whether something started out as a theory, what matters is whether it is well supported by observation and fact. And evolution is well-supported by observation and fact, unlike most of the drivel coming out of the political right or the religious nuts.

  509. Tsk tsk tsk by hayden · · Score: 1

    Don't you understand that the Holy Religion of the Invisible Pink Elephants, like all religions, is based on faith and logic? We have faith they are pink and we logically know they are invisible because we can't see them.

    --
    Nerd: Derogatory term typically directed at anybody with a lower Slashdot ID than you.
  510. Re:Yay! by mo^ · · Score: 2, Funny

    Some of my bestest friends are tooth-fairies....

    You insensitive Clod!!!!

    --
    bah!*@%!
  511. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Pooua: The laws we have are based on our theory of government and rights. If you believe that human rights come from sets of people, then you will produce very different laws than if you believe that human rights come from God.

    WKJ: Maybe, maybe not.

    There isn't as "maybe" to it; change the foundation and you change the results.

    We as a country (I am assuming you are American) got our "murder is bad" belief from Christian tradition. This same belief can be derived (and has been) from other sources long before Christianity existed. Whether those previous cultures came to that conclusion from the Sun God or Tree God or just plain logic seems rather arbitrary to me.

    OK, choose the most trivial single issue within a system that you can and pretend that this shows that different foundations may result in identical systems, but you are blinding yourself to what should be obvious. For one thing, who is defining murder? Is it murder to send a widow to be burned to death, simply because her husband has died? But, don't let obvious differences in systems mislead you into thinking that different foundations necessarily produce different systems!

    Others think that such laws can be derived on a purely logical basis, simply by looking at what helps and what hurts society.

    Again, this will result in different expressions of what is murder. For one thing, it places the needs of society above individual human rights.

    I won't advocate that any one of these are correct - but neither would I say that Christianity is the only source of such laws when clearly it is not.

    And I will say again, that you will not understand our legal system if you do not understand our philosophical foundation, which includes Christianity. You appear to be determined to avoid reaching that conclusion at all costs.

    The implementation must derive from the foundation. If you do not understand the foundation, then you cannot completely understand the implementation.

    The implementation is what it is. It can be perfectly understood regardless of one's religious background.

    No, that results in mechanical recitation. It results in judges who consider the Constitution to be a "living document" that is amenable to modern ideas, instead of being interpreted based on original intent. It results in a public that does not understand what its rights and duties are, and so ultimately loses access to their rights.

    Pooua: I believe that the preservation of our Liberty depends on the understanding of our people as to the theory behind our laws.

    I agree - but I think the theory behind our laws is to not let anyone impose their beliefs on you :)

    That should not mean preventing the state from admitting that our laws are based on our religious foundation, or explaining the role that Christianity has in our nation's history, or in making laws that are religiously-informed.

    Pooua: I don't, especially if it requires leaving the public ignorant of how we got where we are!

    This is obviously the main point where we disagree. Yes, we got here because of X, but many implementations of X in the Old World were downright evil. Our founding fathers (despite being influenced by X) realized that society would benefit from not having religious beliefs imposed on its citizens.

    One of your problems is that you don't know our religious foundations, and so you don't understand our history or our culture. You don't realize that the Founding Fathers of the U.S. frequently used government tools to advance Christianity, including the distribution of Bibles and the making of laws. You may not even realize the reason slavery is now illegal in the world is that evangelical Christian organizations made it a prime issue.

    It's that simple... People are certainly free to practice X, just as they are free to practice Y. The point is that no one religous belief should be i

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    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  512. Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Real by Robowally · · Score: 1
    Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Real Thursday, 16 December 2004 NEW YORK -- A British philosophy professor who has been a leading champion of atheism for more than a half-century has changed his mind. He now believes in God -- more or less -- based on scientific evidence, and says so on a video released Thursday.

    At age 81, after decades of insisting belief is a mistake, Antony Flew has concluded that some sort of intelligence or first cause must have created the universe. A super-intelligence is the only good explanation for the origin of life and the complexity of nature, Flew said in a telephone interview from England.

    Source: Many sources here...

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    Karma? Sorry, i don't believe in superstition. http://talk.thinkingmatters.org.nz
  513. Embarrassment by Sloppy · · Score: 1
    It's a fact of life that you will always be associated with some group that misrepresents you in some way, and creates an apparent basis for prejudice against you. It happens to everyone. Don't worry about it. Most non-idiots that deal with you, will know better than to leap to conclusions.

    And if someone does... you didn't need them anyway.

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  514. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    So a kook philosopher who wrote at least one book on "paraphysical" events came to the conclusion that god exists because he (Flew) can't comprehend the complexity of DNA? Stop the presses!

    This is the only "scientific evidence" presented in the several google links I followed.

  515. gravity is a theory and not a fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Gravity is a theory and not a fact.

    'nuff said

  516. Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't believe how disparate the ratio of +4 or +5 pro-evolution posts is compared to the number of +4 or +5 pro-school district. I think it's something like 66 to 3. Wow, we here at /. sure are a varied group of people.

  517. Court defines evolution as religious position? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    If they hadn't mentioned evolution, it wouldn't have been a "religious" issue.
    So... the court treated evolution as a religious position? That should put the pigeon amongst the cats!

    Maybe it's what the school board was really after. Has anyone explored that option yet?
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Court defines evolution as religious position? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      So... the court treated evolution as a religious position?

      No it did not.

      The problem was not the content of the stickers. The contents of the sticker are irrelevant. The problem was the action of the school officials. They abused government power for impermissable purposes. There was no legitimate government purpose to be served by the rule they imposed. They created the rule with religious intent to acheive a religious purpose.

      If they had a legitimate government purpose they could have, for example, mandated that sort of "clarification sticker" for all science subjects. However there was no valid educational reason or scientific reason or any other reason to target evolution as opposed to the theories light or gravity. It is blatantly obvious the reason they created that rule and singled out evolution was as a grant of special government favor on behalf of certain religious beliefs.

      It's much like the many unconstitutional "Blue laws" that have been (and are still being) overturned. If a law says that stores cannot be open on sunday, and that law is overtured as a violation of separation of church and state, that does not mean the stores are religious. Just because a law targets something non-religious, and does not mention the religion being granted special favor does not mean you can sneak an establishment of religious favors into the law.

      -

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      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  518. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Robowally · · Score: 1

    Flew has looked at evidence for many years and has now concluded that life cannot come from non-life.

    That is the point ... ask an evolutionist HOW the first cell came into being. As far as I can tell, this is a total mystery to those who attend the Origin of Life conferences and is exactly the reason the "Intelligent Design" is making such inroads. ID and people like Flew are just giving creationists more ammunition.

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    Karma? Sorry, i don't believe in superstition. http://talk.thinkingmatters.org.nz
  519. Creationism isn't a threory by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 1

    alternative theories, including creationism might possibly explain.

    Except creationism isn't a threory, it never can be a theory, it cannot be tested, to qualify as a theory it must be a tested hypothisis.

  520. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Antony Flew was at one time one of Britian's premier pilosophers. One book on parphysical events? Why don't you go and amazon his name before you say anything else, okay?

  521. Everything in science is a theory by blorg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...a framework that best fits with the available evidence - Newton's theory of gravitation, for example, fits very well, but was superceded by Einstein's relativity which fits just ever so slightly better. There are no 'facts' in science at all, in this sense, just theories that best fit the observations.

    You can never prove something as unquestionably true (a 'fact') as new observations could come along later; you can however prove theories to be false if they don't fit with the observations (or more accurately, show them to be approximations - Newtonian physics is still immensely useful.)

    The problem here is that most people reading this sticker on the cover will not have been introduced to this nature of the word 'theory' in the scientific sense, but in the more colloquial sense - a theory police are working on in an investigation for example. E.g. 'something that could very well be wrong'.

    A more honest and correct sticker would not single out evolution as somehow special among scientific theories; instead they could have created a chapter that explained scientific method, the status of the word 'theory' in science, and how science differs from other human endeavours, including religion.

    In particular it could explain why science tends to limit itself to statements that *can be falsified* by new observations, as that seems to be the crux of the conflict (the *literal* reading of Genesis being falsifiable, and most people would say, falsified.)

  522. christianty & evolution arn't mutually exclusi by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    Confirmed christians everywhere else (other than that less than 1% recessive demegraphic) simply accept creationism at the way god did it. Just go ask any mainstream bishop in Europe if there's any conflict between their christian beliefs & evolution. Whether Roman catholic, Eastern-rite catholic, Russian Orthadox, Greek Orthadox, Lutheran, Dutch Reformed, Anglican/CoE/W/I, Presbytarian/CoS, etc, etc. odds on to a large bloody degree the response will be something like "no my child, why should there be? Our church sees nothing wrong with members accepting evolution, after who's to say the lord did't simply use evolution as his method to create diversity?"

    Fact is the US is the only nation on the planet where a significant percentage of it's christian population see a conflict between evolution & their christian beliefs (well except for some tiny Pacific Islands where 7th Day Adventists, the mormans & Victorian era English congregational missionaries 'n similar made significant inroads)

  523. Creationism is only a American thing by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    Confirmed christians everywhere else (well other than that less than 1% recessive demegraphic) simply accept creationism at the way god did it. Just go ask any mainstream bishop in Europe if there's any conflict between their christian beliefs & evolution. Whether Roman catholic, Eastern-rite catholic, Russian Orthadox, Greek Orthadox, Lutheran, Dutch Reformed, Anglican/CoE/W/I, Presbytarian/CoS, etc, etc. odds on to a large bloody degree the response will be something like "no my child, why should there be? Our church sees nothing wrong with members accepting evolution, after who's to say the lord did't simply use evolution as his method to create diversity?"

    Really the US is the only nation on the planet where a significant percentage of it's christian population see a conflict between evolution & their christian beliefs (well except for some tiny Pacific Islands where 7th Day Adventists, the mormans & Victorian era English congregational missionaries 'n similar made significant inroads)

    1. Re:Creationism is only a American thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's the same place that is stuck using Imperial measures when the rest of the world uses Metric. Sometimes the US public appears very slow & unintelligent, which is unfair because some of the brightest minds are american.

  524. Earth is flat ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... says the Flat earth society

  525. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    Evolutionary biology is not concerned with how the first cell came into being. It makes predictions (very accurate ones, at that) about evolving species, and doesn't pretend to explain the origin of life.

    I haven't asked any scientists in the field about it, but I don't suspect they're too worried about it either. See my earlier post on self-organizing systems.

  526. expansion theory by Deanalator · · Score: 1

    There is a large difference. Gravity is accepted by probably about 99.9999999999% of the world.

    The only people who really understand gravity are second grade teachers. Newton had some pretty messed up ideas about it, and they all come from his definition of distance. Distance is not really a tangible thing, so defining everything relitive to it is a very bad idea.

    Looking at expansion theory, you can start all over, forget everything newton said, and rebuild it all on the basis that gravity is a pushing force, not a pulling force. Some things work better, but like with any theory, there are just as many holes as its alternate.

    Point being that even top physicists do not understand gravity, so you really should not say that it is something that we agree upon or understand.

    I learned creationism in my high school biology class, and we learned evolution, and a few other things.

    I think expansion theory should be taught in physics classrooms along side with the classical pulling interpretation. The thing I always hated about physics is that physics books tend to teach everything as fact, when noone really knows what is going on.

  527. Re:Creationist? - The debate is too muddied. by technos · · Score: 1

    evolution as fact, and that everything else is crackpotted brain-poison that he/she shouldn't even consider

    Let's teach them the sky is yellow, the Canadians are Red Communists, and that Walter Cronkite is, in fact, the reincarnation of John Wilkes Booth, who assasinated Harry Truman at the Battle of Antietam.

    Why ruin their minds with any other facts? It might make them into a zealot!

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    .sig: Now legally binding!
  528. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they did survive, they are you, me, the chimps, gorillas, etc.

    Evolution does not imply a finished product.
    It is like an open source project. Say you have an app and fork the dev in two teams, after many years they change into different products, both at version 2.0, your question would be akin to saying: Well, if they both came from the same branch, how come version 1.0 does not survive?

  529. The World Is Flat! by Blue_Nile · · Score: 1

    Catholic Church: The World Is Flat! Galileo: No It's round. Catholic Church: Flat! Galileo: Round. Catholic Church: Die Sinner! Galieo: IT BURNS!!! Slashdotters: Evolution Is Fact! Other: No Its a Theory Slashdotters: Fact! Other: You Don't Have 100% proof Slashdotters: Die Troll! Other: My Karma It Burns!

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    Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes
    1. Re:The World Is Flat! by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      Actually evolution is a theory, thats why its called the Theory of Evolution.. no-one is disputing that, we've yet to find the missing link. There are two parts to evolution: 1) accepting that as a theory the idea works and that things do evolve, and 2) that evolution is the full and only explination for all life on eart, the start of life and human life.

      if you don't accept 1, you're an idiot plain and simple, just as if you don't accept that the earth is round, its just an obvious fact. if you don't accept 2 then fair enough, science is still looking for evidence either way.

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      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    2. Re:The World Is Flat! by Blue_Nile · · Score: 1

      Actually yes thats what the arguement was about. The fact that the judge was disputing that evolution is fact by removing the stickers saying its a theory.
      I was commenting on the fact that most of slashdot was yellling that evolution was fact even though its a theory.

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      Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes
  530. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what you're saying is that at the most basic level you have coime up with nothing?

  531. References please! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Evolution is a fact in that we know it occurs and it has been seen occur[r]ing.
    Like Darwin's finches? Or can we have some real references, please? I'd like to pass them on to Antony Flew.

    Are you going to announce that Charlie's pangenes have finally been discovered, or are we going to see "ignoramy recapitulates talkoriginy" replayed for the thousandth time?

    We wait with 'bated breath. (-:

    Other than that massive and unsupported axiomatic assumption, the reasoning in your post was sound. Sadly, real life doesn't work that way. Neither biological evolution as a mechanism for improvement of any species, nor chemical evolution as a mechanism for starting one or more first species, has yet been proven, and nor will they.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:References please! by olewis · · Score: 1

      Amen!

    2. Re:References please! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've only glanced at the finches one so far, but that doesn't inspire confidence, with such silly statements as: If Lack's observation is true, then Darwin's conjecture may also be true. If it is not true, then Darwin's idea is deprived of any content.

    3. Re:References please! by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >Evolution is a fact in that we know it occurs and it has been seen occur[r]ing.
      can we have some real references, please?


      For one, there are some absolutely facinating studies on ring species. Modern observed evolution, incompatible resultant species, and as added super bonus the FULL range of intermediate forms! Ring species are amazing case studies of evolution in action rolled up in nice neat packages.

      Considering that ten of thousand years is nothing in evolutionary time, it's pretty big that we spot anything at all on human timescales. Darwin was born only a hundred-odd years ago. Hell, modern biological study really only rates a description of "decades". And anti-evolutionists won't be satisfied with anything less than watching a scientist pull a rabit out of a hat and seeing it evolve wings and fly away before their eyes.

      -

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    4. Re:References please! by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >has yet been proven, and nor will they.

      Those last 3 words explain exactly why this is a religious issue. You are so hopelessly brainwashed by your religious beliefs that you cannot even allow for the possibility that evolution actually happened. I'll bet you have no similar disbeliefs about any other areas of science unless they relate to evolution or the age of the Earth, even though they might be less believable (like quantum tunnelling).

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      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    5. Re:References please! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      If you have access to Nature, the article "Evolution of novel cooperative swarming in the bacterium Myxococcus xanthus" is an easily accessible article showing how evolution can yield new characteristics.

      Ring species, like with the finches, have been studied extensively with Salamanders as others have mentioned.

      Sarfati frequently makes errors in biology, his PhD is in Chemistry, specifically in semiconductors.

      For example, the first bullet point under Scientific Issues in his article is oversimplified. The genetic code is not entirely universal, but the divergences are in a nested hierarchy supporting common descent. This can be verified using your molecular phylogeny of choice.

      I'd read AiG's statement of faith before I started looking for anything objective there. They're fideistic young earth creationists, which puts them at odds with quite a lot of modern science.

      The molecular phylogenies have been another nail in the coffin for creationism. If creationism had been true we would have not seen reconcilable nested hierarchies with different traces. With advances in genomics, we can even identify and account for lateral transfer of genes falisiably.

      Even diversification within 'created kinds' would require the same sort of changes one would need for macroevolution, which hurts their arguments against evolutionary mechanics.

      At least you didn't spout off something about irreducibly complex flagella... that one used to be quite popular despite being instantly put in its place.

    6. Re:References please! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should try doing some research instead. Ring species does not in any way show anything about evolution. Try again.

    7. Re:References please! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Those last 3 words explain exactly why this is a religious issue. You are so hopelessly brainwashed by your religious beliefs that you cannot even allow for the possibility that evolution actually happened. I'll bet you have no similar disbeliefs about any other areas of science unless they relate to evolution or the age of the Earth, even though they might be less believable (like quantum tunnelling).


      Maybe if you did some research instead of believing the BS preached by evolutionists. If you were sincere in finding the truth, you would learn why there is not any, and never will be any, evidence to support evolution. It is not a fact. It is not accepted by people who actually examine the evidence. Funny. The only ones who persist in believing it are those who are too lazy to do any research. Believing in Evolution takes faith in impossibilities.

    8. Re:References please! by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >Maybe if you did some research instead of believing the BS preached by evolutionists.

      I've done far, far more research on the matter than you have. I know this because if you had done as much research as you claim, you would have to be plain stupid not to know that it really happened. There is no better theory to fit the facts.

      >If you were sincere in finding the truth, you would learn why there is not any, and never will be any, evidence to support evolution.

      To say that there never will be any evidence to support evolution (neglecting the completely ignorant statement that there currently is no such evidence) is not a statement about reality, but is only a statement about your lack of ability to accept reality when it conflicts with your religion. I *could* accept that god created all life if some future evidence pointed undeniably in that direction.

      >It is not accepted by people who actually examine the evidence.

      People like you?

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    9. Re:References please! by duffbeer703 · · Score: 1
      And anti-evolutionists won't be satisfied with anything less than watching a scientist pull a rabit out of a hat and seeing it evolve wings and fly away before their eyes.

      Actually, religous fanatics would consider such an act a display of gods might, or maybe the influence of an angel! You cannot argue with blind faith.

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    10. Re:References please! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you post references to this being put in its place? I've seen lots of good arguments supporting evolution, and I've seen lots of good counter-arguments supporting irreduceable complexity (I constantly argue with my dad - a dedicatedly rational adult Christian convert - about this and other subjects), but I haven't found any coherent responses to those counter-arguments. Where can I find info on this? Google searches so far have produced nothing new.

    11. Re:References please! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      The type III secretion system uses many of the same parts as a flagellum.

      You should note that the type III ss is probably derived from the flagellum and not its progenitor, but it nicely shows that the flagellum is not irreducibly complex in any way that precludes evolutionary pathways since it is more or less a flagellum without all of its parts that still is beneficial.

      Just as a 'half evolved' eye can be a useful light sensing spot, a 'half evolved' flagellum could be quite useful to a microorganism, so a stepwise indirect pathway is capable of generating what would be irreducibly complex.

      In general, TalkOrigins.org is a good resource. They have a sister site TalkDesign.org, but I am not as familiar with it. Most of my knowledge of the Type III ss comes from coursework.

    12. Re:References please! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      Dipshit: if shit can mutate and mutations can get passed on to offspring evolution fucking works. The reasoning behind evolution is far less contrived than most physics that's accepted without question. You can't argue that mutations don't occur. You can't argue that they can be passed on to offspring. You can't argue that a beneficial mutation could cause the muatant to reproduce more. And you can't argue that it wouldn't result in the mutation gettin spread around.

      The above poster said that evolution is an observable fact. We have vestigal organs, we have selective breeding, etc. and all of those support the mechanism for evolution.

      The parent, however, didn't say anything about the origin of life, so if you're not just some zealous jerk setting out to debunk any theories that might call into question the validity of your religion, you're just stupid. Wait, you're stupid either way, my bad.

      Tsk, tsk. Bringing religion to a scientific discussion...

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    13. Re:References please! by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      I can tell by your language and sophisticated style you are a scholar and a gentleman. And like any well-trained scientist, tolerant of dissension, and debate. Having established yourself as such, we listen carefully to your opinions, which of course, show that YOU are neither a zealot nor merely some jerk who is out to debunk any ideas that call into question YOUR religion, ie., that "Evolution" did it all.

      By the way, adaptation is NOT evolution. It was Darwin's hypothesis/theory that adaptation was the way evolution occurred. He guessed (whether correctly or not, we cannot be absolutely sure because we've never absolutely seen the emergence of a new species) that adaptations could/would accumulate sufficiently, over time (owing fortuitous beneficial genetic errors of replication - rather like mistakes in the manufacture of your computer, but obviously beneficial rather than fatal) and consistently in a direction that would develop a population outside the bell-curve distribution of pre-existing/tolerated variation WITHIN a species, that that different population could no longer "come home" and interbreed with its ancestral cousins (?). So far, though there is much evidence that one may choose to interpret as supporting or indicating Darwin was right, we've yet to see a speciation complete, or PROVE beyond any doubt, that any of the various species in existence today arose in that way.

      By the way (#2), we're not even sure what a species is, yet. That's a point I made in "Science", the journal of the AAA, several years ago. That suggests we are still in "theoretical" territory, rather than "fact", eh?

      By the way (#3), the biblical account of creation, never says that adaptation doesn't occur, or would suggest the design of the genetic code as the backbone of defining and maintaining species (or "kinds") didn't include variation/variety, or mutation, as a means of allowing sufficient plasticity of species to survive and adjust to changing times and environments. It only says that the higher "kinds" will remain true, the same, within that bell-curve distribution. And it does not say that about the very "lowest" levels, such as bacteria and viruses, etc. Which, of course, seems to be exactly what science has been able to observe, thus far.

    14. Re:References please! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      Actually, my religion can't be debunked by any theory, in that my religion is non-comittal. I specifically said in that post that "the parent, however, didn't say anything about the origin of life,". I didn't say that it's how life was created, but he's right in that evolution is observable.

      On another note, you obviously have no idea what you're talking about. Seriously.

      #1. "Adaptation is NOT evolution." adaptation: Biology. An alteration or adjustment in structure or habits, often hereditary, by which a species or individual improves its condition in relationship to its environment.
      Apparently you do not understand the biolgical definition of "adaptation." An adaptation is some change an organism has made to fit it's environment. It's not a process. It's caused by the process "natural selection" which is the mechanism for evolution.

      Adaptation, evolution, and natural selection are not several distinct phenomena, like you seem to think. You're mistaking "evolution" for the term "macro-evolution" which involves speciation. Evolution does not have to create new species to be evolution.

      Also, about us "never absolutely seen the emergence of a new species"... good job, idiot. I found that all in about 2 minutes. Not that I didn't already know you were wrong, I'm just saying, do a little research before you make these ridiculous claims.

      As well as us not being sure what a species is, what the hell are you talking about? Biology. A fundamental category of taxonomic classification, ranking below a genus or subgenus and consisting of related organisms capable of interbreeding. I think we're pretty sure what a species is. Even given various exceptions, it's not like we can't tell what's in a species with ease.

      Not to mention the fact that it doesn't matter, as evolution does not have to entail speciation, as you wrongly believe.

      And about whatever the Bible says: that's great! I don't care! Didn't I just say to leave your religion out of this? This has nothing to do with the Bible, or the origin of life for that matter.

      It just has to do with my point, and the point of the original parent that evolution is observable and going on right now. It is. Accept it. Your religion will not come crashing to its feet, I promise, just stop making these ridiculous claims.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    15. Re:References please! by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      Still the gentleman, I see. Nevertheless:

      about #1 and "adaptation": Your definition mentions "often hereditary". If it's not, it's not genetic, and if not genetic, not evolutionary, but merely phenomic, easily reversed or altered again. This does not lead to the "origin of (new) species", which IS what Darwin, and his theory, was about.

      And "adaptation" is not caused by natural selection. Natural selection is hardly creative, though it was Darwin's genius to see that it could result in creativity. Natural selection is the negative pressure, the environmental discrimination against the less well adapted, which by default, allows any species, or variants within a species, or innovation (ultimately supplied by mutation or other replicative error) that can do a better job of prospering and surviving in the environment it finds itself within, to gain an advantage. It's simple economic theory, actually. While not all "new & improved" products win in the marketplace, some do, and some even replace the old version. Others share. But Natural selection tends to eliminate the old, if the new really is improved. But not always. Remember Coke and its "new" and "Classic" contest? Pretty good metaphor.

      But any "new and improved" traits must serendipitously arise, via mutation or other genetic replicative error, before anything new, any new increment in the evolutionary process can occure. That creative process has no relationship to natural selection at all. You, my friend, border on Lamarkism, nor Darwinism, and neoDarwinism. Until and unless a new genetic trait can be created, and tested in the ecological marketplace, natural selection has nothing to discriminate between, and new adaptations and "evolution" is not happening.

      About emergence of new species. I know all about Talk.origins. (You do, unfortunately, talk like them.) Irregardless of what you read there, we have never seen the emergence of a new species. Not in the natural. Though extreme laboratory conditions have forced what appear to be new species of single cell life, and a few insects (mostly fruit flies), one cannot even be sure that's proof of anything. Can we use genetic engineering to prove the real evolution most of us (tho maybe not you) are talking about, the "Origin of Species"? Even the emergence of new bacteria and viruses, which I am willing to accept as "evolution" is not certainly so. We simply don't know what the original gene pool contained, what variations were already there and merely show up without anything new being involved.

      Regarding your question: "as us not being sure what a species is, what the hell are you talking about". If you were a biologist, chances are you would know ... though not all biologists do, which is exactly why I was published in the AAAS (American Association for The Advancement of Science) challenging a research team's proposal. It sparked something of a debate, and got not a few other scientists to do a reality check and realize that that is still a big problem. It's a problem because evolution is about speciation (and numerous other issues in ecology - say, is the world really losing a significant number of species - as well) and if we still cannot define or empirically determine what a species is, well..... how do we know what we see "going on" is going to lead to evolution? Adaptation, mutation and natural and un-natural selection may be going on, but unles and until we can prove it leads to new species, not just new races or varieties or new adaptations, we cannot prove there is such a thing as evolution. Mere change, even great change through much time, without the origination of new species, is not what Darwin, or the theory (though the paragigm may yet be useful) of evolution, or the culture wars, are about! I'm sorry you don't understand that.

      As for me and my knowledge, I don't really need your recognition or agreement or approval, but I spent a number of years teaching it in a couple of universities, including the U of California. I've written about

    16. Re:References please! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      First of all, what exactly makes me zealous?

      To adress a number of things:
      "And "adaptation" is not caused by natural selection." True, an adaptation or a mutation in itself is not "caused" by it, but natural selection determines whether or not the paticular adaptation survives and spreads, therefore it leads to the adaptation of the species as a whole. No need to recite the generic "natural selection 101", here. We both know what it is. Mutations happen "serendipitously" (great superfluous use of the word, now I'm convinced you're a genius) but evolution on a broader scale can't happen without natural selection. You know this, so shut up.

      "About emergence of new species. I know all about Talk.origins. (You do, unfortunately, talk like them.) Irregardless of what you read there, we have never seen the emergence of a new species. Not in the natural." Once again, if you had checked any of the sources that are not talkoriginis.com you might have noticed some things like this: "2) A naturally occurring speciation of a plant species, Stephanomeria malheurensis, was observed in Burns County, Oregon." Oops! Guess they didn't teach you that one in all the colleges you brag about going to. Not to mention (again) the fact that micro-evolution does not require speciation.

      "Regarding your question: "as us not being sure what a species is, what the hell are you talking about". If you were a biologist, chances are you would know..." See, here's where you're missing the point. Micro-evolution does not require speciation, and thus does not require the definition of species. A species does not need to be defined for evolution to be observed. That's the point. I think the problem is, you automatically lump everyone who isn't on your side into an atheistic "evolution created all life" dogma. It doesn't matter how life got here, evolution is still observable.

      "As for me and my knowledge, I don't really need your recognition or agreement or approval, but I spent a number of years teaching it in a couple of universities, including the U of California. I've written about it, presented papers to some pretty esteemed groups and conferences, etc. You might think I'm an "idiot", but I think you're in a very tiny minority, there. Actually, though I see you think you are an expert, you obviously have more zealousness than scientific training or expertise. Nevertheless, I have accorded you enough respect to answer (with politeness) in hopes you might open your mind to the possibility you don't know it all, yet." You can just shove this whole passage up your ass. Regardless of the fact that you could easily make this all up, just because I disagree with you doesn't mean I think I know more than you.

      You seem to be the one who keeps disregarding my whole point. Once again, MICRO-EVOLUTION DOES NOT REQUIRE SPECIATION, GOD DAMNIT. That's basically all I was saying. I'm sorry, but it's incorrect to say that "evolution is not observable", and that's all I'm trying to explain. So don't jump on me with your stupid "zealous atheist" bullshit. You don't even know what religion I am. Do you? For your information I'm not an atheist and I don't deny creationism any more than evolution being the source for life on Earth, so fuck off, professor. They may have taught you about biolgoy but nobody ever taught you how not to miss the fucking point.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    17. Re:References please! by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      Still have a problem with vocabulary, and respect, I see. Does such vehemence improve your argument? No, just makes slashdot sound more like a tavern than a forum. Of course, it is safer.

      Now, I never called you an "atheist", or said or implied anything about your religious affiliation, beliefs, or lack thereof. And I don't recall talking about creationism, or the problem of "source (origins?) of life", here. You must have me confused with someone else. I think we, you and I (I admit I've been posting replies to several others, here, so I could be wrong) are talking about evolution which, as I think you are acknowledging, really doesn't apply to creation or origins of the first cause sort.

      It's true that so-called micro-evolution does not "require" speciation. But if you know much about the field, there has been great and heated debate over that concept, "micro-evolution". Not too many scientists think it matters, or has much to contribute. Of those who first developed and advocated the paradigm, many have given up on it as not particularly useful, while a few have continued on, oft rather angrily. So what is the point of "micro" evolution?

      Every species has a gene pool filled with alleles and genetic variability. We see some expressed in the current population, and know much more is just there, latent or ignored by natural selection, or being utilized by sub-populations within various other habitat or niches. Should any small ("micro") trait gain in frequency, by chance, or by some new factor inb the environment, it may well appear and increase in its frequency or degree of expression. Natural selection may not be relevent, there being no survival or reproductive advantage to the new trait, or it may select against it, or by selecting against the other members actually bestow de facto an advantage to that genome. This would be an example of micro evolution. But so what. All that has happened is a preesisting gene/allele has increased in population. Unless it is actually a new gene, provided by mutation, it's essentially a non-event. About like Iraqis gaining in population relative to Kurds. Only if the trait can be attributed to a new gene establishing itself is it at all relevent to Darwin's (and most evolutionists') theory. And only if it succeeds in replacing the older allele or genome, can it lead to permanent change. And only if it can prohibit the new population from interbreeding can it be said to have originated a new species. Anything less than that amounts to mere (probably temporary, until things change again) adaptation. So what?

      "Micro-evolution is to evolution what a single footstep is to a hike, or one brick to a building. Perhaps necessary, but a rather trivial concept. Unless we can show that minor changes can and do add up to wholly new species, we are not talking evolution, merely variation in population genetics.

      So if you think "A species does not need to be defined for evolution to be observed", then what is it you are observing? Can you see a mutation occurred, and demonstrate exactly what phenotypic change it wrought? That's good, but we already know about genetics. The debate is about whether the theory of the origin of species is correct, not the origin of a new gene. See that in medicine, and in the lab every day. But we are still questioning (and in so many ways, we might ask does the answer really matter?) if Darwin's theory (or the latest version) holds up, if it explains life as it exists today. And contrary to what many think, the answer really doesn't prove or disprove the Bible or God or most of creationists' (even young-earth!) beliefs.

    18. Re:References please! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but how does this change the fact that evolution can technically be observed? My point had nothing to do with the "bigger picture" or how much it matters to other scientists, etc. etc., but it fucking exists and it's called micro-evolution and it's still observable so I'm right.

      "The debate is about whether the theory of the origin of species is correct," nope. It was MY post that you replied to, and my point had nothing to do with the origin of species, so you're just plain wrong. All your fancy education and degrees and magazine articles don't mean shit when you don't even pay attention to what I say until 3 or so replies in when you have to pull some crap like "Okay, you were right but it doesn't even matter!"

      If you had paid attention to what I said the first time you could've said something like "sure, 'micro-evolution' is observable but most scientists don't even care about that, and it's only a small part of the theory of evolution." And even then it wouldn't matter because I'm still technically right.

      I don't contend that you know a lot about evolution, probably a lot more than me about biology in general, but you're still a dipshit for missing my fucking point and trying to correct me when I wasn't wrong.

      Oh look, I outwitted a professor! Maybe with all the time you spent studying biology you forgot how not to be a jackass.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
  532. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Robowally · · Score: 1

    My creationist friends would (I think) reply that the origin problem is a biggie, but also the addition of vast ammounts of information (e.g in the DNA etc.) required to evolve is just as difficult if not impossible.

    One lent me an ID DVD recently and I must say I found the presentation very convincing. I could not see how the required complexity could possibly be achieved without a guiding intelligence.

    --
    Karma? Sorry, i don't believe in superstition. http://talk.thinkingmatters.org.nz
  533. God vs Evolution is often demonstrated by feelings by flyboy974 · · Score: 1

    I'm not an expert. And frankly I was stuck at work today and couldn't answer this thread.

    But, religous folk often associate the "Intelligence" as the unique factor between animals, plantlife, etc, as the difference as to why humans are unique.

    The fact is, my dog cries when the kids leave. She is verbally upset (Besides chewing and pissing on the floor when she doesn't get to go with them). This obviously represents feelings. What do everyone say about relationships... "Oh, it's just chemical.. you really don't love him..." So what the @#$#@$ does my dog have?

    This represents intelligence. She's VERY aware of the things around her. She lacks the abilty to tell us in "Human sounds" that she is upset. But, the chuch has corrupted minds for long enough to say that the lack of speach is what makes us "made" over every other creature.

    She (my dog) has a tongue. She has teeth. Hell, she has a brain (And we see it functioning). She has lungs, a heart, a liver, hell, she's been fixed, and the male dogs have weeners. How much different is my dog from you and I, internally speaking? We all have four limbs. Our crap goes out between our legs. Our genetillia is between our legs right int he same spot. Hell, even a whale unloads out the back. In terms of an organ count, I think compared to an ammeba, she's on par with you and I.

    My best friend's dad had a monkey (she died of old age recently, we all cried). Have you really sat and interacted with a monkey?? Let alone a chimp and or another species along the line? Listened to it try to talk to you (they do).. it's feelings.. it's hands.. It THINKS about what it's doing. Look at her when he's sick. Watch him get angry/upset. It's us!

    Don't tell me we were created and all things are less. Live a little and don't live by what you are preached. Yes, we are more advanced, but, we are here out of luck, not because we were made to be better. We EVOLVED. OH SHIT! THAT WAS A BAD WORD! AND NOT SHIT!

  534. Eye evolution video here by mamahuhu · · Score: 1

    There is a great website here - the companion to the TV series of a few years ago. The book is a great read too.

    There is a very interesting section that shows the evolution of the eye in several phases and how in fact (oops I mean in theory) it is a series of simple steps each better than the previous one. There is a link to a video popup in the top left hand section of the text.

    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/change/grand/pag e03.html

    The most interesting thing about the eye is that it has evolved at least three times - or at least has evolved the complex form three times. Vertebrates, Mollusks (Squid/Scallops) and Arthropods (Lobsters, spiders, insects)

    And the bit I love best is that Vertebrates have probably the worst eye of the lot - but compensate for it with an exquisite nervous system to process all the crap data. My mum got a detacted retina - yikes what a mess. Squid don't have that problem!.

    Here is the start of their web page on the development of the eye - very cool...

    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/change/grand/ind ex.html

  535. That label doesn't mean what they think it means. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

    It sounds more like the school board is trying to encourage students to approach the theory of evolution with an open mind, not "denigrating the theory of evolution" as was stated in the court case. I think this sticker was meant to quiet the complaints of the 2000 parents who complained that the text books described evolution as the origin of life with-ought giving equal time to creationism. The sticker says "evolution is an important theory and students should approach it with an open mind", in answer to these parents criticisms.

    I don't think this label really does promote creationism. All it says is that evolution is being taught as a theory, not a fact. Even if it does promote creationism, I don't see how it violates the separation of church and state. Evolution delves into issues that some people consider to be spiritual, and as such, is in a way "teaching religion". This label is merely a disclaimer saying that that is not the school board's intent, and that students should not take it that way.

    I seriously hope that this ruling is overturned by a higher court.

  536. This is an old and tired fight by Capt.+Dick+Jackman · · Score: 1

    I don't know why everyone gets all worked up over these things. Science allows itself to be challenged and I'm rather confident that science can withstand some silly stickers. Besides, how many of us use Evolution or Creationism in our day to day lives? It would be much more constructive to argue about the piss poor math abilities of our school kids. I think that above average kids could come out of high school at the level of the Lebesgue integration but they waste years on basic arithmetic in elementary when they should be doing algebra. Of course, the less skilled kids would be somewhere less than that and we'd need better math teachers for the Lebesgue stuff.

    --
    Anyone who isn't confused really doesn't understand the situation.
  537. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by renata.org · · Score: 1

    Alzheimer incidence by age increases from 2% at 65 to 25% at 85 - after 85, incidence decreases due to deaths caused by the disease. Symptoms include progressive and chronic memory loss, behavorial changes, confusion, and disorientation. So, I believe Anthony Flew should visit a neurologist.

  538. I live in Cobb County. by Shivetya · · Score: 2, Informative

    I will say one thing about my county government. They are one of the best when it comes to managing a county government. We have had expansion of services while at the same time taxes either rolled back or were not raised. They operate very efficiently and openly.

    Now, as for this matter. While a Christian myself I see no reason for any government agency to act in a way that either promotes or denies any religious belief. Simply put, God can take of his own and himself and doesn't need meddling politicians to do so.

    This is probably the only real waste of money that I have seen the board make. By waste I mean senseless waste as this is a totally no-win situation. No matter how it is worded it will be seen as promotion of religion. The environment of the courts and media is too highly charged to do anything that even remotely be seen as "Christian" related.

    Regardless I will still live in this county for many years to come as it has some of the most friendly people, better living, and very good county and local city governments.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:I live in Cobb County. by Felonious+Ham · · Score: 1

      Completely off-topic, but I find your signature compelling... Do you have the attribution for the quote (the last bit is obviously chopped off)?

  539. Whats really frustrating here is.... by iwbcman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    that this pathetic attempt by religous fundamentaists to impose a creationist curriculum makes the critique of evolution and the critique of modern science even more difficult.

    Science is not about truth. The measurement appropriate to science is the measurement of correctness. It is not about truth because it is personally irrelevant-ie. it has nothing to do directly with you or your actions and values-unless you are a scientist engaged in scientific activities. But the dogma of school science is about truth and pupils are by and large incapable of NOT drawing personal conclusions, conclusions about there own being, life and meaning based on what they are taught about science.

