Slashdot Mirror


The Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design

Mime Narrator writes "An article over at Kuro5hin discusses the controvery over the Intelligent Design movement. The Dover, Pennsylvania school board recently adopted a policy requiring that high school science teachers teaching evolution tell their students that evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again, is flawed, and that intelligent design is a valid alternative. The ACLU, along with the AUSCS (Americans United for the Separation of Church and State), and 11 parents, are suing the school board, accusing the board of violating the separation of church and state. "

3,315 comments

  1. Another giant step backward... by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 3, Insightful



    Honestly, just what is the deal with these fundamentalists? I have two issues with these people.

    One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils? Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils...where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old? I've asked creationists this question, and they've actually replied that they were placed here by God to test our faith. Now, I don't know about you, but I have a serious problem with this hypothesis. I for one refuse to believe that God would give us brains capable of rational, abstract thought, and then plant fake clues to punish those of us who had the gall to use those brains to attempt to understand the world we live in. Of course, this is the same god who told Abraham to sacrifice his only son to Him, and waited until the knife was actually descending to say "Psych!".

    Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution? This is like saying that a particular statue could not have possibly been carved by ancient man, because it is clear that it was in fact carved with a stone tool. Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us? Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.

    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:Another giant step backward... by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's very funny to think that the neo conservatives go to war over oil - the compressed remains of million year old creatures, yet believes the world is young.

    2. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah that's... Long.

      Pop quick, hot shot: There's a bomb on a bus... Wait, no, that's not it. Okay, lets try this again...

      Pop quiz, hot shot: How did life first begin? Where did all the matter come from?

    3. Re:Another giant step backward... by mmkkbb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I for one refuse to believe that God would give us brains capable of rational, abstract thought, and then plant fake clues to punish those of us who had the gall to use those brains to attempt to understand the world we live in

      A belief that God would punish those who use their intelligence is contradicted by the Bible. Those with brains, talent, looks, creativity, etc. etc. who do not use their gifts are considered sinful.

      What would really be funny is if a fundamentalist who believed such about the fossils being a 'test' also complained about people 'picking and choosing' about which parts of the faith they believed in.

      --
      -mkb
    4. Re:Another giant step backward... by intnsred · · Score: 5, Funny

      Honestly, just what is the deal with these fundamentalists? I have two issues with these people.

      Only 2?!

      Oh, I forgot. It's Monday. You must be pressed for time. :-)

    5. Re:Another giant step backward... by wheany · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I predict that this story will have 1833 comments before the it leaves the front page.

    6. Re:Another giant step backward... by Asprin · · Score: 4, Insightful


      Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution? This is like saying that a particular statue could not have possibly been carved by ancient man, because it is clear that it was in fact carved with a stone tool. Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us? Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.

      Indeed, well stated. I like the using a 'book' analogy: If you understood everything there was to know about printing, binding and reproducing books, that knowledge and understanding still wouldn't tell you anything about how to write a good one.

      --
      "Lawyers are for sucks."
      - Doug McKenzie
    7. Re:Another giant step backward... by mysticwhiskey · · Score: 1
      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils? Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils.

      As Bill Hicks put it:

      Creationist (re fossils): They were put here to test our faith.
      Bill: I think you were put here to test my fucking faith.

      --

      Stuck down a hole! In the middle of the night! With an owl!

    8. Re:Another giant step backward... by JohnFluxx · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "looks" is considered a gift which if not used is considered sinful?
      Is this correct in the gist of it?

      Seems almost opposite to various other faiths, where women cover themselves almost completely.

    9. Re:Another giant step backward... by Viperion · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Fossils came from the catastrophic, world wide flood described in Genesis 7:17 through 7:24. (Reference) And if you study fossilization, I believe that you would find that the catastrophic answer makes more sense (I am not a Geologist or Palentologist, however.)

      Two, ID is a broad and varied ideology. Some ID proponents do claim exactly what you claim.

      I find it interesting that you can draw some fairly accurate parallels between Galileo and some modern day ID proponents. Science's foundation is the questioning of established ideas, not the dogmatic defense of them. C'mon, people, take your evolutionary blinders off for a moment, and examine the two theories critically, instead of spasmodically twitching whenever anyone mentions ID.

    10. Re:Another giant step backward... by cyranoVR · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?

      Silly, God put them there on purpose to test the Faith of his children!

      Or was it Satan..?

      Anyway, the point is: Stop thinking for yourself!

    11. Re:Another giant step backward... by Seumas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What I don't get is why these freaks can't just accept the idea that perhaps evolution is part of whatever "intelligent design" they believe in?

      If I can knock over a thousand setup dominoes by ticking over just the first one, then surely some "supreme being" can do the same on a more grand scale?

      Really, "intelligent design" is so incredibly beside the point here. Evolution has nothing to do with the big bang, which could have been created by anything. I'll even concede that religious people could be right on some minor level (that something outside of or concept initiated the beginning of life as we know it) - but that has nothing to do with evolution of life and the world around us after that point.

      This is like requiring that every person who takes driver's education be taught all about the life of Henry Ford, which has absolutely nothing to do with driving, driving laws and safety.

    12. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 3, Informative

      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct

      Very, very, very few Christians believe that the bible is literally correct. If the Bible says "and the mountains sang with joy", does that mean that they grew wind pipes and sand a song? No. The Bible deals in metaphor, and a huge percentage of Christains believe so.

      Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils...where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old

      Scientists have clear evidence, but you should be clear. It is not perfect. Anomolies that are currently unexplained do pop up from time to time.

      Of course, this is the same god who told Abraham to sacrifice his only son to Him, and waited until the knife was actually descending to say "Psych!".

      Depends on which faith you subscribe to. Many Christians follow a line of teaching that describes the Old Testament like you would a work of fine literature. Instructive. The Old Testament, especially the The Law or pentateuch, are considered to be of value only for historical reasons: they applied only to prepare the Chosen people for the coming of Christ. So the story, for example, of Abraham and creation were preperations for the coming of Christ. This is why, for example, even devout Christians do not keep kosher while devout Jews do: the period of preperation and sacrifice ended when Christ was recognized as the saviour.

      This is important. For many Christians, the creation story is unimportant. It is part of the Old Testament, and to be regarded as a piece of historical - aka old - literature. It is useful in establishing tradition, and in learning how our ancestors lived, but otherwise, it is not The Word Of God.

      Even for the gospels - the New Testament - we have four recognized versions.

      For most Christians, this is not an issue. Evolution is a thoery that seems close enough to fact. Creationists will argue against the merits of Darwinian evolution all day, and will be right. The working theory of evolution is based on Darwinian thinking, but it didn't just stop there. It is highly refined, and able to empiraclly observed.

      However, the real issue is, what do we teach? You teach the fact, with respect for dissenting viewpoints, just like any other topic. If you are discussing the birth place of a famous person, and there exists some doubt about the location, most decent textbooks discuss the question. Evolution and counter-evolutionists should work the same way. There are holes in the most complete theory of evolution. They should be addressed. You can point out it is a theory that is not able to entirely proven, like a mathematical equation might be.

      You are right to say evolution doesn't disprove the existence of God.

    13. Re:Another giant step backward... by mmkkbb · · Score: 1

      Come to think of it, I don't think "looks" is mentioned in the Bible. I consider it that way though. :)

      --
      -mkb
    14. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ID isn't a theory. It's a wild-ass-guess. And it has been examined by the scientific community; it took about 1 minute.

    15. Re:Another giant step backward... by ivano · · Score: 1
      errr...we don't know. But this doesn't automatically assume that the ID is correct. One of my biggest peeves is if ID is correct then please make a testable hypothesis that shows it is "more" correct than natural selection. If people can do it for different hypotheses of Big Bang theories, why not for something as fundamantal as this. It's not just a question of interpreting the same data differently (eg fossils) but also seeing which theory can explain everyday events. If ID is better then we should be able to create better drugs etc than we do now. It's not that difficult to determine which one is better as a theory.

      But then the conclusion will be that maybe none are right.

      Ciao

    16. Re:Another giant step backward... by MathFox · · Score: 4, Informative

      There are more "minor" geological issues the creationists have to deal with. If you take a look at the mid-Atlantic ridge: Europe and America separate at the rate of 4 cm/year. Which would give a separation of 240 meters in 6000 years. I'ld say they are off by a factor of 10000 at least. (I'ld like to have a creationist explanation about the magnetic patterns in the ocean crust, other than God did it to make us think.)

      --
      extern warranty;
      main()
      {
      (void)warranty;
      }
    17. Re:Another giant step backward... by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      Don't worry over it, if a fundy irritates you, check out what he is wearing. Chances are he will be wearing clothing made from more than one fabric. In that case, stone him. The bible says that's what you are supposed to do. Remind him you can't just have a strict interpetation of 'parts' of the bible.

    18. Re:Another giant step backward... by jbessie · · Score: 1

      I will start by saying that I am a Christian.