    And it is indeed questionable if such is having a detrimental effect on our society. That so many adults are turning to fundamentalist christian beliefs is a an ultra hardcore indictment of our public school instruction about science. The void of personal meaning present in that which is being taught is real and tangible. It's not as if these adults were not subject to evolution in their schools curriculum....

    Being against the fundamentalist doctrine of creationism does not mean that by default one endorses the theory of evolution. But this kind of situation, where the state acts to prevent an endorsement of religion in the public school curriculum, forces the issue-rendering things black and white.

    The whole argument of science vs religion overlooks that there is practically little difference, in terms of conviction, between religion and science. Science is the religion of many modern day earth dwellers. It is accepted with the same kind of passitivity as is the case in most modern christians. Only a tiny percentage of people are actually scientists yet their theories, facts, and findings, translated into language which the non-initiated can understand, form the basis for much of our public schools curriculum.

    Much of the religious nature of modern science is due not to science itself but due to the science (pedagogic) which has evolved to enlighten our childrens minds by teaching them about science.

    Now one can argue about whether the material being taught is really science. And in the process overlook the fact that the indoctrination of scientific values and assumptions in our pupils impressionable minds is anything but scientific. To the extent to which 'science' and 'evolution' have become doctrines administered to our youth in the public school system the issues of what rightly constitutes science is no longer a decision of 'scientists'.

    Evolution, an incredibly broad and overgeneral term for multiple conflicting and competing theories has become the basis of biology and the whole slew of neo-scientific adventures which have sprung up in the past 40 years (socio-biology, pyscho-biology and what not). In these scientific field there exists a degree of consensus about what evolution implies. This consensus around 'evolution'-or rather the raster of interelated theories which form 'evolution' has become so central, so pivotal that such neo-scientific adventures would vanish in a puff of logic if the non-verifiable ultimate hypothesis implied in 'evolution' where sufficiently debunked.

    'Evolution' is in the first place a working tool which aids in organizing, categorizing the abundance of material gathered and explicitly casting these findings in terms of teleological causes.

    As a tool 'evolution' is usefull for these scientific pursuits. As is the case with all tools- this tool will be surplanted in time by newer and more appropriate tools-as the sitution requires. 'Evolution'(eg. Maturana and Varela and the concept of autopoesis, natural drift) of today has remarkably little to do with Charles Darwins "Origins of Species".

    The problem with 'evolution' in specific and 'science' in general is not that they are based on theories. Aside from the fact that everything which is not a theory is either (fantasy, mythology, mystery, fiction) or the unmittigated

  540. Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by rishistar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If it is the case why are they not asking for the same stickers to be stuck on EVERY textbook? A fair amount of what is accepted as 'scientific fact' for day to day purposes are is still a theory. And not just the natural sciences with its theories of evolution, relativity, black hole formation but also things like economics and geography textbooks need stickers on them

    In fact, now I think about it the same sticker should be on English comprehension textbooks - lets face it we don't really know what Shakespeare was trying to portray a misogynist society in The Taming of The Shrew - seems more likely to me that he was out for a cheap laugh. Much of history is the same.

    And obviously, when sticking these stickers on, they need to do the bible at the same time. Something like 'Well the first half of this book is a collection of pan European mythical tales bought together in a nice anthology and the second half was about a dude who was really cool, but we don't like to talk about what he did between ages 18-30 as he may have been being a naughty boy' should be accurate.

    --
    Professor Karmadillo Songs of Science
    1. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by richieb · · Score: 2, Interesting
      If it is the case why are they not asking for the same stickers to be stuck on EVERY textbook? A fair amount of what is accepted as 'scientific fact' for day to day purposes are is still a theory. And not just the natural sciences with its theories of evolution, relativity, black hole formation but also things like economics and geography textbooks need stickers on them

      There is no such thing as absolute truth in science. Everything is a theory which is supported or refuted by observable evidence and repeatable experiments.

      Here are some example of theories:

      The Earth goes around the Sun

      Matter is made from atoms (ever saw an atom?)

      Electricity is movement of electrons (ever seen an electron?)

      Evolution, as a theory, is as established as any of the above.

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    2. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by aborchers · · Score: 1

      I was basically with you up to "Pan European". What is your argument for that? Every source I've ever encountered indicated the OT was Middle-Eastern/Asian, mostly detailing with the legacy and law of the Jews and sharing certain bits with the foundations of Islam. The NT Jesus is something of an amalgam of Indo-European God-Man myths, but I don't see what is Pan-European about the OT. The deluge is common across a lot of mythologies, but it makes more sense to assume its role in the Bible is adapted from the Mesopotamian flood stories.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    3. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by 74nova · · Score: 1

      holy crap.

      first of all, we can observe that the earth goes around the sun. fact.
      we can also observe that matter is made from atoms. we can even split them. fact.
      i would also imagine that we can prove that electron movement is electricity.

      so, how are these anything like evolution? how is it established as much as any of these three things that can be observed?

      --
      use your turn signal! you people act like it's divulging information to the enemy
    4. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by 74nova · · Score: 1

      okay, so i read a little further down. it would seem that my definition of 'evolution' was wrong. based on this you are correct. i would like to note this as probably the first time ever someone on slashdot has admitted that they were wrong, but thats just a hypothesis with no real basis other than general observation.

      --
      use your turn signal! you people act like it's divulging information to the enemy
    5. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by geekopus · · Score: 1

      It is very rare that I see the +Insightful mod used correctly. This is one of those times. Props.

    6. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely nothing in biology makes any sense except within the framework of evolution. Hell, every little in geophysics, geology, bio-chemistry, etc., makes sense outside of the framework of evolution. It all dove-tails nicely.

      We can see evolution all around us. From examining DNA to just watching species develop over time, to breeding animals and plants for specific traits.

      Evolution is a fact. The mechanics of evolution are open for discussion by critical thinkers. "Natural Selection" was the first theory that attempted to explain the fact of observed evolution. It has since been expanded and refined by people examining evidence and thinking critically about the topic.

      But to even imply that creationism is in ANY way on the same level as science or any evolutionary theory is just beyond ridiculous. Creationism isn't science, and it doesn't belong in any scientific classroom.

      If public schools want to teach creationism, then it should be taught in the proper context: In a mythology class, or in a comparative religions class where they can talk about all the other creation myths out there.

      Evolution is as well established a fact as any other scientific fact out there.

    7. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because each one of these were unknown until a scientist proposed a hypothesis that this may be how things were - 1)middle age Europe and previous societies believed everything revolved around the earth 2) we were not able to actually see an atom until the 1900s and 3) Electricity was discovered in the late 1700s and yet today we are still learning about electron movement - magentism, ect, all of these associated properties of electron movement. Evolution is similar to these in the fact that we are constantly learning more and discovering new facts/fossils that are continuing to support evolution. Like these other ideas protrayed in the previous post, Evolution will eventually gather enough scientific evidence to promote evolution to the status of scientific law.

    8. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also disagree with the 'pan European' statement. The OT was written in the classic pan-european language of Hebrew. See the beloved wikipedia for details: The Old Testament, or Hebrew Bible (so called because it is written almost entirely in the Hebrew language)...

      Evolution is just another theory and students should be reminded of this. Alternative theories should also be made available.

    9. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by schtum · · Score: 2, Informative
    10. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by PantsWearer · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The deluge is common across a lot of mythologies, but it makes more sense to assume its role in the Bible is adapted from the Mesopotamian flood stories.

      Have you ever read the Epic of Gilgamesh? The Flood story in there is nearly identical to the one in the Bible. The names are different, there's a few different secondary items, but it's basically the same layout: God(s) decide to flood the earth, God tells guy to build a boat and put all the living things of the world on it, world gets flooded, guy ends up on top of a mountain.

      There's a nice summary here. (Look at Tablet 11.) Interestingly, Utnapishtim (the story's Noah) is immortal when Gilgamesh meets him (well after the flood), very similar to Noah's unusually long lifespan.

      We aren't talking about "Hey, there are two flood survival stories in ancient writings!" we're talking about "Hey, the Hebrews seem to have inherited a flood story and then adapted it to their own use."

      --
      Be glad life is unfair, otherwise we'd deserve all this.
    11. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by aborchers · · Score: 1

      Gilgamesh is Babylonian. My point was that the OT stories are not European, not that they were original.

      It was my understanding that the stories of Utnapishtim and Noah shared a common ancestor, appropriate enough for a discussion of evolution! :-)

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    12. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by 3point1415927 · · Score: 1

      Excellent point; glad to see you've already been modded up for this. All of the people who have posted in defense of this sticker have expounded upon the idea that "evolution is just a theory, so we need to alert kids about this so that they can be open to other viewpoints!" While I think that creationism is a bunch of nonsense, I do agree that alternative *academic* points of view should be presented. But how can we decide which issues to flag? Well, how about this: have a significant number of scientists or scholars questioned the status quo on a certain issue? Has legitimate, peer-reviewed academic research been found and presented in support of their ideas? If so, go right ahead; add a page to the history textbooks about how the Salem Witchcraft Trials were caused by rotten grain rather than a vindicitive, closed-minded society; add a sentence to physics textbooks debunking quantum theory, or whatever. However, there is absolutely no scientific evidence (and by scientific evidence i mean just what I said before, peer-reviewed academic research) to disprove evolution. Furthermore, putting a sticker on the front of a book, rather than simply adding a page to the chapter about whatever topic you're deriding seems, to me, equivalent to stamping a big "VOID" on the front of the textbook in red ink.

    13. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the second half was about a dude who was really cool, but we don't like to talk about what he did between ages 18-30 as he may have been being a naughty boy' should be accurate.

      Um, he was most likely doing carpentry work during that time.

    14. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by richieb · · Score: 1
      first of all, we can observe that the earth goes around the sun. fact.

      Untrue. Since there is no absolute frame of reference (see Theory of Relativity), we can pick the Earth as the center of the universe, and describe all the movement we see that way. This was the system before. Mathematically Copernican system is much simpler, therefore prefereable.

      we can also observe that matter is made from atoms. we can even split them. fact

      How do we observe that matter is made from atoms? I haven't seen any atoms directly. Only indirect experiments seem to indicate that they in fact exist. Dalton's Atomic theory of matter explained a lot chemistry, but at the time many thought of atoms as "theoretical constructs".

      so, how are these anything like evolution?

      You make observations that are explained by the Theory of evolution. Here are some of these:

      Why do males have nipples?

      Why are there ten species of zebra in Africa, but none in Australia?

      Why are there mammals?

      I'm reading a great book by Richard Dawkins "The Ancestor's Tale" which goes into these in great detail. I recomend it.

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    15. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1
      Evolution, as a theory, is as established as any of the above.

      And to take it one step further, "Intelligent design" is not even a theory. Faith is not science.

      What's the point of having a science class if you're going to be prevented from studying the subject?

      Here's a question: Maybe, just maybe, evolution is the evidence of an "intelligent design" that they're looking for? I'd give mad props to God for thinking up such a cleverly adaptable mechanism.

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    16. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by rishistar · · Score: 1
      I was basically with you up to "Pan European".

      Yeah, sorry dude...that was a mistake...just caught up in the creative artistic flow at that point in time!

      --
      Professor Karmadillo Songs of Science
    17. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by firewood · · Score: 1
      If it is the case why are they not asking for the same stickers to be stuck on EVERY textbook?

      Some textbook statements have greater impact than others on the constitutional right to the free exercise of religion.

    18. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      Yes, the theory of evolution is just another _scientific_ theory, but there aren't any credible alternative scientific theories, as far as I know (I'm not a biologist). Creationism in its various forms is _not_ a scientific theory, as it is not falsifiable (if you don't believe me, try talking rationally to a creationist). It's theology, which is a formal system (kind of like Euclidean geometry, but considerably less rigorous).

      I'm really glad we don't have to deal with this crap as much in Australia as you do in the US (although unfortunately the lunatics are gaining ground here).

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    19. Re:Surely the sticker should be on ALL textbooks by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      If it is the case why are they not asking for the same stickers to be stuck on EVERY textbook?

      I'd vote for that.

      Peace be with you,
      -jimbo

  541. shessh by Deternal · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I have karma to burn so lets just use some here:

    When you have a theory, and it, in your opinion, makes the most sense compared to whats out there, and you are working in this field, you observations will invariable support the theory you believed in unless you come up with a better one.

    The evolution theory is debated - one reason is that it's basic assumption is the following:
    During one lucky momemt mass, substance and energy functioning in time-space, during one incredible lucky moment combined to form a self-propagating unit and that this element by chance grew and grew and then someday up the line man stood there.

    Set up in that context how good odds would this get in a bet?

    Of course religous people believing a soul have a hard time with this theory since it excludes and denies the presence of a soul and as such has formed the basis for people who believe that there is no soul, that we are basically just lucky to have mutated this way from mud.

    I don't believe it, not even fairy tales are this illogical.

    However since the theory is prevalant and since it's the only explicitly scientific theory I agree it should be taught in schools - but stating on the books that it is A) A theory and B) should be read with a critical mind is just common sense, you should note this about almost any theory and proposed idea.

    1. Re:shessh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do not understand evolution and are correct to reject it based on that. You should read "River out of Eden" by Richard Dawkins. You don't have to believe it, but at least you will know what 'it' is.

    2. Re:shessh by White+Roses · · Score: 2, Informative
      Oh, I'd take that bet. See, in science, there is this thing we like to call an "experiment" where we take a "hypothesis" and try to prove or disprove it. You might have heard of this. It's called the scientific method in many circles. As such, an experiment was performed in the 1950's to try to prove the hypothesis that you suggest above, that non-organic mass under conditions similar to a primordial Earth might produce the building blocks of life. The Miller-Urey experiment. They found that under such conditions, non-organic elements can form amino acids, which are a building block of life. The experiment is still under debate, but if you get up high enough in physics research, so is gravity. Like I said, the scientific method at work. You don't have to believe it. It's been proven from a scientific point of view. It's reproducible. It doesn't rely on belief.

      In short, the Georgia schools can cram it in their corn holes. And while they're at it, can look up the scientific definition of theory, not the Reagan definition of theory.

      --
      Do not touch -Willie
  542. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Robowally · · Score: 1

    That's a great idea. Like all scientific claims, they should be put to the test. However Flew may be only the beginning I suspect. The ID DVD I saw was very convincing. But then I am physicist, not a biologist.

    --
    Karma? Sorry, i don't believe in superstition. http://talk.thinkingmatters.org.nz
  543. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by Democritus2 · · Score: 0

    You and so many others miss the obvious point. By singling out evolution, they are making a religious statement. How many scientific theories are there? Did they put a sticker about EVERY theory contained in the book? Absolutely not. The wording was designed to say "Hey, we are being fair, and just want people to think critically" However, because of the singling out, and the motivation for the stickers in the first place, that argument is weak.

    --

    no god is good

  544. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The confusion here always seems to be the automatic assumption that 'God' is the Christian god as described in the bible and all the baggage that goes with that. Theres no reason to believe that the 'Intelligence' that possibly created the universe has any compassionate feelings towards humans or is just off doing his own thing. Can't see any needed link between ID and Christianity / Islamism / whatever.

  545. 2000th post by Leffe · · Score: 0, Troll

    I win.

  546. WRONG by MosesJones · · Score: 1


    God's existence is a HYPOTHESIS not a theory, it has no framework underwhich the existance of god can be disproven and therefore cannot be considered a theory.

    "God's existence is a hypothosis, not a theory" would be a better sticker.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
  547. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by tleskia · · Score: 1

    This Anthony Flew thing has evolved into a new creationist meme.
    Here's an article about what he actually has said:
    http://www.secweb.org/asset.asp?AssetID=369

    One quote from the page:
    "In fact, he asked that I not directly quote him yet, until he finally composes his new introduction to a final edition of his book God and Philosophy, due out next year. He hasn't completed it yet, precisely because he is still examining the evidence and thinking things over. Anything he says now, could change tomorrow."

    Flew also admits he hasn' really kept up on the latest research: "I now realize that I have made a fool of myself by believing that there were no presentable theories of the development of inanimate matter up to the first living creature capable of reproduction."

  548. I'd like to see by octal666 · · Score: 1

    a sticker in the forefront of the Bible saying that most of the text are oral traditions not demonstrated nor contrasted by any other sources.

    --
    DON'T PANIC
  549. To make it fair, I'm knocking up some stickers by goldcd · · Score: 1

    to attach to the front of all bibles.

    "This book contains material on Creationism. Creationism is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

    I was considering also adding a note to indicate that
    "The Bible has been neither peer reviewed, nor have any attempts by other messiahs to replicate the miracles contained within been successful"

    1. Re:To make it fair, I'm knocking up some stickers by jaredbpd · · Score: 1

      Or you could just go into your local Barnes & Noble and move all the bibles into the fiction section. Quicker, safer, more fun :)

    2. Re:To make it fair, I'm knocking up some stickers by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      "This book contains material on Creationism. Creationism is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things."

      Exactly. I got no problem with that. Nor with the science-book sticker under discussion. In fact, as a scientist (Two degrees, two fields, and a new field of resource policy analysis) turned Christian, and quite unable to understand or accept the Genesis account of creation, I then spent 2 years re-translating the Hebrew language in light of my knowledge of science. I became convinced of its accuracy and relevance, and have since written a book on my findings, and dedicated myself to (1) getting both sides of the "creation/evolution debate & culture wars to realize neither of them had hardly any idea of what the Bible really said, and (2) reconciling science and scripture, and showing how science is moving closer and closer, in almost every discipline and every advance, to a parallel account. So, I find it quite reasonable and fair to treat the actual creation account in Genesis as a theory, and keep on testing it. One might think Genesis is at quite a disadvantage, being written down 3500 years ago and unable to adjusd or modify itself, but to my ever-increasing surprise, it isn't. In fact, that disability gives it all the more respect, and gravitas, I think.

      "The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

      We should only wish! What is good for the Christian goose, it seems, is never good for the science "groupie" ganders, who tend to run school boards, the ACLU, courts, and flamers of Slashdot.

      ""The Bible has been neither peer reviewed"

      Actually, I'd say its been being reviewed ad infinitum, both by peers and hostiles, for 3500 plus years (OT) and 2000 years (NT). And never more than in the last 100.

      And by the way, as for that rejoinder submitted to your remarks, here, saying the Bible should be "moved into the fiction dept.", obviously that person is not particularly well-schooled or very familiar with the Bible him or her self. It is often said it doesn't belong in the science dept., though I believe I've shown elsewise, and often speak to science audiences, I think most of academia, even that rather hostile and sceptical sector known as "criticism" (think of the "Jesus Seminar" crew), would say it belongs in the History dept. At least. Quite a few thousand anthropologists, archeologists, historians, Middleeast scholars, etc., would agree, and have made their careers checking out the historical accuracy and usefulness of the Bible!

    3. Re:To make it fair, I'm knocking up some stickers by bareshiyth · · Score: 1

      Uh, since it's been two days, and you're not likely to be checking back here, I'd like to draw your attention to a reply I posted to the post you replied to. :)

  550. Mod parent up by Deternal · · Score: 1

    I seriously wish I could atleast.

  551. Tower of Babel by Moraelin · · Score: 1

    Before I get started, please note that I'm not religious at all.

    That said, whoever came with the Tower of Babel hypotheis (yes, not theory, law or fact) did observe a very real fact: languages have a natural tendency to change and diverge. They do so continuously.

    Even though there was a strong pressure to homogenize languages, e.g., the import of new words from neighbouring tribes/countries/etc, they still diverged much faster than that.

    And they still do, in spite of having an official dictionary and an official grammar, and school and society pressure to stick to the official one.

    Off the top of my head, words which changed or appeared very recently:

    - "gay" used to mean "merry", then it meant "homosexual". And now it's changing its meaning _again_ to mean simply "uncool". (E.g., "Macs are gay". It doesn't mean "homosexual" as such, because computers don't even have any kind of sex.)

    - "google" became a verb out of nowhere

    - "cool" used to have something to do with temperature, but now your first thought would be something completely unrelated upon hearing "cool!"

    Etc.

    So the phenomenon does exist. It's a fact.

    The more scientiffic explanation is that people like cool/new/hip/original/witty ways to say something. New words, new phrases, new metaphors, are cool. They enter the language, whether you want it or not.

    The thing, however is that we don't know _why_ humans have this trait. Is it a survival trait that we haven't found out yet? A cultural phenomenon? (Bearing in mind that it existed in ancient and strictly conformist cultures just as well, not only in the modern days when it's hip to be different.) Or an act of an omnipotent God? We don't know.

    Either way, again, the phenomenon described there is very real. It's a fact. Even if you or I don't believe the hypothesis that it's some act of an omnipotent god, it makes it no less real.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Tower of Babel by rainman_bc · · Score: 0

      Well that's a pretty feeble attempt IMO... Language evolution can easily be traced to common characteristics. German, French, Spanish, and English can be traced like that. Now compare them to Hindi and Chinese and you'll see a HUGE difference. If there was a language evolution as you suggest, Hindi would look like a cross between arabic and Chinese. In fact it isn't.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    2. Re:Tower of Babel by Moraelin · · Score: 1

      You misunderstood my point completely. If languages progressed merely by taking new words from their neighbours, yes, Hindi would end up a mixture of Arabic and Chinese.

      But the whole point is precisely that it didn't. It evolved in its own direction faster than it borrowed words from the Arabs and Chinese.

      As for common characteristics, here's something to think about: ever heard of "indo-european languages"? The fact is: Hindi, as different as it is today, evolved from the same group as, yes, German, French, Spanish and English. And for that matter, the same group as slavic languages and the arabic that you mention: Hindi didn't just borrow from Arabic, it has a common root.

      Search for "indo-european" on Wikipedia. You might be surprised.

      Altaic languages are another big group, including Chinese, Japanese, Hungarian and Finnish. Needless to say, a speaker of any of them, wouldn't understand a speaker of any of the other three unless he learned that as a separate foreign language.

      But even if you take European languages alone, and further more only those of a common ancestor, you can see how far they've diverged. A modern day Italian doesn't speak a language anywhere _near_ the Latin he hears in Catholic church. A modern day Greek would probably get a headache trying to read Herodot or Homer untranslated.

      That's the divergence I was talking about: the divergence that resulted in the fact that although English and Hindi are in fact branches of the same tree, the English complain about communication problems with tech-support in India.

      --
      A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    3. Re:Tower of Babel by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      And you missed my point. To argue language evolution as the premise of the tower of Babel is contradictory. we either have language evolution, or we all spoke one language. What exactly does Hindi have in common with Chinese, or Swaheely (sp), or Native American languages?

      I'm not trying to present you with a false dichotomy, but either language developed differently in different regions, or as the bible points out, we speak different languages because we tried to build a big tower and pissed off God. YOu can't take the hybrid of the two and attemt to justify a rediculous story like the tower of Babel.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    4. Re:Tower of Babel by Moraelin · · Score: 1

      And I'm _not_ arguing that the Tower of Babel story is true or anything. Told you from the start that I'm an athetist :)

      I'm just saying that, in fact, the scientiffic explanation isn't either of those two. Languages _do_ have a natural tendencies to diverge. They aren't different because two different tribes in two different regions first saw a boar and each thought up a different name on it. They did often started with the same name for it, and then diverged to the point where they are today.

      No, of course not because someone built a big ziggurat in Messopotamia. Anything humans can possibly build even with today's technology, wouldn't get anywhere _near_ a height that can be considered "sky" before physics brings it down.

      But they diverge none the less. I just find that interesting, you know.

      Basically, you know, that a phenomenon can be true even if it's given a bogus explanation in the Bible. Sort of like how light is a fact, and a well explained one in science. Even though the "let there be light" in the bible is bogus, light still does exist. Same here, really.

      I also find it interesting that anyone back then would notice the phenomenon. It takes a lot of data and quite a lot of brains to come up with the theory that wildly different languages evolved from a common language. Again, even if the divine-intervention explanation given is bogus, the assumption of a common language _is_ uncannily similar to what our linguists came up with scientiffically, millenia later. Sorta amazing, if you ask me.

      --
      A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  552. the dichotomy between science and religion by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    " If they were, I'd have a major problem, because I am both a professional scientist, and a devout Catholic."

    Actually you do have a major problem, but, like all people who try to be a scientist and 'devout catholic', you chooose to ignore it. You do not see a problem, because you do not WANT to see there is one.

    If you say you are a devout catholic, I'm assuming you believe in the basic tenets of the bible. Seen that they are so contradictory and absurd (an all-powerfull/all-knowing being, life after death, heaven and hell, creationism, etc.: all these things defy common sense) it is ludicrous to say there is no opposite viepoint. Science is ALL about making sense of the observable universe, according to well defined scientific principles. The answer of the devaut catholic?:

    "It doesn't need to make sense."

    Well, indeed, as a personal opinion, it doesn't. But a (real) scientist wants to get to the truth (as in: as close to the observable reality as possible). The dichotomy between the two, thus, resides in how you view your particular religion in the light of your science. Answer: you don't. You shun it. And you will never do it, because there is no rational or scientific basis for believing in God or heaven, nor creationism, etc.

    People like you seperate their religion and their science - yet feel they don't contradict eachother - because you never actually used your capabilities as a scientist to research your beliefs. If you did, you would notice that that belief is irrational and unprovable; things your scientific mind SHOULD tell you to disregard it.

    I mean, c'mon, if you had ANY other theory that would be absurd and untrue on the parts you can check, and completely improvable when taking only the esotheric parts, then, as a scientist, you would regard that theory as useless and disregard it. Yet, you don not do that, when it happens to be your own belief.

    It's not that they aren't contradictory; it's that you fail as a scientist when it comes down to your own religious beliefs.

    --
    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
  553. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Robowally · · Score: 1

    Ok, thanks, so help me out here. What are the "theories of the development of inanimate matter up to the first living creature capable of reproduction"? Every book I have read skips over this question.

    --
    Karma? Sorry, i don't believe in superstition. http://talk.thinkingmatters.org.nz
  554. Like it or not Evloution is a religious issue. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    The school system did not single out evolution, the parents of students did. People found the corse material to be offensive, and therefore singled it out. The school merely responded to their criticism in the most even handed way possible.

    Would you be happier if the school instead decided that evolution was a religious issue, and opted not to teach it at all? They aren't allowed to teach religion, and religion is defined by those who practice it, like the 2000 parents who protested the teaching of evolution.

    It is ironic that court deemed the school's statement that evolution falls within the realm of science to be religious in nature. How much less religious could you get?

    1. Re:Like it or not Evloution is a religious issue. by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      I think you need to look up the definition of what a religion is exactly. According to the Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, religion is defined as: "Strictness of fidelity in conforming to any practice, as if it were an enjoined rule of conduct. R." I don't know about you, but I think evolution falls into this definition quite easily...unless of course you don't follow evolutionary theory with strictness and fidelity.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
  555. Insane by Soothh · · Score: 1

    If you were to read the "federalist papers", (the documents by the founding fathers to explain in greater detail what the mean in the dec. of independance and bill of rights etc...)
    Then anyone with a little bit of sence would read, they were trying to keep the government out of the churches, and specifically NOT the church ouf of the government.

    As i seen in someone else's sig "Where are we going?? and whats up with this hand basket?"

    --
    We have seen that living things are too improbable and too beautifully "designed" to have come into existence by chance.
    1. Re:Insane by Democritus2 · · Score: 0

      So? Regardless of the past, I am absolutely FOR keeping church out of the government. End of Story.

      --

      no god is good

  556. My experience by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    When I was in high school (finished 6 years ago). We studied evolutino but we had brief discussions on other theories aswell. I don't mind the whole approach with an open mind thing. That should be put on everything. And evolution is fact. You really couldn't prove it more.

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
    1. Re:My experience by wraith0x29a · · Score: 1

      Totally.

      The school my kid goes to teaches religeous education. It is always put in terms of 'Christians believe that..', 'Muslims believe that..', 'Athiests don't believe that..' and so on. None of the beliefs described are taught as being absolute Truth despite the teacher being a Christian minister.

      Whether science should be taught that way or not ('The scientific community in general currently believes that..') is something I'm not too sure about. Once this honest vaugeness is introduced every religeon and minor scientific faction would be fighting to get their opinion included in the curriculum. However, that disclaimer would add another level of Truth to the presentation of scientific knowledge in schools, the real Truth being that we may think we know something but can never really be 100% sure about anything.

      Science is not an exact science, hell, I was taught that an atom was made up of some little balls orbiting another, bigger ball. This load of balls was presented as absolute matter-of-fact despite quantum theory (which suggests this is not really the case) having been pretty much accepted by the scientific community at that time.

      Now there are scientists suggesting that the speed of light is not as absolute as once believed.

      If everyone; religeons, scientists, politicians et al took the 'we think we know but can never be sure' stance I suspect the world would be a better and more tolerant place. Sure uncertainty is scarey but it's truthful.

      --
      ~ Better a freak than a sheep. ~
  557. Re:What Ever Happened to the "Free Exercise" Claus by vidarh · · Score: 1
    The First Amendment has nothing to do with this. Nobody is prohibiting the free exercise of religion with this ruling, merely making them do so outside school.

    The problem with this sticker is that it applies only to evolution, not to any of the thousands of other theories people are presented with at school. So it implicitly treats evolution as if it is not as accepted by the scientific community as the rest of them, thereby implying that religious claims about creationism and intelligent designs may have more claim to validity than they have.

    That is what the judge had a problem with - not the text of the sticker by itself, but singling out evolution.

  558. My other reality makes sense. by mattpalmer1086 · · Score: 1

    I don't think the parent was saying *all* bibles ever printed should have those stickers. Given his perfectly reasonable stance, I assume he was simply asking for parity. They have Bibles at school, don't they?

    Descartes said the only thing we can be *absolutely* certain of is our own existence as a thinking entity. I think creationists need a big sticker putting on them. I just can't believe they're for real.

    1. Re:My other reality makes sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bibles at schools? where the hell are you from?

    2. Re:My other reality makes sense. by uohcicds · · Score: 1

      Indeed I wasn't: parity is the issue here.

      If you are going to use the Bible in schools (as a required textbook) then why shouldn't it have the same disclaimers as any other required textbook that you would use, especially if they are dealing with the same issues. This might also apply to the Koran, the Torah, the Vedas and other scriptures or holy books. Here's a radical thought: why not leave the stickers of all the books and let people make up their own minds? Or is that just me being silly?

      As an aside someone mentioned that the Bible was in fact written in very few languages, as opposed to my contention of many languages. This may be true, but before they were even written down, they may have been passed on orally using any number of local languages and dialects. and yes, each of these introduce errors and differing interpretations into the original sources. That's why I said it. It just seemed much more concise to phrase it that way. You only have to look at the story of Cinderella to see how easy it is to change the sense of something. As far as I am aware the orignial story, which I think was from medieval French, talked about a slipper made of vair (fur), as opposed to verre (glass). It's clear how similar they sound.

      Religion is a deeply personal thing; a relationship between the individual and whichever God they choose to worship. I happen to be an atheist but wouldn't dream of denying anyone's right to worship whom or what they so wished. I might even have some sympathy for the idea of a God of some description as some kind of initiating agent for creation, were it not for Spinoza's argument (around about the 16th century I believe) which goes something like this:

      God is omniscient,omnipotent and omnipresent, and is the greatest entity that exists.

      God created the universe and everything it.

      Therefore, there is an entity which contains both God and the Universe he created.

      This entity must be greater than God. Oh dear.

      I might, therefore, choose to think of God as a personification of the Laws of Nature. This has many attractions, because we could then say that God mediates the way the universe works, that God is in some way responsible for creation and that we even have a non-interventionist God in a non-deterministic universe.

      In the end, true science is not about faith, religion is. In science you can believe something to be true without proof because available data might put the balance of probability that way. Religious faith is, I contend, different: you are "allowed" to believe with fewer constraints on likelihood and evidence is less of an issue. This is not necessarily all bad, because sometimes faith can be a comfort. Carl Sagan's book, 'The Demon Haunted World' talks about this issue in a very accessible and clear way.

      I don't think there is any way that those two sides can be properly reconciled. I just don't like living in a world where either side is not willing to let each other other believe what they want without attempting to indoctrinate the other.

      [Disclosure: I am an atheist, who was a Christian when I was much younger. I have a scientific education-Physics at degree level. I am British and still living here. That'sall the cultural bases covered, I think.]

      --
      It's not you: I'm just this horrifically socially awkward with everybody.
  559. Acceptance of Evolution is Implicit by Darth+Cow · · Score: 1

    Just about everyone agrees that visible things like, say, electronics are real. We accept that the scientific method works, and that it works exceptionally well because it gives exceptional results. That's obvious and clear. Try denying this computer exists. If any clear and patently obvious technology contradicted something in the bible, it would simply be dropped by fundamentalists. But if you accept the method, you need to accept the consequences. The consequences of science include evolution. Just because I can't evolve humans in a machine overnight doesn't mean that it isn't true by the same standard that we accept baffling explanations like electromagnetism even though it makes little sense from an obvious standpoint. Science isn't always obvious. That doesn't mean that it's wrong, or that you can disregard less obvious parts are clearly wrong if they are required by all coherent theory.

  560. Why not? by countach · · Score: 1

    Why not put a warning sticker on every single science book? Science only advances when somebody doubts the status quo. For a long time nobody doubted Newtonian physics. Then this Einstein fellow comes along and throws doubt on the whole thing.

    Every theory is just a theory. Doubt them all - it's good science.

  561. I've said it before and I will say it again.... by mehaiku · · Score: 1

    Gravity is a theory, not a fact!

    1. Re:I've said it before and I will say it again.... by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      Actually, gravity is a fact, but our theories of just what it is, and from whence it comes and how it actually manages to do its thing, have changed several times since Newton, and nowadays have become such a perplexing problem, frustrating and holding up the development of physics, astronomy, and cosmology, that it has become the heart of most modern research, oft called the "holy grail"!

      The amazing "web of life", the rich panorama of species of life on earth is a fact. Exactly how it got to be so is a question that interests (and divides, it seems) almost everyone on the planet. Evolution is one theory (or set of, actually) of how it did. Intelligent design is another type of theory (that is, there are several version). Creation is another ("young earth" and "old earth" are the two major sets of that type of theory). And if you look at the major cultures and religions of the world, you'll find a few others.

  562. This is just moronic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like the theory of evolution, but respect the fact that others don't.

    Also I can't really see how putting a sticker that the theory of evolution is a theory infringes anyones rights.

  563. try "hypothesis" on for size by Vexar · · Score: 1
    Yeah, I see your point. Evolution is really only a hypothesis, not even a theory. It isn't like anyone has ever observed evolution. Explanation, however rational, does not a theory make, if one is to be picky about words. Theories can be tested. At this point, anything on evolution is hindsight conjecture. Don't get me wrong, I'm a big fan of intraspecial microevolution, but even the majority viewpoints of modern comparative phylologists have abandoned the 150-year old model of macroevolution, citing a nearly complete fossil record and no evidence of it. Their current view is that of punctuated equilibrium, or in other terms, a bird gave birth to a lizard.

    I love how Slashdot mixes it up on these inane linguistic minutiae.

    1. Re:try "hypothesis" on for size by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am reminded of something I read that said treating the fossil record we have as a complete history of species is like extrapolating all of human history from a flint flake and a hamburger.

    2. Re:try "hypothesis" on for size by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      For Evolution Theory to work at all, it presupposes a common carrier for genetic material for all species. People started searching for that and found DNA. How is Evolution not a theory again?

    3. Re:try "hypothesis" on for size by Vexar · · Score: 1
      The scientific pursuit of the origins of life has amassed great volumes of topically tangential information, such as the consistency and content of the dirt on Mars and the Saturnian moon of Titan. You speak of macroevolution as if a theory is out there, written as concisely as the theory of Relativity, or Quantum theory. Macroevolution changes, it evolves. It is data-driven, and fraught with subjectivity and core-component debate. Do not point to one small element of knowledge and say it is somehow conclusive, I find terseness unengaging. Instead, begin your discussion with the beginning, not the latter ends. Oparin's experiment lacked any kind of temporal stasis; the quantities of oxygen were poisonous to monocellular organisms. How long is a single DNA strand? What is the shortest known complete strand of DNA from a viable organism?

      Before we discuss the 5 skeletons of the Archaeopteryx that bear any distinction from the common Procompsagnathus, the 6 homonids and their histories, tiger moth, et alia, begin with the beginning. If you happen to have reference to a complete definition of the theory of macroevolution that has stood any test of time, I would appreciate reading it. I must say it is quite assuming for humans to perceive their understanding of the origins of life to be solid enough to consider it a theory.

      Quantum theory is already being applied in electronics design, and cyclotrons are built to take into consideration the theory of relativity. Neither of these exceed the age of the theory of macroevolution, yet the theory itself, not tangential knowledge under the umbrella of biology , has not to my knowledge proven servicable in engineering. Have we evolved anything yet? Have we ressurected the dinosaurs, ill-fated dodo, or the even the coelocanth?

  564. My new sticker by JamesP · · Score: 1

    Creationism is not a theory, it's just a load of crap.

    (no, really!!)

    --
    how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
  565. Re:Yay! by I(rispee_I(reme · · Score: 1

    The problem with trying to appease the creationist's argument of "Where is the missing link?" (If that can be called an argument), is that there are already dozens of intermediary fossils that precede Homo Sapiens. Each time one is found, the dogmatics respond, "Well, yes, but where is the fossil between that one and us?" In short, they will never be satisfied with any missing link that is found, because they will cling to anything that allows them to believe the universe was created by a divinity.

    A better question is, if all life was created within a very short time, why does the fossil record invariably proceed from simple to complex? I don't recall any mammal fossils being found in the strata that contain the earliest invertebrates. Creationists would have you believe this is the work of a "Prankster God", who created a world full of evidence in favor of evolution in order to test man's faith in Him.

    As the late comedian Bill Hicks said in his act, "I'm at the pearly gates. Saint Peter's like, 'Do you believe in dinosaurs?', and I say, 'Well, yeah, there's all this evidence; fossils, you know...' 'Straight to hell with you, sinner!'

  566. missing the point by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

    I think the many posts and replies on what is a "theory" are sort of missing th point.
    Lets go back and look at what happened in Georgia:
    2,000 parents complained about how textbooks dealt with evolution. They did not complain about math, or english grammar, or anything else
    they complained about evolution
    Now it could be these are highly logical geeks parsing the word "theory"
    right
    the reason they complained is that they are bible based people who seek to impose their particular religious beliwefs on others.
    Like most people, they want the schools to teach thir children what they believe in.
    Cant say that is all bad, even if i do think they are bigoted neanderthals

    1. Re:missing the point by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      Actually, I think YOU are missing the (or a few) point(s).

      Math and English grammar are not theories. And almost anything else, except for a curriculum on religion, and perhaps US history, doesn't reflect on, or try to teach something that contradicts a fundamental worldview or set of values, or who and what those 2000 parents believe they are, and are about, and want to pass on to their children (every parent's desire).