      In response to your two issues, I as a Christian do not have a problem in saying that evolution may have been the vehicle that was used by God to develop the species of animals originally in the garden. However, I do believe that God placed the two humans, Adam and Eve, there in the state that humans are today (therefore we did not evolved from monkeys, rather were made in God's own image). Additionally, I believe that the seven days of creation were likely actually ages. To that end, it could have been much longer than 6,000 years, although I believe humans have only been here for that amount of time. Christian beliefs and scientific evidence do not have to result in the kind of cataclysmic disaster of reason that so many make it out to be.

    19. Re:Another giant step backward... by Nate4D · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils...where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old?

      Honestly, I'm a Christian, and I've never met another Christian who spouted crap like "God put them there to test our faith". That's just flaming stupid.

      Most ID folks would say that the fossils got to be there exactly how you'd think they would - the animals died, and their bodies got trapped in the right circumstances to form fossils. It doesn't take that long for stuff to get petrified if conditions are right.

      I believe the traditional reply at this point is: "Fine, fossils can form relatively quickly, but the rocks you find them in can't."

      Not being a geologist, I wouldn't know. Some of the geologists present care to elaborate?

      Of course, this is the same god who told Abraham to sacrifice his only son to Him, and waited until the knife was actually descending to say "Psych!".

      If you're gonna quote the Bible, admit that you're not arguing against ID, you're attacking Christianity. The two are different (I know several ID people who are strongly anti-Christian, and a lot of Christians who don't like ID). And if you're gonna attack Christianity, understand what you're attacking before doing it (If you want to know what that whole sacrifice thing was about, read Hebrews 11:17-20).

      Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us?

      A lot do. Heck, I know Christians who think that evolution is the tool God used to create us. However, most IDers look at it with something like Occam's Razor in mind - why would God introduce that much extra complexity to his creation process? If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort.

      --
      "Oh, I like geeks way better than I like humans." - Mari Sarris
    20. Re:Another giant step backward... by bflong · · Score: 4, Interesting

      where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old?

      If you look at the original Hebrew, the word translated "day" in Genesis has the same meaning as if I said "In my fathers day, automobile fuel was 35 cents a gallon". It refers to a time period. The references to "morning" and "evening" are the same. If this was not the case, there would be no way to count the days until the 3rd "day", since thats when the sun and moon became visable on the surface of the earth.

      The earth is several billion years old. The universe is much older. Those who think that the bible claims the earth was created in 6 literal days simply have not done enough research on the matter.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    21. Re:Another giant step backward... by Paladin128 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Meh... as a faithful Roman Catholic that does believe in macro-evolution (micro-evolution does, in fact, happen in nature and we can prove it. We have NOT proven that all species have a common ancestor, but we have some pretty good evidence for it), I still don't think it's proven. I don't like theory should be presented as absolute fact.

      Presenting Intelligent Design (which I agree, was not thought out in an academic sense very well) as an alternative alongside teaching evolution is perfectly OK. Teach the kids the conflicting theories, let them use thier own intellect to sort it out.

      And frankly, this wouldn't contradict the first ammendment, which forbids the creation/enforcement of a state religion. Many different faiths (Christian and non-Christian, organized or not) believe in intelligent design. I know a couple athiests that have some caveats that make them disagree with evolution, but can come up with no alternative. The point is, teaching this theory is not advocating or prostheletizing any particular religions, but at the same time, it is allowing for rational intellectual discussion.

      --
      Lex orandi, lex credendi.
    22. Re:Another giant step backward... by compass46 · · Score: 1, Funny

      Wow, an intellignt post on this matter. Did you come over here from K5?

    23. Re:Another giant step backward... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      "In the beginning God created the heavens and earth, all was confusion and there was nothing on the land. Darkness covered the abyss while the spirit of God hovered over the surface of the waters". Genesis 1:1.

      It is very interesting that the first lifeforms appeared on "the surface of the waters", don't you think?

      The problem of these post-19th century fundamentalists is that they take the Bible at face value, while the Bible itself does not say how it should be interpreted.

      To get more info about this, you can read John Paul II's papal Encyclica "fides et ratio" (faith and reason). I think the first step towards an mutual respect between churches would have to start with this encyclica.

    24. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Remind him you can't just have a strict interpetation of 'parts' of the bible.
      Actually, if the person is a Christian, you can. Most Christians do not recognize the old testament as applicable to them: it is a preperation for the coming of the Messiah. Since they believe Jesus was the Messiah, the rules set down in the Old Law are vacant.

      This is why even the most devout of Christians do not feel bound by the old laws: about keeping Kosher, about punishment for various crimes, etc.

    25. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Most neoconservatives are secular jews who do not believe in creationism.

      Or are you another one of those ignorant boobs who thinks "Bush supporter" == "Neoconservative"

    26. Re:Another giant step backward... by Lonath · · Score: 1

      God would have to be an asshole to play a trick on us like that. Just ask them if they think God's an asshole, and if they say no, then tell them the world isn't 6000 years old. And if they insist, then start saying "Oh, so you think God's an asshole? Ok. If that's how you feel."

    27. Re:Another giant step backward... by TGK · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ok, fine. Lay out for me some experiment I can do in which one of the possible outcomes disproves the existance of God or the theory of ID.

      If you want it to be accecpted as a scientific theory it needs to have a falsifiable test that we can run.

      The problem is, when we point to evidence that creationists or IDers disagree with, they say "God put it there to test our faith" or "It's the work of the Devil."

      Those are supernatural phenomina. You can't disprove them because they aren't falsifiable.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    28. Re:Another giant step backward... by imaji · · Score: 0

      "One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?"

      Creationists believe that the Flood explains the fossil record. Scripture clearly indicates that the climate of the earth, and thus is various ecosystems, were vastly different in the PreDeluvian world. There was no rain...water rose from the earth, according to Genesis. The problem is that the highly educated are *usually* highly ignorant of what the Biblical record states.

      The Creationist's view of evolution is simple...if you believe that you can take all of the parts of a Rolex, put them in a box, shake them up for a billion years, and then open up the box to find a perfectly functional watch, then you, too can believe in evolution.

      I have no problem with Darwinian concepts like survival of the fittest, or the adaptability of species. I have a problem with attempting to make them explain the Origin of life.

      Things produce "after their kind", as Scripture states. Mate two dogs, they make a dog, not a cat. When an apple tree drops it's seed, another apple tree blooms, not a grape vine.

      "Evolution does not disprove the existence of God."

      You can say that again.

      "I for one refuse to believe that God would give us brains capable of rational, abstract thought, and then plant fake clues to punish those of us who had the gall to use those brains to attempt to understand the world we live in."

      Perhaps you're just misinterpreting the clues, in addition to your fallacious assumption that they were put there as an impediment.

    29. Re:Another giant step backward... by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 2, Informative

      Fossils came from the catastrophic, world wide flood described in Genesis 7:17 through 7:24. (Reference) And if you study fossilization, I believe that you would find that the catastrophic answer makes more sense (I am not a Geologist or Palentologist, however.)

      No, you are obviously not a Geologist or a Palentologist. The order and uniformity of the fossil record is completely different than what you would get from a "world wide flood".

      Check peer reviewed scientific journals covering the fields of geology or palentology. You will see no papers that support the idea of the fossil record created by a "world wide flood" - or for that matter, any paper supporting the idea that a "world wide flood" ever occured.

    30. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you study fossilization, I believe that you would find that the catastrophic answer makes more sense (I am not a Geologist or Palentologist, however.)

      It shows that you're not. Read Glenn Morton's story.
      http://home.entouch.net/dmd/gstory.htm

      Dogmatic defense is when lies are kept as truthful because the people holding the beliefs are too afraid to face the consequences.

    31. Re:Another giant step backward... by ant_slayer · · Score: 1

      I would be curious to know what this clear evidence is. I have read the literature on both sides of this issue intensively for many years, and it's humorous to me that people say things like "clear evidence" without ever making reference to the actual evidence.

      Usually, people will point out the fossil record that it's "clear evidence" that ID can't be correct, yet an intelligent ID proponent will simply point out that the presence of old dead things doesn't mean that there was no designer. The fossil record is not a successful argument.

      So what are the real "clear evidences"? This isn't an age-of-the-earth problem, so uranium dating won't help. Instead, this is an information content problem -- consider this helpful analogy: The DNA structure that defines your being is impossibly complex. Why? It's a chain of about 6 billion base pairs. Imagine that each is a bit (when it's actually more like a trit). The odds of generating yours in one shot are 1/2^6E9. If all the atoms in the universe (10^80) were candidate base pairs to produce your DNA, combining into new candidate strands to be you at a rate of one per second (not the 20 years that evolution would require for a generation), the odds of generating your DNA randomnly in impossible conditions in 20 billion years are roughly 1/(2^6E9)/20E9/10E80/6E9, or 1 in 16025317071114407339428943471579329170526278863496 21253942602733418923567123267050964426391033155045 79327369273824029716303716841360696927185673872692 48346434819911785259196081621432543164646371472077 5519919216616685

      That's dang improbable.