      Evolution, if it is treated as a scientific theory, is pretty well tolerated and even considered (that is, they will consider the possibility it is true) by most of that 2000. But to many pushing evolution and opposing the stickers (or any other type of qualifying language in the schools), if not most, evolution is a religion. Few who debate it here, or in front of school boards, even have a rudimentary understanding of it as a scientific theory/paradigm. They see it as a "not-God", as a refutation of religion(s), of the Bible, of Christians, and thus it is the doctrine of most atheists (read "religion's about a naturalist universe"). And it is almost always taught by the teachers as a refutation of, and proof that there is no God, never mind it was never intended to, and few (except dogmatic atheistic) scientists think it does. So, evolution has become "the other religion" in the culture wars, and that 2000 parents (and about 80% of the rest of America, and 98% of the world) know that, and that it will destroy the values and beliefs of many of their children if taught by such determined authority figures as anti_Christian, and ani-theistic school teachers. I know, because I was a university teacher in human evolution and paleontology who believed absolutely in evolution, and was absolutely atheistic, and felt it my duty to convert any Christian student in my classes. I rarely failed!

      You don't have to be "Bible-based" to object to the dogma that "evolution is a fact", and "evolution is the real creator", to find that offensive, if not threatening (to your family and your right to teach your children your own heritage and values). Because it is the "evolutionists" who are imposing their beliefs on the rest of the world, their anti-Christian, anti-creationist (whether bible or other religion-based), anti-intelligent design, anti-any "supernatural power or force or explanationfor the origin of the universe and life" (though they might believe in ghosts, magic, or any number of sci-fi theses, themselves, without recognizing it ie, "UFOs anyone?") beliefs.

      I appreciate the fact you are willing to grant them their stickers, in a vague sense of fairness, but your racist classification of them as "bigoted neanderthals" rather spoils it. I once (some 40 years ago) went to Mississippi as a civil rights worker. I met a number of whites who were fair enough to give "the damn niggers" the vote, or right to go into Walgreens, but never turned my back on them. I fear the culture wars, and postmodernism have erased the word "respect" out of our dictionary, and rendered the idea of pluralism moot.

    2. Re:missing the point by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

      for most of your post I agree with the thrust that evolution is, for whatever reason, part of hte HAL (humanist liberal atheist) critique of religion and these people are right to be angry.

      the neanderthal was a joke (neanderthal-evolution -kinda poor, )

      this is the first google link i clicked for "dictionary bigoted"
      [adj] blindly and obstinately attached to some creed or opinion and intolerant toward others; "a bigoted person"; "an outrageously bigoted point of view"
      blindly and obstinately attached...intolernat" pretty fair summation. I have no doubt many of these people are, in other parts of hteir lives, kind, etc etc, but in this respect they are bigots.

    3. Re:missing the point by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      OK, but I don't understand.

      If you read the sticker (the topic of this discussion) it only said (accurately) that evolution is a theory, and that students should keep that in mind, reflect, weigh the evidence themselves, keep an open mind... that sounds like the epitome of tolerance, temperance, gentle open-mindedness, to me. Not to mention a fair and honest way to teach, and encourage young people to conduct themselves. They aren't hating (well, most aren't) evolutionists, or trying to banish them from the book or curriculum, but just asking that the truth and fact that evolution is a theory be clearly stated, however meekly. It is those who wish to banish even open mindedness, refuse to treat that 2000 parents with any respect, calling them stupid, etc., who seem to be bigots. They're unwilling to compromise or yield an inch.

      And remember, the public school, and the teaching of "evolution is a fact", and the obvious implication there is no God and no possibility "creation" or "intelligent design" lies behind origins, etc., is compulsory and mandated under penalty of law. So those 2000 parents are forced to send their kids to school, pay for it, and allow it to "brainwash" (in their view) their kids every day. And know the teachers are likely to push their own values/opinions, at least as a constant subtext, even more. Small wonder they get upset, and ask at least this tiny compromise!

    4. Re:missing the point by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

      No, it is not ok, because the sticker is not trying to get the students to question and think for themselves.
      The stickers are put their by stupid uneducated (becasuse if they actually read about ID, they would see that it is just nonsense, total dreck) bigoted (they want their religion imposed on others because they think it is better) hypocritical (afraid to say the previous) people.

      Let me emphasise: it is not tolerance to question a theory when you dishonestly propse an alternative that is garbage, like, say polywater, or tealeaf reading.

      u assume i am against the stickers.
      actually, i am for them, because in any honest discussion, the kids wd see that "intelligent design" is lies and deceit, not science at all, and this might lead a few to question the rest of religious nonsense that they are taught.

      I agree that the state is imposing its view;that does not mean the parents are honest -
      Of course, what the parents shd be doing is asking why the state control apparatus denies them adequate medical care, etc (chomskyism here) but they have been brainwashed into thinking that religion is the answer; in this sense the liberals are part, as you correctly note, of the state control apparatus which strives to prevent these people from wondering about why there is no decent medical care etc.
      U r also completely wrong in assuming evolution = godless; as can easily be shown in that he catholic church endorses evolution; u r right in noting that this is about POWER - the state allows people to exercise power in this domain to keep them from asking why their r no jobs, etc

    5. Re:missing the point by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      Whoa there! You are wandering off into something of a different tirade, and losing your grip a little, I think.

      For instance, You say, "u assume i am against the stickers." Go back to my first posted response to you. I actually said this:
      "I appreciate the fact you are willing to grant them their stickers, in a vague sense of fairness".

      You now say this: "the sticker is not trying to get the students to question and think for themselves". Go back and read the actual text of the sticker. What does it say except that?
      You also say, here, "The stickers are put their by stupid uneducated (becasuse if they actually read about ID..." Now where is there anything at all about "ID"? ID may be something that many of the parents think is a valid alternative to evolution, and wish it were at least mentioned as theory that many - including scientists and folks with excellent credentials (from good universities, even secular schools) think has a lot to offer (if only as a counter "null hypothesis" to evolutionary explanations), and should be allowed in the public place - even schools! I think you're being rather arrogant and, yes, bigoted if you can not respect them and only call them "stupid". Do you really think you have enough training and expertise in both evolutionary science and the paradigm of ID(and research and writings of its advocates) to make such intemperate statements?

      I have a couple of degrees from some very good schools (U/C/ Berkeley, U of Oregon, and doctoral study at UC San Francisco) and taught both evolution and human evolution at several colleges and Universities. I think I am pretty up on it. But after many years of absolute acceptance and advocacy of evolution, I came to have questions and doubt it had all the answers. I now consider ID to be a paradigm (you know there is more than one theory/version of ID, just like any major theory in science) worth consideration. It does offer answers to some of the evolutionary school's weakest points. And, btw, ID is not a shoe-in for the God of the Bible - if that's your fear or assumption. About 98% of the world (are they all stupid?) believes in ID, but the gods, or powers, or forces that they would give the credit to are many and various. A lot of sci fi fans readily accept a "creator" from "out there", but refuse to accept the Christian God. Others believe the whole universe is organic, alive, intelligent, and self creative. Some of the better known scientists who believe evolution has all the answers fall into that school, because Darwinism/neoDarwinism cannot account for ultimate origins, including the brilliantly designed universe, and incredibly complicated "first cell" of life.

      You say, " they want their religion imposed on others because they think it is better) hypocritical (afraid to say the previous) people." Come on now, you don't know that. But, if it were true, do you think it any better that "the other side" gets to impose their religion (there is no creator, no god, no greater intelligence, no real design, and the "evolution is a fact" equivalent of "God is a fact", etc.)? You know, there are a huge number of scientists who are theists, and many of them of the Judeo-Christian persuasion. Well over half of astronomers, close to half of physicists and cosmologists are. And why? Because the know just how incredible, awesome, and unexplainable by any current science, the univers is. Check it out. Einstein, of course, was a theist. His faith in an Intelligence having designed the universe (and he said "God", usually) was what led him to Relativity! So, he too, was pretty stupid, I guess. Though he didn't work in biology, I suspect he'd have been an advocate of keeping an open mind, and not thought it was a, anti-science plot. Unless you've swallowed the postmodern thesis that each of is our own creator, determining truth and reality for ourselves because there is no universal objective truth and reality (which completely negates science) you must admit science is a method for seeking the truth. And there are essentiall

  567. Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fine. As long as you stick "Juils Caesar's existance is an untestable hypothesis that can never rise to the validity of a theory. Belief that 'Julius Caesar' once ruled the Roman Empire is as demonstrable and testable as 'invisible pink elephants' ruled the Roman Empire.

    You are right, there was no Juils Caesar. There was Julius Caesar, though. The difference between Julius Caesar and Jesus Christ is quite serious, however. In fact, even the historicity of Jesus is doubtful at best [1] [2] [3] [4] i.e. there is nothing to suggest there ever was such a man in the first place, even before we try to wonder if the Bible (decided during the First Council of Nicaea in the year 325, three centuries after the alleged death of Jesus) contains what he said, not to even mention if anything he said was true. There are no such doubts regarding Julius Caesar to my knowlegde, but I am sure that you will post some references to enlighten me.

    1. Re:Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      The point I was making is that scientific proof is not the only method of determining truth. Any evidence you have of Julius Caesar's existence is historical, not scientific. So saying Jesus' existance is an untestable hypothesis is a true statement, coming from a scientific perspective. But so is the existence of every other historical figure. If you try and prove Jesus' existance from a historical perspective, it is just as provable as any other historical figure. No, I don't think there are any people that dispute Caesar exist. But that's primarily because because Caesar was not such a polarizing influence as Jesus and Christianity were. Anything controversial will have people who want to deny its existence. There are people who deny the Jewish Holocaust, and that's still in living memory. Any controversial event or person will come under attacks like that sooner or later. Whether or not you believe in what Jesus preached, there's pretty much no way you can say he wasn't controversial - or we wouldn't be having this discussion.

      As for the historicity of Jesus, maybe you should read your own links. I quote from a number of them:

      "the existence of a historical figure named Jesus is commonly accepted by Christians and non-Christians alike"

      "The reason they don't dispute it is because of the abundance of historical evidence for Jesus. Today, there is virtually no debate among serious scholars whether Jesus was real."

      "I hate to spoil the party, but the fact is nearly all modern historians admit the existence of a man named Jesus. Any view that holds that he never existed is an extreme one indeed. And this has nothing to do with "cultural bias"; in fact, the question of Jesus' existence has been debated at length by scholars since the 19th century. The general consensus is that he was real, and this fact needs to be acknowledged in the article."

      End of quotations. I'm not really sure why the "Talk" page of a Wikapedia article should constitute proof, but the first quote comes from the article itself.

      No serious scholar questions the existance of Jesus of Nazareth any more than they do that of Julius Caesar. What they question is the veracity of his actions as recorded by his disciples, and that because extra-ordinary claims are made in them, not because the documents are any more unreliable historically than any other documents.

      decided during the First Council of Nicaea in the year 325, three centuries after the alleged death of Jesus

      The books of the Bible were indeed formalized at the Council of Nicaea. It was not written then, but that was when the various books that would make it up were formally decided. However, one of the top criteria used at that council was whether the early Christian church accepted the book in question as legitimate. So although a formal decision may not have been made until much later, that decision was itself based on an already-existing informal accptance.

      even before we try to wonder if the Bible ... contains what he said

      If you have studied much of Roman history (along with Greek, pretty much the only ancient history that claims to record what people said), you'll know that historians doubt any of them contain the actual words spoken. The books of speeches and such are generally written after the event, and most historians assume, in a much more favorable light than the actual speech. So the historicity of non-Biblically recorded speeches is not exactly a great model to try and measure up to.

      There isn't much reason for the writers of the gospels to lie about Jesus' existance anyway. The vast majority of the new testament is written to Christians. That is, to people who already believed in the existance of Christ. There's no need to try and fabricate stories when your audience already believes them.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    2. Re:Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point I was making is that scientific proof is not the only method of determining truth.

      I was not talking about science. I was talking about historiography. Big difference.

      Any evidence you have of Julius Caesar's existence is historical, not scientific.

      Indeed. Unfortunately, there is no such evidence for Jesus.

      So saying Jesus' existance is an untestable hypothesis is a true statement, coming from a scientific perspective. But so is the existence of every other historical figure.

      Don't confuse science and historical evidence.

      If you try and prove Jesus' existance from a historical perspective, it is just as provable as any other historical figure.

      This is not true. Could you please quote any evidence?

      No, I don't think there are any people that dispute Caesar exist.

      Exactly.

      But that's primarily because because Caesar was not such a polarizing influence as Jesus and Christianity were. Anything controversial will have people who want to deny its existence.

      You must be joking!

      There are people who deny the Jewish Holocaust, and that's still in living memory. Any controversial event or person will come under attacks like that sooner or later.

      OK, ask this question: WHO is denying Holocaust and why. If you think Caesar didn't do anything controversial you have apparently missed your history lessons in school.

      Whether or not you believe in what Jesus preached, there's pretty much no way you can say he wasn't controversial - or we wouldn't be having this discussion.

      This is irrelevant, and you know it.

      As for the historicity of Jesus, maybe you should read your own links. I quote from a number of them: "the existence of a historical figure named Jesus is commonly accepted by Christians and non-Christians alike"

      Exactly. It is commonly accepted. But there is no historical sources to back this up. Read the entire article.

      End of quotations. I'm not really sure why the "Talk" page of a Wikapedia article should constitute proof, but the first quote comes from the article itself.

      The Talk page is a discussion. That's why I don't comment the fragments you have quoted. I provided links to that Talk page so people could see how the article was written and why. This is a place to find a rationale behind the article. This is also a place where people were supposed to provide sourcec of Jesus existence, with no luck. You might want to read it.

      There isn't much reason for the writers of the gospels to lie about Jesus' existance anyway.

      Right! Who needs power and wealth? OK, I have one advice for you. Learn some history.

    3. Re:Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The books of the Bible were indeed formalized at the Council of Nicaea. It was not written then, but that was when the various books that would make it up were formally decided. However, one of the top criteria used at that council was whether the early Christian church accepted the book in question as legitimate. So although a formal decision may not have been made until much later, that decision was itself based on an already-existing informal accptance.

      See:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filioque_clause
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicene_Creed
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Council_of_Nica ea
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Council_of_Cons tantinople
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecumenical_council
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocrypha
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heresy
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arianism
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinitarianism
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East-West_Schism
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Schism

      for a good start. There has never been anything universally accepted by all Christians. Otherwise defining the creed and the canon of the bible would be unnecessary, banning (and burning) apocrypha would be unnecessary, there would be no great schisms, no filioque clause controvercy and no need for inquisition. Please do yourself a favour and read some history. I don't want to be a jerk but you seem to know very little about history in general. I have no doubt that you know your religion from the inside very well but I think that some outside view might help you see the historical context much better. See the links above, and read those articles. Good luck.

      -D.R.

    4. Re:Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      I was not talking about science. I was talking about historiography. Big difference.

      Well, then stay out of the discussion. The original poster was claiming Jesus cannot be prove scientifically. I was arguing that point.

      But there is no historical sources to back this up. Read the entire article.

      The entire article is representative of a minority view, which it itself admits. This is why it carries a disclaimer at the start of the article stating that the majority view (among Christians and non-Christians) is that the histority of Jesus is uncontested.

      You must be joking!

      Great argument.

      OK, ask this question: WHO is denying Holocaust and why.

      Example. People with an agenda to push are denying the Holocaust. People with an agenda to push are denying the existance of Jesus. Your obvious distate for Christianity shown in your post demonstrates you are not exactly an unbiased source.

      Right! Who needs power and wealth? OK, I have one advice for you. Learn some history.

      You have to be joking. Out of the twelve apostles, only one died a natural death. Paul spent a large portion of his life under arrest and being transported between jails. Yay for wealth and power for the gospel writers! Wealth and power for the Catholic church didn't come about until long after the gospels were written.

      I have one advice for you. Learn some history. Good advice. Take it yourself.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    5. Re:Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      for a good start. There has never been anything universally accepted by all Christians

      No, but I doubt you can find anything universally agreed on by everyone. The criteria was "common acceptance", not universal acceptance, and was more to establish authorship (ie: legitimacy) than inspiration.

      I don't know what your trying to prove with all those links - yes, there have always been people calling themselves Christians who have different theologies. That's why the Nicean Creed was established - it was a "standards document" defining the accepted definition of "Christian" at the time.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    6. Re:Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but I doubt you can find anything universally agreed on by everyone. The criteria was "common acceptance", not universal acceptance, and was more to establish authorship (ie: legitimacy) than inspiration.

      There was no common acceptance at all, and that's the whole point. There were something around 250-300 bishops invited to the First Council of Nicaea but only 5 of them represented the Western Church. There was no representation of Western Church on the First Council of Constantinople at all.

      The most important point of the agenda was substituting the original Apostles Creed with the new Nicene Creed (and later Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed) containg the filioque clause, to solve the Arianism/Trinitarianism controversy in favor of Trinitarianism. There were more points, like the date of Easter or the prohibition of kneeling and self-castration, but none of them were nearly as important as the filioque clause.

      It is hardly surprising that it was decided in favor of the Trinitarians, when only those were invited...

      Also, establishing the canon of the bible was not about establishing its authorship, or otherwise there would be no apocrypha written by the same authors as other texts included in the canon. It was about judging (in the 4th century, mind you) which of those texts were written under the influence of the Holy Spirit and which were merely heresies. (Keep in mind that different churches have different canons.)

      Today it is much easier to decide what is said under the influence of the Holy Spirit because we have the dogma of papal infallibility since 1870 and anything the pope says ex cathedra (from the throne of St Peter) is protected by the Holy Spirit from all error. Or is it? Well, not everyone accepts the First Vatican Council of 1870... But if the pope is infallible then The Blessed Pius IX must have been right about the infallibility. Oh, wait...

      I don't know what your trying to prove with all those links - yes, there have always been people calling themselves Christians who have different theologies.

      You would know why have I posted those links if you had read them. I am not trying to prove anything. I am only trying to inform you about the history. There have always been people calling themselves Christians and there still are. Ask both sides, supporters of the Roman Catholicism and supporters of the Eastern Orthodoxy about the East-West Schism of 1054. Both sides will tell you that the other side is only "calling themselves Christians" and that it was the other side who decided to separate from the main stream of Christianity. (The same you would have heard during the Western Schism in the 14th century from the supporter of every one of the three rival popes. Now we know which was the "real" pope but it was not that clear back then.)

      That's why the Nicean Creed was established - it was a "standards document" defining the accepted definition of "Christian" at the time.

      Read the "Ecumenical council" article I posted to see which council was accepted by whom. Every single dogma introduced on every single council (especially those redefining the creed) is very controversial even today, and the acceptance of any given council was and still is very different among Christian churches.

      In short, Mormonism accepts none of the ecumenical councils. Arianism accept none. Unitarianism accept none. Jehovah's Witnesses accept none. Nontrinitarian churches accept none. The Assyrian Church accepts councils of 325 and 381. Oriental Orthodoxy accepts councils of 325, 381 and 431. Protestantism accepts councils of 325, 381, 431, 451, 553, 680, 787 with reservations. Eastern Orthodoxy accepts councils of 325, 381, 431, 451, 553, 680, 692, 787, some also accept councils of 879 and 1341. Roman Catholicism accepts councils of 325, 381, 431, 451, 553, 680, 787, 869, 1123, 1139, 1179, 1215, 1245, 1274, 1311, 1414, 1431, 1512, 1545, 1870 and 1962.

      These are the largest Christian church

    7. Re:Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > > I was not talking about science. I was talking about historiography. Big difference.

      > Well, then stay out of the discussion.

      Oh, great argument. How mature.

      > The original poster was claiming Jesus cannot be prove scientifically. I was arguing that point.

      Indeed. You were arguing that while Jesus cannot be proven scientifically, he was a historical person, which is also not the case.

      > > But there is no historical sources to back this up. Read the entire article.

      > The entire article is representative of a minority view, which it itself admits. This is why it carries a disclaimer at the start of the article stating that the majority view (among Christians and non-Christians) is that the histority of Jesus is uncontested.

      No. The existence of Jesus is uncontested but it is a matter of faith. No one has provided any evidence. The article admits that it is disputed, see its Talk page. No one has provided any evidence there either.

      > > > But that's primarily because because Caesar was not such a polarizing influence as Jesus and Christianity were. Anything controversial will have people who want to deny its existence.

      > > You must be joking!

      Great argument.

      Now I am even more surprised. Then are you seriously suggesting that Julius Caesar had little influence? And are you seriously suggesting that his little influence is the reason why people are not denying his existence?

      > > > There are people who deny the Jewish Holocaust, and that's still in living memory. Any controversial event or person will come under attacks like that sooner or later.

      > > OK, ask this question: WHO is denying Holocaust and why.

      > Example. People with an agenda to push are denying the Holocaust. People with an agenda to push are denying the existance of Jesus.

      That is exactly what I was saying. Do the Jews deny the Holocaust? No? Why not? You said that people deny the existence of someone that they disagree with! Why don't the Jews deny the existence of Hitler? Can you show any example when people are denying an existence of someone for the reasons you talk about?

      > Your obvious distate for Christianity shown in your post demonstrates you are not exactly an unbiased source.

      First of all, I have never claimed to be an unbiased source. You would have to be insane to even consider the possibility that an Anonymous Coward on Slashdot could possibly be any reliable source, much less an unbiased one. That is why I have provided reliable sources for you, and that is also why I would expect you to do the same.

      Second of all, saying that I have an "obvious distate for Christianity" is the most stupid thing I have ever heard. As a matter of fact, I am a Christian myself. But I believe that the existence of Jesus Christ or God is a matter of my faith, not a historical fact. If you prove questions of faith, there is no need for faith, is it? You can believe in whatever you feel like, but don't confuse your faith with facts, or your gospels with history, because you are very wrong when you do it, as can be seen on the example of this thread.

      > > Right! Who needs power and wealth? OK, I have one advice for you. Learn some history.

      > You have to be joking. Out of the twelve apostles, only one died a natural death. Paul spent a large portion of his life under arrest and being transported between jails. Yay for wealth and power for the gospel writers! Wealth and power for the Catholic church didn't come about until long after the gospels were written.

      I was hardly joking. I was not talking about the Apostles. I was talking about the popes and the Vatican, and you know it. It is you who is against the Apostles Creed in favor of the new Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed. Don't you know about the historical, poli

    8. Re:Unlike Jesus, Julius Caesar realy existed by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      establishing the canon of the bible was not about establishing its authorship, or otherwise there would be no apocrypha written by the same authors as other texts included in the canon. It was about judging (in the 4th century, mind you) which of those texts were written under the influence of the Holy Spirit and which were merely heresies

      I didn't say authorship was the sole criteria, but it was one of them. As far as I am aware, the primary criteria was consistensy with each other. Most of the books in the NT had previously been generally accepted by the early church as well.
      Today it is much easier to decide what is said under the influence of the Holy Spirit because we have the dogma of papal infallibility since 1870 and anything the pope says ex cathedra (from the throne of St Peter) is protected by the Holy Spirit from all error

      Perhaps I should make my position clearer. I'm a protestant; I don't believe in papal infallibility. Protestants take the Bible as their only source of divine knowledge.

      What your list of councils basically proves is that the term "Christian" is now pretty much useless. There are such a wide range of religions claiming the title that it is next to impossible to establish any common beliefs among them. And you're right; perhaps I should have said the Nicene Creed was a standards document defining the term "Christian" as accepted by those in attendance.

      Pretty much the only way to determine who is a Christian these days is to ask them if they think they are. There is no common standard to which theology must conform in order to make the believer Christian. Christianity is pretty much a pointless title nowadays.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  568. Dear Georgia by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

    When considering creation myths, please consider this one:

    When the earth begun there was just water. All the animals lived above it and the sky was beginning to become crowded. They were all curious about what was beneath the water and one day Dayuni'si, the water beetle, volunteered to explore it.

    He went everywhere across the surface but he couldn't find any solid ground. He then dived below the surface to the bottom and all he found was mud.

    This began to enlarge in size and spread outwards until it became the earth as we know it. After all this had happened, one of the animals attached this new land to the sky with four strings.
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    Just after the earth was formed, it was flat and soft so the animals
    decided to send a bird down to see if it had dried. They eventually returned to the animals with a result.

    The land was still to wet so they sent the great Buzzard from Galun'lati to prepare it for them.

    The buzzard flew down and by the time that he reached the Cherokee land he was so tired that his wings began to hit the ground. Wherever they hit the ground a mountain or valley formed. The Cherokee land still remains the same today with all the land forms that the Buzzard formed.

    The animals then decided that it was too dark, so they made the sun and put it on the path in which it still runs today.

    The animals could then admire the newly created Earth around them.

    -

    This is the Cherokee Creation Myth. And Georgia resides in the Lands of Cherokee Nation. Why import a crazy story about snakes and apples and ribs when you can simply listen to the First Peoples -- *THEY* have the right answer to creation... at least the answer we choose if we abandon reason. Let other geographies have their fantasy about God/Adam/Eve - Im sticking with the Cherokee myself (oh, and reason).

    Thank-you.

    1. Re:Dear Georgia by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      And you know, those stories, those creation myths, have every right to be taught in the public schools, in several types of classes. And will especially be taught, I expect, in BIA or public schools on the various reservations. Only the Bible and Christian stories are not allowed!

      And you know, a minute or two, or even a day, spent on these stories in a science class would be OK. As a university science teacher, myself, I did get into such topics (Navajo was a specialty of mine. I also raised their ideas of time - circular rather than linear - and way they looked at the world - looking at the landscape as actors passed through it, rather than focusing on actors and actions as the primary interest), and through that was able to get a much better idea of "our" modern science, and why we reach the theories we do.

  569. Re:Yay! by mr+i+want+to+go+home · · Score: 1

    This is possibly the most sensible post in the whole topic. And you didn't get modded at all.

  570. religious eco-warriors by misterpies · · Score: 1

    It's slightly off-topic, but one of the things I find hardest to understand is how those people who are keenest on Creationism are very often the same people who have the most blase attitude towards the environment. I mean, if you thought that every single species was individually designed by God, wouldn't causing the destruction of a species be the ultimate act of vandalism against the creator? Since he presumably designed each species to fit their ecosystem, isn't the deliberate damaging or destruction of an ecosystem sticking two fingers in God's face. Isn't it saying "Thanks for all the work you put in, God, but we've decided we don't need that crap any more so we're flushing it down the pan". If you really believe that God created the world and everything in it, how about showing it a little respect?

    --
    The author of this post asserts his moral rights.
    1. Re:religious eco-warriors by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      "those people who are keenest on Creationism are very often the same people who have the most blase attitude towards the environment"

      That, my friend is a baseless and very inaccurate generalization. You are speaking from prejudice, not knowledge. Indeed, if you went into almost any Christian church you'd find many an ardent environmentalist, many a sermon about being good "stewards" (caretakers, respecters) of the environmental. Try "googling" a few environmental sites, and Christian environmental sites, and professional organizations of geologists, biologists, etc. Learn something.

      I've met some very nasty evolution advocates. But I know some (quite a few) who are Christians, including professional biologists, paleontologists, etc. And who are not taking the hard line of anti-tolerance, or anti-Christianity, that many do. It's so easy to fall into bigotry, and from that into stupidity and ignorance. Don't let yourself go there, OK?

  571. As a local and Christian: Boo! by solafide · · Score: 1

    Yep, that's right. I live nearby, and though I do not have anything to do with the schools, nevertheless the stickers were a small step on the right track.

  572. You did not grok then. by hummassa · · Score: 1

    The Bible was written by the hand of Yhvh himself. He does not make mistakes. Now step out of the building and await calmly the lightning bolt. Have a nice eternity.

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
  573. Two Things that bother me about this... by iammrjvo · · Score: 1



    (1) As a creationist, I think that it is important to challenge students to challenge this pervasive scientific theory. Although my degree was in physics rather than biology, the evidence that I see presented for evolution raises more than reasonable doubt.

    (2) As a conservative resident of Cobb County, I want the federal courts to back out of our local business and let our schools teach the way that they see fit.

    --
    Ha, ha! Nobody ever says Italy.
  574. Another sticker by scarolan · · Score: 1

    To be balanced, they should have another sticker that reads:

    "Creationism is also a theory, not a fact."

    1. Re:Another sticker by Niddix · · Score: 1

      That would be fine. If the textbook also presented creationism as a theory. Of course it doesn't, but hey what does that matter as long as we tell people creationism isn't the truth either right?

    2. Re:Another sticker by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      Read that idea a bit earlier. And answered that the same way: sounds fair and good to me!

      By the way, a theory is an idea that we all must form an opinion about. Scientists, lay folks, anyone who hears it. We choose to believe it or not. Actually, we usually have a degree of belief ("strongly", "moderately" etc.) in it. And based on the strength of our belief we develop a certain amount of faith in it. And act upon our faith. Stronger belief, more faith that the theory is right, more act upon our belief. Without much faith, we aren't likely to do much with the theory. Scientists are exactly the same, though what they do (act out in that faith) might be a bit different, like spend a lot of their careers developing experiments, reasearch money, writings, etc, on that theory. So, creationism (there are several kinds in Christianity, alone, such as "young-earth", and "old earth") is a theory which many believe in, and many act upon. Evolution is also. And so is intelligent design (which is accepted by many christians, but also by many other religions, by new agers an by sci fi fans and even the UFO crowd, eh?). Etc, etc.

  575. This is a great step. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank goodness, this is a great first step. Let's keep religion and academics separate shall we? At least this way those bleeding heart catholics won't be polluting our schools with their drivel.

  576. Pope has credibility? by superyooser · · Score: 1

    Pope John Paul II himself also declared that The Monster was "more than just a leader" (paraphrased).

  577. whoops -- you were so close by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

    And since athiesm is just another religion

    Athiesm and Science are not Religions. As much as theists try repeat it to add gravitas and moral authority to their own beliefs.

    -

    As for the rest of your commnet, did you read the judge's ruling?

    "U.S. District Judge Clarence Cooper concluded that the stickers, although worded to avoid religious reference, amounted to an endorsement of "Christian fundamentalist or creationist" beliefs.

    "The sticker communicates to those who oppose evolution for religious reasons that they are favored members of the political community, while the sticker sends a message to those who believe in evolution that they are political outsiders," he wrote."

    This sticker did not materialize in a vacuum. It was placed by a Theist Cult to undermine scientific knowledge.

    It is clear that *not* removing them would be (at least) an establishment of religion.

    Science is about facts and theories - not beliefs and faith. If a group can foist a blanket over the intellectual pursuits of a minority (reasonable people (athiests)) with a sticker SOULY grounded in their opinion/beliefs/faith than the state would be establishing this religion's beliefs as authority.

    1. Re:whoops -- you were so close by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Athiesm and Science are not Religions.

      Science is not a religion. As for atheism, I addressed that a few moments ago in this post.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  578. It's fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am an atheist and believe strongly in the separation of church and State. I have no problems whatsoever with the sticker. While evolution has the greatest supporting evidence of all creation theories, it is just that...a theory. Question everything.

  579. Evolution: known via rationalism or via science? by LinuxParanoid · · Score: 3, Insightful

    (post1:) while atomic theory, gravitational theory, and germ theory can be tested, evolutionary theory cannot.

    (post2:) Yes, it can, and has. If we found human remains in Precambrian strata, or if human DNA wasn't similar to the DNA of the other great apes, or if a cat ever gave birth to a dog, then evolution would be in trouble.

    As an engineer watching this debate (and now dipping his toe into it), I don't find your rebuttal that persuasive. Analysis of the state of the world today (e.g. evolution) is a rational method, but it is not, to my mind, the scientific method (hypothesis, test, analyze, etc.) Whenever you are forced to use your analysis of a situation to predict and change it, your analysis is really tested in a fundamentally different (and superior) way than when you just take in new evidence and find you can make it mesh with prior evidence.

    I confess I only skimmed a dozen of those speciation events in the FAQ you mentioned, but all the plant ones involved either observing or crossing-by-a-scientist. Not a scientist setting up an environment and watching chance do its work in creating new capabilities. (Actually some of the drosophila ones came at least close to using what I would consider the "scientific method" for evolution but I didn't find them too compelling. I didn't have the patience to wade through them all (work beckons) and you can discount my opinion appropriately.)

    I've written natural simulation programs and I can tell you that it's not too hard to create an environment where, according to random chance a single trait changes from X to Y when you have coded a gene that allows variations in that trait. But evolution postulates that the genes weren't "created" and the notion of a trait wasn't "created" and that's a much subtler beast and based on what I've read over the years I don't quite buy that evolutionists have "proven" or even demonstrated it via a "scientific method".

    I guess if I had to ask you one question, it'd be whether you agree with my distinction between a rational method and a scientific method. I see the latter being a subset of the former. If I'm wrong about that, then you probably don't have to even get into the evidentiary specifics.

    --LP

  580. Re:How could a statement of fact be unconstitution by bentcd · · Score: 1

    You know, this could really take off. I can see drivers' training text books, with appropriate stickers adorning the sections on keeping distance and explaining braking lengths vs speed: "Remember, the theory of physics is only a theory, not a fact. There are competing theories saying that when you hit the brakes, the vehicle may come to an complete and immediate halt regardless of prior speed. Keep an open mind when you're speeding along the highway!"

    --
    sigs are hazardous to your health
  581. It would be nice to have stickers that said... by Peter+Simpson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "You'll be told many things in life. Don't believe all of them, ask questions, weigh the responses, do your own research, and form your own opinions."

    That's what school's *supposed* to be about. Not school boards promoting their pet ideas and buying "lowest common denominator" textbooks.

    Do yourself a favor, read your child's textbooks. Discuss them with your child, encourage them to think (critically) for themselves. It will only do them good as they grow up.

    (and remind them that if they ever find themselves saying "hey, watch this", that they should immediately stop whatever they are doing and think long and hard about what might happen next!)

  582. $250,000 for anyone who scientifically prooves it by Baalam · · Score: 1

    Dr. Hovind's $250,000 Offer
    Formerly $10,000 offered since 1990

    I have a standing offer of $250,000 to anyone who can give any empirical evidence (scientific proof) for evolution.* My $250,000 offer demonstrates that the hypothesis of evolution is nothing more than a religious belief.
    Put your money where your mouth is.

  583. Re:Yay! by arose · · Score: 1

    The stickers should read "Theory of evolution is just a theory". :-D

    --
    Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
  584. Open history book please by aepervius · · Score: 1

    Even History book coming from extrem majority christian religious country do not put "jesus" as a proven existence. Heck, try for example Hindu or chinese history books and text (please no religious text book) and citate me on which page it says Jesus has a proven existence.

    "the existence of a historical figure named Jesus is commonly accepted by Christians and non-Christians alike"
    is the worst of all. Please look back for publication which purport that and sooner or later you will find out that there are no proof beyond oral stories and written stuff up until 4th century AC.

    Like all people you are confunding "commonly accepted existence" (aka without proof) and prooved existence.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:Open history book please by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Well, considering Jesus was a Jew, who appeaered in Israel and whose main influence was on Israel, I don't see many reasons why Chinese or Hindu texts should deal with him at all. That's like saying "Find me a Chinese history text that proves the American Civil War".

      Open history book please Open history book please (Score:1) by aepervius (535155) Alter Relationship on Friday January 14, @08:19AM (#11360442) Even History book coming from extrem majority christian religious country do not put "jesus" as a proven existence. Heck, try for example Hindu or chinese history books and text (please no religious text book) and citate me on which page it says Jesus has a proven existence.

      "the existence of a historical figure named Jesus is commonly accepted by Christians and non-Christians alike".

      That was a quote from a page which the grandparent said demonstrated the lack of historicity of Jesus. It's from wikapedia, which is not really a credible academic source. I used it to point out that the grandparent's "proof" was false, not to prove my own point.

      Like all people you are confunding "commonly accepted existence" (aka without proof) and prooved existence.

      Define proved existance. How do you prove a historical figure exists? Tell me your criteria for proof. Because if your looking for absolute proof, it can't be had. Not for any historical figure. The best you can do is look at the sources and archeological evidence and infer from that. You cannot prove byeond all doubt, although you can often prove beyond reasonable doubt.

      There are plenty of written accounts of the life of Jesus. Chief among these are the gospels, which you will no doubt discount. But they *are* written sources, and the earliest was written betwen 55-80 AD - a time when some eye-witnesses to the events were probably still alive.

      We have numerous early, written texts attacking Christianity on a number of grounds. But none of them ever try attacking Christianity by disputing the existance of Jesus. If Jesus never really existed, wouldn't that be the first avenue of attack? But it seems his existence is never questioned, even by early critics of Christianity.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    2. Re:Open history book please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, considering Jesus was a Jew, who appeaered in Israel and whose main influence was on Israel, I don't see many reasons why Chinese or Hindu texts should deal with him at all.

      Fair enough. But don't you also see any reason why Jewish texts should deal with him then? What about Roman texts?

      Even History book coming from extrem majority christian religious country do not put "jesus" as a proven existence. Heck, try for example Hindu or chinese history books and text (please no religious text book) and citate me on which page it says Jesus has a proven existence.

      "the existence of a historical figure named Jesus is commonly accepted by Christians and non-Christians alike".

      That was a quote from a page which the grandparent said demonstrated the lack of historicity of Jesus. It's from wikapedia, which is not really a credible academic source. I used it to point out that the grandparent's "proof" was false, not to prove my own point.

      See the Reference section of that very article for academic sources. That's the whole point of encyclopedia. An encyclopedia should write about the state of knowledge, not do the original research.

      Like all people you are confunding "commonly accepted existence" (aka without proof) and prooved existence.

      Define proved existance. How do you prove a historical figure exists? Tell me your criteria for proof. Because if your looking for absolute proof, it can't be had. Not for any historical figure. The best you can do is look at the sources and archeological evidence and infer from that. You cannot prove byeond all doubt, although you can often prove beyond reasonable doubt.

      I think aepervius is right. You are acting like people who say that OK, Internet Explorer has dozens of unpatched vulnerabilities but no system is 100% secure! Well, of course, no system is 100% secure, but still there is a huge difference between unpatched Windows and OpenBSD or KeyKOS, wouldn't you agree? Or do you think that if nothing is 100% X than we might have 0% X just as well?

      There are plenty of written accounts of the life of Jesus. Chief among these are the gospels, which you will no doubt discount. But they *are* written sources, and the earliest was written betwen 55-80 AD - a time when some eye-witnesses to the events were probably still alive.

      There are plenty of written accounts of the life of Zeus and The Twelve Olympians. Chief among these are the Greek mythology, which you will no doubt discount. But they *are* written sources, and the earliest was written in the 6th century BC... Can you see a trend here already?

      We have numerous early, written texts attacking Christianity on a number of grounds. But none of them ever try attacking Christianity by disputing the existance of Jesus. If Jesus never really existed, wouldn't that be the first avenue of attack? But it seems his existence is never questioned, even by early critics of Christianity.

      His existence is never questioned? Then why do we have this discussion? Why do we have numerous articles about the historicity of Jesus? Why are there literally dozens of books written about this very subject? You are contradicting yourself! If you know something about any written sources and you are not merely bluffing, then please go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus, hit the "edit" link and add a reference to those sources. There are a lot of people who will thank you, myself included.