      -Ant Slayer-

    32. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Thanks, but I never have posted on K5. I normally wouldn't post in this thread, but I see a lot of mis-informed commenting on Christian tradition. It's a shame that so many Christians and bashers don't have a better grasp of Christian history! You really can't understand Western history unless you have a good grasp of the history of Christian flock!

    33. Re:Another giant step backward... by Golias · · Score: 3, Funny

      If you understood everything there was to know about printing, binding and reproducing books, that knowledge and understanding still wouldn't tell you anything about how to write a good one.

      Well, you could at least write a definitive book on the subject of publishing.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    34. Re:Another giant step backward... by Kineticabstract · · Score: 4, Insightful
      For most Christians, this is not an issue.
      I'm going to have to disagree with you on this one. "Most"? 90% of the Christians I personally know tell me that the Bible is the literal word of God, and evolution is one of Satan's attempts to derail good Christians and keep them from the kingdom of Heaven.

      I know a lot of Christians.

      It's all well and good to re-interpret your religion in the light of modern-day knowledge... I'm all for that. But justifying your view by claiming that "most" of your demographic agree with you is loose science at best. From what I'm seeing, we're living in a society that is growing more conservative and backwards in its thinking about God and science, not the other way around.

      One last point - the Sunday school I went to as a child focused on the creation story as being VERY important. And it drew no distinction whatsoever between the old and new testaments in regards to validity or accuracy.

    35. Re:Another giant step backward... by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

      therefore we did not evolve from monkeys

      Quite right. Both humans and monkeys evolved from a common ancestor, neither human nor monkey, a few million years ago.

      And if we *are* made in God's image, then either we're a pretty shoddy copy, or God's image is very inefficient -- ask someone who knows about the wiring of the eye why that blind-spot is necessary.

    36. Re:Another giant step backward... by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But only science should be taught in the science class. And Intellegent Design is not a scientific theory.

    37. Re:Another giant step backward... by Kim0 · · Score: 1

      >...even National Geographic says the fossil record is a movie with 999 out of every 1000 frames missing. ID is simply a response to scientism's refusal to keep evolution as the untested hypothesis that it truly is.

      One frame in 1000 is still a very big number of frames. You do not need more than one frame of Charlies Angels to show that Cameron Diaz was in the movie.

      Kim0

    38. Re:Another giant step backward... by torndorff · · Score: 1

      You're right (and now a great deal more than I about Christian history), but most scientists argue against ID teaching because it inherently is NOT science, and therefore should not be taught as a valid, viable alternative scientific theory to evolution. It does not ascribe to basic scientific notions. It is a creation myth utilizing the fact that our human civilization TODAY can't explain how we came to be. There is no other empirical evidence used to base this belief on -- hence, not a scientific theory.

    39. Re:Another giant step backward... by torndorff · · Score: 1

      Please forgive spelling errors in parent post -- I've been up since 4am writing anthropology term papers ;)

    40. Re:Another giant step backward... by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Teach the kids the conflicting theories, let them use thier own intellect to sort it out.

      That may be acceptable if they *were* conflicting theories, but they're not. Intelligent Design doesn't even make a good hypothesis. It's a doctrine, a superstition, a faith... not a theory.

      And don't start saying 'they're both just theories'. I can't just think something up off the top of my head, and call it a theorem, just like I can't call any random mathematical statement a theorem. Science has standards, and ID doesn't meet them.

    41. Re:Another giant step backward... by Kim0 · · Score: 1

      >In response to your two issues, I as a Christian do not
      >have a problem in saying that evolution may have been
      >the vehicle that was used by God to develop the species
      >of animals originally in the garden. However, I do believe
      >that God placed the two humans, Adam and Eve, there
      >in the s.............

      That is just something you believe.

      Kim0

    42. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh crap, someone else thinks they can handle statistics.

      A deck of cards is lying before you on the table. The odds of it being in the exact order when you look at each one and put it down again is 1/52! or 1/8,0658175170943878571660636856404e+67

      Now, that's dang improbable. But the deck is still lying there before you on the table - it does not vanish in a puff of logic.

      Try again.

    43. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Answeres to you questions are here:

      www.drdino.com

      It's about teachability... Evolution is a theory taught as fact... Why can't the Theory of ID be present in the same text books saying "Look, here is another theory!" ???

      Fear of compitition for the truth? Sounds like it.

    44. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 4, Insightful

      90% of the Christians I personally know tell me that the Bible is the literal word of God, and evolution is one of Satan's attempts to derail good Christians and keep them from the kingdom of Heaven.
      Well, I hope you take a moment and inform them! Thomas Aquinas debated vigioursly the idea of inspiration, and how it applies to the bible. How does God work with inspiration?

      There can be a few ways, according to Aquinas - really the preeminent Christian thinker - he can dictate it or phsyically write it (aka, stone tablets). In Islam, the Prophet recieved dictation from God. Therefore, for them, their holy book and the parts shared with the Bible, are exacting literal. It is the literal word of God. Another theory of inspiration is that God speaks to a person, and the person runs from that point. It's a figuritive kick in the pants. The same way a beautiful painting might inspire a poet to write a lovely poem. Another theory - one that most Christians would agree with - is that God breathes motivation and direction to the instrument to communicate what he wants communicated at that time.

      From what I'm seeing, we're living in a society that is growing more conservative and backwards in its thinking about God and science, not the other way around.
      I disagre with you based on my own experiences, but I think we'll have to just disagree on this!

      One last point - the Sunday school I went to as a child focused on the creation story as being VERY important. And it drew no distinction whatsoever between the old and new testaments in regards to validity or accuracy.
      I think is a big problem with many, many Christians! Your education as a Christian shouldn't start and end as a child! The creation story is great for children! It is instructive about the nature of God, and can be easily understood by small minds. If you stop your education at that level, don't be surprised if you have a child-like understanding of God and Christian faith!

      I think really what we disagree about is who is a Christian. A Christian in demographic terms is a person who says he believes in Jesus as more than historical figure. For me, that's not a Christian.

      Believing in Jesus is not enough! People who stop their learning about the faith at sunday-school level are missing what the true essense of being a Christian is about.

    45. Re:Another giant step backward... by reconciledthief · · Score: 1

      Just because it's "intelligent design" doesn't mean it's based on the bible. But of course, everyone assumes that intelligent design implies design by the God of the Christians/Jews. Intelligent design is just saying that there is a good possibility that the Universe was created or designed with intelligence. Whether it was Allah, God, Jesus, or some Alien race, who knows. What is the DEAL with these non-theists?

    46. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what? How many people give a hoot about evolution? Ask your relatives. 1) Do they know the mechanics of evolution? 2) Do they care?

      If someone prefers to believe that the world was created 5000 years ago, good for them. Whatever makes them happy.

      If your fear is that there will be fewer scientist in the future. Give it a rest. There will be many people who will question the biblical version of creation.

    47. Re:Another giant step backward... by MSFanBoi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually this isn't true at all. A recent survey showed that of all of America's Christians, over 30% believe that the Bible is factual. Meaning they believe all that in the Bible is the truth and to try to interpret it in any other manner is sinful. These are the people who start web sites trying to prove Creationalism (or whatever it's called today), and saying that dinosaurs, fossils, and whatnot, as was mentioned before, are all God's joke to temp us into doubting the Bible. All I have to say to the Fundemenatalists who claim all in the Bible is fact, that if Adam and Eve are the start of the Human race, they had two sons, one which killed the other and then took off. Where the heck did the rest of the Human race come from? I mean we are down to two males, one female, and according to the Bible incest is very wrong. So where did all the people come from? The Bible does not mention any other people, and the Bible is always right correct? So just where did all the people come from? Maybe we all are not really here...

    48. Re:Another giant step backward... by bflong · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course, this is the same god who told Abraham to sacrifice his only son to Him, and waited until the knife was actually descending to say "Psych!".

      This is the same God who actualy went though with letting his own son, who was counted as a decendant of Abraham's son Issac, to die as a criminal and provide a randsom for the perfect life that Adam forfited. The recording of the event was created as a forgleam of what God would give up for mankind. Becouse of his faith and obediance, Abraham is the only person in bible history that is called "Gods Friend" (James 2:23)

      Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us? Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.

      There is nothing in the bible that says that animals cannot adapt to their enviroment. If that was true, all humans would be the same race unchanged by their enviroment. What is *does* say is that God created all the animals "according to their kinds" (Genisis 1:21,25). This pretty much rules out reptiles evolving into mammals, etc, unless you can find a way to reconsile that. My understanding of the fossal record seems to align itself with those scriptures, i.e., there are explosions of species and changes in those species, but hardly any links between the "kinds".