  585. Difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Bible isn't a nationwide curriculum in public education (despite some halfwitted remark you'd likely make to the contrary).

  586. KJV is dying by superyooser · · Score: 1
    I'll add to what phantasma6 said since non-churchgoers have a lot of misconceptions about what goes on in churches.

    The King James Only (KJO) movement is a small minority in Protestantism. I don't think any serious Evangelical scholars, including Southern Baptists, agree with the KJO proponents.

    The New International Version (NIV) is by far the most popular translation in American Protestant churches. King James Version (KJV) comes in second place. It is almost completely neglected by the younger generations except in very traditional churches. New American Standard Bible (NASB) is also very popular, because it's a modern, literal translation, unlike most others.

    In a group Bible study, it's not unusual to have four or more different translations among the participants. This is good, as it helps to flesh out a fuller meaning of the original text.

  587. The eye is an example of evolution... by MosesJones · · Score: 1

    Because there are lots of different types of eyes that have evolved due to different purposes.

    It is certainly NOT an example of an even semi-intelligent designer.

    I mean what sort of engineer has the cables from receptors go BACK into the system thus creating a blind spot, rather than dragging them out the back. This is how it works on the octopus.

    If you think god is a smart designer, explain how he failed when working on a human, and then did a better job on the octopus.

    And don't even get me started on the fact that humans can choke on food.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
  588. Over the pond by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In Britain, evolution is taught as fact in school. We even looked at some evidence ourselves to see how it worked*.

    Even most Christian preists accept evolution here, and just work it into their beleifs. Their attitude tends to be less "we have the answers" and more "there are *philosophical* questions that fall outside the realm of science, and we can help you work them out."

    It seems obvious that the bible isn't supposed to be literal. It contradicts itself, and clearly many of the stories are contrived to put over moral arguments. Why is it then, that certain aspects, like the creation myth, are taken as being literal accounts? At least the stuff about Jesus' life is talking about actual events that people saw. The creation myth is clearly designed to add credibility to the bible, by giving answers to fundamental questions which are difficult to answer. Very few people here take it literally.

    *IIRC, the example was moths in London, during the industrial revolution. At first, they were mostly brown, because that gave them the best camoflage against wood and stone surfaces. When people started burning lots of coal, everything got covered in soot and the air was thick with smog (pea soupa). Black moths blended in better, so after a few decades most moths were black because they had a better chance of living long enough to reproduce. When things cleaned up a bit, the moths eventually went back to being mostly brown.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    1. Re:Over the pond by The_Spud · · Score: 1

      I did a small course on evolution at med school and someone had done further research on the moth example.

      The original study

      There are two varieties of peppered moth, one is pale one is dark. With clean air the bark of the trees are covered in lichen and pale, therefore the number of pale moths eaten is lower than the number of dark moths. During the industrial revolution the trees trunks were covered in soot and more pale moths were eaten by birds. Hence the dark moths had a selective advantage.

      This all sounded really convincing till someone analysed the original research and found a fairly major flaw. The moths had been pinned to the tree trunk so the observer could watch the birds feeding on them. This species of moth don't naturally stay on tree trunks they hide in the leaves and grass at the bottom of the tree.

      Probably not the best example to cite in support of evolutionism. The jist of the course was Darwins theory is the best we have currently but there are some problems a some of the supporting evidence. Close mindedness of both sides of the debate isn't very helpful but I agree intelligent design or creationism shouldn't appear in a science class.

    2. Re:Over the pond by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In general, Americans are lazy, stupid, and belligerent. And I say that as an American citizen (who only freely admits to the lazy part).

      The combination of those three promotes mass-acceptance of things like creationism, the world is flat, American votes are still counted...

  589. Facts and theories by bheading · · Score: 1

    I have nothing against stickers on textbooks saying "evolution is theory not a fact", provided we can also have a sticker on the front of each bible saying "God is a belief, not a fact". Do you think the creationists would go for it ?

    1. Re:Facts and theories by Trunkboy · · Score: 1

      Yes, I think they (we) would. Assuming the book is pertaining to a the existance of God. The science books contain issues that Americans have differing views on, namely, evolution. I don't think the book states in any chapter that, "God is a fact." -- therefore, any disclaimer to the contrary would be silly.

    2. Re:Facts and theories by Stickney · · Score: 1

      Only problem with that idea is that schools aren't allowed to force Bibles on children...if they were, stickers like that would be fine. There's just no point to having stickers for Bibles that don't exist.

      --
      ...the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
    3. Re:Facts and theories by Trunkboy · · Score: 1

      My bad, I misread. I thought you meant on the front of the *science* book you wanted the new sticker.

      Your comment makes no sense, since Bibles are not allowed in schools as textbooks.

  590. Evolutionists did evolve from apes. I didn't. :) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If an evolutionist believes he came from apes, more power to him. He probably did. As for myself, I know that I did not.

  591. Re:Yay! by nickco3 · · Score: 1

    No, in that you are wrong. Bertrand Russell spent several years and actually proved, in the real and rigorous sense of the word, that 1+1 = 2.

    That's a mathematical proof, not a scientific proof, an example of the same word with two different meanings, like confusing free speech and free beer. Mathematical proofs are easy, and everywhere. High school students are taught them.

    The scientific model, on the other hand, does not except absolute truth: everything is contingent and can it all be overturned tomorrow if the right evidence is found.

    In the scientific view of the world, there is no such thing as absolute truth, the closest you can ever get is a "theory", and you can't prove theories, only observe that they match the evidence.

    An idea that hasn't yet made it to the dizzy heights of "theory", that lacks supporting evidence is called a "hypothesis". In the scientific model the furthest point away from truth is "faith". Faith is the absence of evidence.

    --
    -- Nick "Hallo this is Beel Gates, und I pronounce weendows as ... WEENdows"
  592. What's funny... by Fringex · · Score: 1

    Is that if someone who claims Evolution to be theory is automatically labeled a religeous nut. Doesn't matter who you are, the label comes and bears itself upon you like a scarlet letter.

    The problem I have with the verdict is that the religeous nut side was immediately thought of and branded in the open.

    I read the sticker and found it acceptable as it doesn't push religion and it isn't suggesting evolution is factual. However, it allows students to have that open mind. To the point where they can decide, "Hey, maybe evolution wasn't the ticket after all. Maybe creationism is wrong as well. I wonder what other avenue could be available to describe all this?"

    When you don't label something as theory from the start, (Especially something that is for all intentional purposes theory) you begin to institutionalize the students, leaders, thinkers and scientists of tomorrow.

    I guess I should also point out that it is also unconstitutional what the judge did. Teaching from a book that states evolution as fact to those who choose to have religion violates Amendment Numero Uno. I think the best solution is to have a waiver signed for all students. Those you are the "religeous nuts" can talk to their children before hand or even go to the extreme and not let them take the course. Those who belive the evolution route can sleep securely at night knowing that their kids aren't getting "perverted" by the idea that religion might be true.

    Under every avenue that would probably be the best as it would protect the best intrests of all parents and children with the varying belief structures.

  593. Why stop at evolution? by Anita+Coney · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I can't understand why creationists only object to the theory of evolution. There are plenty of other scientific theories which could be helped by their guidance:

    Theory of Relatively: Things occur because god says so.

    Theory of Gravity: Things fall and do not fall because god says so.

    Theory of Continental Drift: The earth's surface moves because god says so.

    Heck, I figure with the creationist approach to learning, kids would only have to go to school for about a week before they graduated. How long would it take to teach a kid the following: If you can't explain something, or if you don't like the explanation science offers, just assume that god did it.

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    1. Re:Why stop at evolution? by thegnu · · Score: 0

      I don't get the whole taking the bible literally thing. I think creationists skip over that whole part about a day being like a thousand years and a thousand years like a day in the eyes of the Lord.

      And if they want to take the Bible literally, why aren't they following the teachings of Leviticus? It would be mighty easy to pick them out then, because they'd all be in prison.

      Creationism a bunch of self-interested, mindless bullcrap in my oh-so-humble opinion.

      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    2. Re:Why stop at evolution? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      As a scientifically minded person, I wish all theories would be stated as such until well proven.

      Gravity is now the "law of gravity" in common nomenclature. String theory is a theory. Quantum theory is a theory, and so is evolution.

      Get over it.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    3. Re:Why stop at evolution? by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      I'll "Get over it" when the radical christian right gets their paws off our schools!

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    4. Re:Why stop at evolution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The law of gravity is a theory, which is very useful but slightly wrong (indeed to this day a full and complete understanding of gravity escapes us). So your naming scheme tells us nothing useful.

    5. Re:Why stop at evolution? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      The radical christian right has as much right having a say in the debate as do the UFOlogists.

      I'd like to point out that there is no good evidence of extra-terrestrial life either, some just think it probable.

      I was taught about UFOs in school, grade 4 I believe. I also learned about various native origins of the world beliefs and worship rituals of various "foreign" nations.

      It'd be a shame to equally educate our children equally, wouldn't it.

      Afraid of something?

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    6. Re:Why stop at evolution? by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point. I have no objection to religion being taught in schools. I've taken plenty of religion classes in college.

      My problem (which should apparent) is with the premise that the creationism is a science. Merely saying that "god did it" has absolutely no basis in science because it is utterly un-testable and predictions cannot be made and validated from it.

      As I pointed out, every question of science can be easily answered with the simple "god did it." Is that the society you want to live in, where every question has the exact same nonsense answer?

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    7. Re:Why stop at evolution? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      The article (and event in question) has nothing to do with creationism except by association.

      The stickers simply pointed out that evolution is still theoretical.

      Of course, that begs questions that christians are happy to answer, and that irritates some people, but why don't we just explain to kids that we don't really know where we came from yet? We don't know everything, and that's one of them. Here we have this theory about evolving that looks good, but needs more evidence.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    8. Re:Why stop at evolution? by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      And my question was why only put them in books regarding evolution. Why not stick them on ALL science books? If you can answer that for me, I'd much appreciate it.

      And Christians are happy at PRETENDING to answer. But "god did it" is not really an answer.

      Let's imagine that you're in charge of a government program to set up a Tsunami detection system. Your chief scientist determines that Tsunamis are caused by Dweos. You ask was Dweos is and he replies, "Dweos is an incorporeal entity which causes Tsunamis."

      Question: Do you fire your chief scientist or follow his advice?

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    9. Re:Why stop at evolution? by randallpowell · · Score: 1
      Afraid of something?

      How about a Christian theocracy with Biblical law that states anyone different is a Devil worshiper and deserves death?

    10. Re:Why stop at evolution? by bareshiyth · · Score: 1
      Your sarcasm (perhaps a bit justified) aside, do you understand that it was Einstein's biblical worldview that led him to his theory of relativity? And that the theory led to (following Hubble's demonstration of the expanding universe - which Einstein"s belief in God made it quite difficult for him to accept, tho he eventually did) the theory of the Big Bang. Which is the very predominant theory of the universe's history, and was hated by the atheists and the anti-Bible folks because it re-opened the door to the possibility of a Creator because it says the universe is NOT eternal (which was the predominant belief until Big Bang), but had a beginning (as the Bible says), and thus a "creation event", which some scientists say was a "singularity exploded", and others say God or some other bigger force/power had to institute? And Relativity says the universe is a precise, orderly, unbelievably well-designed lawful physical entity, which causes even many scientists - especially astronomers - to think the blind chaos of a super explosion is a poor candidate for Creator, but a god, if not the God, makes more sense?

      Now, by the way, gravity is not a theory, but a fact. And we still have not got a theory that satisfies all the questions of scientists. Newton's theory was good. Einstein's much better. But the so-called "holy grail" of modern physics and cosmology, is a better theory. Though the Bible, to my knowledge, says nothing about gravity, and most Christians have no "christian" or biblical leanings in any way that I know of, the Bible does have a few things to say about the way the universe began and was stretched out to where it is today, that gives some strong hints as to what actually is the nature of spacetime and the "fabric" of space that creates gravity (in relativitistic terms), and the cosmological constant, that scientists are trying to figure out because it may answer why the universe is expanding, and gravity works...

      Ditto, liittle in the Bible about continental drift (a fact, about which there are several theories, and much research going on today), but for one verse about how when the earth was covered with water God said "let dry land appear. Watch, patiently, it will!". Which implies plate tectonics in action, and the idea of continental drift!

      Beware sarcasm (and speaking about things you have really not much real scientific knowledge of), it can bite you in the... Sarcasm is a pitbull!

    11. Re:Why stop at evolution? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      That's not christian at all. That's just stupid.

      It may be the subject of many sci-fi movies, and many self-proclaimed christians may believe such a thing would be good, those of us who are educated (and I happen to have conservative theological education as well) know that "those who do not believe cannot be expected to act as those who do."

      I have no moral authority over someone who doesn't believe what I believe. As a christian, my sole worries in that sense should be trying to witness christ-likeness to those who don't believe, and correcting and helping those who do.

      Correcting people who don't believe, or trying to legislate christendom is like trying to correct the grammar of a foreign person's language which you don't speak or understand, based on your own language's rules.

      That said, legislating morality in the case where the majority of a democratic group have voted it to be so should be allowed to go ahead except where it significantly and unfairly impedes others' rights.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    12. Re:Why stop at evolution? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      I'm not George Bush, nor would I have voted for him. Lets make that clear.

      As for your question, yes, all science books should be accurate. That's what I'd expect. Innacuracies should be corrected, no matter the special interest group that had the idea or what their subtexts may be.

      For what its worth, I pointed out several non-evolution examples myself in my postings, please read them.

      "God did it" is a perfectly valid answer if you believe in God, just as string theory is a valid theory if you believe in strings and black holes are an answer to where the missing matter in a galaxy is if you believe in them too.

      There is evidence for each, not a lot, but some. It bears interpretation. Maybe in a few thousand years we'll prove black holes really do exist, that strings hold the universe together, and that God designed it all to be so. Perhaps we'll disprove all three. Until then, none of the above is less valid on its own legs than the others.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  594. Do you have a BETTER explanation? by khasim · · Score: 1
    I would love to see some examples of biological textbooks advocating critical thinking of evolution.
    Until you understand it, you cannot be critical of it.
    Instead of that, the textbooks present a history of events involving the theory, and explain evolutionary theory, but do nothing for showing weaknesses in evolutionary theory.
    And what would those "weaknesses" be?

    Be specific.
    The closest we get to critical thinking are short, amusing anectdotes involving Lamarckism.
    If Lamarckism is your standard for "critical thinking" then you've already lost.

    Lamarckism is easily and quickly disproved. No matter how much I bench press, any children I have
    will NOT be born stronger.

    "Critical thinking" doesn't mean complaining about something that you don't understand. If you see a problem with it, then why don't you come up with a counter theory that can better explain the observed facts AND be more testable.
  595. Re:Yay! by nickco3 · · Score: 1

    That's all very well, but how far do want to take this "understand the foundation" thing? Do you need to study the Legend of Gilgamesh to understand the story of Noah? Of course not. Do you need to understand the Zoroastrian concepts of dualism and monotheism before you can grasp the Judeo-Christian interpretation? Obviously not.

    --
    -- Nick "Hallo this is Beel Gates, und I pronounce weendows as ... WEENdows"
  596. 1st Admendment vs Destruction of Property by freshBlueO2 · · Score: 1

    I think many of you have missed the point (all though I admit I haven't read the case). Don't argue over Evolution and creation, and science and relgion.

    First of, the sticker is a form of free speech, which is just as important as weither a student is allowed to pray his/her relgion with a group of similiar students. However, no matter what the sticker says, the act in itself is a destruction of state property. Therefore even though the court rule is probably correct and fair in the end, the reason behind the ruling is not.

    On the angle of what the sticker actually says, no matter what your relgious belief I think many of you are forgetting the fundamentals of science. Evolution IS a theory, not a fact. Creation is ALSO a theory and not a fact. And practically ALL of science is theory, not fact. Few items even get the privliage of the "LAW" status, except when talking about mathematics. I'd say 95% of mathematical theorys are actually law (fact), while less than 1% of all the other sciences' theorys put together have the "law" status and even those are still thrown back to "theory" status do to finding "experiments" that prove the theories wrong (think netwon vs einstein).

    1. Re:1st Admendment vs Destruction of Property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wrong.

      Evolution is a fact, not a theory.

      "Natural Selection" is the first theory put forward to explain the observable fact of evolution.

      Creationism isn't a theory at all. It's religious dogma. There is nothing scientific about it. It doesn't belong in any science classroom, period.

      If you want to each Christian Creationism in public schools, it can be done in a mythology class or a comparative religions class, where all the various creation theories are discussed.

      There is little in science that is more well established than evolution. To single it out for special treatment seems beyond silly.

    2. Re:1st Admendment vs Destruction of Property by witwerg · · Score: 1

      Umm.. Maybe micro-evolution.

    3. Re:1st Admendment vs Destruction of Property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution is a theory that has evidence to support it other than the ravings of desert nomads.

      The theory of evolution has examples like how strains of bacteria evolve to become resistant to different types of antibiotics.

      Creationism has "because some nutjob said God told him."

  597. Easy solution... by martinultima · · Score: 1

    Use common sense! Biology and evolution are science, and creationism is religion. Do they teach about subatomic particles in church? No, I didn't think so.

    If I wanted to learn about some bullshit thing where some all-powerful guy with nothing better to do creates everything and that has flaws everywhere (it only takes five minutes to crack almost 3,000 years, you know), I'd take a religion class. Oh wait - separation of church and state :-)

    --
    Creative misinterpretation is your friend.
  598. Err by DrBytes · · Score: 0

    You guys need a revolution.

  599. The ultimate revenge on creationists. by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    The ultimate revenge on creationists is to apply the theory of evolution to them:

    Let them have their own society where they live with each other and teach their children whatever they want.

    Of course, any people who hold beliefs they deem incompatible with the surrounding society should be allowed to similarly separate.

    Such self-determination is the foundation of all human rights.

    It is also the way nature creates: Through natural selection of variation.

  600. Re:Yay! by nickco3 · · Score: 1

    ABC News: Famous Atheist Now Believes in God

    You mean: Famous 81 year old Now Believes in God.

    --
    -- Nick "Hallo this is Beel Gates, und I pronounce weendows as ... WEENdows"
  601. Hopefully by Aslan72 · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Hopefully this is a well moderated discussion. I don't really see this as coming under the realm of either 'News for Nerds' or 'Stuff that matters'.

    Unfortunately, most of teh 2236 comments probably consist of "I'm right and you're a piece of crap".

    --pete

  602. Test for proof of existance of god by blackjackshellac · · Score: 1
    A very good test to determine whether there is a god,
    Personally, I would think an atheist would approve of the religious trappings of the Bush inaugural. If Bush takes the oath of office with his hand on a Bible and is not struck by lightning, that's proof there is no God. -- www.mahablog.com
    The good thing about this particular test is that, either way, we win.

    Salut,

    Jacques

    --
    Salut,

    Jacques

  603. Isn't it interesting by BryarWolf · · Score: 1

    Two things I noted in most of this discussion. One. It immediately fell into darwin vs. creation. That's not very important. What is important is that while Darwin's microevolutionary theory seems to work out, his macroevolutionary theory has not been proven. Darwin himself stated that if the fossil evidence could not be found to support it, then his macro theory was incorrect. Most of the time what people start arguing about is Darwin's macro theory. Sorry folks, but the evidence is pretty clear that the macro theory is wrong, but very few in the scientific community will stand up and oppose the secularist gospel. FYI. I believe in our creator. I know that there is no such thing as a "separation of church and state". AND I believe that Darwin made some wonderful observations and good guess about the wonders that God has placed in our world.

    1. Re:Isn't it interesting by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Thank you! And here I thought that all slashdotters were secularists. This is a very encouraging comment posting and I'm not being sarcastic either.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    2. Re:Isn't it interesting by randallpowell · · Score: 1
      I know that there is no such thing as a "separation of church and state".

      Why does every Christian have to say that? I'm assuming you support a Christian theocracy.

  604. "Evolution is a theory" is correct by PaneerParantha · · Score: 1

    I know I'm late jumping into the debate, but here's my 2-pence. In scientific method, a "theory" is a "hypothesis" that has been confirmed through repeated experimental tests.
    A "hypothesis" is (an educated) guess.
    In general language though, a "hypothesis" is what people mean to say when they say "theory."
    So when the sticker said that Evolution is a Theory, it is correct from scientific language point of view.

  605. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I am kinda split if it is a good thing to make "keep open mind" stickers unconstitutional.

    They say that? Oh, right. They don't. Loser.
  606. Above Post is Complete Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    By your definition, how does evolution have more observed changes then relativity?

    What do you think you're attempting to say in this sentence, and what relationship do you think it has to the post you claim to be replying to? Please learn to read before posting.

    Relativity is the most observed theory off all time - and you can actually test it!

    No, it's not the theory with the most observed theory of all time. General relativity does currently hold the record of the single most precise measurement verifying the theory, beating out quantum electrodynamics in the 1990s, but it does not have the largest number or widest variety of supporting observations.

    The theory of natural selection can and has been tested. It's always been supported by evidence, while prior theories that attempted to explain evolution, like Lamarck's have failed and thus are no longer taught in biology classes.

    Evolution is a collection of untestable observations, with some outliers that don't quite meet the data.

    What do you think an untestable observation is? "Untestable observation" is an oxymoron, so you're obviously not thinking clearly, a problem common to opponents of evolutionary biology.

    Please, get a clue.

    You should save you clues for yourself. You clearly couldn't read or understand the post you're responding to, as all of your points are either non-sequitors or completely nonsensical.

    I don't mind if you call them both theories - but to claim evolution has more data then relativity?

    Natural selection and GR are both theories.

    Where did above post claim that evolution (sic; you mean natural selection) had more data than (general) relativity? I don't know which theory has more supporting evidence, but no one made the claim you're protesting.

  607. Play on words. by Jagasian · · Score: 1

    There are basically two different definitions of "theory" involved in this debate. The plebeian meaning of "theory" is "a vague idea", while the scientific meaning of "theory" is much stronger on the scale between "fact" and "fiction", leaning closer towards fact than the plebeian definition, which sits very close to fiction. It is even more enlightening to compare these two definitions of "theory" to the meaning used in mathematics, where a mathematical theory is absolutely fact and absolutely true.

    These stickers are a tool of creationist, who intend to confuse the difference between the multiple meanings of the word "theory". It is definitely a violation of church and state, and a sick example of how religion can be used to set back scientific progress and education.

  608. mod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +1, Anthropic Principle

    1. Re:mod by Alsee · · Score: 1

      +1, Anthropic Principle

      Chuckle. Is that the theory that says if I'm reading a post that it has been modded up? Otherwise I wouldn't have seen the post and would never have asked the question in the first place?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  609. leave out the falsehoods by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i don't have a problem with evolution in the text books, but when various theories in evolution are undoubtably proven false, they should be stripped from the books. agreed?

  610. Re:Yay! by Major+Lame+Brain · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's actually quite tiring to try to make rational arguments to "believers" who seem to lack the ability to recognize what, to me, are pretty straight-forward logical arguments.

    Here's a simple description of evolution in progress over the last hundred years:

    A while ago, some guy discovered that penicillin (sp?) killed a lot of bacteria quite effectively -- as a result the medical community (and the human population taken as a whole) received the benefits of antibiotics. Well antibiotics are incabable of killing every bacterium in a given host -- especially if the entire percribed course isn't taken). The result is that those bacterium with an existing resistance (not immunity -- just enough better able to withstand the assault that they don't die) to the treatment are the ones that survive to create progeny. They pass their resistance on to their "children". Those children are then subjected (possibly in a different host) to another treatment, maybe even of a different antibiotic, and the cycle repeats. Ultimately, this produces a strain of, say, staphlococcus (sp?) that laughs at penicillin (sp?), and since species are simply our classification of organisms based on certain characteristics -- presto! a new species of bacteria. Get it?

    DNA, the agent of heredity (as much a theory as evolution is, I might add), is subject to occasional changes in the order of the nucleotides that make up it's structure -- errors in replication or mutagens that cause one of the nucleotides to be replaced by another have been shown to occur regularly but only sometimes have any effect on the organism. Of course we know that DNA codes for the creation of protiens and if the change in the order of nucleotides is sufficient than the type of protien is different enough to affect the function of a critical action (like the ability to deal with penecillin (sp?)).

    Simple enough right?

    I'd be delighted to hear a well reasoned argument that describes how we now have resistant strains of bacteria that relies on intelligent design instead. Maybe God *wants* us to get gangrene so he just creates a new variety while we wern't looking and tricks us meanwhile by allowing observed bacteria as they evolve in a laboratory?

    I know that ID really means that life is too complex to have arrisin (sp?) by chance but rather required an Inteligence to allow it to happen -- but that is untestable, unrepeatable, and un-observable, and make no predictions about future observations -- so it isn't science and has no place except in philosophy or religeon classes.

    --
    I report to Colonel 2.6.1 and General Chaos is his boss.
  611. Reminds me of the old joke by delcielo · · Score: 1

    A flood hits a small town and a homeowner finds himself stuck on the roof of his house surrounded by water.

    A few hours into the first day a rowboat comes by and the man at the oars tells the man on the roof to get in, he'll make sure he gets to shore safely.

    "No, thank you" the man on the roof says. "I have faith that my Lord will save me."

    The next day, with the waters still rising, a powerboat comes by. Despite repeated entreaties, the man will not get off of the roof. "I have but to wait for my Lord. He will deliver me from the valley of the shadow of death." After more attempts at reason, the crew of the powerboat leave him on his roof.

    On the third day the waters are creeping up the slant of the roof, and the man is stuck at the peak. A helicopter flies low over him and a rescue swimmer jumps into the water and swims to the man on the roof. "No" he says. "You may get into your basket and leave. I have been a servant to God my whole life. He will not forsake me. He will deliver me. You'll see."

    On the fourth day the man drowns. He goes to heaven and after passing through the gates is greeted by God.

    "Why did you leave me to die, Lord? Have I not been a good and faithful servant?"

    God replies: "I SENT TWO BOATS AND A HELICOPTER!"

    --
    Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
  612. Thank What? (nt) by danila · · Score: 1

    nt

    --
    Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
  613. Where is the "creationism?" by jav1231 · · Score: 1

    Take notes, people. Liberals never want you to expose any truth about them. "Global Warming" has to be a fact and no one can be critical. The Theory of Evolution worked under just such a dogma. Hammer it until it's accepted as fact and redicule any attempts to question it.
    The sticker said "Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."
    Someone explain the "creationism" in that statement, please. I can't find it. Let's break it down. "Evolution is a theory, not a fact." True. Widely held and supportive of evidence, but a theory nonetheless. "The material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered." This could just as easily be construed as ENCOURAGING creationsists to consider Evolution. Once again academia wants "careful, scientific, and logical study" to only inlcude acceptance of their ideology. This is idiotic.

  614. Only in America? by dltallan · · Score: 1

    My wife was asking me this morning, having seen this news item in the paper, whether any developed nation other than the U.S. has a significant proportion of the population not believing in evolution (according to Gallup[http://www.gallup.com/poll/content/login.as px?ci=14107], 2/3 of Americans do not believe evolution is well supported by the evidence!).

    I wasn't aware of any. Can anyone offer other countries with similar situations.

    Note, this isn't stray America-bashing. Both my wife and I are American citizens (in the 1/3 minority), although we don't currently reside in the US. It's a sincere question.

    --
    Respectfully, David Tallan
  615. Noone will see this by Apreche · · Score: 1

    Nobody will see this post, but I have to make it. Do you stupid Americans realize that every other country in the world laughs at us when we talk about creation? This issue was settles many many years ago in just about every other western society. Only in America are enough people stupid creationists to have any amount of recognition in society. If you were creationist just about anywhere else not only would you be a member of a ridiculous minority, you would also be a laughing stock. People in the United States largely do not understand science and technology. And eventually that will be the ultimate downfall.

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    1. Re:Noone will see this by scootr1 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you can explain what existed before the big bang. Was there nothing? Did matter spontaneously create itself?

    2. Re:Noone will see this by be0wulfjr · · Score: 1

      I took the Flame-bait...
      "Do you stupid Americans realize that every other country in the world laughs at us when we talk about creation?"

      I don't believe this is true (considering Jewish, Muslim and Christian peoples around the world hold this belief) but even if it is, let them laugh at us. We are free to hold whatever beliefs we want.

      "People in the United States largely do not understand science and technology. And eventually that will be the ultimate downfall."

      Our country's success has made us too comfortable and we may have slipped a bit in the Science department. However, when our country is challenged, do not be surprised at what our people are capable of.

      I feel that the school system should be able to use the sticker. Other stickers should be allowed as well.

  616. Re:Yay! by fakeplasticusername · · Score: 1

    It is impossible to understand Judaism-Christianity, without understanding their pagan, egyptian mythology, and nature-worshipping foundation.

    You don't see many southern baptist ministers delving into that rabbit hole.

  617. Laugh. Its funny. by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1
  618. Know what you're attacking by Aguila · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I take offense at the parent's summation of my beliefs about religion, particularly his putting words in my mouth claiming I believe "It [religion] doesn't need to make sense." Before you attack somebody this way, make sure you know what you're talking about.

    Religion makes quite a bit of sense, and if Catholicism did not answer and agree with more of the facts I have observed about existence than any other explanation, I would not be a Catholic. You claim the basic beliefs of a Catholic are contradictory and absurd. (I assume you meant contradictory to science.) Well, let's examine the beliefs you stated:

    the existence of an all-powerful/all-knowing being - Science says absolutely nothing against this, and the existence of miracles (many documented, many non-subjective, but not qualifying as scientific proof as we cannot command God to provide miracles on demand) provides ample evidence.

    life after death/heaven and hell - Please tell me which scientist has died and reported back that there is nothing. Science implicitly cannot measure anything about what happens after death, as we cannot provide an observer. Strong argument in favor of religion is that science also cannot explain life itself (organic life yes, but not the concept of making choices). I have more evidence for my ability to make decisions (true decisions, not computations) than I have for even gravity. Pure science has not yet offered any explanation of how I as a purely material being could make a real choice. Therefore, there is more evidence for religion (albeit not a specific one) than for the theory of gravity.

    creationism: If you had actually read my post which you were attacking, you would have seen that I am not a creationist (and neither is the Catholic Church). The Catholic Churh has no problem with evolution assuming you allow that God created man, through evolution.

    Please at least understanding what you are attacking before you do so. I have applied all my scientific skill to my examination of my religion, and have never found a true contradiction. Religion, for the most part, addresses issues that are not measurable by science, such as what happens after death. For the rest, there is strong evidence for religion. I'm not ignoring the contradiction; I have searched and found there is none.

    1. Re:Know what you're attacking by mrscorpio · · Score: 1

      I assume that, as a scientist, you have researched the history of Catholocism and found that at its core it is a corruption of the teachings of Jesus by Roman emperors, right? Like the fact that the "Holy Bible" has had all of the books excluded that show women on equal footing to men, for instance?

      BTW, I am not protestant, or any other religion for that matter, before you go that route.

    2. Re:Know what you're attacking by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 1

      I'm attacking no one or nothing; you're entitled to your opinion, but it does not mean the reasoning used is sound.

      "Science says absolutely nothing against this[..]"

      Well, yes, that was one of my points; you can't scientifically disprove that God or the toothfairy didn't create the world just a second ago, with fossils and even our own memories of having lived for years included. Any other theory which is in such a way not falsifiable would be thrown into the bin, by scientists. Since you claim to be a scientist, you should do the same with your belief, yet you don't, which is why I claim their IS indeed a problem. The problem lies not in the personal arena, because ppl have a way of making it everything ok in their mind, whatever the reasoning used, but you do have a problem if you look at it in a scientific way, as a scientist would/should do.

      It amazes me that as a scientist, you do not realise that any theory which is not falsifiable is basically worthless, at least in the scientific viewpoint.

      Thus, though every person has the right to his belief, even when it's in santa claus, I still maintain that their is a contradiction between science and belief.

      "The Catholic Churh has no problem with evolution assuming you allow that God created man, through evolution."

      Actually, they had A LOT of problems with it. It's just that science progresses and has the upperhand (at least since the enlightenment) on what the bible or the pope dictates. Since the *scientific* view is widely accepted now, the church can't else then agree to it. Yet, even now, as the article demonstartes, you have ppl who actually believes what the Bible says, and they would consder themselves to be the true 'devaut' christian.

      And in fact, they would be right. Strictly spoken, what they say is closer to what the bible says, and you could easily be called a heretic. I find modern christiaans are the worst of two worlds: they only take out of the bible what suits their own viewpoint, and disregard all the rest (for instance, like the fact that God, especially as described in the old testament, is one hack of a vengefull son of a bitch). Mostly it is done in a 'revision' of the bible, where the aspects that are obviously absurd or contradictory are remade into an allegoric sense, or revamed into something esotheric, that is impossible to prove. 'God created man, through evolution' is a prime example of that. Nonsense, for as long as one can remember, and to some degree even till today, the church has said that god created man, as described in the Bible, period. 'Evolution' is nowhere mentionned in the Bible.

      So you see, you don't really follow the bible or what it really mans, but rather you use it like a self-service buffet: you use what you want, and the rest you denounce as being allegoric or 'tales'. Well, be consistent and acknowledge the possibility the whole Bible is a tale and allegoric, then.

      It is simply not possible to respect the scientific viewpoint, and yet remain convinced of a tale, because no one can disprove the (parts of the) tale (you kept as belief). The true scientific respons has always been to adher theories to falsification; and if theories are inherently unprovable, then they are scientifically spoken worthless.

      Now, it can well be that you and other people, on a psychological level, have a need to belief and maybe feel better and happier by it, but that's not the scientific viewpoint, but a personal one. That's why I said their is a problem if you want to be both. If you do that you are either not being scientific about it, or not a really devaut catholic (in the strict sense), and probably both.

      "Strong argument in favor of religion is that science also cannot explain life itself"

      Bullocks. Lightning didn't used to be explained by science neither, the same with earthquakes etc.: they all were frequently attributed to God in the past. If you're reasoning would make sense, then, indeed, it would have been a strong argument in favor of

      --
      --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
    3. Re:Know what you're attacking by Alsee · · Score: 1

      not yet offered any explanation of how I as a purely material being could make a real choice.

      Heh. What makes you think you could make a real choice?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  619. Yes, more stickers! by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...stating that they too are not facts...

    I too would prefer more stickers. Stickers indicating that the aforementioned stickers are not proven facts, but they themselves are opinions regarding the factual nature of the theories contained within the attached book.

    1. Re:Yes, more stickers! by poirchr · · Score: 1

      how about this... we label every book in the library with stickers stating that the contents of the book are not facts. In fact (and I use the word lightly), nothing is a known fact, even this statement.
      The only thing I can know for certain is that I exist.
      Just because the hammer fell to the ground the past 1000 times I dropped it doesn't mean that I know for certain that it will drop to the ground the next time I let go of it.

    2. Re:Yes, more stickers! by legirons · · Score: 1

      "I too would prefer more stickers. Stickers indicating that the aforementioned stickers are not proven facts, but they themselves are opinions"

      A business card with "the text on the other side is not a fact" printed on both sides...

    3. Re:Yes, more stickers! by shic · · Score: 1

      I too would prefer more stickers.

      According to my sister (a teacher) most children have a fetish for adhesive labels. If we can use this preoccupation to encourage the voracious reading of scientific textbooks in schools maybe this would prove an own-goal for the creationists?

  620. "the" implies "the one and only" by Jagasian · · Score: 1

    What I think is funny is that there are educated people who think that there is such a thing as "the Calculus". "Calculus" literally means a formal system for mathematical reasoning. There is integral differential calculus, as well as various logical calculi such as Gentzen's sequent calculi, and there are calculi for algorithms too, such as the lambda-calculi, etc.

    Talking to some people, you get the impression that mathematics is something that was set in stone a few hundreds of years ago, and that mathematics is solely about numbers. This helps explain the completely broken public school curriculum for mathematics, which holds integral differential (in your case "the") calculus as the zenith of mathematics... forcing everybody down the same educational path, at the expense of other branches of mathematical education.

  621. It is a theory - as are many scientific by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Darwin's theory may have only got it partly correct. Just as Newton's gravitation theory has been superceded by Einstein's theory.

    This has some great discussions and a bibliography on problems with neo-Darwinism:

    http://www.jamesphogan.com/bb/archives/evolution.s html/

  622. Exactly, Silence the infidels! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank God that no one knows Macroevolution is a theory! But seriously, I don't understand what is creationist about stating that Macroevolution is a theory. If anything that should encourage evolutionist students to get interested in arguing their point of view. Now, I know the idea of encouraging students to think is pretty scary for you, but you'll get over it.

    If I was (still) an evolutionist I'd be pretty interested in getting students thinking because most of them in high school and college don't even know the difference between microevolution and macroevolution!

  623. Religious Texts should get t his sticker by SilkBD · · Score: 1
    Fine, then include a sticker on every bible and religious text saying:

    "This book contains material on religion. Relion is a baseless usubstantiated theory lacking evidence of validity, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered in context of the evidence presented."

    --
    00101010
  624. the laughing stock of the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please forgive me (a representitive of the old Europe) for this comment. Or maybe not. I don't really care ...

    The U.S. attempt to teach the world about democracy ... and commit crimes against humanity in Iraq.

    The U.S. want to be seen as the nation that is on the forefront of science and technology ... and teach creationism in schools.

    Thanks America, but we don't need your advice. We are already xxx years ahead of you.

    What can we learn from a country where it takes a lawyer to tell people that the content of a hot coffee mug is actually hot ??? :-)

    What can we learn from a country that believes its own propaganda? We have seen it in our past. Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union showed us where this leads. What can we learn from a country which managed to split the world along religious borders (christian vs. muslim)? We thought we can co-exist with everybody. At least we try, rather than using Hitler's "with us or against us" ...

    But in case you need help, we will be there for you ... because we have learned. (And yes, we have a lot to learn ourselves!!)

    Will the Bush government become the 'McCarthys' of the 21st century, by advancing the influence of religion over science, using religion to justify their agendas and excluding people who don't conform to their world view?

    For all the criticism: Europe has to learn a lot itself: think of former Yugoslavia, the problems with the Basque drive for independence, immigration from North Africa, etc etc No tto mention the troubles in the former Soviet republics. Wouldn't it be nice, if a more advanced America could lend us a hand, rather than dropping bombs on everyone?!

    1. Re:the laughing stock of the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a representitive of the old Europe

      For crying out loud! I have said this before and I say it again, there is no old Europe! Only Europe, no matter what the monkey in a whitehouse says! And yes, I realize you a European, so you should know not use this stupid old Europe/new Europe naming thing.

  625. Sticker Fun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They can slap stickers on as many textbooks as they like, as long as I can slap a few of my own on their bibles!