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    49. Re:Another giant step backward... by Mmm+coffee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The basic hypothesis of intelligent design is that our genetic makeup was designed by a higher power, as such complexity could not have simply "happened".

      The basic hypothesis of evolution is that our genetic makeup was slowly grown and improved on by a process called "natural selection" over billions of years. Evidence for this hypothesis includes similar yet slightly differing species with abilities adapted to their different environments, a long and evolving fossil record, and the evolution of microorganisms witnessed both in the lab and the real world. I will specifically state HIV's growing resistance to therapudic drugs as an example.

      Hypothesis, test, and review. When the proponents of ID can show strong evidence that a god-like entity exists, then the hypothesis might be taken seriously. Until the results of the god-test are peer reviewed, it is the ID guys who are presenting a dogmatic defense of pre-concieved ideas, not the scientists.

    50. Re:Another giant step backward... by daVinci1980 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Man, you almost had me... Right until here:
      You teach the fact, with respect for dissenting viewpoints, just like any other topic.

      Except that ID is not a dissenting viewpoint to anyone with any scientific background. No one in the scientific community actually believes that ID could be "the right answer." (And actually, quite a few Christians believe in a literal interpretation of the bible, they're called Southern Baptists).

      There was a phenomenal Penn & Teller's Bullshit! on exactly this topic. I'll skip the details and go with the highlight reel.

      First off, the term 'evolutionary theory.' Evolution is a theory, and not a fact. Much in the same way that 'gravity' is a theory and not a fact. It's true! People have come up with corollaries and conjectures and lemmas that all expect gravity to be fact, but it hasn't been proven. It's been demonstrated, tested, peeked, poked, prodded and is generally accepted as fact. But it is still a theory. So when people talk about the 'theory of evolution,' as though it should somehow be less valid... In science, the term 'theory' doesn't mean wild guess. It actually means this is the best guess I have that fits with all the pieces that are available.

      Which brings me to my next point. In science, once a theory is widely accepted, it is rarely thrown out as completely wrong. One piece being incorrect generally doesn't invalidate the entire theory. The theory will be adjusted to accommodate the new information, and will be stronger for the change. This is in stark contrast to a literal interpretation of the bible. What Christian fundamentalists find so threatening about evolution is that a literal interpretation of the bible forbids it. To them, if evolution were valid, the book of Genesis couldn't possibly be correct. But because the bible is infallible (the word of God), that would threaten their belief in the entire book. They fear that their faith would fall like a house of cards.

      ID is nothing more than a sham to try to work around that pesky "separation of search and state" thing that our forefathers were bright enough to put into that pesky "Constitution." It's creationism with a new name to try to stay under the radar. And frankly, it isn't going to work.
      --
      I currently have no clever signature witicism to add here.
    51. Re:Another giant step backward... by ivano · · Score: 1
      or fight fire with fire. Force every religious text to have those stickers they place on science text books saying something like "all religions are just believe systems..." and then force religious studies to teach all different religions, since they're all just belief systems. Right?

      The weirdest thing is these guys just sap the every last bit of spirituality out of Christianity. They're just so filled with hate and paranoia. That's what sucks more than anything.

      Ciao

    52. Re:Another giant step backward... by pzampino · · Score: 2, Insightful

      wow, with that kind of reasoning, ID adherents must be glad that you're arguing for evolution.

      --
      "If men will not be governed by God, they will be ruled by tyrants." - William Penn
    53. Re:Another giant step backward... by jbessie · · Score: 1

      What went wrong with the monkeys then? Did they just stop evolving, or did they move all their evolution off of the planet Earth for the time being so that Planet of the Apes could be a reality?

    54. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Scientists have clear evidence, but you should be clear. It is not perfect. Anomolies that are currently unexplained do pop up from time to time.
      In what way does this support the hypothesis of a 6,000 year old Earth?

      Who claimed that the fossil record was "perfect," anyway? Classic strawman argument.

    55. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      There is no other empirical evidence used to base this belief on -- hence, not a scientific theory.
      The base of Intelligent Design is a metaphor.

      Something like:

      "Imagine you were walking across a large field, and stumbled upon a beautiful watch. You open the cover, and notice that it is exactly right - it keeps perfect time. Is it not safe to assume that the watch had a maker?"

      It's called the Watchmaker approach.

      Many scientists are openly anti-religious, which is why there is a big debate. Some textbooks go out of their way to antagonize religion. That's just not useful, not to the learning process, and not the scientific process. We shouldn't pretend that science knows all the answers about evolution, or how life got to the point that it is now. We shouldn't gloss over the anomolies that pop-up from time to time, or pretend like dissenting view points have no place in the classroom. Intelligent design is an alternative explanation for what happened to start the evolutionary processes that we know work. This whole situation could be explained away with a well thought out 2 paragraph section in a high-school textbook. Yes, evolution is not proven like a mathematical theory. Yes, there are gaps. This is what critics say about the gaps. End of story!

    56. Re:Another giant step backward... by cnelzie · · Score: 1
      However, the real issue is, what do we teach? You teach the fact, with respect for dissenting viewpoints, just like any other topic. If you are discussing the birth place of a famous person, and there exists some doubt about the location, most decent textbooks discuss the question. Evolution and counter-evolutionists should work the same way. There are holes in the most complete theory of evolution. They should be addressed. You can point out it is a theory that is not able to entirely proven, like a mathematical equation might be.

      Do you understand what a theory is? Let me put it to you simply, a Theory is not a fact, it is not a law, it is not the end of a discussion or scientific pursuit. In fact, it is only the beginning of a discussion or scientific pursuit.

      At most, the only 'Facts' that come into play with a theory are things that support the theory, facts support theories, theories do not support nor are they facts themselves.

      A Theory is simply a strongly supported idea that can be tested to be proven right or wrong. Everytime that theory is tested, the theory is either brushed aside, rewritten to support new evidence or is simply strengthened.

      If that theory is strengthened enough, it could become a scientific law, for instance like The Law of Gravity. Even at that point, the Law could be proven incorrect or be broken, at which point it drops back down to the state of being a Theory.

      If you are unable or unwilling to accept or even understand this simple fact about what a Theory is, then you have no business even entering this conversation.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    57. Re:Another giant step backward... by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Regarding the creation myth in Genesis, it's completely unimportant to Judeo-Christian beliefs. It was thrown in there as an example of the omnipetence of Yaweh, not as an explanation of how the world was formed and life was created. To claim that the purpose of Genesis is to inform you of the how's and why's of creation is to completely miss the point.

      You're correct about the meaning of the 5 books of Moses (Torah, Pentateuch) to Christians. It's a historical reference of the Israelites relationship with God. The point of the stories about Eden and the creation of man is to illustrate the relationship between God and the individual, not to tell you about a perfect Garden and the first man. The first man is unimportant, as is the garden of Eden, the relationship to God that they illustrate is the point.

      The existence of God cannot be proven or disproven, it is a question of faith. Religion deals with questions of faith, Science deals with questions of fact. Science does not ask one to take anything on faith, as religion does not claim to prove any facts.

      ID theorists are trying to mix the two and will be as unsuccessful as those who have tried before them.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    58. Re:Another giant step backward... by vvaduva · · Score: 0

      What do you mean what is the deal? It's the same deal with "evolutionists." People have faith in their theories. The Bible doesn't say the world is 6000 years old...I have no idea where you are reading that. Not all Christians are young-earth Creationists. And just because a theory is "established" - that doesn't make it authoritative. Those who cry "be open minded" don't really mean that; it's ok to be open minded until you consider a creator. It's OK for life to be created by "aliens" as long as the alien is not the god of the Bible. The hypocrisy is astounding!

    59. Re:Another giant step backward... by Nikker · · Score: 1

      One question.

      What makes us experts one way or the other?

      In terms of the universe in which we are members we are infants. We in just the last 100 years got electricty in our homes and we think we have reached our pinnicle? In terms of it all we just started.

      The most unintelligent thing of all is to say a God created us from tip to toe out of nowhere and for shits and giggles threw us on this planet. Next you will say that you have approved sources that we are the only life in the universe. Why not? If there were others then God would have told us right?

      Does it not make more sence that the Universe its self has the capabilities of life and we formed as a result?

      Again I would like to point out if you put down our ego and seriously look at our existence, we just got here. In terms of the universe we are just a blink of an eye. Do you really feel that a book that was meant to help us was merely just a users manual? Or since God would know us better than our parents maybe made the book so when it was first read it gave those people courage to feel they did know it all and it gives us today the knowlege that we know nothing?

      --
      A loop, by its nature, continues. If that didn't make sense, start reading this sentence again.
    60. Re:Another giant step backward... by skaffen42 · · Score: 1

      Very, very, very few Christians believe that the bible is literally correct. If the Bible says "and the mountains sang with joy", does that mean that they grew wind pipes and sand a song? No. The Bible deals in metaphor, and a huge percentage of Christains believe so.

      Well, in the US at least the percentage of people who believe the bible is literally true stands at around 63%.

      What I find funny is that almost none of them seem to be following the words of Jesus. These days Christian and hypocrite seem to be synonyms.

      --
      People couldn't type. We realized: Death would eventually take care of this.
    61. Re:Another giant step backward... by abuthemagician · · Score: 1

      I only have one thing to say: http://www.doesgodexist.org/

    62. Re:Another giant step backward... by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1
      A relevant passage is the parable of the talents (large denominations of money in those days) at the end of the Gospel of Matthew.
      People are given 5, 2 and 1 "large" to invest for the boss.
      At review time, the first two had doubled the cash.
      Mr. Singleton sat on his booty, successfully returning the loot intact, for which he is crushed:
      28" 'Take the talent from him and give it to the one who has the ten talents. 29For everyone who has will be given more, and he will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even what he has will be taken from him. 30And throw that worthless servant outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.'


      I think the conversation a bit of a distraction. Hugh Ross has some interesting harmonization of creationism/evolution.
      My take: the Genesis account is a true "abstract" of the "paper" that is creation. I admit a deep personal need to believe in an order to reality; the alternative to such a reason, IMHO is a pure nihilism. Natural Born Killers, why not?
      As far as the original article goes, exactly which church the government is establishing as a state religion (which is what I thought the Constitution was actually proscribing) is unclear. I guess something vaguely Judeo-Christian (where does Islam fall on this?)
      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    63. Re:Another giant step backward... by ChaosCube · · Score: 1

      Interesting points, Trip Master Monkey. I agree with you to a certain degree, but I have serious issues with the theory of human evolution regarding our race evolving from an ape-like creature. I have seen no scientific evidence that tells us we came from apes. What I have seen, however, is a hypothesis which requires faith to believe.

      Take a look at prehistoric man, for example. Excessive hair, and most notably, a large sloping forehead. But wait, I was not desribing a prehistoric man. I was describing the bus driver on the movie Speed. Watch it and you'll know what I'm talking about. Another example would be Alaskan Eskimos. Some of them have skulls shaped strangely like supposed cavemen. Then there's the interesting Lucy fossil. All I see around that is a lot of conjecture.

      Now, I'm not saying the earth is 6000 years old, or 6 billion years old. I'm just keeping an open mind about what is theory, what is faith, and what is scientific fact. What you said is true, that all this can be a tool of God. The truth is, creationists don't know how long the earth has been around. Perhaps Moses' time line is literal and correct, but Adam and Eve were in the garden of Eden for 4.78 million years. Neither science nor theology has given us these answers. So God gave us these brains to find the answers.

      --
      BDR Gear
      Outdoor gear, MREs, and more!
    64. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      A recent survey showed that of all of America's Christians, over 30% believe that the Bible is factual.
      Again, you missing what factual means. But even if that means what you suggest it means, that's not surprising. 30% is a clear minority. There are of course Fundamentalist Christians.

      You shouldn't pretend though that Creationism is the same as disagreeing with Evolution, or seeking alternate explanations like Intelligent Design.

      Where the heck did the rest of the Human race come from? I mean we are down to two males, one female, and according to the Bible incest is very wrong.
      You'd be surprised what the Bible actually says. Things you think are in the Bible are often not. They are really based on tradition and doctrine, not scripture.

      Regardless, just so you know. The Law - the part of the bible which sets down rules and laws - all are established after Adam & Eve, when the tribes of the Chosen are forming or formed. They are based on the works of prophets. Laws like the commandments and the laws of chosen people were all - according to the bible - inspired by the word of God or signs from God. God famously gave Adam and Eve only one commandment. Therefore, proscriptions against adultery and incestous relationships came well after the tribes were estalibshed.

      A fundementalist, one who knows his scripture, could easily defeat your arguments without much mental effort or any really bizarre logic.

    65. Re:Another giant step backward... by Clock+Nova · · Score: 1

      That's just really, really funny. Do you mind if I borrow that quote? I know some people who need to hear it.

      --
      There they were, sitting in the van with all those dials, and the cat was dead. -V. Marchetti, CIA
    66. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you could make an analogy to someone who has a very nice member - it may be a gift from God, but it wouldn't necessarily be right to go dangling it around.

      Just different standards for different cultures/religions.

      BTW, Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Buddist, etc. women used to have to cover too - the older orthodox Christian ladies still do in some places (Italy, Greece to name a few western cultures where this happens).

    67. Re:Another giant step backward... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      It will probably have 666 comments before my morning break!

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    68. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils.
      If this is indeed true, we should expect to find a large percentage of fossils that are trasitionary (a cross between 2 species). To date, we have found a big fat ZERO of these fossils. That doesn't sound like "clear evidence" to me.
      where exactly did they [the fossils] come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old? I've asked creationists this question, and they've actually replied that they were placed here by God to test our faith.
      I agree; this is non-sense. "If a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct," then a catastrophic event would have been required. In Genesis 6, such an event is described. Any "scientist" will tell you that, given the right conditions (heat, pressure, rapid burial, etc.), fossils can be formed in a relatively short amount of time.
      Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution? ... Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us? Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.
      Evolution may not disprove the existence of God, but it's a very convenient way for people to remove God from their lives and live their own way.
    69. Re:Another giant step backward... by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      Intelligent Design is just as "scientific" as evolution. Evolution as a whole isn't scientific.

      Small parts of evolution may be science, but the whole thing is more like "proving" history. You've got evidence, and you can come up with theories to fit the evidence, but in no way can you prove it without a control planet and another billion years.

      Indeed, evolution itself argues for the possibility, even the likelyhood of intelligent design. Do you think that of all the planets in all the stars of the galaxy, we humans are the first intelligent race to evolve?

      Personally, I don't think that public schools should teach any origin theories. Kids don't need it. "Where do we come from?" is fundamentally a religious issue, along with "Why are we here?" Just leave it alone and let the parents explain it.

    70. Re:Another giant step backward... by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

      if you believe that you can take all of the parts of a Rolex, put them in a box, shake them up for a billion years, and then open up the box to find a perfectly functional watch, then you, too can believe in evolution.

      This is not even a *bad* analogy for the evolutionary process.

      I have no problem with Darwinian concepts like survival of the fittest, or the adaptability of species. I have a problem with attempting to make them explain the Origin of life.

      Natural selection makes no attempt to explain the origin of life. One life arrives, evolutionary processes start.

      Things produce "after their kind", as Scripture states. Mate two dogs, they make a dog, not a cat.

      This works very well in the 'macro' world of dogs, cats, and caterpillars. Go down an order of magnitude or two, though, into the world of bacteria and viruses, and things get a lot more interesting. Species barriers break down, and you begin to see a much higher instance of horizontal gene transfer (where genes can be passed from one individual to another with no familial relationship).

      "Evolution does not disprove the existence of God."

      You can say that again.


      And, conversely, God, were she to exist, would not disprove the existence of evolution.

    71. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still don't see what the problem is with stating that perhaps ID explains how this natural selection process came to be. The problem with evolution is that it assumes there is something there to evolve. "In the beginning" what was there? Can nothing evolve into something? If not then we still have a hole to fill, and ID is a possible explanation.

    72. Re:Another giant step backward... by HydroCarbon10 · · Score: 1

      The problem with showing respect for dissenting viewpoints in this case, is that the dissenting viewpoints aren't based in science. In fact, they're based on the very opposite of science - assuming something to be true first and then making the information fit. Actually, even that's stretching what the ID'ers do too far. Often they don't ever get past pointing out flaws in evolution, somehow assuming that evolution's lack of perfection validates their ideas. ID runs entirely contrary to science, and to suggest that it should be held at the same level as evolution is to invalidate science in front of the children you are trying to educate.

      Pointing out flaws in a current theory in the class room is great. I think its a wonderful way to explain how the scientific method actually works. Bringing in wild assertions and claiming that they may be just as valid as the theories that came about via the scientific method, on the other hand, is just wrong.

      --
      The best way to accelerate a windows box is at 9.8 meters per second square.
    73. Re:Another giant step backward... by Proaxiom · · Score: 1
      "I'm going to have to disagree with you on this one. "Most"? 90% of the Christians I personally know tell me that the Bible is the literal word of God, and evolution is one of Satan's attempts to derail good Christians and keep them from the kingdom of Heaven... I know a lot of Christians."

      Those you know are probably not a good statistical sample. I will counter anecdotally that I also know a lot of Christians, and I don't think I personally know anyone who believes in literal interpretation.

      But then, I'm Catholic. And Catholic doctrine does not oppose evolution -- our position is essentially that as long as you believe God is behind it all, you can believe anything you want about the origin of life. Even Pope JP2 is famously quoted as saying "we have to accept that evolution is more than just a theory."

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think Catholics represent most Christians, on a global scale.