  626. Re:Yay! by Zphbeeblbrox · · Score: 1
    First of all, evolution has been PROVEN to take place in some form or another, from bones and fossles, and whick would you be more inclined to believe - A modern theory with -=*PROOF*=- or a child's story that dates back c. 2000 years ago?
    Hrmmm very interesting. Can you provide some references to your statement concerning proof of evolution occuring? Is this definitive proof or merely evidence which could support the theory? Could this "childs story" also account for the evidence or is the evidence exclusively for Evolution? Which type of evolution exactly are we talking about? Macro or Micro?

    All these questions must be answered before your statement can be validated.
    --
    If you see spelling or grammatical errors don't blame me. I tried to preview but IE here at work borked the CSS
  627. Best Anon Post MOD UP by acomj · · Score: 1

    This is good... Mod up someone.. Please..

  628. Re:Yay! by Flibz · · Score: 1

    As I recall the theory goes that the whole increased brain capacity of man came about due to walking upright and the cooling effects of the elevated head.

    I would imagine that the human style feet were part of this process.

    I think that dogs (as an example) are outside of the process of natural selection. Breeds that would not survive in the wild have been artifically maintained by breeders into some of the freakish "dogs" that we have today to the detriment of their own quality of existence.

    As an example of many different similar animals, I think birds fit this example (see Darwin & Finches). But many of the differences are enviromental rather than physical - i.e. they've adapted gradually to their enviroment

    Returning to monkey feet though, I've seen me feet and they are pretty damned ugly!

  629. It MAY not be a fact by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Therefore, it is not a fact"

    Now that's not even a theory, that's a pure assertion.

    The theory of Evolution has clearly not been proven untrue, since we're not privy to a scientific examination of the unfolding of creation. Whether or not the theory of Evolution describes the facts which led to our existence will never be known. To say it is not a fact, is to presume that you have some supernatural insight. You do not.

    (Despite reigious beliefs which you may or may not posess, your lack of supernatural insight into the creation of the universe is a fact and it's quite impossible to contradict in any objective way.)

    1. Re:It MAY not be a fact by ultranova · · Score: 1

      The theory of Evolution has clearly not been proven untrue, since we're not privy to a scientific examination of the unfolding of creation. Whether or not the theory of Evolution describes the facts which led to our existence will never be known. To say it is not a fact, is to presume that you have some supernatural insight. You do not.

      If we do not know something for certain, then we cannot claim it's a fact, now can we ? ToE might be true, but it would be erraneous of us to claim it's a fact, since we don't know for sure. Therefore, as far as we are concerned, ToE is not a fact.

      In short: A fact is something that's known to be true. If you do not know if something's true, then it's not a fact.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  630. I beliefve...in the Scientific Method! by Number6.2 · · Score: 1

    You know, all this just boils down to people who cannot deal with any amount of uncertainty in their lives. Just let everything be explained, and they'll be happy.

    A saint once said, If it were not for the miracles, I would not be a Christian.

    The Age of Miracles is over. I'm an empiricist. Miracles are one thing, repeatable results are another. These days, Science gets the results.

    Let's look at the scorecard, shall we?

    Faith ruled Europe for fifteen hundred years with an iron hand. Faith's crowning achievement was some pretty buildings, some nifty art, and some good books that only a privileged few could read.

    Reason has ruled the Western world for the last five hundred. And while some may lament the dubious contributions in the areas of art and literature, our quality of life has risen dramatically.

    Faith gives you the courage to face the ravages of Nature as Nature pummels you into the ground. Big Reward to come in the Great Bye and Bye.

    Science gives you a big fat honking stick to beat Nature back with. Payoff in this lifetime if you don't get too stupid or too greedy.

    You know, maybe that's why the Fundies get so outraged: Science says that all of their "faith" is probably for nothing. No Hell below us, above us only sky. as John Lennon said. Pretty unsettling stuff for someone expecting his singing to drown out the screams of the damned in the Great By and By.

    Hey, that's what I believe, anyway

    6.2

    --
    "If god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him" --Voltaire
    1. Re:I beliefve...in the Scientific Method! by Chris+Z.+Wintrowski · · Score: 1

      You know, all this just boils down to people who cannot deal with any amount of uncertainty in their lives. Just let everything be explained, and they'll be happy.

      Science is not about dealing with uncertainty, it's about dealing with facts. Darwinian evolution is not a rock-solid, sound as the Earth is round, absolute fact - many of the main principles of natural selection do not even apply to humans. But yet, despite the inconsistencies, evolutionists cannot deal with the uncertainty of their hypothesis and so shout down the nay-sayers with all sorts of historical lies and insults, as you have done in your post.

      Faith ruled Europe for fifteen hundred years with an iron hand. Faith's crowning achievement was some pretty buildings, some nifty art, and some good books that only a privileged few could read.

      You should go read the history of Europe, my friend, for your sentiments are far from accurate. If it wasn't for the Church, you'd probably be an illiterate Muslim, and the highly refined sciences we know today would not exist.

      Reason has ruled the Western world for the last five hundred. And while some may lament the dubious contributions in the areas of art and literature, our quality of life has risen dramatically.

      Ha ha ha! If you think STDs being at an all-time high, and a significant portion of the population being obese is a "high quality of life", then you are even more crazy than what I had imagined!

      Science gives you a big fat honking stick to beat Nature back with.

      Go tell that to the tsunami victims.

      You know, maybe that's why the Fundies get so outraged: Science says that all of their "faith" is probably for nothing.

      Science says nothing of the sort. And it never will for that is beyond the scope of science. Perhaps if you were a scientist, you'd know that.

      --
      - Chris Z. Wintrowski -
      [ Site ]
    2. Re:I beliefve...in the Scientific Method! by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Has our quality of life really improved all that much? Sure, we live longer, but how often do we hear people lament about life's later years being worthless? If you equate "quality of life" with "living longer so we can stall death further", I'm not buying it.

      Have all the societal, technical, et al. advanced really helped us that much, as people and as a society? Are we better, happier people? I'm not so sure.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    3. Re:I beliefve...in the Scientific Method! by Number6.2 · · Score: 1

      Tell you what: you give up antibiotics, factory food, heat in the winter, and lving in a mostly plastic house, and I'll light a candle in the house of worship of your choice, government travel restrictions permitting.

      That seems fair to me. Your milage may vary, of course.

      Bad teeth, rotting away from the Plague, or starving to death doesn't make you more noble, but it certainly makes you more colorful.

      As to wether we are a better, happier people, well, that's a funciton of each individual. And one's own happiness, that's an individual's responsibility, isn't it? Happiness is not a guarantee. Hapiness is a possibility.

      6.2 version 6.3 Real Soon Now

      --
      "If god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him" --Voltaire
    4. Re:I beliefve...in the Scientific Method! by Number6.2 · · Score: 1

      My mother always told me to Never Feed the Negative Energy Monster. Have a perfect day, my friend

      Yours truly: 6.2

      --
      "If god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him" --Voltaire
    5. Re:I beliefve...in the Scientific Method! by Chris+Z.+Wintrowski · · Score: 1

      My mother always told me to Never Feed the Negative Energy Monster.

      Coward.

      --
      - Chris Z. Wintrowski -
      [ Site ]
  631. Re:Yay! by Zphbeeblbrox · · Score: 1
    I'd be delighted to hear a well reasoned argument that describes how we now have resistant strains of bacteria that relies on intelligent design instead. Maybe God *wants* us to get gangrene so he just creates a new variety while we wern't looking and tricks us meanwhile by allowing observed bacteria as they evolve in a laboratory?
    Here is your well reasoned argument. Resistant strains of bacteria occur not by the creation of "new" genes in the bacteria but by new arrangements of genes in the bacteria. or by genetic travel between bacteria strains. How does intelligent design account for this? Simple you have "in the beginning" just a few types of bacteria. These bacteria have lots of different attributes to allow them to be useful in a myriad of different places. The bacteria tend to specialize or breed out certain characteristics that either hinder or are unused. Some times this loss of charactistics results in harmful bacteria. Sometimes this loss also results in weaker bacteria. Here's the kicker though bacteria can trade genes. (whoah) So when a little used trait is needed its available in a smaller subset of the strain perhaps but still there. Additionally in any given strain of bacteria there are already resistent bacteria they just haven't gained dominance because that trait isn't giving them an edge. This is ,contrary to popular belief, not an evolutionary leap because they were already there. They didn't show up magically because the environment changed.
    --
    If you see spelling or grammatical errors don't blame me. I tried to preview but IE here at work borked the CSS
  632. Re:Yay! by ajs318 · · Score: 1

    You want evidence for evolution? Penicillin used to be a powerful drug. It isn't anymore. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are very real.

    Classical Darwinian theory suggests that misuse of antibiotics -- overprescription, and/or premature discontinuation of treatment -- should lead to the evolution of strains of bacteria which are resistant to those antibiotics. What do people do? They take antibiotics when they don't really need them, and stop taking them at the first sign of feeling better. But in those last couple of days of a course of penicillin, the combined effects of your body's immune system and the antibiotics together are killing every last germ stone dead; without that boost, the strongest bacteria could recover, multiply and pass on their immunity to the antibiotic, and you would eventually have a strain of bacterium that was resistant to a particular antibiotic.

    Scientific observation and experimentation bear this proposed mechanism out, so I am prepared to claim this as an observeable example of evolution in action.

    Beside which, if you want to go that far into it, electromagnetism is only a theory, not a fact; there could be some other, completely different reason why a television set works.

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  633. Re:My other reality makes sense by mattpalmer1086 · · Score: 1

    Hmmmm.... speaking philosophically, I'm not sure that Spinoza's argument holds up. Disclaimer: I don't know his work, so I'm just going on the argument presented in the parent post.

    "Therefore, there is an entity which contains both God and the Universe he created."

    Why must God be contained in another entity? That doesn't logically follow from any of the prior statements, or any other absolute necessity I can see. Introducing contradictory statements into the argument only invalidates the argument, not the subject of it!

    This may actually be a reflection of the naive (and at the time, perfectly scientific) belief that space and time were some kind of absolute given backdrop that "everything else" just happens in. So you couldn't conceive of an entity without also having somewhere for it to be.

    As far as religion goes, I don't even know what I am in terms of belief. The closest I can get is agnostic, but not necessarily in a Christian sense. I can argue it one way, and in the paradoxical style I've come to understand is the hallmark of this universe, when I follow it all the way to its logical end, it no longer makes sense, and I have to switch sides... Repeat...

  634. Re:Yay! by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

    That is what makes it difficult, of course. For the purposes of this discussion (how the "correct" moral values are chosen), we are a democracy. The exact form is only a second order change. It just happens that one of the morals of our society is not to shove our morals onto other people, except in extreme circumstances (murder is wrong, stealing is wrong, etc.).

    The problem with sticking with testable, scientific methods is that there is disagreement about what constitutes a testable method. Many scientists do not believe that palentology is a science. Most scientists do not believe that Psychiatry is a sciences. Others do believe those to be a science... who's "moral" judgment do we go with? In our society, we have said the majority decides (or as you have pointed out, more of a locally weighted majority, but still the majority).

    This is not a black and white issue. Honestly, I'm not sure which side of the argument I am really on, I just know it is not a simple argument. I teach my daughter, so I am not really worried about what her teacher at school teaches. But that is not true of others, and there are people that unfortunately believe whatever is told them by those in authority, and there exist teachers that teach evolution as law.

    If a parent teaches their child creationism, that is protected by freedom of religion. Teaching a contrary theory (evolution) as the "truth" in school, without at least mentioning the level of dissent in society, would be unethical no matter what you believe. And believe it or not, what is taught in school is accepted as truth by the vast majority.

    (Evolution is at the very least an extremely important theory, because it is the only successful theory to violate causality.)

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  635. missing link by phyruxus · · Score: 1
    >>Where is the physical evidence for the theory of common ancestry? Where are the missing links?

    Haven't you heard?

    >>Just like science can't explain the pre-big bang universe

    s/can't/hasn't/

    If you want to quibble about missing data points even when the curve is clearly visible, maybe you'd like to explain to me where God is when kittens are run over by cars? Having his omnibenevolence washed and waxed? Please.

    --
    "A witty saying proves nothing." ~Voltaire
    "d'Oh!" ~Homer
  636. Re:Yay! by Long-EZ · · Score: 1

    Yet biologists' investigation of DNA "has shown, by the almost unbelievable complexity of the arrangements which are needed to produce (life), that intelligence must have been involved," Flew says

    What's he talking about? Comparitive DNA analysis is one of the best proofs for evolution.

    I've studied the entire human genome thoroughly, and found no evidence of intelligent design. You want to impress me? Show me pi to 20 places encoded in DNA, the Fibonaci sequence, or the first 64 prime numbers.

    But there was a section near the end of the Y chromosome where, if you played it backwards it said, "Paul is dead." That really freaked me out. But it's within the statistical limit of probability.

    --
    >> My ultraviolent Linux switch video.
  637. Why this insistence on either-or in the debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that evolution school K12 textbook controversies suffer from being a proxy for theism versus atheism debates. That is the real reason they become so heated--the actual facts are twisted by both sides of THAT debate. For example:

    atheist: we see bacteria evolve to become resistant to antibiotics. Therefore natural selection explains everything, and there is no God. (Biased argument: I don't think God exists, and I select facts to support my view.)

    theist: we cannot explain how the improbable complexities of life came to be. Therefore God exists. (Biased argument: I believe in a God and select facts to support my view.)

    The fact is that many Christians believe in physical but not spiritual evolution: see
    http://www.oca.org/pages/orth_chri/Q-and-A_OL D/Evo lution-and-Orthodoxy.html

    and some atheistic philosophers have argued that we may live in a computer simulation, which is a creation that does not require a God of ordinary religion: see
    http://www.simulation-argument.com

    So we can have theism with or without evolultion and creationism with or without theism.

    The problem is that, on the street in the US, many people think that belief in God and belief in evolution are incompatible. They are not.

  638. Is evolution a science by exor · · Score: 1

    Is evolution even a science. My definition of science is the scientific method.

    You create a hypothesis
    You test the hypothesis
    You either confirm or change you hypothesis
    You write a conclusion

    And be able to repeat.

    You can test the theory of gravity.
    Pick up an object and let go
    Repeat as many times are you like
    You do not need to see gravity to test the effects of gravity.
    You can do the same for electricity.
    You can see the electron cloud using a very good microscope

    These are sciences you can use MATH to project what is going to happened and test you projection.

    Can you test evolution?
    Does is stand up to the scientific method?
    Can you test your hypothesis?
    Can you change one species to another?
    Can you repeat the process?
    Can you use Math to calculate what is going on?

    Then answer is no

    Until we have more science and less theory it is not a science
    Evolution is best a hypothesis at worst a MYTH.
    It should not be in a science text book

    1. Re:Is evolution a science by fbjon · · Score: 1

      Possibly so, but creationism is at best a belief, and at worst a HOAX.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    2. Re:Is evolution a science by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

      It is only a belief. Just like our current scientific state, with the exception being that religion is based on unobserved (and possibly unobservable) axioms of universal processes. I don't think you can really provide an at worst scenario, if only because of my previous statement.

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
    3. Re:Is evolution a science by fbjon · · Score: 1
      I don't think you can really provide an at worst scenario, if only because of my previous statement.
      Good point. But I just got an idea: isn't it possible to construct a hypothesis, such as to explain the origins of religion, and point out that Christianity (as a religion) is a hoax? This would be difficult to prove, since evidence is probably long-lost. But wouldn't it still be easier to prove than the religion itself?

      And interestingly: there are many hoaxes, rumours and myths going around the world, and have been probably for a very long time. One of them has to be the most succesful (i.e. the most popular). Couldn't various religions (not restricted to christianity here) conceivably have this property?

      And (going out on a limb here... ^_^;), when thinking about collection and missionaries, collecting funds and spreading the word: couldn't christianity be thought of as the biggest pyramid scheme ever? (overlapping with several roots).

      I'd say is IS actually a belief at best, and a hoax at worst. The only thing that can take away the hoax possibility would be profound evidence in support of the bible.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    4. Re:Is evolution a science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Ahm, yes, you can test it.

      We do it on a small scale all the time, the classics being fruitflys, zebra danios, and all sorts of examples with plants.

      Over a longer scale we've done it with dogs, and they _have_ become differnt species (i.e. the more divergent ones can no longer interbreed sucessfully).

      And there are some pretty good mathmatical models for how quickly genetic code can diverge and change with known mutation, breeding, and mortality rates. There have also been quite intersting studies in simulated life on computers that use evolution to produce differnt 'species' of 'life.

    5. Re:Is evolution a science by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

      Using our available methods of observation, in any possible time now or in the future, the existence of a metauniverse cannot be proven or disproven in any case. Existence itself is only a theory. You might prove certain axioms of certain organized religions just don't work, but you could almost certainly never prove that a particular axiom was present in the religion to begin with and not injected into it, either forcefully or as a byproduct of generational passage.

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
    6. Re:Is evolution a science by bankshot201 · · Score: 1
      Evolution is a central concept in Biology and must be understood to appreciate Biology as well as the history of modern science. It is "Intelligent Design" this season's well oiled gust of political hot air, that has no place in a science text book.
      Exor asks: "Can you use Math to calculate what is going on?"
      Yes, I'm a chemical engineer and I do that very well, as my understanding grows, so grows my power to predict outcomes.
      So I reference the University of Utah's Math Department Web Site and make a prediction:
      The University of Utah has Graduate Studies in Mathematical Biology. They have Cross-Disciplinary Research Training in Mathematical Biology to train graduate students to use the tools of Applied Mathematics to study the challenging problems of modern biology.
      The broad research emphases of the program are Biofluids, Ecology, and Evolutionary Biology, Neuroscience, and Physiology.
      I guarantee if you send them this thread along with a stickered high school biology text, they will have a really good belly laugh.
  639. Thank Jefferson! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Ohhhh! The children might actualy question evolution! They might listen to what these "christian nut jobs" have to say about it!

    Seriously though, why is it such a horible thing to have an alternate view presented.


    Even though you forgot the question mark, I'll awnser your "question":

    Because of the separation of church and state.
    In science class, they get taught science.

    No one is forcing churches to explain why Lamarck was wrong to their faithfull, so why would you want schools to indoctrinate children in your myths?

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  640. Physical Evidence for Evolution by data1 · · Score: 1

    DeoxyRibonucleic Acid also known as DNA.
    Look it up sometime - it will explain a lot.

    1. Re:Physical Evidence for Evolution by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Similar DNA doesn't prove anything. It's all very similar because God made it that way. All it really proves is that God is a lazy hack using copy n' paste a lot.

      Either that or God is a malicious bastard intentially planting false clues to deceive us.

      See? You have no proof for evolution at all!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  641. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bertrand Russell spent several years and actually proved, in the real and rigorous sense of the word, that 1+1 = 2

    You can't prove an axiom. What Russell would have "proved" would look something more like "A quantity, generally believed to be represented by the term 'one', having an operation applied to it whereby an identical quantity is associated with itself, produces a larger quantity, generally believed to be represented by the term 'two'." You can still doubt the validity of the terms, or of the operation itself.

  642. They should read: by obdulio · · Score: 1

    Evolution is a theory, not a fact.
    Creationism is a belief, not a fact.

    --
    PENAROL: Seras eterno como el tiempo y floreceras en cada primavera.
  643. Thank Bob! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    do we allow kids to throw salt over their shoulder, for good luck?

    Yes! Dear GOD yes we allow it.

    We just don't teach it in science class or include disclaimer stickers in statistics text books to that effect. But we sure do allow it!

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  644. Re:Yay! by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

    This sort of gets to it, but misses my point a little. In software, the code itself has no will to live so the analogy fails.

    Take 3 brothers, ug, zug, and zig. Zig has a mutation that leads his descendants to become human. Ug has a mutation that leads his descendants to become apes. Zug is normal. Why did Zug die? People like zug obviously outnumber the exceptions. People like zug have lived for millions of years. Now, because 1 member of the population has a mutation, suddenly every normal person dies? That deosn't make sense.

    Some people have said that it was because a hardship arose that killed off everyone that didn't have the mutation. That could happen, but would be VERY rare, and too rare to explain this (people survive for more than one reason, most of the time - even luck).

    The best explainations seem to be that an isolated group (constantly interbreeding) slowly becomes homogenized. So a mutation happens, and then the gene is slowly spread throughout the community if it is advantageous. I'm still not convinced that this would lead to much natural selection - in general even the weak animals get to breed at a certain point.

    Interesting responses, though.

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  645. Re:Religious Texts should get this sticker by adzoox · · Score: 1

    "lacking evidence of validity"

    This is one argument that atheists or agnostics can't make.

    Has no Sodom & Gomorrah been discovered? Was it not charred by a seeming "nuclear type" explosion?

    Was there no King Herod who had all the first born children killed?

    Was there no flood of any type? Is there no scientific evidence to support this?

    Was there no Paul?

    Before you answer no to any of those questions - do some research ... they all have proof they have existed and existed as decribed in the Bible.

    Now, the Bible may have a lot of unbelievable elements as well (to you). But evolution has a lot of unbelievable (and believable) elements to those that subscribe to the Bible.

    For instance ... I believe in the evolution of a species, but not the evolution of Ape to Man.

    I believe that dinosaurs roamed the earth - I do not believe they evolved INTO birds.

    I believe that Sabre Tooth Tigers existed - I do not believe they devolved into Tigers or that Tigers and domesticated kitty cats are anything related to evolution.

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
  646. Re:Yay! by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

    By the way, the point of all this is partially to show that what they are teaching in schools is known to be wrong by everyone that has studied it or merely believes in creationism. Even assuming that evolution is correct, the evolution being taught in school is incorrect in important ways.

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  647. Stickers on Religious texts? by Ced_Ex · · Score: 1

    By that same route of thinking, shouldn't stickers be placed into religous text as well?

    Mod this flamebait if you wish, but it made you think didn't it?

    --
    Live forever, or die trying.
  648. Re:Avoid the controversy!! There is a better answe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yes, and in English, forget shakespere, Instead, teach words, look through dictionary looking at words.

  649. Re:correct. by bamberg · · Score: 1

    Natural Selection happening on a microscopic scale does not in any way prove that we all started as dust and evolved into our current forms.

    The Theory of Evolution (unlike the bible) does not claim that we started as dust. What is the agenda behind your dishonest claim?

  650. Re:correct. by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    Do you have some other word for billions of tiny particles clumping together at random? What is the agenda behind your being a fucking moron who should shut up?

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  651. Ticklemonster's theory of relevance, it's a fact. by Ticklemonster · · Score: 1
    You all do of course realize that Darwin believed in a creator, don't you?

    As has been said, the theory of evolution never states anything about where anything came from in the first place, so creationism and evolution are two totally different topics that only nattering nabobs would waste their time fightng over. Apples and oranges, you dopes. Now quit with the mental gymnastics before you hurt yourselves.

    What was created could very well evolve, and that is the theory. Ring species are just nature's law that keeps cousins from makin' teh babies, you know. lol

    --
    Karma: Bad is the liberal way of saying this guy won't drink the kool aid here on slash dot. I wear my Karma with pride
  652. I'm all for the stickers ... by ciderpunk · · Score: 1

    ... providing we're allowed to stick "Christianity is only a theory" stickers on all the school bibles as well.

  653. Who needs stickers by ltbarcly · · Score: 1

    Creationists should wear stickers warning possible employers and associates that their brain does not work.

  654. foolish school board on Nightlight by peter303 · · Score: 1

    A nightline reporter asked board members last night was what Intelligent Design meant. Most bullshitted incoherent answers, showing they didnt have the faintest idea of what it was. I.D. is just a stand-in for anti-evolutionism, with relatively few understanding what it means.

  655. That sticker did no harm to students by PyrotekNX · · Score: 1

    Evolution was a philosophy created to alter the world views of the people that believed in the Theory of Evolution.

    Scientists have spent about 150 years doing research on evolution. There are many things in evolution that have been known to be a lie for at least 50 years. These lies are still in textbooks today.

    The more research into evolution, the more evidence is found against it. Any proof offered to evolution has turned out to be a fraud. Neandertal man is a hoax. The skulls found that were humanoid were in fact just humans. The more apelike skulls came from apes. Old human skulls with unusual characteristics have an ape's face put over it to give evidence for evolution. The first ape-man was proven to be a fraud in the 1930's. It was an ape skull with a human mandible. There is no missing link. The geologic column never existed.

    Here is the ugly truth about evolution.

    The people that created it and are teaching it to the people are conducting Psychological Operations (PsyOps) on us to help bring out their goals. PsyOps are downwardly delegated. It's not the individual teachers that want to brainwash the children. There are only a few book companies in the US that print textbooks for students. If you trace those companies back far enough you fill find that they are controlled by a central source. Colleges are a great place for someone to lose their faith and fall into the pitfalls of evolution. It's so strongly shoved down their throats so badly that students have to support the theory to graduate in many cases. Teachers get fired on a regular basis that don't believe in evolution (evilution). The Supreme Court members are biased for evolution.

    The nefarious plot to brainwash all of us is simply to bring out the New World Order.

    To bring out the NWO, society must change their ideas about world government, human rights and politics. The way they do that is by brainwashing, plain and simple.

    The Evolution THEORY is being taught in schools rather in depth. It doesn't matter that everything about it is a fraud and a lie to them. The art of brainwashing is making people believe in a well crafted story. The goal of the story is that it must be believable and the story gives covert and overt messages that try to make the reader accept whatever lie is being told to them. It's such a big lie that most people can't see around it because only 1 view is taught in the classroom. That's what brainwashing is all about, present one view and force people to learn a great deal about it without giving another side to compliment and suppliment it.

    1. Re:That sticker did no harm to students by TaintedPastry · · Score: 1
      So what you're saying...is that by some grand design, all school boards everywhere are controlled by the Illuminati?

      And if what're you saying is really true..that people are being duped into ditching their faith, then why was someone like G.W. allowed (this New World Order presumably would haver enough power to influence a little election) to take office, elected by faith based groups and every Mary Christian and Joe Hard-Worker out there?

      And why does 70% of the world's population still hold to faith-based practices. Is the New World Order trying to manipulate the Congo, and have the Tribesmen believe in nothing?

      Or are you shortsighted...did you not take into account that America and it's beliefs aren't the 'world'? Some school, somewhere teaches faith, and creation...and rich people pay lots of money for their bratty little kids to be out of their hair for 13 years of education.

      The New World Order doesn't exist as you paint it. It exists in another form...and it's figure head is a portrait of Benjamin Franklin.

      It's all about money my friend, not beliefs. If anything, this NWO you speak of is keeping people in line...keeping them going to their construction sites and sunday school meetings - teaching them to be content, work hard, and enjoy their free time raising kids and drinking beer by the lake.

      It's a beautiful life to some, enough of a challenge to make it not boring, but filled with enough ignorance to make it amazing. THATS what we're being duped into, a life of work. To support others with more money...and that , my friend, is what goes all the way to the top.

      Evolution isn't part of a grand design. The grand design is right in front of you. A scientific theory can only influence so much.

  656. 2 words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Body armor.

  657. Re:What Ever Happened to the "Free Exercise" Claus by davide+marney · · Score: 1
    Nobody is prohibiting the free exercise of religion with this ruling, merely making them do so outside school.


    First, one does not shed one's First Amendment rights "at the schoolhouse door". The Constitution protects free exercise of religion in the public sphere, and public schools, are, well, public.

    But that is not the main point. To say that evolution is a theory and one should have an open mind is simply not an endorsement of religion. One could have this opinion and not believe in God. In fact, having an open mind is supposedly something liberal-minded people who go where the facts lead them ought to support and encourage.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  658. Re:Yay! by compro01 · · Score: 1

    well, i personally think you bring up some semi-valid points in your flame, so i'll bite and reply.

    why are there still monkies around?

    well, reason for that is everything on the planet is equally evolved, they just took a different road and edned up where they are, we took another one, and ended up as the "intellegent" life form of the planet.

    Why don't dolphins have thumbs by now?

    evolvution works buy addapting to conditions, thumbs would be of little use underwater, and likely would impede the streamlinedness of a dolphin.

    --
    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  659. Faith and Evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Frankly,

    Evolutionists have more Faith then 99% of 'Religious Types'. I do not have enough faith to believe in the theory of evoltion. There is no single missing link in the fossil evidence. There are no links period. Not one single linking species. Most Americans still claim to believe in 'God'. But apparently this God is an all powerless god, who could never create anything complex or slightly beyond our tiny human comprehension. I think the reason this topic is a 'Hot Topic' is because it raises the concept of a God. Which forces people to realize they are accoutable for their actions, and that this short miniscule existence on this little planet isn't all there is.

  660. Wait a minute .... by poirchr · · Score: 1

    I'm just as tired of bible-thumping idiot moves like this as the next guy, but isn't the sticker right? Evolution IS a theory not a fact.

  661. Thank Religious Dogma. by theManOfRain · · Score: 1

    "This is a great day for Cobb County students," said Michael Manely, an attorney for the parents who sued over the stickers. "They're going to be permitted to learn science unadulterated by religious dogma."

    I suppose that he should thank religious dogma for the word "unadulterated"?

  662. Re:Yay! by appelflapje · · Score: 0

    Funny that the creationists think that the evolutionists are defending evolution. They're not. They're constantly trying to find more evidence. If it proves or disproves (part of) the theory is irellevant. What most evolutionists get upset about is that the creationists keep changing the rules (we want more proof, it's not fact, it's theory, you weren't there, so you can't be 100% certain), while they give no form of proof for their own claims (other than that it's written in a very old book, like age counts or something). And they're in the funny situation that giving proof only disproves their own religion, any religion for that matter. Since a religion is based on a BELIEF and not on FACT. So the wisest thing they can do (and don't do, for that matter) is keep their assumptions to themselves.

    Sometimes they try to be smart and think they've disproved the whole Evolution theory simply by asking a question that can't be answered yet. Like that proves something. Evolution theory is far from complete and it won't be any time soon. It's constantly expanding, whereas Creationism is still at exactly the same point it was when it was written down.

    I've heard one funny Creationism explanation trying to incorporate some of the facts that are presented by Evolution theory and it goes like this:

    God created man as a perfect being. All offspring of Adam and Eve are a little imperfect each generation, because of genetic mutation. The first men lived hundres of years, so that explains why Kain could find a wife (effectively his sister) and have offspring. I stopped listening right there.

    Now you've gotta give it to them, that's pretty creative thinking, right? :)

  663. I am a Christian... by xp_fetchbeer · · Score: 1

    I am an American, church-going, caucasian, midwest-living Christian. I believe placing these stickers on a science book is a mistake. I believe the theory of evolution is the closest explanation we have. I do not believe earth was created 6,000 years ago. Please don't generalize in a hateful way. There are more of us than you know.

    --
    I'm the decider.
    1. Re:I am a Christian... by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      Finally, a Christian. A real hard working American Christian. I like you and so does Buddha.

  664. Re:correct. by bamberg · · Score: 1

    Do you have some other word for billions of tiny particles clumping together at random?

    You are missing the point, which is hardly a surprise. The Theory of Evolution does not say anything about how life began, only about how it has changed over time. The theory of how life began is called abiogenesis. That particular theory has life beginning in the ocean. No one with two brain cells to rub together would claim that dust is a synonym for ocean.

    What is the agenda behind your being a fucking moron who should shut up?

    Wow. After only one message you fall to pieces. That's much more quickly than most people would have. Perhaps you should run along now before you before you lose the ability to form complete sentences.

  665. Re:Yay! by PriceIke · · Score: 1

    "The basic need for faith, in something, by far exceeds the need to keep one's worldview intellectually honest." - a Slashdot poster whose name I don't remember

    --
    It's not a lie. It's the truth with lossy compression.
  666. GRUNT by l4m3z0r · · Score: 2, Funny

    You. Right. Grumsh hate evolution. It stinky farty poo. Atheists go squish now!

  667. Non sequitur by lost+sheep · · Score: 1

    It's not that I don't believe in evolution--but let's look at what the sticker says and what the constitution says.

    1st Amendment:
    "...no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..."

    Sticker:
    "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

    I fail to see how viewing evolution as a theory establishes a state religion or prohibits the free exercise thereof. Furthermore, what about an atheist teacher who doesn't believe in evolution and tells his students that? Is he failing to separate church and state? What about the people that view evolution as a significant part of a religion? Sir Julian Huxley is quoted as calling "the most powerful and the most comprehensive idea that has ever arisen on earth." Does that mean that we should no longer teach evolution because it is part of some religion?

    (Note: Since I do not actually have Julian Huxley's Essays of a Humanist, I grabbed that quote from a website I found through google. Disclaimer: that website was a very anti-evolution website and so if that quote is wrong, missing context, or whatever, please tell me, but realize it was an honest mistake.)

    --
    -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Lost Sheep to Shepard, you got your ears on?
  668. School by SlyMonkey · · Score: 1

    When I was taking Biology in my Upstate New york High School, my teacher expalined there was an alternate theory called "poofism". He explained that some people believe that everything was made by an all-powerfull being that "poof!" created man and "poof!" created animals and.. you get the idea. Is that why I have a "Darwin" fish on my car these days?

  669. Interesting Decision by FinalCut · · Score: 1

    When I first heard of the sticker controversy I was pretty suprised. The sticker seemed innocous enough and had a valid point - think critically about the theory of evolution

    But the Judges ruling makes sense too. Why single out just one theory? The sticker should be more generic.

    This textbook presents some theories that are widely accepted, but NOT proven fact. When you encounter theories in this, or any book, you should think critically about the theory and any opposing viewpoints.

    I think this would not only serve the purpose of the religious folks who wanted the first sticker but maybe it would actually lead to one or two students to THINK about things.

  670. OMG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean there isn't one all powerful being responsible for all human existance thoughout this universe ? Now I have to say OMNEP (Oh My Natural Evolutionary Process)

    i sure wish someone would have told me sooner-rosery beads aren't cheap you know!!

  671. more Faith required... the engines cannae take it! by mattpalmer1086 · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that "faith" is confused with "existence belief" far too much. Faith is not the irrational belief in the existence of a god, a deeper meaning in life, or little blue fairies. It's the *act* of choosing to take a position, even if you're fully aware of the ultimate lack of proof either way. This may be a subtle distinction, but it's one that I don't think enough people make. Ultimately, most of us have some kind of faith, examined or not, whether it's in the existence, or non-existence, of god, or that tomorrow will be better, or that England will/won't win the next World Cup. Unanswerable questions that we take a position on. Strangely, religious people seem to confuse this more than non-religious people, possibly because they don't critically examine their thinking enough (the Christian church hasn't historically encouraged that kind of thing, even though JC himself was quite into questioning established thought patterns). It may also be because the theologies of established religions tend to become quite baroque. Try rationalising the unanswerable and see where you get after several centuries. So maintaining belief in the existence of all that baggage takes increasing amounts of Faith. Maybe this indicates that religions have a natural lifecycle. What seems like a wonderful, intuitive and liberating idea in the context of one millenia, over time accumulates keepers of the truth, theologians and other people with an irrational desire to package the numinous and mysterious like a box of chocolates. This may also explain why I know an increasing number of people who profess a belief in God, or at least, a Creator (which seems to me to be a more general word with less historical baggage) but do not, and will not follow the Christian Faith anymore.

  672. Or how about this sticker by asr_man · · Score: 1
    How about we just slap a little sticker on every Bible sold in GA:
    This Bible contains material called a creation myth. The creation myth is a story, not a fact,regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with the mind open to all creation myths in various religions scattered across the globe and the purposes those myths served in the pre-science cultures that originated and embraced them.
  673. Have they banned Michealangelo? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Will they send a student home for having a Sistine Chapel lunchbox? If not, there's the angle to take at the hearing (equal protection!). If so, well, it's a clear 1st Amendment problem.

  674. Re:Yay! by 72beetle · · Score: 1

    Hear, Hear!

    --
    -Those who dance are considered insane by those who can't hear the music.
  675. I live about 50 miles from there and tutor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I live about 50 miles from there and volunteer my time as a math-and-science tutor so I've gotten both sides of the issue from the beginning. I'm posting as an AC because I don't have an education degree and the local teacher's union gets a bit pissy about people infringing on their turf.

    [rant] Where did we ever get the idea that only people with an education degree can teach? It seems like the "professional teachers" would welcome all the help they could get! [/rant]

    Anyway, yes I got a lot of "finally our views are being represented" comments when the stickers went on, but I also got a lot of "by saying that evolution is just a theory, they're saying that it isn't true!" comments from parents. I can also tell you that my students were being taught as if evolution were an absolute fact, and the only possible explanation for how life came about. It's almost as if there was an "evolution religion".

    I use the opportunity to teach both students and parents about the scientific method, and to explain that a theory is just an explanation of all of the observed facts. Is it possible that there's more than one possible explanation? Of course! Is it possible that next week there could be an observation that would cause the thoery of evolution to have to be massively revised? Possible, but unlikely.

    Think of a species that is obviously maladapted to its envirionment, but is successful anyway. Its offpring are even more maladapted, but continue to be successful, even at the expense of better-adapted species. Of course, an immediate counter to this argument would be that the species in question only appears to be maladapted.

    Unfortunately, critical thinking has been essentially eliminated from the school system. It is much easier to get people to follow the dictates of government (no matter which party is in power at the moment) if they've never learned to think for themselves.

    BTW, did anyone listen to he interview that the plaintiff in the case gave? He didn't bring the case over any issue of scientific accuracy or educational excellence or anything like that. He stated that his purpose was to stem the tide of "theocracy" that he sees sweeping the nation. In other words, he was just an anti-religious zealot (And yes, I am a Christian) Flameproof underwear on!

  676. Perhaps you should read up on the ACLU? by dave-fu · · Score: 1

    NEWSFLASH! Dateline, Michigan - After ACLU Intervention on Behalf of Christian Valedictorian, Michigan High School Agrees to Stop Censoring Religious Yearbook Entries.
    So is fighting for a student's right to express themself in a yearbook is just the most insidious of the ACLU's never-ending struggle to exterminate Christianity in public life or are you just nurturing a healthy persecution complex?

    --
    Easy does it!
    This comment has been submitted already, 276865 hours , 59 minutes ago. No need to try again.
  677. Dogs and wolves by zoney_ie · · Score: 1

    It is no great stretch of the imagination to see different variations of a single species evolve - selective breeding achieves this. Humans have achieved a lot with such techniques with plants and animals in just a couple thousand years.

    Where the evolution theory breaks down for me is the theory that all life came from a single source, or even much earlier, that for example, mammals started out as one mammalish creature.

    Of course, there's a problem even with the "variations on a species" theory for "Creationists" (really, that's kind of tarring people with the one brush to use that label). The idea that humans, apes and monkeys came from the same source *is* in contradiction with the Bible's assertion that humans have been made in God's image. I can't really see how anyone claiming to be Christian (or indeed other such religions) can sit comfortably with the more involved evolution theories being thrown around, and more importantly, *sold as fact* to children. Not just in science lessons either, but everyday in many areas.

    I don't claim to have it all worked out, or to necessarily take the "7 day creation" story entirely literally. But I do consider many aspects of contemporary evolutionary hypothesising to be quite irresolvable with certain Biblical issues fundamental to the Christian faith. Humans being considered "just another mammal", and "things happening by accident" are not reconcilable with Christian beliefs.

    --
    -- *~()____) This message will self-destruct in 5 seconds...
  678. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I was going to say, the south is largely Protestant and anti-catholic....

  679. RTFA, CowboyNeal by Second_Infinity · · Score: 1

    "Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional"?

    Nothing about the stickers promoted Creationism. Criticizing one argument is not promoting another.

    The sticker reads:
    "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

    What inside that quotation gave you the idea it was promoting Creationism? It just says exactly what is the truth: Evolution is a theory - not a fact. It cannot be proven. Neither can the flipside, but neither should be returned as fact, then. It doesn't put down evolution either, as it says it should be "approacted with an open mind."

    Use your head next time you manufacture a misleading headline.

  680. Re:How could a statement of fact be unconstitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a fact that creationists are a bunch of retards, but I can't print that and put on a sticker.

  681. Re:Yay! by lgw · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if the parent post is trolling as the mods seem to think, but I certainly agree that what was taught as "evolution" in my high school biology class was crap. In fact, I think poor teaching of evolution in high schools is a strong reason for the rise of creation "science".

    You really can make a logical attack on what I was taught in high school, from the downright wrong ("Humans are the peak of evolution", "Evolution results in better organisms over time") to the so over-simplified as to be effectively wrong ("Evolution proceeds ny a combination of mutation and selection"). It's sad, really, but then I was also taught the Bohr atom one year without any caveats that it wasn't the current theory.

    At least should teach that the word "evolution", as used by biologists, means "a change in statistical distribution of alleles in a population over time", which is constantly observered in the field and in the lab. And especially what the word "theory" means to science (i.e., that "just a theory" is oxymoronic at best)!

    If anyone bothered to teach evolution as current understood by science, I don't think creation science" could get off the ground. Most of its attacks are against ideas still taught in high schools that no biologist in the field believes.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  682. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by fmaxwell · · Score: 1
    It sounds more like the school board is trying to encourage students to approach the theory of evolution with an open mind, not "denigrating the theory of evolution" as was stated in the court case. I think this sticker was meant to quiet the complaints of the 2000 parents who complained that the text books described evolution as the origin of life with-ought giving equal time to creationism.

    Why the should a science class give equal time to non-scientific, religious dogma? Creationism has nothing to do with science. What's next? Complaining that the schools are explaining that the tsunamis were caused by plate techtonics rather than "God's will"? Do you think that churches should be required to give equal time to teaching evolution?

    I don't think this label really does promote creationism. All it says is that evolution is being taught as a theory, not a fact.

    Stephen J. Gould Excerpted from Discover Magazine (May, 1981).

    In the American vernacular, "theory" often means "imperfect fact" - part of a hierarchy of confidence running downhill from fact to theory to hypothesis to guess. Thus the power of the creationist argument: evolution is "only" a theory and intense debate now rages about many aspects of the theory. If evolution is worse than a fact, and scientists can't even make up their minds about the theory, then what confidence can we have in it? Indeed, President Reagan echoed this argument before an evangelical group in Dallas when he said (in what I devoutly hope was campaign rhetoric): "Well, it is a theory. It is a scientific theory only, and it has in recent years been challenged in the world of science - that is, not believed in the scientific community to be as infallible as it once was.

    Well evolution is a theory. It is also a fact. And facts and theories are different things, not rungs in a hierarchy of increasing certainty. Facts are the world's data. Theories are structures of ideas that explain and interpret facts. Facts don't go away when scientists debate rival theories to explain them. Einstein's theory of gravitation replaced Newton's in this century, but apples didn't suspend themselves in midair, pending the outcome. And humans evolved from ape-like ancestors whether they did so by Darwin's proposed mechanism or by some other yet to be discovered.

    Moreover, "fact" doesn't mean "absolute certainty"; there ain't no such animal in an exciting and complex world. The final proofs of logic and mathematics flow deductively from stated premises and achieve certainty only because they are NOT about the empirical world. Evolutionists make no claim for perpetual truth, though creationists often do (and then attack us falsely for a style of argument that they themselves favor). In science "fact" can only mean "confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional consent." I suppose that apples might start to rise tomorrow, but the possibility does not merit equal time in physics classrooms.

    Evolutionists have been very clear about this distinction of fact and theory from the very beginning, if only because we have always acknowledged how far we are from completely understanding the mechanisms (theory) by which evolution (fact) occurred. Darwin continually emphasized the difference between his two great and separate accomplishments: establishing the fact of evolution, and proposing a theory - natural selection - to explain the mechanism of evolution.

    The theory of evolution is one of the strongest and best supported (by evidence) theories in all science. Evolution is, for all practical purposes, a fact. Biologists consider evolution to be a fact in much the same way that physicists do so for gravity.

    I don't think this label really does promote creationism. All it says is that evolution is being taught as a theory, not a fact.

    What the sticker does is repulsive. It preys on the ignorant who don't understand the scientific

  683. Re:Evolution: known via rationalism or via science by Twanfox · · Score: 1

    I think the biggest problem people have with any 'unresolved aspects of evolution' is when you talk about macroevolution. That is evolution of new species from old, or diversification of species from a common root. I have a feeling few contest microevolution, which is the adaptation of a single species to changing environmental conditions.

    The manner in which macroevolution happens, if it happens, is in question. Is it random mutation that just happens to beat all odds and propogate as 'good' and 'desirable'? Is it geographically seperated and isolated sections of the common species placed into differing microevolutionary forces for sufficient time to cause an eventual macroevolutionary shift? It's really hard to analyse this kind of thing because of the length of time for it to occur naturally (thousands of years? more?). In order to attempt to have some 'sanity', Scientists attempt to create the baseline experiment and control the forces that go into it. Generations upon generations are required to even see if you can create a new species by evolution. Any attempt to speed this process up is generally met with a response similar to yours, that it was unduely influenced by the scientific process.

    Because of the length of time an experiment of this nature would have to run, I sadly don't see this being proven any time soon.

  684. Sense in the courts? by runlvl0 · · Score: 1
    From the article:
    "By denigrating evolution, the school board appears to be endorsing the well-known prevailing alternative theory, creationism or variations thereof, even though the sticker does not specifically reference any alternative theories," U.S. District Judge Clarence Cooper said.
    That's an interesting interpretation. To apply it here, couldn't you say that "by denigrating the idea that Linux is a derivative of SCO, Slashdotters appear to be endorsing the well-known prevailing alternative operating system, Microsoft Windows or variations thereof, even though the website does not specifically reference any alternative operating systems." (At least not in the anti-SCO tirades.)

    I'm not sure that this qualifies as "a bit of sense in the courts," so much as broad and overreaching leglislation by fiat. Of course, that's just my opinion, I could be wrong.
    --

    Carthago delenda est!
  685. Re:Yay! by lgw · · Score: 1

    Some of the RNA analysis of viruses I've seen, when viewed with the mindset of an assembly coder, makes me fervently hope there is no god creatinging these things. ;)

    RNA is interpreted in triples, but in some viruses the same string of RNA is functional both with an offset of 0 and an offset of 1 - overlapping op codes! I believe there are cases where there are 3 protiens encoded with the same string of RNA by overlapping at different offsets.

    I can only hope this is the product of evolution, I'm *sure* I don't want to meet anyone who writes code like that!

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  686. Re:Yay! by lgw · · Score: 1

    Given enough time, the Catholic Church always doe a good job of rationalizing their beliefs to the evidence of the day. And it's completely worth pointing out both that actual evidence of ape-to-man evolution is somewhat lacking, and that this has very little to do with the theory of evolution as a whole, or of the somewhat seperate theory of origin by common ancestry, both of which have giant mountains of evidence.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  687. Re:Evolution: known via rationalism or via science by spasmatik · · Score: 1

    What exactly is the relevance of you being an engineer? Does that somehow qualify to speak on the mechanics of evolution? Your shortcomings in understanding biological evolution are just that. Sorry to be hard on you, but you hear this kind of thing so often. Being an expert in one area does not mean you have the slightest clue in another.

  688. Re:Yay! by bluekanoodle · · Score: 1
    I think its funny that this was modded down. Not once did I mention that I believe in creationism, but rather that many of the ideas of the evolution presented in biology texts books have been discredited.

    Apparantently some ./ people can't handle their belief systems being challenged.

  689. I'd like to see... by splatterboy · · Score: 1

    I would love for God to come down and tell everyone that yes The Theory of Evolution through Natural Selection is basically correct, that the Bible is a collection of bed-time stories for humans who were not capable of understanding much at the time.

    "Imagine trying to explain cellular division, DNA and reproductory process to a bunch of illiterate sheep herders! Of course I made the world that way - But even worse, you haven't let go of that old book and made any progress! You can fly to the moon now, created supercomputers and digital watches - Get a life! Move on"!

    --
    "Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." ~The Honorable Daniel Patrick Moynihan
  690. Yeah by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1
    Scientific theories are not things that have been proven to be correct.
    If you say so.
    --
    Yeah, right.
  691. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    Now you seem to have misread my comment as well. I did not say that creationism merited equal time, nor did I mean it. What I said was that the sticker on the books was an answer to the criticisms of parents who felt that the book should give equal time to creationism. The nether sticker itself or the book give equal time to creationism. The sticker merely says that evolution is a scientific theory that students, whatever their beliefs, should consider. The sticker it trying to clarify that the book is teaching science, instead of teaching religion.

    The sticker does not "prey on on the ignorant who don't understand the scientific meaning of the term theory." The sticker's use of the word theory is appropriate, and is not derogatory. Just because Stephen J. Gould from Discover want's to be able to say that evolution is a fact because of the term theory's supposed vernacular is unpalatable doesn't mean that it's wrong to say evolution is a theory.

  692. Re:Yay! by lgw · · Score: 1

    In general, finding two living species, one which evolved from the other, is extremely rare. No living primate species is throught to have evolved form any other living primate species, for example.

    However, quite a few intermediate hominid fossils have been found, dozens of species somewhere between ape and man. Only humans and neandertals seems to have made brain-power really work for them as a survival edge, AFAIK.

    Of course, judging intelligence based on brain size and the occasional tool found might not be the best approach, but it's what we have to work with.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  693. Science & Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Science is simply the search for the truth about the universe around us.

    Religion is what remains of cavemen trying to understand the universe around him when he could only imagine gods and demons and the like being responsible for the world in which he existed but did not comprehend.

    Hence, religion is the science of the ignorant and gullible.

    Sorry if that offends but that's the only way I can express it.

  694. Re:Yay! by lgw · · Score: 1

    The answer is surprising simple.

    The halfway points typically survived longer than any living primate species has survived so far. There are a bunch of hominids, apes, monkeys, and so on that had a nice 30000-50000 year run as a species. Many living species are younger than that.

    WHen looked at from a geological time scale, regional climates have frequent radical changes. New species tend to displace old species when that happens.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  695. Mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At this point in the discussion, it's the most appropriate comment I've seen.

  696. What? That's a good call, dude? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nah, it just shows that God is more and more inclined to side with the Americans.

  697. Re:Yay! by lgw · · Score: 1

    "Microevolution" and "Macroevolution" are not scientific terms.

    There is a theory of "evolution", which says "the statistical distribution of alleles in a population changes over time". This is witnessed as frequently as gravity. There can be no rational doubt.

    There is the "cladistic theory of taxonomy", often called "common origin". It predicts that all existing species can be orginized by postulating a tree of common ancestors. All features of all species can be described this way. This theory, along with General Relativity, are the most predictive theories man has ever come up with. There are millions and millions of data points for this theory: it requires, for example, that all species with a common ancestor have the same solution to the same problem. No vertibrates with insect eyes, no mammels with feathered wings, and so on.

    The early objection to the theory of common ancestry was "God would never alow a species to become extinct". Finding dinosaur fossils pretty much quenched that objection. The discovery of genetics was a wonderful corroboration of the theory - a mechanism for passing down traits was not proposed by the theory at first. Every extinct species found as a fossil is a bit of evidence, but the theory isn't based on fossils, it's based on the postulate that similar living species must share certain features, or they couldn't possibly have a common ancestor. Millions of species have been discovered since the theory was postulated, and every one has been consistant.

    The third hypothesis sometimes lumped in with evolution is the "abiotic genisis of life". Unliving chemicals sometime in the past became living chemicals. This is right up there with the hypothesis that extra-terrestrial life exists. Sure, there's no evidence anywhere that it's not true, and theres no logical reason that it couldn't be true (heck, I believe both hypotheses), but there is exactly 0 actual evidence.

    Sometimes people argue that "micro evolution" couldn't produce new species, but then by some definitions of species (those used by scientists who study bacteria, for example) evolution of new species is observed constantly. That argument only holds water by restricting itself to cases where man just hasn't been around long enough to have made the observation.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  698. Why? by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1
    Why are evolutionsts so defensive about their theory?

    Why are the religious so afraid of questioning their faith?

    --

    I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

  699. Re:Evolution: known via rationalism or via science by Zinho · · Score: 1
    What exactly is the relevance of you being an engineer? . . . Being an expert in one area does not mean you have the slightest clue in another.

    I'll back him up on this. Being an engineer means that he has a very good grasp on procedure for experimentation and requiremensts for declaring validity of a theoretical model. Unlike research scientists who lose some reputation of they are wrong, engineers can cause monetary losses in the $US 10^6-9 range along with loss of human life if they make an inaccurate model. As a result, engineers care in an "I may get fired, destroy my company, and have this tragedy resting on my conscience the rest of my life" way about experimentation that many scientists just don't.

    Considering that his comment largely dealt with experimental procedure and the intractability of proving evolutionary theory, I'd say that he's at least as qualified to discuss it (absent specific details about cases and their results) as any other scientist in this public forum. Before you declare him clueless out of hand, re-read his comments about the procedural methods required for proof of evolution and compare them to the so-called "soft" sciences of human behavior and psychology. "Hard" science researchers frequently question the validity of behavioral studies because of the same issues that LinuxParanoid cited: namely, small sample size, experimental procedure affecting the study results, and intractability of proper longitudinal studies.

    Your hostile response makes it sound like he's struck you too close to the mark. Just because you don't like hearing it doesn't mean he's wrong.
    --
    "Space Exploration is not endless circles in low earth orbit." -Buzz Aldrin
  700. Re:Yay! by lgw · · Score: 1

    Quite a bit of bacterial DNA/RNA has been directly observed to have "shown up magically" because the envirnment changed. The mechanism of "mutation and selection" actually describes bacterial evolution pretty well. Bacteria evolve new species all the time (by the definition of species used by those who work in that field).

    The existing strains gaining dominance once things change to give them that edge is certainly true, but so is it true that totally new, random sequences of DNA/RNA appear due to mutation. These become the existing strains that but that bacteria at a disadvantage, unless everything changes before the mutation gets selected out.

    This is all very wel understood for bacteria, and constantly observed in the lab and in the "wild". Evolutionary leaps happen every day. There are entire medical technologies based on the theory.

    Complain about evolutionary leaps in mammels if you have to, but as far as bacteria go, you're dead wrong.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  701. Re:Evolution: known via rationalism or via science by Yunzil · · Score: 1

    As an engineer watching this debate

    I'm an engineer too. So what?

    it'd be whether you agree with my distinction between a rational method and a scientific method.

    Yes. However you are incorrect about evolution being analyzed by rational methods.

  702. An interesting quote from the actual decision by male · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you read the decision, the court spends most of the time explaining why the sticker *is* constitutional. However, the sticker still failed the test. Here's one reason why:

    --
    In this case, the Court beleives that an informed, reasonable observer would interpret the Sticker to convey a message of endorsement of religion. That is, the Sticker sends a message to those who oppose evolution for religious reasons that they are favored members of the political community, while the Sticker sends a message to those who beleive in evolution that they are political outsiders. This is particularly so in a case such as this one involving impressionable public school students who are likely to view the message on the Sticker as a union of church and state
    --

    1. Re:An interesting quote from the actual decision by GrassyNoel · · Score: 1

      The sticker is wrong. Evolution is not 'a theory regarding the origin of living things'. It is several theories which try to explain what happened after the origin. One of these is Darwin's theory of evolution by means of natural selection.

      --
      Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
  703. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not -1 free speech because no one is telling anyone that they can't believe in or talk about creationism. No one's shutting down a website that has creationist "evidence" or any of that. This sticker appeared on a textbook in a classroom, paid for by tax dollars. I'm not a law student, but I'm pretty sure that public school textbooks are outside the domain of free speech. The stickers are misleading to students because they a) imply the colloquial definition of "theory" which, as I'm sure someone has pointed out by now, is different from the scientific definition and b) wrongly create the impression that there is a real divide in the scientific community over the theory. If you put the stickers on biology textbooks, you should also put them on physics textbooks warning about the theory of relativity, &c, &c. There is a humorous take on that here: http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/cpurrin1/textbook disclaimers/

    I'm pretty sure the right to free speech does not include the right to deliberately mislead high school students.

  704. Re:Yay! by EEgopher · · Score: 1

    Former Catholic? I appreciate your account, and I like newadvent. What made you leave?

    Our Catholic Pastor gave us this (paraphrased) quote: "The Church is always interested in finding out more about human origins, but make no mistake about it: humans are no accident."

    --
    hi, I like pancakes -.-- -.-- --..
  705. The Relativity of Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Relativity of Wrong
    by Isaac Asimov

    I received a letter the other day. It was handwritten in crabbed penmanship
    so that it was very difficult to read. Nevertheless, I tried to make it out
    just in case it might prove to be important. In the first sentence, the
    writer told me he was majoring in English literature, but felt he needed to
    teach me science. (I sighed a bit, for I knew very few English Lit majors
    who are equipped to teach me science, but I am very aware of the vast state
    of my ignorance and I am prepared to learn as much as I can from anyone, so
    I read on.)

    It seemed that in one of my innumerable essays, I had expressed a certain
    gladness at living in a century in which we finally got the basis of the
    universe straight.

    I didn't go into detail in the matter, but what I meant was that we now know
    the basic rules governing the universe, together with the gravitational
    interrelationships of its gross components, as shown in the theory of
    relativity worked out between 1905 and 1916. We also know the basic rules
    governing the subatomic particles and their interrelationships, since these
    are very neatly described by the quantum theory worked out between 1900 and
    1930. What's more, we have found that the galaxies and clusters of galaxies
    are the basic units of the physical universe, as discovered between 1920 and
    1930.

    These are all twentieth-century discoveries, you see.

    The young specialist in English Lit, having quoted me, went on to lecture me
    severely on the fact that in every century people have thought they
    understood the universe at last, and in every century they were proved to be
    wrong. It follows that the one thing we can say about our modem "knowledge"
    is that it is wrong. The young man then quoted with approval what Socrates
    had said on leaming that the Delphic oracle had proclaimed him the wisest
    man in Greece. "If I am the wisest man," said Socrates, "it is because I
    alone know that I know nothing." the implication was that I was very foolish
    because I was under the impression I knew a great deal. My answer to him
    was, "John, when people thought the earth was flat, they were wrong. When
    people thought the earth was spherical, they were wrong. But if you think
    that thinking the earth is spherical is just as wrong as thinking the earth
    is flat, then your view is wronger than both of them put together." The
    basic trouble, you see, is that people think that "right" and "wrong" are
    absolute; that everything that isn't perfectly and completely right is
    totally and equally wrong. However, I don't think thats so. It seems to me
    that right and wrong are fuzzy concepts, and I will devote this essay to an
    explanation of why I think so.

    * * *

    When my friend the English literature expert tells me that in every century
    scientists think they have worked out the universe and are always wrong,
    what I want to know is how wrong are they? Are they always wrong to the same
    degree? Let's take an example.

    In the early days of civilization, the general feeling was that the earth
    was flat. This was not because people were stupid, or because they were
    intent on believing silly things. They felt it was flat on the basis of
    sound evidence. It was not just a matter of "That's how it looks," because
    the earth does not look flat. It looks chaotically bumpy, with hills,
    valleys, ravines, cliffs, and so on.

    Of course there are plains where, over limited areas, the earth's surface
    does look fairly flat. One of those plains is in the Tigris-Euphrates area,
    where the first historical civilization (one with writing) developed, that
    of the Sumerians.

    Perhaps it was the appearance of the plain that persuaded the clever
    Sumerians to accept the generalization that the earth was flat; that if you
    somehow evened out all the elevations and depressions, you would be left
    with flatness. Contributing to the notion may have

  706. In other news by BaldBass · · Score: 1

    A judge in Fresno, NY ordered the stickers stating that "Big Band is a theory, not a fact" removed from all physics textbooks.

    The ruling has been received with satisfaction in the district's religious communities.

  707. Re:Evolution: known via rationalism or via science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not an assertion of authority in biology (if anything, its the opposite, as you note.) It's an explanation of the perspective I'm coming from in asking my question.

    --LP

  708. Re:Laugh. Its funny. by hesiod · · Score: 1

    That's great :)

    Thanks for the link!

  709. Re:Statistically Everything is possible by vertinox · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you think about the improbables than you have to think about your own existance for example. The shear fact that your descendants did not die from disease or get killed in some manner over the centuries leading up to your birth is quite amazing.

    Then you have to think about why you are who you are rather than why weren't you born as someone else (IE born in 1500AD vs 2500AD) then you are just stumped on how you even begin to exist.

    Well the matter is that the universe has infinite time and infinite variants so you had to exist sometime and this was just that time. I have no idea what makes someone exist or even have a soul to begin with, but all sorts of combinations have existed. Perhaps our planet is a fluke and the on average most planets are dead.

    Secondly, I would have to ask you: What if you were born into Islam? Would now that be the truth for you? What about other Christians now? Is their book still "the truth".

    I'm not stating an answer for anything or saying that you are wrong. I could be very well mistaken. Just something for you to think about.

    --
    "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
    -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  710. Re:Religious Texts should get this sticker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know what? You make absolutely no sense what so ever!

    Was there no giant cosmic hot dog orbiting the earth?!

    Did La-La not watch the telly on his tummy?!

  711. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by fmaxwell · · Score: 1
    What I said was that the sticker on the books was an answer to the criticisms of parents who felt that the book should give equal time to creationism.

    The way to "answer" those people is with a stern "no!"

    The sticker does not "prey on on the ignorant who don't understand the scientific meaning of the term theory." The sticker's use of the word theory is appropriate, and is not derogatory.

    No, it is intended to mislead students by the misuse of the words "theory" and "fact" as applied to the sciences.

    Just because Stephen J. Gould from Discover want's to be able to say that evolution is a fact because of the term theory's supposed vernacular is unpalatable doesn't mean that it's wrong to say evolution is a theory.

    "Stephen J. Gould from Discover"? Are you serious? If you don't know who Stephen J. Gould is, you have no business discussing this subject.

    Stephen Jay Gould (1941-2002) was one of the best known and most widely read scientists of our time. He earned a Ph.D. in paleontology from Columbia University in 1967. He was the Professor of Geology and Zoology at Harvard University, the Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology and Professor of Geology at Harvard University, Curator of Invertebrate Paleontology in the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology, and adjunct member of the Department of the History of Science. He was also the Vincent Astor Visiting Research Professor of Biology at New York University.

    Professor Gould was known as the leading spokesperson for evolutionary theory. His monthly columns in Natural History magazine and his popular works on evolution earned him numerous awards and one of the largest readerships in the popular-science genre. He wrote over twenty successful books throughout his career.

    If Stephen J. Gould says that evolution is a fact, you can bank on it.

    But since that seems unlikely to satisfy you, here are some more quotes from other sources:
    It is time for students of the evolutionary process, especially those who have been misquoted and used by the creationists, to state clearly that evolution is a fact, not theory, and that what is at issue within biology are questions of details of the process and the relative importance of different mechanisms of evolution. It is a fact that the earth with liquid water, is more than 3.6 billion years old. It is a fact that cellular life has been around for at least half of that period and that organized multicellular life is at least 800 million years old. It is a fact that major life forms now on earth were not at all represented in the past. There were no birds or mammals 250 million years ago. It is a fact that major life forms of the past are no longer living. There used to be dinosaurs and Pithecanthropus, and there are none now. It is a fact that all living forms come from previous living forms. Therefore, all present forms of life arose from ancestral forms that were different. Birds arose from nonbirds and humans from nonhumans. No person who pretends to any understanding of the natural world can deny these facts any more than she or he can deny that the earth is round, rotates on its axis, and revolves around the sun.

    The controversies about evolution lie in the realm of the relative importance of various forces in molding evolution.

    - R. C. Lewontin "Evolution/Creation Debate: A Time for Truth" Bioscience 31, 559 (1981) reprinted in Evolution versus Creationism, op cit.
    I'm sure that won't satisfy you either, so here's another:
    Today, nearly all biologists acknowledge that evolution is a fact. The term theory is no longer appropriate except when referring to the various models that attempt to explain how life evolves... it is important to understand that the current questions about how life evolves in no way implies any disagreement over the fact of evolution.

    - Neil A. Campbell, Biology (textbook) 2nd ed., 1990, Benjamin/Cummings, p. 434


    Evolution is a fact and the stickers that said otherwise were wrong, intentionally misleading, and intended to give credence to religious dogma.
  712. What about cyclical causation? by sutekh137 · · Score: 1

    4) A causal chain cannot stretch back infinitely in time
    -------
    Would you say a finitely drawn figure (in other words, it uses a finite amount of ink) cannot stretch on "forever"? Maybe so, but what about a circle? A finite figure with no beginning or end. What if the Universe is such a "closed" construct?

    1. Re:What about cyclical causation? by caudron · · Score: 1

      but what about a circle?

      Some faiths make the same claim. Himduism, for instance, professes a belief in the endless cycle of of Shiva the Creator and Destroyer, whose dances both make and end the universe and existence over and over again.

      I'm not a Hindu, but the idea is fascinating to me. The logic underlying the Karmic/Samsaric wheel and the Atman are intricate, and in a sense beautiful.

      This is in no way meant to belittle the process or the faith by base comparison, but it's like well written code---elegantly perfect.

      But I'm a Christian, so I'm stuck with a far more messy religion. ;-) Not elegant at all in its general cosmology...excepting the Theology of the Cross which is as elegant as anything I've seen.

      --
      -Tom
  713. Re:$250,000 for anyone who scientifically prooves by bamberg · · Score: 1

    Dr. Hovind's $250,000 Offer
    Formerly $10,000 offered since 1990

    I have a standing offer of $250,000 to anyone who can give any empirical evidence (scientific proof) for evolution.* My $250,000 offer demonstrates that the hypothesis of evolution is nothing more than a religious belief.


    Hovind's offer is a sham. Here is some more information on the subject.

  714. another way to look at theories by dreadlocks · · Score: 1

    consider the Pythagorean theorem. a^2+b^2=c^2 ... the sum of the squares of the lengths of the legs= square of the hypotenuse of a triangle. Yes it is a theory, but it is the best explanation for the relationship of the sides of a triangle we've come up with. We've tested it and still it stands. Nothing better, supported with facts, has come along to replace it. Same for evolution. Yea we have ID (creationism in a new suit)as an alternate "explanation", but where are the facts that make it a realistic contender. It explains nothing while making a big assumption - a designer did it. Sure, evolution may be wrong, but it has a body of supporting evidence that makes it extremely unlikely. When ID has some real facts, science will consider it. Until then, it has been brushed off as BS by all intelligent scientists.

    1. Re:another way to look at theories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wipe my ASS with your Pythagorean theories! That is a bunch of totall bull!

      The truth is, the way the sides of triangles relate to each other is decided by GOD!

      It is not based on numbers, but on what GOD decided.

      But because you only have those newfangled calculatormachines that have been programmed according to a theory (not a fact, mind you) they always come up with the same result!

      And you cant just take GOD and keep him in your pocket and punch his buttons and see his answer on an LCD!

    2. Re:another way to look at theories by GrassyNoel · · Score: 1

      It's not a theory; it's a theorem. Different animal altogether.

      --
      Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
  715. Wonderful!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see how it works.

    When he cites things you don't like you basically say "irrelevant".

    Look.

    God didnt' make the world in 7 days. He just didnt'. There is no mainstream thought that think it did. To the people who think God literally took 7 days (earth days) to create the world and everything in it, I put you in the same category as those guys with rattles and masks who are trying to conjure spirits.

    Its pathetic.

    God gave you a brain. Use it.

    Let me put it another way... You think Evolution isn't true because its just written books. Yet you believe god shot out lightening made the whole universe and created all life in a few days because....you read it in a book?

    Do you realize how pathetic that is?

    And hell... I'm a methodist and I know better than that.

  716. Re:I believe...in the Scientific Method! by Number6.2 · · Score: 1
    Coward.

    Thank you for making my point.



    The only thing I'll admit to is...needing a spelling checker.



    Have a perfect day. 6.2



    P.S. feel free to have the all-important Last Word. I'm done.


    --
    "If god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him" --Voltaire
  717. Re:Evolution: known via rationalism or via science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your shortcomings in understanding biological evolution are just that.

    Not the OP, but i have to say, you're bigoted scientific view is exposed here. It's not that scientific views are bigoted, and in fact, when they are, they've ceased to be scientific IMO, it's that YOUR views are clearly bigotted. Your reply smacks of the dogmatic bigotry of the clergy of the major religions.

    Evolve into a better scientist. The scientist who refuses light and can't take criticism is a poor one indeed, no matter what minor "successes" he/she may experience.

  718. Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What does the big bang have to do with what he said?

    Fucker..

  719. Re:Evolution: known via rationalism or via science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However you are incorrect about evolution being analyzed by rational methods.

    What kind of answer is this? Are you intelligent or not? Sounds like the clergy "no, you're wrong."

    Fucking explain how he's wrong asshole, or keep your mouth shut entirely. You haven't proved shit with your reply. Jesus. Where the fuck are you "science" students getting your degrees from? Your teachers need to be shot if this is what they are telling you constitute intelligent replies.

  720. devilish idea by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

    Hm, that gives me an idea.

    Im going to make some wallet-sized

    "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

    stickers of my own. And whenever I see a Bible, Im going to help "encourage critical thinking."

  721. Re:Yay! by Bora+Horza+Gobuchol · · Score: 1
    ... however using the courts to overule the decisions of the majority is wrong.

    Brown vs. The Board of Education forced integration of schools. The majority of people (that is, whites) in the South were against it. That does not make seperate schools for blacks and whites, or the concept of "seperate but equal", right.

    Progress - social, scientific, and otherwise - is often made against the wishes or beliefs of the majority. Occassionally it needs to be legislated, or defended in the courts. That does not make the "will of the people" - often an ignorant mass - right or correct.

  722. Put a sticker on Bibles! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This book contains material written
    by HUMANS and is a theory not a fact
    regarding certain historical events.
    This information should be approached
    with an open mind, studied carefully,
    and critically considered.

  723. Not Enough Info ITA by W.+Justice+Black · · Score: 1

    There seem to be two general sorts of responses here:

    1. Evolution IS just a theory, so what's the problem?
    2. Evolution has been observed, so it IS fact, and the sticker is wrong.

    The fact vs theory debate has been beaten to death by other posters, but questioning the statement by itself is insufficient. The question must be taken in context of the content of the book. If the book is truly written in a "this is all fact" manner, then the sticker is correct (or at least plausable)--even the most pro-evolution scientist will readily admit that not everything evolution-related is fact (though it's damn well-supported theory).

    That the same can be said for any physical science is irrelevant, and that the motivations of the sticker proponents are dubious is also irrelevant. There's a wide gap between "take this evolution thing with a grain of salt" and "this is a load of crap but we're forced to teach it to you. Praise Jesus!"

    The whole sticker thing may be a supremely dumb waste of time and resources, but unconstitutional? If a case could be reasonably made that the book's wording miscategorizes evolution fact (observed speciation, etc.) with evolution theory, then there is no constitutional question here.

    --
    "Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana." --Groucho Marx
  724. Re:My other reality makes sense by uohcicds · · Score: 1

    Bad phrasing on my part, this is how I interpret Spinoza's argument:

    God created the universe. This universe is a separate entity (as previously opined by earlier christian philosophers). It makes little sense to assume that this entity is part of the existing one, viz God. Therefore there is now an entity containing both God and the created universe. The root of Spinoza's argument, as far as I understand, is not that there is a separate God, but that God IS the universe. To be fair, Spinoza expressed this better than I ever could, which was why he was one of the greatest renaissance philosphers and I'm not (as well as the fact that I was born about 450 years too late ;-) ).

    --
    It's not you: I'm just this horrifically socially awkward with everybody.
  725. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, I guess some religious people (yes evolution is a belief system) took offense at you questioning their "religion".

  726. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    abigot gets defensive when people question how classroom textbooks preach his religious world view.

  727. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    Look, a fact is something you know for certain. Usually statements of observation can only be stated as facts when they are in the form "the temperature of the cylinder was measured to be 27 degrees celsius". Saying "the temperature of the cylinder is 27 degrees celsius" is a theory, supported by the above fact.

    Consider the following examples:

    Fact: There exist a large fossil record which shows species changing incrementally over time.

    Fact: Bacterial species have been observed to change characteristics over time.

    Fact: Species undergoing mutation in the presence of a sufficient quantity of natural selection will evolve into a form better adapted to their environment.

    Theory: All life on earth has evolved from a single spontaneously generated cell over the course of billions of years.

    Fact: No amount of quotations from authoritative sources will change the truth of my argument.

  728. Yep, the church used to oppose electricity too... by Omega · · Score: 1

    It's funny. Here we are on a global computer network, built upon the application of principles of scientific theory that were once opposed by the church, and we're having the same argument people did 300 years ago.

    Ahh, progress.

    Funny story -- back when Ben Franklin invented lightning rods, the church decried them as heretical. That was until every building in town was safe from lightning strikes except the churches. :)

  729. obviously by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    You have never read a scientific journal. Most of the theories discussed are not proven correct, but merely supported with varying amounts of evidence.

  730. Everyone who uses the word "science" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in his commentary is so GAY!!!!! (Besides me, I had to) SUCKERS!!!!!!! This doesn't have anything to do with science.

  731. No evidence, except for all the evidence by jonabbey · · Score: 1

    Proof of such diversity would be the transversal from one species to something completely different without any in-betweens. Why no in-between micro-changes? Because there's no evidence -for- such changes in the fossil records, at all. There is absolutely no "evidence" for the biological diversity on Earth when using the Evolutionary method.

    Right!

    Except, there is.

    We can see species gradating one into the other with varying degrees of granularity in the natural world. Bacteria don't get terribly picky about who has what genes, and as you say, even plants can hybridize across our intuitive notion of species. Other people have pointed out the phenomenon of ring species, where Great Britain maintains two species of gulls, incapable or disinterested in mating one with the other, but which turn out to be gradually related if you follow the range of one species to the west. One species of gull in Great Britain is capable of mating with a close relative to the west, which is capable of mating with a close relative a bit further west, and so forth, until the ring stretches back around the planet and we find the end of the ring of inter-compatibility is that second species. Micro-changes in space, rather than time.

    Even if we did not have the spectacular example of ring species to point to, it is very clear that animals differ in many cases by region, and the wider the separation, the wider the difference among species. This was, in fact, one of Charles Darwin's main points of argumentation when he wrote his books.

    What skeptics of the fossil record seem not to realize is just how rare it is that a fossil forms. I have read (but cannot at the moment find) a statement that perhaps one species in a thousand has fossilized so that we may find an instance of it in the geologic record. If we are missing 99.9% of all species in the geologic record, it is not at all surprising that we might not see a *perfectly* smooth continuum of change looking at the rocks.

    Yet, given the resolution of the rocks, we do after all see a very smooth pattern, enough so that we can form a picture of the story of life over time that is consistently corroborated with a variety of technical dating methods, from radiological processes to magnetic field variations to depth of rock to the evidences of tectonic uplift and subduction.

    Everything we know about evolution coheres strongly with the natural world as it is observed. So much so that evolution through natural selection is the only theory of the history of life on our planet that anyone without a religious motivation takes seriously.

    I applaud you for being skeptical upon being told something that you find incredible, but rather than jumping to the ignorant assumption that the evidence for it doesn't exist, why not study the matter for yourself?

    1. Re:No evidence, except for all the evidence by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      I have read (but cannot at the moment find) a statement that perhaps one species in a thousand has fossilized so that we may find an instance of it in the geologic record. If we are missing 99.9% of all species in the geologic record, it is not at all surprising that we might not see a *perfectly* smooth continuum of change looking at the rocks.



      Yes. Ok. But where do the scientists derive this information from? It's not from evidence, because - as you've agreed - there is none. It's nothing more than postulation that 99.9% of all species are missing. For all we know, it could have been quite easy for fossils to form during certain periods of the Earth's history. There are quite a few drastic climatic changes that can occur in a very short period of time, and any number of them can result in fossil-forming conditions.

      The logic behind saying that 99.9% of the fossil records are missing is what is termed "circular logic". It's a chicken and egg problem. It's no different than seeing 1000 cups laid out on a table, listing one and finding a penny, and postulating, "Well, there must be a penny under each cup." It's pure fallacy.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  732. I agree.... by fromme · · Score: 1

    And the reason being is this... There is a process already present by which material gets added into textbooks. That process should be followed. If new textbooks are required to be printed, so be it. Adding a sticker whenever an alternative concept arises is ridiculous! Also, I don't think all the people who have been brought up being taught the Theory of Evolution as it is in the textbook are in any way less religeous! A textbook is no place for politics and it should be kept that way. And for that matter, anything that is read in any book (including stickers in a book!), "should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered." That goes without saying, isn't it? Isn't that the whole point of education?

  733. Re:I'm an American...humility by mikewhittaker · · Score: 1
    Perhaps a student of history can correct me, but I get the feeling that with Europe's history of persecution between Roman Catholics and Protestants of various denominations, people in Europe generally are these days more willing to see another's point of view, or at least to tolerate it, perhaps even leading to a more secular, but nonetheless moral society; though we still see divisions, for example in Northern Ireland.

    Whereas many of the religious sects and branches of Protestantism who felt oppressed or threatened by life in Europe emigrated to America in order to set up religious societies where they did not need to come into contact with outside influences; perhaps the Amish being a case in point.

    My understanding therefore from a European view is that the Creationist standpoint harks back to the mindset of those settlers of the 18th century, who were dogmatic in their beliefs, and, rather like the Israelites of the Old Testament, felt they would only come to salvation by ever-closer adherance to the letter of the law as set down in the scriptures.

    And as we know from 21st century media, a set of writings, especially those translated from two millenia ago, can be reinterpreted to agree with different agendas.

    Those religions that claim to have all the answers seem to me to be lacking fundamentally in one attribute they all preach, which is humility and respect for others.

  734. Re:My other reality makes sense by mattpalmer1086 · · Score: 1

    OK - now I'm confused. I did a bit a googling on Spinoza. It seems to me that he's arguing that creation *cannot* be fundamentally seperate to God - indeed that there is a "Unity of Substance". http://www.philosophypages.com/hy/4h.htm http://home.earthlink.net/~tneff/stapnd1.htm Any thoughts?

  735. Re:Yay! by Alsee · · Score: 1

    The anti-Christians proceed by removing reference to God in all aspects of public life

    Your definition of "public life" appears to actually mean GOVERNMENT IMPOSED.