    74. Re:Another giant step backward... by jeroen94704 · · Score: 1

      Debating this issue with True Believers is useless. It doesn't matter how much evidence, arguments and/or common sense you bring to bear. Any argument you make, they refute. In case of your argument about fossils, they argue carbon dating is flawed, and point to some examples where carbon dating hasn't worked. Or the fossils are planted by God to test the faithful.

      Whatever.

      I've long since stopped trying to convince religious people of anything. It's a waste of time. They live in their world, I live in mine, and there's no way we can communicate effectively. The whole idea of building an argument based on facts and evidence is alien to these people. Mentioning the scientific method, the burden of proof, occam's razor: They shrug it off and tell you God exists, because it says to in the Bible, and the Bible is True, since it's the Word of God. QED. It's not so much that there's disagreement about facts. They are actually having a DIFFERENT conversation than you are. They are talking about something completely different than you think they are, and think according to different rules you and I will never understand. 1+1 does NOT necessarily equal 2.

      It's like eating soup with a fork: It just doesn't work.

      --
      He who laughs last, thinks slowest.
    75. Re:Another giant step backward... by Rooktoven · · Score: 1

      I have no problem with Darwinian concepts like survival of the fittest, or the adaptability of species. I have a problem with attempting to make them explain the Origin of life.

      Darwinian theory (evolution) is menat to explain the origin of life, but rather Origin of Species. In other words, what variations helped life forms adapt and what which changes made for successful continued existence.

      Things produce "after their kind", as Scripture states. Mate two dogs, they make a dog, not a cat. When an apple tree drops it's seed, another apple tree blooms, not a grape vine.

      Thinds do produce after their own kind. Parents tend to make offspring similar to themselves, rather than exact duplicates. Throughout history, those children with better ability to fight against disease tended to survive. Likewise, those children smart enough to be able to provide sustenance tended to survive. This same principal applies on a macro level. Those societies that encourage survival of the group tend to survive over the long haul. One could say evolution explains the continued survival of a relatively small group of people from ancient Palestine after 4000 years.

      Of course evolution does not disprove the existence of God. Nothing does. However, the existence of God does not disprove evolution either. It seems to be a pretty "Intelligent Design"...

      --

      Acquiescence leads to obliteration
    76. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Except that ID is not a dissenting viewpoint to anyone with any scientific background.
      I am not suggesting ID should be included in a science textbook.

      As far as the theory/fact bit. I am well aware of the differences. But you should be careful about implying that evolution is perfectly understood, which of course, it's not. It is under constant refinement within the scientific world. About how speciation occurs, about the types of mutations that occur, about rates, about how certain species got to where it is now, etc. There are legitimate questions about evolution, and they should not be downplayed because it may open the door for religious explanations.

      Now, about your other points:

      literal interpretation of the bible forbids it
      Like I mentioned, even the Southern Bapists you mention do not literally believe every word of the bible. An uneducated one might, but that is not the teaching, the doctrine. The mountains do not literally sing with joy. Metaphors are all over the place in the bible. Parables. Etc.

      But because the bible is infallible (the word of God
      Christians of nearly every domination and faith refer only to the New Testament gospels are The Word Of God. The Old Testament books are in some parts the "divinely inspired word of God", which means just that.

      ID is nothing more than a sham to try to work around that pesky "separation of search and state" thing that our forefathers were bright enough to put into that pesky "Constitution."
      Discussing ID in school, or creationism, or even religion, does not violate the "seperation of church and state". What our founding fathers did do was forbid the estblishment of State religion, which was a glorious thing!

      You have to re-read what I wrote. I am not stumping for ID. I am stumping for a time and place in school for a reasonable discussion of what non-scientists believe. You can't understand anything about the world until you deal with this topic. The goal of removing all mentions of religion is out there, and it's harmful. The history of the Christian faith crosses over all topics: literature, science, mathematics!, western and american history, ancient history - it's all very deeply interwoven.

      It is a sad fact that most people graduated from public school with no conception whatsoever of what effect the Christian faith has had on American history, culture, world events, and the direction of the world! It's a travesty! Scientists have pushed so hard against religion it's almost absurd. Even if religion were scientically undeniably proven false it should be studied, understood, respected, by educators, scientists, schools, and students. It is a major force in so, so many ways!

    77. Re:Another giant step backward... by Golias · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm going to have to disagree with you on this one. "Most"? 90% of the Christians I personally know tell me that the Bible is the literal word of God, and evolution is one of Satan's attempts to derail good Christians and keep them from the kingdom of Heaven.

      Where do you live, anyway?

      Let's break it down, shall we?

      Catholics: Do not believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God. Believe in Evolution.

      Lutherans (all major Synods in America): Do not believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God. Believe in Evolution.

      Episocpals: Do not believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God. Believe in Evolution.

      Methodists: Do believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God, but most do not believe that Evolution contraticts it.

      Baptists: Mostly believe that the Bible is the literal word of God. Most (not all) Baptist denominations consider Evolution to be contrary to their beliefs.

      I think I hit most of the major ones.

      The thing about Fundamentalism is, it's fairly unique to the United States, and even then, it's fairly unique to the Deep South, and even then, it's fairly unique to only a handful of denominations.

      Another thing about Fundamentalism is, it's a relatively new trend, and is actually a sort of neo-Catholicism. I'll explain what I mean (if you will pardon a long-winded tangent)...

      Catholics believe that the Bishop of Rome (the Pope) is the ultimate spiritual authority on all things related to God in the world. Each pope is selected by a council of bishops, and Catholic dogma teaches that God's Holy Spirit works through these men to lead them to select the right leader for the Church. This (and the fact that anybody even considered is somebody who has dedicated a lifetime to studying Christian theology) is where the Pope's authority derives from.

      Fundamentalists believe that the ultimate spritual authority on all things related to God in the world is the Bible. The Bible is not a single book, but a collection of many books. Which books were included in the Bible was determined by the Council of Nicea... a group of Church fathers, not at all unlike the groups that choose Popes these days, who came together to determine which Gospels, which letters, and which prophesy text(s) should be included, and which should be omitted. Fundamentalism rests on the idea that these men were guided by God's Holy Spirit to make the right choices. That (and the fact that they were about seventeen hundred years closer to the events in question) is where the Bible derives it's authority from.

      Sound at all familiar?

      Personally, I don't entirely embrace either idea, but if one is to take Christianity seriously at all, one should be loathe to completely dismiss the ideology of either sect... yet oddly enough Catholics and Fundamentalists often scoff at one another openly, and sometimes each question whether the other is actually part of the Christian Church.

      This tiresome division is one of the reasons why "non-denominational" Evangelical churches are popping up like wildflowers all over America. People have better things to do with their lives than fret over whether the folk in the church across the street are "real" Christians or not.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    78. Re:Another giant step backward... by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1


      Honestly, I'm a Christian, and I've never met another Christian who spouted crap like "God put them there to test our faith". That's just flaming stupid.

      I too am a Christian, and I have met other Christians (plural) who believe exactly that. As for it being 'flaming stupid', I certainly won't dispute that.

      Not being a geologist, I wouldn't know. Some of the geologists present care to elaborate?


      Here's some information on radiocarbon dating for you.

      ...if you're gonna attack Christianity, understand what you're attacking before doing it (If you want to know what that whole sacrifice thing was about, read Hebrews 11:17-20).

      I wasn't exactly attacking Christianity...I'm sorry if it appeared that way to you (I never did like that story, though). You invite me to read Hebrews 11:17-20 to understand the sacrifice thing...for the sake of clarity, I've posted it below:


      17By faith Abraham, when God tested him, offered Isaac as a sacrifice. He who had received the promises was about to sacrifice his one and only son, 18even though God had said to him, "It is through Isaac that your offspring[a] will be reckoned."[b] 19Abraham reasoned that God could raise the dead, and figuratively speaking, he did receive Isaac back from death.

      I'm sorry, but this is entirely contradictory to the actual account of the sacrifice, as it is described in Genesis 22 (again, I've posed it below for clarity).


      20By faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau in regard to their future.

      1 Some time later God tested Abraham. He said to him, "Abraham!"
      "Here I am," he replied.

      2 Then God said, "Take your son, your only son, Isaac, whom you love, and go to the region of Moriah. Sacrifice him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains I will tell you about."

      3 Early the next morning Abraham got up and saddled his donkey. He took with him two of his servants and his son Isaac. When he had cut enough wood for the burnt offering, he set out for the place God had told him about. 4 On the third day Abraham looked up and saw the place in the distance. 5 He said to his servants, "Stay here with the donkey while I and the boy go over there. We will worship and then we will come back to you."

      6 Abraham took the wood for the burnt offering and placed it on his son Isaac, and he himself carried the fire and the knife. As the two of them went on together, 7 Isaac spoke up and said to his father Abraham, "Father?"
      "Yes, my son?" Abraham replied.
      "The fire and wood are here," Isaac said, "but where is the lamb for the burnt offering?"

      8 Abraham answered, "God himself will provide the lamb for the burnt offering, my son." And the two of them went on together.

      9 When they reached the place God had told him about, Abraham built an altar there and arranged the wood on it. He bound his son Isaac and laid him on the altar, on top of the wood. 10 Then he reached out his hand and took the knife to slay his son. 11 But the angel of the LORD called out to him from heaven, "Abraham! Abraham!"
      "Here I am," he replied.

      12 "Do not lay a hand on the boy," he said. "Do not do anything to him. Now I know that you fear God, because you have not withheld from me your son, your only son."

      13 Abraham looked up and there in a thicket he saw a ram [a] caught by its horns. He went over and took the ram and sacrificed it as a burnt offering instead of his son. 14 So Abraham called that place The LORD Will Provide. And to this day it is said, "On the mountain of the LORD it will be provided."

      15 The angel of the LORD called to Abraham from heaven a second time 16 and said, "I swear by myself, declares the LORD, that because you have done this and have not w

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    79. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be Catholic then because I haven't seen what you have.

    80. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (I'm only posing via "Anonymous Coward" because I'm too lazy to get a /. login.)

      People that think fossils were placed here by God to test our faith are idiots. Well intentioned idiots perhaps, but idiots nonetheless. There's a perfectly biblical and scientific answer. If you've ever read the Bible, you might have heard about a little thing called "The Flood." During which the entire earth was covered in water which perfectly explains the existance of fossilized shells on mountain tops. If you think that's rediculous consider the fact that if the earth were flat there's enough water on the planet to cover everything in a mile and a half of water.

      Show me "clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils" and I'll show you scientist that's been looking too long and too hard for something that doesn't exsist. There is much evidence to show variation within a kind (different races of humans, etc.) but no evidence whatsoever "proving" that one _species_ evolved from a completely different _species_. Great, so you found finches with different shaped beaks. Guess what? They're all still FINCHES. There's no bat finch, no lizzard finch, and no butterfly finch.

      Show me a "missing link" and I'll so you a platypus. What does a platypus prove other than the fact that God has a wonderful sense of humor?

      Science hasn't _proved_ a thing about evolution. It's all a THEORY. And a bad one at that.

      --Shannon

    81. Re:Another giant step backward... by quantum+bit · · Score: 1

      "Imagine you were walking across a large field, and stumbled upon a beautiful watch. You open the cover, and notice that it is exactly right - it keeps perfect time. Is it not safe to assume that the watch had a maker?"

      That might be a good metaphor if human beings were akin to precision timepieces.

      For that to be a complete metaphor, there would also have to be lesser clocks and mechanical devices around that don't keep perfect time. Those other clocks would have to be capable of mechanically reproducing themselves, and not always being 100% correct when they do so. Not to mention the basic building blocks such as single celled organisms (tiny gears and springs that reproduce as well?). And so on.

      /not sure about the bigger issue, I just don't think that's a particularly good metaphor

    82. Re:Another giant step backward... by anti_analog · · Score: 1

      There seems to be a bit of a misunderstanding of the term "intelligent design" here.

      It is not a fundamentalist belief that the earth was literally created in 6 days about 14,000 year ago or whatever.

      Intelligent design, from my understanding, is the belief that the natural laws of physics and chemistry and biology, that we understand through the ideas of science, such as the theory of evolution were the forces that God used to shape our universe to the way it is so that humans would exist (not excluding other life forms elsewhere, that is merely an unknown).
      An advocate of intelligent design spoke at my church a few years ago, and my parents encouraged me to attend his talk with them. I went expecting some spaz proclaiming the usual battle of God vs. scientific thinking and was pleased to find someone speaking of them as ideas that are in no way mutually exclusive (since we can't forseeably scientifically prove or disprove the existance of God). His name was Dr. Hugh Ross, and he's an astrophysicist or cosmologist at Berkley or something like that.
      He and his buddies have a website, http://www.reasons.org/ or something like that, if you want to hear them rant about the latest science and how they see it relating to issues of faith.

      Anyway, the one thing that both scientists and religious people need is a nice dose of humility. Evolution, to us, was taught as fact, not theory, and that's BS, at least partially. Likewise, religious people should be satisfied with science taught with humility, and should butt out so long as teachers are doing a good job of teaching kids about scientific ideas and theories in an honest way. Creationism discussion can occur in classes about religions, not science classes.

      Or at least that's how I see it.

      --
      you cannot dodge the quad laser. jumping is useless.
    83. Re:Another giant step backward... by lifebouy · · Score: 1
      I agree. I am constantly puzzled by this argument. On one hand you've got radicals who say God created everything and how could you blaspheme against creation? On the other, you have radicals who say evolution is the only answer for it and everything can be explained by evolution.

      Science and religion are not enemies. They coexist just fine, if you take out the radicals. Science and religion are like the wings of a bird. A bird cannot fly with one wing. Neither can mankind go any further until science and religion are reconciled.

      I can't get too excited about anyone trying to prove or debunk the Bible. It's been mis-translated badly. The errors begin with the second word in Genesis: it should read "In THIS beginning..."(emphasis mine).

      Nor do I worry too much about Evolutionists and their theories. There are just too many strange things that cannot be explained by evolution alone. Such theories completely ignore the spiritual aspects of life, like how a man can walk across hot coals without burning his feet.

      One without the other is bunk.

      --
      Drop me a line at:
      Key ID: 0x54D1D809
    84. Re:Another giant step backward... by LnxAddct · · Score: 1

      Where you live is very important. In the east coast major cities like New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Washington D.C. (all of which I frequent) Very few people in any religion disagree with evolution anymore. Its just accepted as fact because it is fact (I'm a christian btw). All of us experience evolution everyday not just in the foods we eat, but more importantly in ourselves. Your parents combined 50% of each of their DNA in some "random" configuration with a few possible mutations. If it turns out that these combinations and mutations were beneficial or neutral (which something like 90% are), then you have a very high probability of living long and reproducing new offspring with a high probability of them having genes neutral with yours or even more improved. If you get a bad combination or mutation, you'll most likely suffer some mental or phsyical disability that in many cases will stop you from spreading those bad genes any further. It sounds harsh, but that is evolution. The strong get stronger and the weak die off and this happens thousands of times a day in hospitals across the globe. You wanna see evolution? Go visit a hospital and watch some babies get born and some unfortunate severly handicapped person spend their life in a hospital bed. (Someone here is going to argue that I'm describing microevolution, to which I respond that evolution is a long and pain staking process, it must be taken in baby steps as it is. A bunch of small mutations and improvements, or as you call microevolution, over a long period of time will indeed result in huge changes such as the variety of species found on earth just like adding very small numbers a large number of times will result in a large number).
      Regards,
      Steve

    85. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      What I find sad is how many people claim to be Christian without knowing anything about what they claim to subscribe to!

      I agree, it's sad. But the people who claim to believe the bible is literally true, do you think they would answer "Yes" to "Do you think if the bible said the 'mountains sang with joy' the mountains literally sang a song that you or I could hear'?"

      I agree about Christian and hypocrite statement as well. I have no problems with Christians who are devout and fundamentalist, so long as they are sincere. If they are pretending to justify their bigotry or rage or ignorance, than that is really sad.

    86. Re:Another giant step backward... by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      TripMaster Monkey has got the score once again.

      There is no reason to believe that a supreme being (ie. God) couldn't use evolution to hone his creations to perfection. As I've said before, anyone who takes the bible completely literally (The world was created in seven days) is insane. I'll bet if you sat down and had a face to face talk with God about the creation of Earth, it's animals and the human race, he'd laugh you out of existence when you would say you think it's awesome that he created everything in seven days. Think of it this way. As a talented artist, you could get a canvas and some paint and attempt to render a great work. If you spent one hour doing it, you'd probably have a pretty lame piece of crap. If you spent one day, it would probably be a lot better. If you spent one year doing it, you'd probably be approaching something worthy of being revered for years to come. If you spent one lifetime working on it, it could very well be a masterpiece. The point is that it takes time for great things to happen. Developing a sentient being and having it survive for millions of years is not something you do in a decade or a century or ten thousand years. It takes a VERY long time. Especially is you are writing it in assembler... errr... DNA.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    87. Re:Another giant step backward... by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Easily solved. Just ask them if they think the admonishment against homosexuality in Leviticus ought to be followed. If they say yes, as fundies unceasingly do, then they clearly feel that the OT is still relevant and _then_ you can stone them.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    88. Re:Another giant step backward... by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

      Nothing went wrong with the monkeys. To take a more extreme example, there are examples of species which found an evolutionary stable niche hundreds of millions of years ago, and so from your perspective are 'less evolved' -- but that's not the right term to use. Everything that's currently living on this planet has an evolutionary history of exactly the same length as everything else. We just have different degrees, and areas, of specialisation.