    I think you'll find that the ACLU is actually your ALLY if you were to read "public life" as reffering to individuals' religious freedom. The ACLU has fought - and won - several such cases. For example one case a student submitted a bible quote to be included as their presonal message in the school yearbook. The school attempted to reject (censor) that message because it was religious. The ACLU fought for it to be included, and WON. The key here is that the school offered all students space for their own messages. The student's messages were were not government speech, and in no way invloved the government imposing anything on anyone. It was the student's personal religious freedom and speech, and it was even to be included in the "public life" of the official school yearbook.

    So no, the ACLU isn't anti-Christian or trying to eliminate religion from "public life".

    The constitution guarantees religious freedom. Freedom means freedom from government power being imposed on us and against us for religious purposes. It is purely a restiction on the government. It only applies to people while they are acting in an official capacity as an agent of the government and weilding government power.

    Government power may not be used to favor any religious belief over any other. If that were not true then others could could abuse government power to favor and promote their belifs over yours - for example the belief that there is not god. You would not want someone hijacking the government to impose that on your childred, would you?

    Government power cannot be used for religious purposes. You wouldn't want the force of government being imposed on you and your children for a religious purpose contrary to your religion, would you?

    not just in the classroom

    God can certainly be mentioned in the classroom, but government officials like teachers cannot abuse their governmental power over your children from religious purposes. You wouldn't want an Islamic teacher imposing classroom prayer on your children would you? And by classroom prayer I mean that Islamic teacher stopping the class a few times per day at the Muslim prescribed times and making all of the students FACE MECCA. Including your children.

    Guaranteeing your freedom from that means it goes both ways. While acting in an official government capacity as a teacher YOU cannot abuse that power for religious purpose either.

    the Ten Commandments are not to be allowed in courthouses

    False. For example an employee there is perfectly welcome to include the Ten Commandments or whatever else that like amongst they personal knick-knacks on their desk. However someone acting in their official capacity as an agent of the government to order a ten-foot-tall stone carving of a Satanic verse be established on the building itself above the entrance. The rights go both ways. That is not "public life", that is an official act and endorsement by the government and imposed by force of government.

    (despite the fact that it is one of the foundational documents of our civilization);

    It is a religious text, and the decree "I am the Lord thy God" is hardly the only problematical item on the list. In order to ensure YOUR religious freedom the government is REQUIRED to stay neutral on religious matters. You have no more business attempting to establish the Ten Commandments as a government enshined text than someone else has the right to enshine THEIR favorite religious text (and in their oppinion their text is also 'one of the foundational documents of our civilization').

    the Pledge of Allegiance is not to mention God; and so forth.

    As another poster noted, our traditional pledge of alligance was butchered to ADD that in 1950-something. It was an unconstitutional law e

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  736. GDP figures - Ireland the richest in the EU ??? by mikewhittaker · · Score: 1
    The richest EU country--Ireland???
    EU GDP data from Eurostat 2004 Q3 figures in million Euros, descending order, plus US for comparison
    • US:2417123
    • DE:545010
    • UK:432504
    • FR:406262
    • IT:33 9454
    • ES:199889
    • NL:116479
    • BE:71223
    • AT:59216
    • DK :48862
    • EL:41860
    • FI:37150
    • IE:36372

    From which we can see that Germany as a whole has a GDP of 1/5 of the US.
    Ireland has the 12th highest GDP in the EU, and its GDP was 1/66 of the US GDP.
  737. Spinoza had it right by Dollyknot · · Score: 1

    Basically put, he said "God didn't create the universe, God *is* the universe." Google pantheism for more details.

    --
    It's called an elephant's trunk whereas it is in fact, an elephant's nose, a nose by any other name would smell as sweet
  738. Re:Yay! by maroonhat · · Score: 0
    Why don't dolphins have thumbs by now?
    Because they are well suited to their enviroment without them. Thats almost as ludacrist as asking 'Why dont people have fins?'
    --
    The more I learn about Windows the more I am surprised it runs at all
  739. Keep going... by JavaRob · · Score: 1

    God created this world. It's arrogance and ignorance of the highest degree for men to say they understand how He did it.

    You're partway there. It's arrogance and ignorance for us to say we know how the world was created, period. That includes saying "we know God exists, and He created it". How can we presume such knowledge?

    The best we can do it look at the world we can observe (God has proved notably tricky to observe), and come up with the best explanations we can based on that evidence. We call those explanations "theories". They are testable, and must be altered when they fail a test.

    There are other explanations, which are not based on observation but on ancient stories passed down over centuries. We call those explanations "myths". These are generally untestable (or have been disproved), but are an interesting part of our culture and history.

    1. Re:Keep going... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      In this case, that's a tangental arguement which has it's own merits, but is a barrier to what really matters in this case.

      I'm suprised at the number of people who wnt only to declare total victory over theists in this case. Does it matter in the long run as long as the stuff we DO know isn't blocked by people like these people are trying to do to evolution?

      --
      It's been a long time.
    2. Re:Keep going... by JavaRob · · Score: 1

      In this case, that's a tangental arguement which has it's own merits, but is a barrier to what really matters in this case.

      Agreed -- this wouldn't even come up if I were arguing the original creationist vs. evolution debate. I took a tangent that's interesting to me; i.e., exploring how you are blending the scientific approach to truth with the religion approach to truth.

      I'm suprised at the number of people who wnt only to declare total victory over theists in this case.

      Interestingly, I think it's only in places like a /. discussion where I will sometimes argue this sort of the thing to the bitter end; in some ways it's more an intellectual exercise than anything else. If I'm working towards an actual goal in a conversation (like convincing someone that textbook sticker are a bad idea) I'm a lot less hard-line.

      Does it matter in the long run as long as the stuff we DO know isn't blocked by people like these people are trying to do to evolution?

      Good point, but of course we're 10 posts down in a slashdot discussion offshoot thread, so I don't think that holds here. :)

  740. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > one of the best proofs for evolution

    ...using that word "proofs" very loosely of course.

  741. And they wonder why we make fun of them. by Stopher2475 · · Score: 1

    It seems that more and more certian parts of America are just like these religous totalitarian states we're fighting against. To ignore the fossil record and scientific method over a book of which the people who wrote it believed the earth was flat is just retarded. We talk down these crazy zealots in the mid east but these people in our own country are just as bad. Of course, they won back the White House. I don't know how that happens. Our federal tax dollars support these people. I'm in NJ and we get less than a dollar back for each dollar we pay in taxes while these other states are on the plus side. They get annoyed if we make decisions but you'll be damm sure they want our money.

  742. I *love* this School Board! by FishinDave · · Score: 1

    Lost in the immediate uproar over the stickers' presence is the laudable cunning exhibited by the newly elected Cobb County School Board way back when they approved the stickers. They put evolution back into the county's curriculum, from which it had been banished for years. They accomplished that worthy goal by compromising on the stickers - which they knew damned well wouldn't pass Constitutional muster. "But hey - we tried!" they can tell fundamentalist voters! Gotta love 'em! :-)

  743. Freedom of speech by smoker2 · · Score: 1

    If the "Creationists" want to put forward their point of view, they should refrain from disfiguring other peoples work and write their own book ....

    No, wait...

  744. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

    Fact: There exist a large fossil record which shows species changing incrementally over time.

    Fact: Bacterial species have been observed to change characteristics over time.


    Therefore, the process of evolution is a fact.

    Fact: Species undergoing mutation in the presence of a sufficient quantity of natural selection will evolve into a form better adapted to their environment.

    That is Darwin's theory of natural selection, which you have now called a fact. It is still a theory in the strict scientific sense of the term and there are other (non-exclusive) theories. One is "punctuated equilibria", a theory set forth by Stephen Gould and Niles Eldredge in the early '70s. Another theory of evolution is called "genetic drift", "neutralism" or "nonadaptive evolution". I won't waste space and your time by summarizing them here since you no doubt know how to use Google should you be curious about those theories.

    Theory: All life on earth has evolved from a single spontaneously generated cell over the course of billions of years.

    The generally taught "Theory of Evolution" holds that all life on Earth evolved from a few primitive unicellular organisms, possibly even from one single organism.

    Fact: No amount of quotations from authoritative sources will change the truth of my argument.

    An argument is neither true nor false. It is either without flaw or flawed. You are thinking of conclusions, and when most authoritative sources indicate that your conclusions are wrong, your conlusions probably are wrong. It's your job to come up with an argument which supports your conclusions and proves those authoritative sources wrong.

    Let us go back to the wording of the Cobb County sticker: "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

    Note that the stickers do not read "This textbook conains material on Darwin's theory of natural selection." Instead, they are designed to make it sound like there is doubt about whether the process of evolution takes place, something that all reputable scientists now accept as fact.

    Natural selection is a theory. Punctuated equilibria is a theory. Genetic drift is a theory. But evolution is a fact.

  745. Re:RTFA, CowboyNeal from the apples-to-apples dept by rayk_sland · · Score: 1

    I also vote against that 'dept' headline.

    It really isn't the church versus science, here. It's one valid paradigm, atheism, that obviously and unfairly has legal-political backing, versus another valid paradigm, theism, that is being championed at this time by the church. Neither is a matter of science, rather personal experience, faith and philosophy.

    Those who believe in God should not be called unscientific, as your headline did, because they interpret the universe that way. Those believe in 'no God' should not be called scientific because they have chosen that paradigm. 'All we are saying is...' students, especially children, should not have their paradigm predetermined for them by school textbooks. The theory of evolution as taught in schools proceeds from and leads back to an atheistic paradigm. (Loud cries of protest! Yes I hear you, and disagree.) This is why there is a necessity to emphasise that it is merely an option. If a creationist theory was taught it would need the same disclaimer. Origins science has huge implications for your worldview. It's too important an issue to let one paradigm override another mistakenly using the word 'science' as a club.

    --
    Jedis are stupid. If they were so powerful, why couldn't they handle counseling for a kid who missed his mom?
  746. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    What? It's a fact simply because authoritative sources say so? I have submitted my argument that evolution is theory and not fact, and you have merely responded with contradictions put fourth by authoritative sources. You have yet to submit a counter argument. By definition, the theory of evolution is a theory. No number of authoritative sources may change this fact. Most simply argue that it must be fact since they believe in it's truth so strongly. But that does not change the fact that is only a theory. At best we may be able to prove that it is possible that life on earth evolved from a few simple organisms. It is unlikely we will ever be able gather data which will prove all life on earth evolved in such a manner.

    Furthermore, "Species undergoing mutation in the presence of a sufficient quantity of natural selection will evolve into a form better adapted to their environment" is a fact since it can be mathematically proven. I was not referring to animal species, or plant species, merely the generic term species to represent a unique mathematical quantity.

  747. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by fmaxwell · · Score: 1
    It's a fact simply because authoritative sources say so?

    It's not a fact simply because you, with no credentials or authority, say that it is not? Gee, Bob, who should I believe? Some of the most respected scientists of our time or some guy on Slashdot who thinks that Stephen J. Gould was a guy "from Discover"?

    I have submitted my argument that evolution is theory and not fact, and you have merely responded with contradictions put fourth[sic] by authoritative sources.

    No, you have not submitted an argument. You have made assertions with no logical arguments supporting them.

    You have yet to submit a counter argument.

    That is a bald-faced lie and here are some examples:
    Creationists misquote and take evolutionary scientists' quotes out of context and make the disagreement over the mechanisms of evolution seem like a disagreement over whether evolution has occurred. Well, no respected scientist questions whether evolution occurs or has occurred. It is considered a fact based on abundant evidence. The actual scientific debate is over how evolution occurs, not whether it occurs.

    and
    Let us go back to the wording of the Cobb County sticker: "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered."

    Note that the stickers do not read "This textbook conains material on Darwin's theory of natural selection." Instead, they are designed to make it sound like there is doubt about whether the process of evolution takes place, something that all reputable scientists now accept as fact.

    Natural selection is a theory. Punctuated equilibria is a theory. Genetic drift is a theory. But evolution is a fact.


    I was not referring to animal species, or plant species, merely the generic term species to represent a unique mathematical quantity.

    Yeah. Right. Except that the word "species" doesn't mean "a unique mathematical quantity" and, even if it did, that meaning would have nothing to do with biological evolution, which is what we are (supposedly) discussing.

    You are now just wasting my time. You refuse to debate any points that I make and even have the nerve to claim that I never made them. You claim that the most respected scientists are wrong but provide no logical refutation of their claims. Now you are redefining words and making absurd statements about things being "mathematically proven."

    If you want to debate in an intellectually honest manner, then I'm happy to participate. Otherwise, I have better uses for my time and mental energy.
  748. Coward by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

    Typical Creationist behavior: post a huge whine about how nobody will read your huge whine, then chicken out when someone actually responds. Low intelligence, low courage, low ethics, what doesn't Creationism lack?

    --
    "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
  749. Re:RTFA, CowboyNeal from the apples-to-apples dept by randallpowell · · Score: 1

    Your wrong. I believe in god and that science is the best method for understanding the natural universe. Buddhism covers the spiritual. So religion and science can play well together.

  750. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    "Theory: All life on earth has evolved from a single spontaneously generated cell over the course of billions of years."

    Please cite the page number of the textbook which states this. As a scientist, I would like to write to the author(s) to correct this mistake, as no honest scientist anywhere would ever spout such drivel.

    Don't feel bad if you can't produce a page number. I know you're just pulling these ideas out of your ass. It's OK, really.

  751. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    "I could not see how the required complexity could possibly be achieved without a guiding intelligence."

    The wonderful thing about science is that its validity isn't affected one bit by what anyone believes.

  752. Jesus is the DEVIL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Lucifer is the Latin term originally used by the Romans to refer to the planet Venus when that planet was west of the sun and hence rose before the sun in the morning, thereby being the morning star."

    "Rev 22:16 -- I Jesus have sent mine angel to testify unto you these things in the churches. I am the root and the offspring of David, [and] the bright and morning star."

    So all christians have actually been praying to the devil. Jokes on you!

  753. Letter sent to head of the relevant school board by aeoneal · · Score: 1
    My spouse (who holds a PhD in religious studies from UVA) sent the following to school board head Kathie Johnstone, which I found a good overview of the problems with the sticker.

    The sticker in the Cobb County science books to the effect that "evolution is a theory, not a fact" is highly misleading, indeed mistaken, but not for the reasons one might think. As the word is used in science, "theory" is not the same as "hypothesis". To the contrary, a theory represents the highest level of certainty currently available to a discipline. Hence, we speak of "quantum theory" in physics without any hint that this is just a guess, or is in some way not a fact. Indeed, data are not just raw input but are "theory-laden". That is, the theory is what determines what counts as a fact in the first place. So it makes no sense to say that something is only a theory, not a fact. One could say "evolution is only an hypothesis, not a theory" or, equivalently, "evolution is only an hypothesis, not a fact", but this would be false. Evolution, in the scientific community, is a theory, not an hypothesis. To be sure, theories may change or be replaced. Phlogiston theory was the science of its day, but was replaced by oxidation theory. Evolution may someday be replaced. But that can be said about any current scientific theory whatever.

    Despite all this one could continue to maintain the theory/fact distinction, but in that case the logic of the position would entail having a sticker to the effect that "Relativity is only a theory, not a fact," that "Genetics is only a theory, not a fact," and that "Plate tectonics is only a theory, not a fact." Of course, this would be ridiculous, but at least it would have the virtue of consistency. Perhaps it is the singling out of evolution to tar with the brush of "theory not fact" when no other theories are required to have such a disclaimer that made the religious basis of the sticker so transparent to the court, giving the lie to the school board's patently disingenuous statement that "The textbook stickers are a reasonable and evenhanded guide to science instruction and encouraging students to be critical thinkers."

    Respectfully, Barton Odom

    She replied only, "Thank you for your input."

  754. Re:Yay! by bechthros · · Score: 1

    My point is that if I choose not to believe in science it doesn't matter what you prove. And theory and proof are similar in that they are both predicated on givens. It doesn't matter how conclusive the proof is of someone just doesn't subscribe to the principles that underlie conventional science or mathematics (hard to do, I know).

  755. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Robowally · · Score: 1

    Well, yes and no. Ideally a scientist is 100% objective. But in reality you have to start with a hypothesis and then test it to see if it is true or not. BUT in the evolutionary world of people like Oxford's Richard Dawkins, their reasoning is anything but objective, and in fact commits the logical fallacy of affirming the consequent.

    e.g. Dawkins begins with the belief there is no God, then finds that evolution is true because there is no God to have created. This is plainly circular!

    Evolution therefore becomes a non-falsiable theory because of this logical fallacy.

    --
    Karma? Sorry, i don't believe in superstition. http://talk.thinkingmatters.org.nz
  756. Re:RTFA, CowboyNeal from the apples-to-apples dept by rayk_sland · · Score: 1

    I didn't say that science and religion don't play together. I said that one paradigm or worldview is no more or less scientific than another and it's unfair to characterise one as church and one as science. Atheistic, pantheistic (last time I checked Buddhism is pantheistic) monotheistic paradigms all lead to different interpretations of scientific data. The resultant theories from those interpretations lead back to the paradigms that originated them to reinforce them. What I believe the parents who requested those stickers in the first place wanted was that their children not be presented with a false choice between the atheistic paradigm mis-labeled 'science' and the christian paradigm taught at home.

    --
    Jedis are stupid. If they were so powerful, why couldn't they handle counseling for a kid who missed his mom?
  757. So you'd be fine to sticker expansion redshift...? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Not to mention "dark" matter and energy, superstrings and other stuff which is still kinda dodgy but not often presented that way?

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  758. So why was that not rated Funny? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Amen!
    Well, I liked it, you bunch of sourpusses! (-:
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  759. You need to read deeper by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    I've only glanced at the finches one so far, but that doesn't inspire confidence
    Short story: the finches aren't evolving as so many people have claimed for so long.

    Environmental pressures force them away from the norm, then when the pressure goes away, so does the variation. It's the exact opposite of evolution, it's species-wide homeostasis in the face of precisely the kind of pressure most likely to cause evolution in the classical sense.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  760. Ring species are subsets of the one species, by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    there's no new information, ergo no evolution, but thanks for playing anyway.

    Considering that ten of thousand years is nothing in evolutionary time, it's pretty big that we spot anything at all on human timescales.
    BOC if things happen much too fast, your pet theory breaks just as badly as if they happen too slowly or not at all, no?
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Ring species are subsets of the one species, by Alsee · · Score: 1

      there's no new information, ergo no evolution

      Ah good, the same claim someone else replied with. I wrote up a rather extensive explanation of exactly how evolution adds information here. It's long, but you should read it. For example it explains that mutation is NOT the engine of evolution. Almost everyone has the impression it is. You need mutation to prevent evolution from eventually grinding to a halt, but mutation is merely a AA-battery in the megawatt powerplant driving evolution.

      But to breifly and directly address added information in ring species here, that post cites a ring species where one end of the ring is evolving towards increasing camouflage and the other end of the ring is evolving towards increasing obviousness and mimicry of a deadly posionous newt (which predators would not risk attacking).

      Not some sort of divergent degredation, but evolution driving each end of the ring "uphill" towards different advantageous goals.

      BOC if things happen much too fast, your pet theory breaks just as badly as if they happen too slowly or not at all, no?

      Huh? WTF? Yeah, and the theory of sound would break down if sound traveled faster than light! And the theory of sound would breakdown if it traveled slower than it does too.

      The theory of sound predicts that sound will travel at certain speeds caused by the speeds that atoms move and hit each other. The fact that the actual speed of sound matches the speed the theory predicts is evidence that the theory is RIGHT! And OBVIOUSLY if the speed of sound were different then the theory would be wrong!

      Yes, if you CHANGE REALITY then any correct theory will "break down" and be wrong.

      When you fully understand it evolution is an information processing system. A single operational cycle equals a generation, a single tick of the clock. Now that we've fixed the clock rate at a generation you look at the information processed at each tick of the clock. The information added is quite specific and limited, specifically the fitness of each individual as measured by the number of offspring. The population frequencies of each genetic variation can generally only change by a few percent each generation. Of COURSE it takes a long time from evolution to carry out any signifigant information processing. Each tick of the clock actually does some powerful information processing, but each clock tick is limited. Even the simplest case of the most overwhelming genetic advantage it would take dozens of generations for the decendants of a single individual to displace an entire population. Any reasonable rate of change is going to be far slower than that.

      To the extent evolution makes time scale predictions for observable time scales, the predicted rates match observed rates. To the extent evolution makes long time scale rough estimates, the predicted rates are a good match to fossil and related evidence.

      Yes, evolution would be wrong if its predictions did not match the observed rates of change of living things. Yes, evolution would be wrong if its predictions did not match the fossil record. And you think this is an argument against evolution? Doh!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  761. As I said, thanks for playing... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    To say that there never will be any evidence to support evolution (neglecting the completely ignorant statement that there currently is no such evidence) is not a statement about reality
    It's a statement that the evidence so far accumulated is mutually exclusive of real evidence being discovered for evolution.

    The massive body of evidence to which you refer by implication is not real. It is an accumulation based on false axioms. Just recently, geological isochrons - a keystone of long-ages dating systems - were called into serious question by evolutionists. It's not the first time that's happened to isochrons, and it's a long, long way from the first field that's happened in.

    When you have mathematicians and biologists calling each other liars and heretics at the tops of their voices in a formal conference, you know you have a problem with your theory - but your religion (Materialism) prevents you from accepting that.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:As I said, thanks for playing... by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >The massive body of evidence to which you refer by implication is not real.

      Go to your library. Go to the periodicals section. Look up some topics like 'evolutionary biology' or 'molecular biology' and witness for yourself how unreal all that evidence is (just from one month).

      >Just recently, geological isochrons - a keystone of long-ages dating systems - were called into serious question by evolutionists.

      No, they weren't. You've been sucking on too much creationist teat.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
  762. Glad to see one serious reply in the bunch by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Ring species, unfortunately, do not involve any divergence based on new information - it's a form of degeneration and you can in fact breed all of the participants back together by simply working your way around the ring ("chording" it) in small enough steps.

    I don't have on-line access to Nature but a precis of the Myxococcus article would be helpful if you can paste one. The odds are very much in favour of the "novel" behaviour being latent or otherwise not based on true diversification.

    The nested heirarchies are not a prediction of evolution. If development turns over species as thoroughly as it has to in order to assure that new species replace the old, any vestiges of nesting would be very tenuous. Also against the nesting argument you have situations like the well-worn "macrobats/microbats" matrix, which is usually hand-waved as "parallel evolution", in turn a serious piece of question-begging if ever I saw one.

    If creationism had been true we would have not seen reconcilable nested hierarchies with different traces.
    This assertion has always puzzled me. Do you have time to explain why not? Surely, if a process or structure works in one place a designer would use it in many places, perhaps tweaked a little to better address the other tasks?

    Even diversification within 'created kinds' would require the same sort of changes one would need for macroevolution, which hurts their arguments against evolutionary mechanics.
    With one showstopper exception, specifically that degeneration into subspecies requires no new information.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Glad to see one serious reply in the bunch by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      There has never been a definition for information provided by creationists that cannot be demonstrated to arise via naturalistic evolution.

      The Myxococcus evolved novel fibrils to facilitate cooperative behavior when the gene for the standard pilus used in the wild type species was deleted.

      This would require not only generating novel fibril structures, but tying them into the existing pathways used for behavior and quorum sensing.

      The nested hierarchies are molecular phylogenies. It is the same principle used in paternity testing. The place of bats using traditional phylogeny was difficult, sure, but you're ignoring the molecular phylogenies. Descent need not be guesswork based solely upon phenotype.

      The reason that we would not expect nested hierarchies of the type we see under an ex nihilo creation model is that we see the same hierarchies from different targets, such as the ribosome or cytochrome. These would not be expected to nest together if common descent were not true. Instead of a tree of life, we'd expect an orchard if creation ex nihilo was true.

      Since the DNA code is degenerate, you can have a completely different sequence code for the same protein. Positing that a creator would use the same sequence, with the amount of drift expected naturalistically, between the species also poses philosophical problems along the lines that Descartes tried to solve.

      The 'no new information' argument will continue to be teethless until the creationists come up with a definition that hasn't already been shown to arise naturalistically. We've had several discussions on this at TheologyWeb in the past year.

  763. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    It is a fact that there is a lot of evidence that supports the theory if evolution. This means that evolution is a good theory to use in trying to predict the changes in species which occur over time.

    This, like any other scientific theory, does not necessarily mean that it is applicable in all cases. For example it does not preclude the possibility species will become less adapted to their environment over time (which could happen given the correct arrangement of random events, especially over a small period of time). Also, theories which try to formulate the mechanism of evolution are only theories. It is possible that evolution could come about by another means than mutation and natural selection (a good example of this is genetic manipulation on the part of humans).

    One could describe the theory of evolution as a law (such as the laws of thermodynamics, or Moors' law). But describing it as fact is not appropriate. No one would describe the laws of thermodynamics as facts, while there is a much greater of abundance of information supporting these laws than supporting evolution. There are many individual occurrences where evolution accurately describes facts, but these do not render evolution itself fact.

    Your very authoritative sources do not counter my argument as outlined here. Simply saying that the term "theory" does not do evolution justice does not make it acceptable to describe evolution as fact. Perhaps you cold dry to popularize the description of evolution as a law (but "law of evolution" does not roll off the tongue as easily as "theory of evolution" in much the same way as the "law of relativity" doesn't seem as good as the "theory or relativity"), but describing evolution as fact is not correct.

    Now, the whole premise of this court case is that calling evolution a theory denigrates it. If this true, why then is it not derogatory when people refer to relativity as a theory? Moreover, why is it not derogatory when scientists refer to evolution as a theory? I think the intent of the sticker was to encourage students to view evolution as a scientific theory and not as a direct contradiction to their established beliefs. This is good because often people will reject a direct contradiction to their beliefs out of hand.

  764. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    I don't know where you got the impression that was a citation. That was an example I created to demonstrate the nature of theories.

    Your assertion that I am "just pulling these ideas out of [my] ass" very strange given the context of my statement, but it is factual. My whole argument is that statement is not a fact (hence the label theory). Thus the appearance of such a statement where it is not presented as a theory would be unlikely to occur in a text book. That would be, as you and I have both pointed out, inappropriate.

    So basically, what you've said here is that that statement is appropriately described as a theory, much like the theory of evolution. It's strange that you've chosen to state this in such an offensive manner (then again, it is equally strange that you post at +2 if this is the typical form of your comments), but I'm glad you agree with my argument.

  765. Re:Catholicism & Science Creationism vs. Evolu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, leave him alone. He's funnier that way, and therefore more useful to the slashdot community. After all, he replies to himself, doesn't he? No other corrections needed! :)

  766. Re:That label doesn't mean what they think it mean by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

    Thank you for a more reasoned debate.

    It is a fact that there is a lot of evidence that supports the theory if evolution.

    There is no single "theory of evolution" -- and that's one of the particularly offensive things about the stickers on the textbooks. There is Darwin's theory of natural selection, Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould's theory of punctuated equilibria, and the theory of genetic drift. All seek to explain the mechanism(s) behind evolution.

    Simply saying that the term "theory" does not do evolution justice does not make it acceptable to describe evolution as fact.

    That's not my point at all. The term "evolution" refers to the process of genetic change over time -- which is considered by the scientific community to be fact. When someone says "the theory of evolution," they are improperly characterizing the scientific community as having a single, universally shared, explanation for why evolution occurs.

    Now, the whole premise of this court case is that calling evolution a theory denigrates it. If this true, why then is it not derogatory when people refer to relativity as a theory?

    No, the premise of this court case is that evolution was singled out in order to promote and/or support religious beliefs. Excerpts rom the lawsuit (note that most references, paragraph numbers, etc. were removed for ease of reading. For the complete text, see http://www.aclu.org/Files/OpenFile.cfm?id=17050):

    No other theory, topic, or subject in the School system has a disclaimer.

    The effect of the disclaimer is the disparagement of the non-religious scientific theory of evolution, to the benefit of the religious beliefs of creationism and intelligent design.

    After agreeing to the language of the current disclaimer, but before placing the disclaimer in the textbooks, the Board considered and rejected an alternative disclaimer. The alternative disclaimer was both more accurate and more comprehensive, but was rejected by the Board in favor of the disclaimer that more clearly, and less accurately targeted evolution. The current disclaimer was chosen because it fell in line with the complaints from parents who wanted creationism and intelligent design taught in the classroom.

    There are two uses of the word "theory." Webster's New World Dictionary (2nd College Ed.). One is the common usage, which defines theory as "speculation, a mental viewing or a contemplation." The other is the scientific usage. Id. A scientific theory "is the most parsimonious coordinated statement that a scientist uses to explain natural phenomena." Id. "It's basis is factual; its application is predictive." A scientific theory is a "thoroughly tested and well-substantiated scientific explanation." Evolution is a scientific theory. As such, evolution is "something known to occur." "There is no scientific dispute in the peer-reviewed scientific literature as to whether evolution is fact and occurs." Indeed, evolution "is one of the best supported theories in all of science." "There is no scientific evidence that evolution does not occur, and there is a tremendous amount of active research into the details of how it occurs and how it can be applied for the human good." Evolution is a fact. The Board may claim that it was using the scientific usage of "theory." That cannot be true, however, because a scientific theory essentially is a fact. Thus, if written that way, the sentence would contradict itself. Nonetheless, the disclaimer rejected by the School Board does not totally discredit evolution as the current disclaimer does. The disclaimer uses the common usage of "theory" even though the disclaimer is placed in a science textbook and makes scientific claims. The disclaimer, therefore, distorts the truth about evolution and conveys a message that the School District supports the belief that evolution is "speculation" and does not support the fact that evolution is "one of the best supporte

  767. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    Citations, please. Because I've read Dawkins, and I don't think he said what you said he said. :)

  768. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Robowally · · Score: 1

    Regarding Dawkin's rejection of any deity, just do a google search for "Richard Dawkins quotes".

    The rest stems from that doesn't it? If you a priori reject the existence of anything outside the space-time box in which the universe exists, then only athiesm seems to make sense to me. At least Dawkins is consistent in his athiesm.

    So, if for arguments sake you and I knew (say via inside knowledge) that the universe and life was created by some deity, Dawkins would reject it because of his founding assumption that there is nothing outside the box.

    The big (and exciting) problem in all this is that evolution seems more and more impossible as we understand more and more about (for example) the cell. At least, that is where the ID DVD was going.

    --
    Karma? Sorry, i don't believe in superstition. http://talk.thinkingmatters.org.nz
  769. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    The confusion here always seems to be the automatic assumption that 'God' is the Christian god

    That assumption was not made nor implied, but was explicitely denied in the article. You are the only one who has made the leap in that direction.

    Theres no reason to believe that the 'Intelligence' that possibly created the universe has any compassionate feelings towards humans or is just off doing his own thing.

    Irrelevant.

    Can't see any needed link between ID and Christianity / Islamism / whatever.

    Your confusion is that you assume that ID (that is, "INTELLIGENT DESIGN") only means "the Christian God created the Universe." You just acknowledged that an intelligence may have created the Universe; that's all the more that ID posits.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  770. Re:So you'd be fine to sticker expansion redshift. by Alsee · · Score: 1

    They can do pretty much anything they like, so long as they are doing it in furtherance of a legitimate government purpose. If they made some reasonable attempt to reflect the level of scientific concensus of each subject for purposes of improving science education that would be quite reasonable.

    Hell, their evolution-sticker rule could(*) have been upheld as legal had they simply presented a legitimate purpose for them in court. There was no hint of any attempt at presenting a legitimate purpose in the news report. If they did attempt to offer a purpose for it the judge apparantly didn't find it credible.

    They failed seperation of church and state not because of what they did, but because of why they did it.

    (*)With a legitimate purpose for the rule it would be presumably valid, but it could potentially still get stuck down if in application it unintentionally caused a signifigant problem.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  771. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    What's he talking about? Comparitive DNA analysis is one of the best proofs for evolution.

    Which is not to say that an intelligent designer was not involved. Apparently, you don't know what intelligent design is.

    I've studied the entire human genome thoroughly,

    That's an absurd statement.

    and found no evidence of intelligent design.

    That's a thoughtless statement.

    You want to impress me?

    No; I want to enlighten you to the reality that evolution is not the final word for theories of biological origins.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  772. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Ultimately, this produces a strain of, say, staphlococcus (sp?) that laughs at penicillin (sp?), and since species are simply our classification of organisms based on certain characteristics -- presto! a new species of bacteria. Get it?

    You should have learned what the definition of a species is before you began arguing for evolution. Or, more to the point, you should have learned what is not a good definition of a species.

    Staph aureus is a type of bacterium. Whether it is vulnerable to penicillin or resistant to penicillin, it is still Staph aureus; it is not a new species, even if a population of it develops resistance to penicillin.

    Besides, drug resistance may be reversible. Part of the reason that drug resistance is reversible is that many organisms turn on and off various gene expressions as the environment requires. Drug resistance does not require new genetic information encoded in the organism; the population inherently carries the information needed to resist drugs that hurt it.

    DNA, the agent of heredity (as much a theory as evolution is, I might add),

    Where do you get that idea? DNA is a tangible object. Evolution is a process, an abstraction. It is an apples-and-oranges comparison.

    I know that ID really means that life is too complex to have arrisin (sp?) by chance but rather required an Inteligence to allow it to happen -- but that is untestable, unrepeatable, and un-observable,

    ALL theories of human origins are untestable, unrepeatable and unobservable! What human was around to witness the birth of the first human? How could you evolve another first human? The experiment has run its course, and now all you can do is forensics.

    and make no predictions about future observations -- so it isn't science and has no place except in philosophy or religeon classes.

    ID can make predictions at least as well as evolution can.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  773. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Right. Based on given propositions.

    Proof is not just a bunch of assertions, nor is it arbitrary. There is actually a methodical process of determining the truth or falsity of statements; this is called, "logic." Only statements that test true according to the rules of logic are true. What is more, statements that test true according to the rules or logic ARE TRUE. It isn't a matter of opinion. In fact, the reason that you are able to participate in this forum is that the evaluation of truth and falsity of expressions can be tested by machines. The results of these tests are not subject to opinion.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  774. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    based on a set of axioms that he believed.

    It doesn't matter what Bertrand Russell believed! It doesn't even matter whether Bertrand Russell ever lived! 1+1=2 even if humans never existed. It is not a matter of opinion; this is an inherent nature of logic. All the Bertrand Russell did was discover the proof. I emphasize the word, "discover." It wasn't something he made up or created or formulated; he discovered a fundamental property of the Universe.

    Frankly, if you guys understood logic, you would know better than these statements you are making.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  775. Re:Leading Atheist Philosopher Concludes God's Rea by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    That doesn't really answer my question. I did start to slog through Dawkins quotes, but then I remembered I wasn't the one who made the assertion. To convince me, you'd have to come up with a quote that shows (preferably in full context) that he began with the idea that God doesn't exist, and ended with something like "so therefore, evolution must be true."

    From what I've read of his writings, he appears to have decided God doesn't exist based on the scientific priciple. While it's impossible to prove something doesn't exist, it's easy to decide what you want to believe based on the available evidence. My view is that we don't *need* a god to explain the universe, and Dawkins' writings indicate that's his view as well.

  776. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    That's a mathematical proof, not a scientific proof, an example of the same word with two different meanings, like confusing free speech and free beer.

    No, they are the same thing. If you understood logic--by which I mean, the study of evaluating the truth of statements--you would know that. They are EXACTLY the same thing. In fact, there is even a branch of mathematics, called, "Discrete Mathematics," in which all sorts of statements (mathematical, statements of weather, statements of conditions, etc.) are all subject to evaluation by the same set of rules. The rules of logic that govern mathematics are exactly the same set of rules that govern science.

    Mathematical proofs are easy,

    Not for normal people they aren't.

    and everywhere. High school students are taught them.

    What makes you think that high school students can't know the truth?

    The scientific model, on the other hand, does not except absolute truth:

    Nonsense! If science has no concept of truth--and there is only one kind of truth (that is, absolute truth)--then it is aimless. The problem that scientists have is that the requirements for proof usually exceeds the ability of scientists to meet them. But, even in theories that are eventually shown to be unrepresentative models of our Universe, the internal statements of the theories can be proven (that is, they are absolute truth within their parameters).

    Einstein did not disprove Newton; rather Einstein's Relativity is a special case of Newtonian physics, an extension, not a contradiction. It is not an accident this is so; the reason Einstein could extend Newton's work is that Newton's work is logically consistent with reality.

    everything is contingent and can it all be overturned tomorrow if the right evidence is found.

    Have you ever thought of what that means regarding how scientists got their theories in the first place? Scientists don't produce their theories by getting stoned and reporting the hallucinations they have. The Universe works along consistent lines, and scientists use methodical, logical approach to model the Universe. Within the parameters of their observations, scientists can produce accurate models of our universe. BTW, that's what theories are; models of the Universe.

    In the scientific view of the world, there is no such thing as absolute truth, the closest you can ever get is a "theory", and you can't prove theories, only observe that they match the evidence.

    Nonsense! Theories could (in theory, pardon the pun) be proven; only, the requirements of proof are very steep. Mathematics has a (temporary) advantage, in that most of our math is relatively simple expressions of logic. Indeed, mathematics can be used to model our Universe, just as English statements can, and those mathematical models are just as prone to proof or falsification as the English statements.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  777. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Pooua: Bertrand Russell spent several years and actually proved, in the real and rigorous sense of the word, that 1+1 = 2

    AC:You can't prove an axiom.

    Who said that 1+1=2 is an axiom?

    "Principia Mathematica is the book Russell wrote with Alfred North Whitehead where they gave a logical foundation of Mathematics by developing the Theory of Types that obviated the Russell's paradox. This assertion may become more convincing after a look at the page 362 of Principia Mathematica where Russell and Whitehead finally proved that 1 + 1 = 2."

    Russell's Paradox

    "In 1913, Russell and Whitehead published "Principia Mathematica," a three-volume set considered one of the intellectual landmarks of the century that began from first principles and developed the laws of arithmetic (proving on Page 362 of Volume 1 that 1+1=2), but failing in the end to prove the internal consistency of mathematical logic and its ability to determine the truth or falsity of a given statement. The project drove Russell to the outer bounds of sanity."

    Honolulu Star-Bulletin: No certainty exists in search for truth

    AC: What Russell would have "proved" would look something more like...

    Pooua: It would have looked like this!:

    before we initiate we will admit 3 primitive concepts (this is you understand it without we need a explanation):
    ZERO (denoted by 0);
    NATURAL NUMBERS (N);
    and IS SUCESSOR OF (this concept indicate a number that is the sucessor of another, and we will denote by "a" is the sucessor of "a");

    finaly we define the operation sum by i) a+0 = a (the sum of any number with zero is equals to the number)
    ii) a+(b)=(a+b) (the sum of any number with a sucessor of other number is equals to the sucessor of the the sum of the numbers);

    by notation you have:
    0=1; 1=2; 2=3; etc....

    now we can calculate 1+1 that is
    1+(0)=> by definition (ii) of sum =>(1+0) =>(1+0) => by definition (i) of sum =>(1) =>(1) => by notation equals to 2.

    and by this you can know all others sums. note: you cannt say 0+a=a until you proof this is real. so by now, if you want calculate ], for example, 0+2 you must do:
    0+2 => by notation => 0+(1)=> by definition (ii) of sum =>(0+1) => by definition (i) of sum => (1) => by notation equals to 2.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  778. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    CB: No, I'm entirely correct that the evolution-based attack only exists because of the fundamentalist creationism viewpoint.

    I know Christians who are evolutionists. I also know atheists, who point to evolution as "proof" that there is no God. After all, if natural forces are sufficient of themselves to produce all the life we see today, where is there a need for God? As many atheists have pointed out, the "God-of-the Gaps"--the attempt to fit God into the expanding edges of our knowledge--is futile, if not nonsensical. Regardless of the claims of the fundamentalists, if our Universe really is purely the result of materialistic forces, then God is obsolete, and atheists are just being difficult by making that point.

    If the fundies had gotten on board with scientific reality like most other branches of Christianity, we would almost certainly not be having this conversation today.

    Instead, our conversation today would revolve around a philosophy in which the concept of God would be, at most, a figure of speech. Christianity would be reduced to a mere social club. For, that is what Christianity is in these mainstream churches that have accepted secular humanism as truth.

    However, I am well aware of the fact that Christianity in general is attacked, whether by extension of our connection to the fundies, or for other reasons.

    Many great philosophers have noted that people who fearlessly advocate the truth are going to be persecuted. If Christianity is truth, it is to be expected that Christians who advocate it would be persecuted. In particular, Christianity--which demands the existence of a literal God interacting in the affairs of humanity--would be opposed very strongly by atheists and Materialists.

    Pooua: The anti-Christians proceed by removing reference to God in all aspects of public life, not just in the classroom or in discussions of biology. Hence, God is not to be mentioned in government; the Ten Commandments are not to be allowed in courthouses (despite the fact that it is one of the foundational documents of our civilization); presidents are not to be given an oath of office that references God or uses a Bible; the Pledge of Allegiance is not to mention God; and so forth.

    You're confusing public life with government.

    You think I am confusing them. If these ideas are confused, it is not my confusion, for I am only telling you what I have read from the actual works of the people trying to remove Christianity from the public sphere. Government is only the start of the battle; the ultimate goal is the complete disfranchisement of Christianity, so that it dies out.

    Sorry, but all of those examples are not just reasonable but necessary. Religion and politics should not mix.

    Hardly anyone in this country thought so until the mid-19th Century. Most of the Founding Fathers expressed strong statements to the contrary. And, I will add that the idea that religion and politics must not mix is a morally destructive and pernicious idea.

    Separation of Church and State is necessary for a free society in which religion can flourish

    Many European have an established state church. Britain is one example. In contrast, at least one of the Soviet Union's constitutions specified the separation of church and state. So, I am inclined to dismiss your statement as incorrect.

    -- or do you not understand that a the crossing of religion and government for so many years is part of why there have been general backlashes against Christianity since the Renaissance?

    You are mistaken to believe that there has been general backlashes against Christianity.

    Fleeing from government-specified religion was part of how our nation was born!

    Obviously, there was more to it than what you acknowledge, or those who fled would not have set up their own governmental churches here. The context of your statement suggests that you believe these are examples of a "gen

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  779. Oh ye of little faith ? by mikewhittaker · · Score: 1
    So let's get this straight:
    • Creationists suggest that the Universe arrived in some flat-pack form from Ikea, because "otherwise things wouldn't fit together, would they"
    • non-Creationists suggest that the Universe "just growed"

    This is like saying that all trees must have been bought in tubs from a garden centre, because it's "too unlikely" that they grew from a seed.

    Now which, for those who wish to think about such things, is the greater miracle, and if you like, the greater "demonstration" of "creation".

    For my money, it's the Universe that was initiated in a big bang. That is awesome (look up "awe") - inherent in a quantum fluctuation giving rise to spacetime is the possibility of life, and McDonalds(tm).

    So the Creationists don't think "God" could do that ? Who lacks faith in the Almighty now ?

  780. Re:correct. by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    people with quite a few braincells would call the entire planet, before life was on it, nothing more than dust.

    But then, you are a fucking moron who should shut up, so I guess you wouldnt make that connection.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  781. Re:Religious Texts should get this sticker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    not sure if you make sense either or help any side in the debate.

  782. Re:correct. by bamberg · · Score: 1

    people with quite a few braincells would call the entire planet, before life was on it, nothing more than dust.

    Nonsense. You screwed up and you can't admit it. What are you, 12?

    But then, you are a fucking moron who should shut up, so I guess you wouldnt make that connection.

    Do you really think, even for a moment, that I or anyone else reading this message is at all impressed by this? You must or you wouldn't have typed it. That's just sad.

  783. Re:Yay! by Long-EZ · · Score: 1

    Repeat after me. It... was... a... joke.

    You obviously have very little sense of humor, at least where your religious beliefs are concerned. If you did, you'd probably recognize the humor in many aspects of religion. Of course, there's nothing funny about institutionalized pedophilia, systematically suppressing scientific thought and the associated technical advancement to maintain control over people, and other unfortunate aspects of organized religion. From my perspective, religion has done a lot of good, but has done twice as much that is bad. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. If religion had its way, we'd still be in the Middle Ages, huddling in the cold and dark, believing whatever The Church told us to believe, and scared to think for ourselves under pain of death after being labeled a heretic.

    The next time you turn on the faucet and have hot water, flip a switch and have electric light, travel by jet airliner, or go to the hospital for a modern medical procedure that saves your life, don't say, "Thank God". Thank science instead. Let's give credit where credit is due.

    Intelligent design is a theory proposed as a sad attempt by religion to hold onto some credibilty in the face of science explaining that most of the religious dogma that has been rigidly espoused as the truth for centuries is a pack of lies invented to control people. When science approaches the issue using the scientific method, evolution is THE answer. Intelligent design, and the more general belief in a god, are both way down on the list of probabilities when it comes to explaining the observations. Neither intelligent design nor god can be absolutely disproved, but they are unlikely. Both beliefs require faith, not science.

    ID is obviously an attempt to cling to a lie by compromise. "All of creation took about 14 billion years, and not a week, like we said? Oh, umm, well... we were speaking figuratively. We didn't mean it actually took a week. Of course the mechanisms were exactly as you describe and man wasn't made from a lump of clay, and woman wasn't made from a rib taken from the first man. But God was still responsible for everything." The creation myth was a fairy story presented as a fact until science finally prevailed and proved otherwise. Now, in the face of real facts, religion is forced to compromise to avoid losing all credibility, and that compromise is called intelligent design.

    I won't convince you. Your beliefs are based on faith, and there is no compelling scientific evidence that can overcome such personal beliefs. Sadly, people will believe what they want. Religion will keep telling lies to control people by making them feel they are the ones who are right while everyone else's beliefs are false, and they will be rewarded for all of etentity. Religion is divisive, and will unfortunately continue to cause prolonged wars with much killing in the name of some god. The Crusades, Ireland, Palestine, 9/11... when does it end? It ends when we grow up, and stop believing these fairy stories.

    Here's a clue. Science does not accept beliefs based on what makes you feel most comfortable, or what fits best with existing dogma.

    One of my greatest joys is seeing a child who was not indoctrinated into the church, who has developed some critical thinking skills, then watching as an adult attempts to convert the kid to a particular religious belief. I love the part when the confusion and disbelief builds to the point where the kid finally interrupts to ask, "You're kidding me, right?" When reason prevails, I feel there is hope for humanity.

    People who are immersed in the religious dogma and have been programmed to accept it as their own belief system do not realize how ridiculous most of it sounds to anyone who is thinking rationally.

    For now, science and religion should try to stay out of each other's way. If people with religious beliefs are allowed to place stickers on the cover of textbooks that discredit evolution, then those with scien

    --
    >> My ultraviolent Linux switch video.
  784. Re:Yay! by bechthros · · Score: 1

    "Proof is not just a bunch of assertions, nor is it arbitrary."

    Says you. Now think back to all the things in the past that have been "proven" (like the Sun revolving around the Earth, space being filled with "ether"... hell, the Nazis thought they "proved" that Jews were inferior). Now you're going to say those weren't proofs because there was stuff they didn't know back then.

    Well, there's also stuff we don't know now. We are still basing our "proof" and "logic", at the end of the day, on assumptions and postulations. And we keep finding out how wrong some of them are (just ask any astronomer, or any particle physicist).

    "There is actually a methodical process of determining the truth or falsity of statements; this is called, 'logic.'"

    But any process requires input. Ever hear of the GIGO effect? All logic is based on givens. For example, assume that I don't believe in science, math, or any other branch of "Western" logic because it conflicts with my religious beliefs (and yes, I am playing Devil's advocate here). Assume I honestly don't believe that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line. Assume I don't hold as immutable that 1 is always greater than zero. Hell, assume I don't believe in zero.

    Now, prove anything to me. You can't do it.

    "Only statements that test true according to the rules of logic are true."

    That statement would more accurately read, "only statements that we perceive as testing true according to the rules of logic as we currently understand and apply them may be called true...without us feeling like giant assholes, which we are anyway."

    Anytime humankind is convinced that it holds the aboslute truth in its hand, be it spiritual truth or scientific, is a very dangerous time for both science and scientists.

    We have only to look back to the human race's bloody, bloody past of persecutions and wars based on things like Copernicus v Galileo to realize two things: that the standard for "passing the tests of logic" has changed significantly over time, and that said standard is likely to change even more in the future. Seems to me like what you appear to have is absolute faith not only in logic, but the immutability of it. Last time I checked, having aboslute faith in something qualified as a belief system.

    Do you think it's possible to extend ardor for science and logic into the realm of zealotry? Do you think that absolute faith in the infallibility and immutability of today's logic qualifies as such? And what do you think Galileo would have had to say about that? History is filled with scientists who were right but unpopular, and whose blood tended to flow rapidly and frequently. Science has just as much blood on it's hands as religion does, due to bad input into the process of logical testing.

    "What is more, statements that test true according to the rules or logic ARE TRUE. It isn't a matter of opinion."

    Ah, scientific intolerance. My friend, everything is subject to opinion. Life is subject to opinion. Religion is subject to opinion. And yes, even science is subject to opinion. If logic is so immutable than why do so many respectable, intelligent scientists disagree? They're all following logic. They're just not all doing it the same. Who's right and who's wrong? Time will tell. It might take a few hundred years, it certainly has before.

    "In fact, the reason that you are able to participate in this forum is that the evaluation of truth and falsity of expressions can be tested by machines."

    Funny, I can think of plenty of times where /. got hosed up in some manner. I guess this means logic tests aren't infallible, huh? Almost like any logical system you provide with bad input will fail.

    I'm not saying that I personally don't beleive in logic - I do - but I am saying that the key word in that statement is "believe". All rational thought is predicated on earlier

  785. Re:Yay! by lucabrasi999 · · Score: 1
    What made you leave?

    No particular reason. I haven't been a regular attendee of any church in almost two decades (weddings and funerals are my usual reasons for going to church).

    My wife, who was educated in a Florida non-denominational Christian School, believes there are issues with Catholicism. I do not share her beliefs in that matter (although I am a bit more liberal than Catholic teaching would permit). To this date, neither of us are particularly religious (but we are not aetheist).

  786. Unfoirtunately for the whole argument... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...diversity is not a blanket evolutionary advantage.

    It costs gene-space (and hence reduces the efficiency of homeostatic processes) to implement. It potentially interferes with existing, functional forms and processes. It takes energy to sustain non-helpful changes (consider so-far-useless mutations as Henry Kissinger's "useless eaters"). Driving one form of diversity through a population by definition eclipses some others. Replacing an existing population so that a variation or collection of same can thrive is very expensive for a species - way too expensive, in practice, to be realistic (think about Microsoft; in OSes and office suites, they're their own biggest competitor; since they need to grow to survive, they're about to become extinct). And so on ad nauseum.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Unfoirtunately for the whole argument... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Being different has inherent evolutionary value, which of course gets balanced against any costs. And this will inherently promote diverity.

      think about Microsoft

      While it can sometimes be useful to extend a natural selection metaphor into other areas, it isn't always a good fit.

      It appears that you're attempting to say the various versions of windows and other operating systems are "species". Well in one way this exactly highlights my point. Windows has almost zero genetic diversity. Infections and parasites easily adapt to that exact genetic monoculture and sweep through attacking all "individuals" of that species easily. Easy prey.

      The analogy falls apart because those individuals don't die. They are generally simply reinstalled, and perhaps patched. Nor do any individuals spontaneously propagate decendants. Nor do you get random mutations. There are a host of ways the biology model falls apart.

      If it did work like biology then Windows would have been wiped out by infections and parasites ages ago, and we would now have a substantial naturally evolved diversity.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  787. Honestly harsh VS Politely lying by Scrameustache · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Just because you don't believe in something doesn't make it right for you to go slaming other peoples beliefs. I'm no church-goer, but I respect peoples rights to believe in what they want...as long as they'll respect mine, and not call me (or others) an idiot.

    I believe in letting it be known when I feel someone is an idiot.
    I believe it's wrong to pretend to respect someone when you don't. I believe that euphemisms and contrived politeness are poisons of the mind.

    Stop slamming my belief.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:Honestly harsh VS Politely lying by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I also believe that. Hey! You're an idiot!

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  788. Re:$250,000 for anyone who scientifically prooves by bareshiyth · · Score: 1

    I agree Hovind's offer is bombast, insincere, and essentially a sham. Unfortunately, the same can be said about most participants in talk.origins

  789. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A theory equals explaination, however, an explaination doesn't equal fact. The theory of evolution is merely one explaination which has broken down under closer exaimation.

    The labels are clear. Evolution is purely a theory. It is not fact. It is often taught as fact, which is a problem.

    Your argument is just shameful.

  790. Evolution vs Creationism by SoulSkorpion · · Score: 1

    I've never really seen much of a conflict between the two concepts, myself, and don't really see why people get their undergarments in a tangle about it. The biblical account itself seems to support evolution (my interpretation only, blah blah blah, don't get all holier than thou on me. That said: onward...)

    If you consider the notion that a "day" isn't necessarily 24 hours, and that's not too much of a stretch. After all, if you define a day to mean one planetary rotation that alone complicates matters (which planet? was Earth always spinning at the same speed?).

    Anyway, in the text the order in which things were created is: light, earth, plants, sea creatures, land creatures, humans. I don't know about you, but that sounds pretty much the same as the order the theory of evolution places things in.

  791. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    Pooua: "Proof is not just a bunch of assertions, nor is it arbitrary."

    bechthros: Says you. Now think back to all the things in the past that have been "proven" (like the Sun revolving around the Earth, space being filled with "ether"... hell, the Nazis thought they "proved" that Jews were inferior). Now you're going to say those weren't proofs because there was stuff they didn't know back then.

    No, I'm going to say that those weren't proofs, they were assertions, beliefs, theories and dogmas. None of those are proofs.

    As I said before, you don't know what proof is.

    Well, there's also stuff we don't know now. We are still basing our "proof" and "logic", at the end of the day, on assumptions and postulations.

    Take a class in classical logic sometime. Yes, there really is such a thing. It might be titled, "Classical Logic and Critical Thinking." Check with the Humanities Department at your local college.

    If you take a class in Classical Logic, one of two things likely will happen. You will either come out of the class saying that logic is simply a matter of opinion; or, you will pass the class.

    And we keep finding out how wrong some of them are (just ask any astronomer, or any particle physicist).

    Noteably, none of the physical theories that have been discarded were ever proven.

    Pooua: "There is actually a methodical process of determining the truth or falsity of statements; this is called, 'logic.'"

    But any process requires input. Ever hear of the GIGO effect? All logic is based on givens.

    You need to learn the difference between valid propositions and the truth of arguments.

    Proposition 1: "All unicorns are white."
    Proposition 2: "This is a unicorn."
    Conclusion: "This is white."

    The logic is valid, regardless of the validity of the propositions. Though the argument may not model our physical Universe, the argument is still logically valid. By analogy, mathematical statements can be proved, even if those statements do not model our physical Universe. Scientific theories, which are only of significance if they acurately model the physical Universe, can nonetheless be proved either way (though it isn't worth the effort if the theory does not model the physical Universe). The proof we seek from scientific theories is proof that the theory accurately and precisely models our Universe. Thus, it is much more difficult to prove a scientific theory than to prove a mathematical statement.

    For example, assume that I don't believe in science, math, or any other branch of "Western" logic

    It doesn't matter what you believe, or even what you know. Truth exists independently of humanity.

    because it conflicts with my religious beliefs

    It also doesn't matter why you do or don't believe.

    (and yes, I am playing Devil's advocate here). Assume I honestly don't believe that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line. Assume I don't hold as immutable that 1 is always greater than zero. Hell, assume I don't believe in zero. Now, prove anything to me. You can't do it.

    You are very confused between proof and pursuasion! Proof does not matter what you know or believe; it exists whether humans do or not. What you are describing is pursuasion, a completely different topic.

    People can be pursuaded that man evolved from lower life forms simply because the person telling them that it is so is very smart, good-looking and has a beautiful wife. But, smart, good-looking people married to beautiful women could also convince you to buy a defective automobile or give them your money on false pretenses. Pursuasion is not proof.

    everything is subject to opinion.

    Humans have opinions. Let's say that all living things have opinions. That still would not begin to cover a

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  792. Re:My other reality makes sense by uohcicds · · Score: 1

    This, I think, is what I understood about the original argument when I paraphrased it: God and the Universe cannot be separate. This leaves two options: either there is no God and the Universe stands on its own (a more Richard Dawkins perspective) or they are both the same thing and are therefore indivisible. It certainly means God is omnipresent and ominscient, because He simply is everything.

    Like I said previously, I'm an atheist based on the evidence before us now, but if I were to believe in a God of some sort, I must admit that the second position might be an attractive one.

    This is the bit that is faith-related; we will likely never know exactly how the universe came into being, let alone if there is any why, but I personally cannot reconcile the idea of a non-interventionist God that say, a weakly anthropic universe suggests, and the kind of interventionist God portrayed by religious writing. This is one of the difficulites of the I see about the Creationsit/Intelligent Design position: they can't really decide which kind of God He is.

    --
    It's not you: I'm just this horrifically socially awkward with everybody.
  793. Re:$250,000 for anyone who scientifically prooves by bamberg · · Score: 1

    I agree Hovind's offer is bombast, insincere, and essentially a sham.

    Unfortunately, the same can be said about most participants in talk.origins


    Evidence?

  794. God is not even a theory by sean5008 · · Score: 1

    Gravity is a fact. It can be observed, verified and measured.

    Evolution is a theoretical field. Facts can be observed, which are currently best explained by the Theory of evolution by Natural Selection. Like many other empirical scientific theories, it may prove at some point to be correct, partially correct or incorrect.

    God and the Bible however is just conjecture. As speculative fiction it does not deserve the claim to be even a hypothesis. Faith, or personal belief do not make God a fact. No facts can be observed or measured that support the claim that any God(s) exist.

    Some primative idiots could not explain the physical world around them and choose to believe in some mystical omnipotent beings. These beliefs later evolved into a single god speculative fiction. At some point a best seller was written (the Bible) wherein the authors claimed to have some ability to know the origins of life as well as being able to document thousands of years of history preceding the writting of the Bible ~ again a ludicrous claim by the authors. At the same time other primitive cultures were undergoing similar monothesis evolutions in their primitive belif systems.

    Even today, with our well documented historical documents, historians with access to gigabytes of information can not reach back even a few years and write with authority on many matters. Why should we lend any credance to the claims by the authors of the bible? Indeed why should we listen to any religious claims.

    Religion was created by man to explain the natural world around him at a time when he did not even know the world was round! Everything was magic! The only excuse for religious belief is ignorance.

    Religion should be outlawed. I look around the world and instead of seeing religion helping ignorant people to deal with a big unexplainable universe, I see religion being used as an excuse to kill, to hate, to restrict thought and freedoms. Religion's time is past.

  795. Re:Evolution: known via rationalism or via science by spasmatik · · Score: 1

    Yes, your response is completely rational and scientific. Swearing and name calling is definately a valid debating technique taught at all the best universities.

  796. parent != flamebait; by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Flamebait -- Flamebait refers to comments whose sole purpose is to insult and enrage. If someone is not-so-subtly picking a fight (racial insults are a dead giveaway), it's Flamebait.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  797. Re:Yay! by schmink182 · · Score: 1

    I do understand logic. I understand your point. But the parent was certainly pointing the truth: Bertrand Russell began his proof with axioms. He had to. Without axioms, there is no ability to prove. So what Russell proved was that, given his initial axioms (probably about the set definition of natural numbers?), 1+1 must be equal to 2. He did not -- nor was it possible for him to -- prove his axioms. Therefore, belief that 1+1=2 lies in ones belief in the absolute truth of his axioms.

  798. Re:Yay! by schmink182 · · Score: 1
    Einstein did not disprove Newton; rather Einstein's Relativity is a special case of Newtonian physics, an extension, not a contradiction. It is not an accident this is so; the reason Einstein could extend Newton's work is that Newton's work is logically consistent with reality.

    This is untrue. Relativistic physics show that Newtonian physics are wrong -- but still very good approximations at low velocities.

  799. Re:Yay! by schmink182 · · Score: 1
    I had the same kind of science education as you had. I know that evolution is a theory, and I agree that it is important to understand that it is fallable. As another poster noted, most (all?) K-12 science textbooks include a chapter explaining this. However, I think that making this point on the cover of the book absolutely screams to an elementary school student not to believe what is inside of the book *at all*.

    Imagine if the president (any president) announced in a speech that relativity was just a theory, and that one should exercise caution before using it. While what he is announcing is the truth, it sends a strong signal that relativity is not useful because it is so likely to be flawed. For this reason -- because of the signal sent by these stickers -- I believe that they are a bad idea.

  800. C'mon guys... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only, like, 12 more posts before reaching the #3 stop on the HOF.

    Sorry, I didn't read anyone else's posts. They are all stupid.

    1. Re:C'mon guys... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are an idiot.
      wait, i wrote this.
      i am an idiot.

  801. 11th *last* post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i win man.
    i win.

  802. just *ten* more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but i have work to do, someone help me out.

    1. Re:just *ten* more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      three more left...

  803. YOU FAIL IT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But I don't know what you fail...

  804. Re:Yay! by EEgopher · · Score: 1

    Thanks for sharing, lucabrasi. I'm a cradle Catholic, but experienced a serious resurgence in 2003. Prior to then I had not been fully "living" Catholicism even though I agreed with it.
    How, may I ask, do you define "more liberal", and what are some of the predominant issues for you? I struggled to make sense of certain teachings, and am eager to share my learning on them now. Fire away, if interested!
    -gopher

    --
    hi, I like pancakes -.-- -.-- --..
  805. Re:Yay! by lucabrasi999 · · Score: 1

    I don't know if I want to get into this discussion. It may not result in a good experience. I doubt we will get very far in having a 'religious war' on a public forum. However, even with my resignations, I'll bite.


    Abortion. I am a strong supporter in the right of abortion. If you are not, please do not let us get into a pissing match on this issue.

    Marriage of priests. Around 400AD, the church started down the path of having celibate priests. It took a few hundred more years, but finally, the church was able to impose the rule of celibacy for priests. It has never made any sense.

    Homosexual rights. I believe the church is confusing "sexual preferences" with "moral standing". Then again, the church does something similar by insisting on a celibate priesthood. So, I guess that I should not be surprised.

    The Catholic "ritual". The amount of 'ritual' that occurs in a Mass is amazing. Think about it, sit, stand, kneel, shake hands, priest call/congregation response, etc. Other than the priest, does anyone in attendance understand why each step of the ritual takes place? Does anyone wonder if Saint Paul was thinking of this complex ritual when he created Christianity in the decades immediately after the resurrection of Christ? Why does the church insist on continuing with what appears to be a series of yoga exercises when most people can't explain why they do them every week? At the minimum, I think the church should try to explain the ritual (I don't recall any church that I have attending offering classes on the ritual -- but I am not a regular attendee of church).

    That's it. I could go on, but I would probably fill up a few pages.

  806. oooh, i did it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saddam fuckin' Hussein can go fuck 'imself.

    I WIN IT!

    Last post, man.

  807. Re:Yay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolution predicts finding fossil remains linking past species to current ones. And, lo!, such fossils are found.

    Name one prediction ID makes. Then show me how it has been backed up.

    Evolution can't generally predict how species will evolve specifically. But it does actually make predictions. It predicts that if you introduce a stress, species will evolve to handle it. Introduce antibiotics: get resistent bacteria. Change the colors of trees due to pollution, get darker colored moths. And so forth.

    I've seen ID make no such predictions. Since you're relying on "God wants it", you can explain anything a postiori, but never before it happens. Even evolution, as inexact as it is, can beat *that.

  808. Re:Religious Texts should get this sticker by bamberg · · Score: 1

    This is one argument that atheists or agnostics can't make.

    Of course we can.

    Has no Sodom & Gomorrah been discovered? Was it not charred by a seeming "nuclear type" explosion?

    No. Archaeologists have found cities (such as Bab edh-Dhra' and Numeira) that they think might have been Sodom and Gomorrah, but no proof has been found. The two cities mentioned are considered promising by christian apologists because they show signs of being emptied, not because of any "nuclear type" explosion. Of course, there are any number of reasons why a city might be abandoned so it's not really strong evidence either way.

    Was there no King Herod who had all the first born children killed?

    Actually there's no evidence outside of the bible that Herod (who did exist) had all the first born children killed. None of the histories written at the time mention it.

    Was there no flood of any type? Is there no scientific evidence to support this?

    Nice try, but the bible specifies a global flood, not a "flood of any type". And there was no global flood. There is plenty of evidence of that.

    Was there no Paul?

    Was there no Mohammed? Guess you're also a Muslim then.

    Now, the Bible may have a lot of unbelievable elements as well (to you).

    Such as the idea that an all-knowing, all-powerful god had to sacrifice himself to himself in order to convince himself to change a rule ("sinners" go to hell) that he made himself. It's just nonsensical.

    But evolution has a lot of unbelievable (and believable) elements to those that subscribe to the Bible.

    That's not surprising.

    I believe that Sabre Tooth Tigers existed - I do not believe they devolved into Tigers or that Tigers and domesticated kitty cats are anything related to evolution.

    That would be evolved, not devolved. And ignoring the obvious similarity between larger cats like tigers and smaller domesticated cats is just silly.

  809. Re:Yay! by EEgopher · · Score: 1

    I agree, Lucab. I'd prefer to carry the battle on private email. For the interest of anyone following this string, however, I'll throw some short answers. May I say first of all, however, that the Catechism of the Catholic Church (paperback book) explains all Church teachings. In my experience, understanding requires faith, and praying for an increase of faith is an advantageous exercise. If we understood it, it wouldn't be God.
    (1) Abortion: None of our constitutional rights mean anything unless we are alive. Abortion is dead wrong. Tune in Monday to watch the marchers in DC.
    (2) Celibacy is not natural: it's supernatural. In Revelation, Christ marries the Church, as does a priest, in a sense, at his ordination.
    (3) Homosexual relations: please see the Catechism. Sex between homosexuals is morally wrong as is sex for unmarried heterosexuals.
    (4) Ritual: I liked your description: amazing. Any catholic bookstore will have something under 100 pages that explains the parts of the Mass. Seasoned catholics may well fall short of understanding as they should; anyone can become distracted if they're not careful, to which I can personally attest. The basics are not terribly complicated, however -- remember, it's intended for every person on Earth to participate, so it can't be that difficult.

    --
    hi, I like pancakes -.-- -.-- --..
  810. Mod parent very, very funny! by Beltway+Prophet · · Score: 1

    Mod parent very, very funny!

  811. Re:Yay! by bechthros · · Score: 1

    "As I said before, you don't know what proof is."

    1) As I said before, even mathematical proofs are useless to me if I don't believe in zero. Seems to me this "universal truth" that you speak of would have to apply to everybody, regardless of belief system...
    2) you're splitting semantic hairs between proof and accepted theory, which is fine, I guess.
    3) I do indeed know what proof is. The difference we're having is that you are viewing "proof" in a very narrow, mathematical/logical sense, while I'm viewing "proof" in a much broader context as it applies to human behavior, and therefore to human logic.
    4) At least I know how to turn my italics off... ;)

    "f you take a class in Classical Logic, one of two things likely will happen. You will either come out of the class saying that logic is simply a matter of opinion; or, you will pass the class."

    I never said logic is just a matter of opinion. I said that logic is always as fallible as the propositions/givens/axioms it is based on, as it inevitably is. And ultimately, all logic is always built on a previously existing belief system - the part that comes after the assumption can be as logical as you please, if it's built on a faulty assumption than it really doesn't matter.

    "Proposition 1: 'All unicorns are white.'
    Proposition 2: 'This is a unicorn.'
    Conclusion: 'This is white.'"

    Thank you for making my point for me.

    Every piece of "logic" is based on an unproven premise. Logic is not infallible and fails when given bad input.

    It's turtles all the way down.

  812. Re:Religious Texts should get this sticker by adzoox · · Score: 1

    All that was quoted or mentioned has written proof of their existence. The cities found were called Sodom/Gommorrah - there was a severe burning - radioactivity of the remains found there.

    Mohhamed may have existed. Won't dispute that.

    A Sabre Tooth Tiger is a FAR greater species than a Tiger. What would be the purpose of a devolving?

    Barring pygmies, which aren't really "less of a human" what other example do have than primates of concurrently visible human evolution?

    "Nice try, but the bible specifies a global flood, not a "flood of any type". And there was no global flood. There is plenty of evidence of that."

    For you to say there was no global flood at one point makes you an ignoramous rather than a valid debater here.

    Guess you've never seen sedimentary rock formations or understand why there is red mud in the Carolinas like is found in Colorado and Arizona.

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
  813. Re:Religious Texts should get this sticker by bamberg · · Score: 1

    All that was quoted or mentioned has written proof of their existence. The cities found were called Sodom/Gommorrah - there was a severe burning - radioactivity of the remains found there.

    It's obviously true from the link I gave you that not all that was quoted or mentioned has written proof from their existence. I'm not sure why you would say something that is so obviously untrue. If you had any significant evidence of the existence of Sodom or Gomorrah I'm sure you could point to it, or at least to some apologetics. But you can't even do that.

    Mohhamed may have existed. Won't dispute that.

    A good try at pretending to miss the point, but I'll help you out. You claimed that the possibility of Paul existing was proof of the bible's validity. I showed you that it wasn't by pointing out that this same argument would mean that Mohammed's existence proves the validity of the koran. Unless you're saying that you are a muslim....

    A Sabre Tooth Tiger is a FAR greater species than a Tiger. What would be the purpose of a devolving?

    Again you use the incorrect term "devolving". This shows a very child-like understanding of evolution. You think that a Sabre Tooth Tiger is a "greater" species than a tiger (whatever that means) so that a transition from one to the other is a step down. But evolution is about the adaptation of species to their environment. If a tiger is better adapted to its environment than a Sabre Tooth Tiger is, then it is reasonable that evolution will proceed in that direction. There's no concept of "greater" or "lesser" involved.

    For you to say there was no global flood at one point makes you an ignoramous rather than a valid debater here.

    Ad Hominem attacks don't impress. I've pointed you to a number of the many, many pieces of evidence that there was no global flood. All you can do is kick and scream and call names. It makes me suspect that deep down inside you doubt your own position.

    Guess you've never seen sedimentary rock formations or understand why there is red mud in the Carolinas like is found in Colorado and Arizona.

    Why would you think that sedimentary rock formations or red mud in the Carolinas would indicate a global flood? Perhaps my mistake is in using the word "think" to describe the process by which you come to your conclusions.

    I noticed that you marked me foe. Probably a wise decision; everything you've said here so far suggests that you're out of your depth. You'll probably be happier in the future if you don't see my messages.

  814. Think about this if you will... by fswsysop · · Score: 1

    I'm unsure if this was a point made in a previous post, since there are way too many of them to sort through, so I'll just get to the point. Creation could have happened ANY number of ways. The Bible cites it being done in a number of days, but since God exists outside of time, who is to say how long one if His "days" are? What reference is being used? Also, just because it says he snapped his fingers and "it was done" doesn't mean that it couldn't have been something that He simply initiated...the Big Bang could have been the direct result of God's creation. It doesn't mention the creation of the Universe itself, only the way He created everything on Earth. He could have easily used what is known as the Big Bang to set the Universe into a creation cycle...it only says "In the beginning God created the heavens and the Earth"...NOTHING about how long it took or the method implemented. Using this, one can easily see that it is entirely possible for God to have used a "Big Bang" method of creating everything in the first place. Not only that, the Bible only mentions how God created Adam and Eve, but by the time Cain was sent out into the world, there were entire races of human beings out there already. How was this possible, and who is to say that God didn't evolve everyone else into being while he scrapped up Adam and Eve from clay dirt? The Bible is extremely vague, if not totally evasive, on those points. Thinking for ourselves and reasoning are two gifts that God gave us. Use them.

  815. Re:Yay! by Bouncersplace.com · · Score: 1

    An example please. This is a common and erroneous claim put forth by Creationists.

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  816. Re:Yay! by Bouncersplace.com · · Score: 1

    Are you trying to say Evolution is a religion? If so kindly elaborate. If not then what the hell are you trying to say?

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  817. Re:Yay! by Bouncersplace.com · · Score: 1

    "You just acknowledged that an intelligence may have created the Universe; that's all the more that ID posits." So how did they come to that conclusion? Is there any guideling for when research becomes too complex and it is time to invoke the 'designer?'

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  818. Name two by Bouncersplace.com · · Score: 1

    "ID can make predictions at least as well as evolution can." Name two predictions made by ID.

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  819. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    He did not -- nor was it possible for him to -- prove his axioms. Therefore, belief that 1+1=2 lies in ones belief in the absolute truth of his axioms.

    The truth of an axiom is assumed. More forcefully, the truth of an axiom is a given. It is not a matter of belief, opinion, like or dislike. There is no choice in the matter; indeed, there cannot be a choice, because (as you say) fundamental axioms are unproveable (that is, untestable).

    As I said, logic is not subjective. It is not due to a matter of opinion or belief. What? Do you think that logicians actually believe in unicorns? But any logician who has ever lived should be able to make sense of the argument I gave earlier, that is:

    Proposition 1: All unicorns are white.
    Proposition 2: This x is a unicorn.
    Conclusion: Therefore, this x is white.

    As far as logic is concerned, I have proved that x is white in this argument. Your belief in any of the points of my argument is irrelevant. And, regardless of one's belief or opinion, the value of zero exists.

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  820. Re:Yay! by Pooua · · Score: 1
    1) As I said before, even mathematical proofs are useless to me if I don't believe in zero.

    It is irrelevant whether any proof is of any benefit to you or not. The discussion is concerning the nature of proofs.

    Seems to me this "universal truth" that you speak of would have to apply to everybody, regardless of belief system...

    You might think of logical proof as being analogous to rocks. Maybe you don't believe in rocks, but they still exist and one could still land on your head or even kill you instantly. Your believe system is irrelevant.

    2) you're splitting semantic hairs between proof and accepted theory, which is fine, I guess.

    Far from splitting hairs, the difference between proof and accepted theory is my point.

    3) I do indeed know what proof is.

    You show no evidence of that. Indeed, what you say contradicts your claim.

    The difference we're having is that you are viewing "proof" in a very narrow, mathematical/logical sense,

    That is the only kind of proof there is when it comes to science and mathematics. The colloquial expressions of natural language are imprecise. Science and math require highly precise expressions, and the definition of proof has a very narrow meaning.

    while I'm viewing "proof" in a much broader context as it applies to human behavior,

    Frankly, that's gibberish. You are merely using the word in an informal, imprecise sense, and so, you are using language unsuitable for discussing science.

    and therefore to human logic.

    How many books on "human logic" have you seen? Can you name anyone working in the field of human logic? I don't believe you can answer those questions, because there is no such thing as "human logic."

    4) At least I know how to turn my italics off... ;) That's nice.

    ultimately, all logic is always built on a previously existing belief system - the part that comes after the assumption can be as logical as you please, if it's built on a faulty assumption than it really doesn't matter.

    "Proposition 1: 'All unicorns are white.'
    Proposition 2: 'This is a unicorn.'
    Conclusion: 'This is white.'"

    Thank you for making my point for me.

    What? You believe that logicians believe in unicorns? I didn't invent that piece about unicorns, you know; that happens to be one of the illustrations that I found in one of my first books on classical logic. Rather, it illustrates that beliefs are irrelevant to proofs. No logician need believe in the existence of unicorns, but virtually all of them would agree that the statement I gave about unicorns is logically valid. Your beliefs have no bearing on the validity of proof; only logic matters.

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  821. Re:Yay! by bechthros · · Score: 1

    "It is irrelevant whether any proof is of any benefit to you or not."

    I disagree. Logic owes it's existance in the world, it's realization in textbooks like yours, to the fact that humans needed it to survive.

    "You might think of logical proof as being analogous to rocks. Maybe you don't believe in rocks, but they still exist and one could still land on your head or even kill you instantly."

    Unless I don't think it's a rock, I think it's the evil god Meepzork smiting me for chronic masturbation. Then I don't know it's a rock, no matter how much you "prove" it to me.

    "Your believe system is irrelevant."

    Only to you.

    "Far from splitting hairs, the difference between proof and accepted theory is my point."

    That's what I'm saying - you're talking about pure, abstract logic divorced from reality or practical application. And that's fine, pure theory is necessary. I'm talking about people's perception of the givens underlying any logic. My original point that started this whole argument was that logic is only as good as the givens it's based on, any logic proceeding from flawed information is therefore flawed. Which you put much more succinctly with this example:

    "Proposition 1: 'All unicorns are white.'
    Proposition 2: 'This is a unicorn.'
    Conclusion: 'This is white.'"

    Which is exactly what I was saying - everybody knows there's brown, yellow and black unicorns as well as white ones, so the logic following from it is flawed. Everybody also knows that what the observer is looking at is most probably not a unicorn, so the logic following from it is flawed from the other direction as well. To me it's a perfect example.

    "You are merely using the word in an informal, imprecise sense, and so, you are using language unsuitable for discussing science."

    Sue me. Words are imprecise things and so are people. I never claimed to be a scientist, a logician, or even as well-educated as you. Besides, I'm sure you don't know the difference between balanced and unbalanced consoles, or how to read figured bass notation. So let's not play that game.

    "there is no such thing as "human logic."

    Bullshit. Human logic is logic as it's executed by humans, just as machine logic is logic as it's executed by machines. Both are applied logic rather than abstract logic, and so both have flaws.

    I don't think we're disagreeing about anything, just looking at it from different perspectives and focusing on different things. You're saying (i think) "the logic is sound in and of itself even if it's based on faulty data" and I'm saying "logic, no matter how logical, that follows from bad data is functionally useless".

    Eh?