    89. Re:Another giant step backward... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      So where did all the people come from? The Bible does not mention any other people, and the Bible is always right correct? So just where did all the people come from? Maybe we all are not really here...

      Genesis 4.16-17:
      16 And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord, and dwelt in the land of Nod, on the east of Eden. 17 And Cain knew his wife; and she conceived, and bare Enoch: [7] and he builded a city, and called the name of the city, after the name of his son, Enoch.

      Doesn't say where they came from. (as in created and what not) Does say that she existed and where she lived.

      http://www.christnotes.org/bible.asp?ViewBible=Gen esis+4&Version=KJV

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    90. Re:Another giant step backward... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      I can do in which one of the possible outcomes disproves the existance of God or the theory of ID

      [[[really, why not lay out an experiment for me that can disprove the numerous theories put forth by evolutionists that try to explain what happened before the big bang (you know, I mean here we have essentially nothing or a tiny super-singularity but what was before. I've heard a half dozen theories but I don't see a discernable test for any of them.

      Guess by your own standard, such evolutionary answers to the creation of the universe are in fact not science. ;)

    91. Re:Another giant step backward... by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

      Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution?

      Interesting. I have a question for /.ers - this is not meant to incite flaiming, trolling, etc. It is simply a question to which I would be interested in recieving intelligent responses.

      Where in evolution (I know the same can be asked of ID) is there any place for conciousness, self-awareness, and morality? When in the evolutionary cycle does man become self-aware? Can evolution explain this? Does it ever attempt to?

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    92. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ugh, you're being as stupid and closed minded as the fundies. The creationist will say it was created that way.

      Kind like how I can start a for-loop in the middle. Just because it steps one at a time doesn't mean it started at 0.

    93. Re:Another giant step backward... by jfruhlinger · · Score: 1

      The Old Testament, especially the The Law or pentateuch, are considered to be of value only for historical reasons: they applied only to prepare the Chosen people for the coming of Christ. So the story, for example, of Abraham and creation were preperations for the coming of Christ. This is why, for example, even devout Christians do not keep kosher while devout Jews do: the period of preperation and sacrifice ended when Christ was recognized as the saviour.

      Except for the gays, though, right? Boy howdy, all that stuff in Leviticus about unnatural sex sure does still apply!

      Note that I'm not saying that the parent poster believes this, just that many Christians seem to have a finely tune ability to say that Old Testament bans on things they like to do (like eat shrimp and bacon) no longer apply, but bans on things that they don't like to do (like have sex with members of their own gender) are still in full force.

      jf

    94. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You are right to say evolution doesn't disprove the existence of God.


      Indeed. It's logic that does that.
    95. Re:Another giant step backward... by torndorff · · Score: 1

      If the logical base for ID is a metaphor of a watchmaker it most DEFINATELY does not qualify as Science. Do you even understand science? No, it is not safe to assume the watch has a Maker if watches in this world reproduce and change over time. It is safe to assume the watch has an origin, but only because of other scientific laws stating that matter is never created nor destroyed. None of these things qualify the watch to have an Intelligent Maker. Your use of metaphor is one based on religious fables and not scientific logic.

    96. Re:Another giant step backward... by quigonn · · Score: 1

      What I find funny is that almost none of them seem to be following the words of Jesus.

      You are so absolutely right. And many of them do not even follow the Ten Commandments, especially the "thou shalt not kill" part. A Christian that kills (or lets kill) other people is definitely nothing but a hypocrite.

      --
      A monkey is doing the real work for me.
    97. Re:Another giant step backward... by zazzel · · Score: 1
      "Most"? 90% of the Christians I personally know tell me that the Bible is the literal word of God, and evolution is one of Satan's attempts to derail good Christians and keep them from the kingdom of Heaven.



      I wonder where you poor soul have to live. At least here in Europe, none of the Christians I know think so. Not a single one I know.
      Then again, I live in a country where ppl find it ok to be taxed to death and, despite the current economic situation getting worse, still believe in more state intervention (aka more taxation, social generosities). Hell, we even fund DUMB people to have more children than academics by giving them the same child benefits!

    98. Re:Another giant step backward... by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Read that story again. Despite what everyone seems to think, God didn't strike them down because of hubris or intelligence or whatever.

      Genesis 11:5-7
      But the LORD came down to see the city and the tower that the men were building. The LORD said, "If as one people they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. Come, let us go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other."

      God didn't destroy the tower because he dislikes knowledge, he destroyed the tower because he was afraid of what people could accomplish.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    99. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You said "Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution? " ... and ...
      "Evolution does not disprove the existence of God."

      Correct. Science neither proves nor disproves the existance of God (singular/plural/male/female/whatever). To put it simply, God is irrelevant to science in much the same way as some guy in china selling white cranes in a market is irrelevant to your math test next week. Who cares if he exists, he has nothing to do with this annoying polynomial I'm trying to solve.

      I've heard fundamentalists say that science is trying to disprove god, it would be more accurate to say that science is the search for gods phone number. (Rather silly, but far more accurate.)

      Ok, explanation for those that don't get that last statement. If you strive to learn everything, you endeavor to know everything. Hmmm, I wonder if they are just afraid that the scientists might actually succeed in "piercing the veil of heaven" and result in the downfall of the fundamentalists own earthly empire.... Just pondering....

    100. Re:Another giant step backward... by Bender0x7D1 · · Score: 1

      Everyone knows that the fossils are present because the mice require them for the proper functioning of their computer.

      --
      Reading code is like reading the dictionary - you have to read half of it before you can go back and understand it.
    101. Re:Another giant step backward... by mog007 · · Score: 1

      The western monothestic religions cannot co-exist with science. It just won't happen. Ask Galielo what the Catholic church thought about a Heliocentric universe, or Darwin's idea of evolution.

      Over time a scientific theory will be accepted by religion, and in fact added into their religious canon, but the fact remains, when a new theory comes about, it takes a while.

      Then you have the extremists, like the fundamentalists. They'll never accept that evolution happened. They'll never accept that this planet is older than six thousand years old. Oh, and they'll never broaden their views, either.

    102. Re:Another giant step backward... by bergwitz · · Score: 1

      A fundementalist, one who knows his scripture, could easily defeat your arguments without much mental effort or any really bizarre logic.

      Possibly, but what I don't get about creationism is which creation myth is correct. There are two, one in which God creates the world in seven days, and one in which he creates Eden and man. They contradict each other. In the first he creates plants and trees, then the animals and lastly man and woman. In the second he creates man (Adam), then the plants and trees, then the animals and lastly the woman (Eve). So which one is that the creationists say is a fact?

      --
      Evolution is just a scientific theory. Creationism is not.
    103. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      I agree about Leviticus etc! Christians of the uneducated variety have a tendancy to pick and choose!

      If you ask the average Catholic on what basis does the Chruch deny homosexuals full communion with the Church, they have no idea that is based on tradition, and not largely on scripture!

    104. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      I am not suggesting ID is the truth! I am presenting what ID is.

      This is really what this debate is about. Does explaining what something is - Intelligent Design - mean I am advocating it!

      Really, re-read what I wrote. I am not advocating for ID.

    105. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't understand the gravity of the situation. The mid-west protestant bigotry madness is already spreading from USA to Europe. Intelligent design people have already rented advertisement space in the underground railway stations in Budapest, Hungary to popularize their 6+1 day books.

      First I told the mass transit company this is a big no-no, if they want to continue receiving gov't subsidies in a secular country. Thes said they don't care. So I just told the authorities to have all those ad removed by the power of law or revoke subsidies. If that fails, I will sue all of them.

      You really can't let these lunatics win. First ID and 7 days advertised, then anti-fornication laws enacted, then Salem would come back. Finally the Earth would be declared flat so they could build a huge WatchTower and keep an ever-seeing eye on the ungodly population.

    106. Re:Another giant step backward... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      I am stumping for a time and place in school for a reasonable discussion of what non-scientists believe.

      Fine, but that better be an all-encompassing, non-mandatory class on religions of the world that covers *all* religions, not just Christianity. But good luck getting that to happen... those same fundamentalists who want Christianity in public schools would probably scream at the idea of their children being taught about Islam.

    107. Re:Another giant step backward... by sl70 · · Score: 1

      The Old Testament, especially the The Law or pentateuch, are considered to be of value only for historical reasons: they applied only to prepare the Chosen people for the coming of Christ. So the story, for example, of Abraham and creation were preperations for the coming of Christ. This is why, for example, even devout Christians do not keep kosher while devout Jews do: the period of preperation and sacrifice ended when Christ was recognized as the saviour.

      Just another example of fundamentalists picking and choosing what they want from the Bible and rejecting other things. Take the Ten Commandments: Those are in Exodus, the 2nd book of the Torah. Just ``historical interest''? How about the prohibition against man lying with another man? That's in Leviticus (the 3rd book). (BTW, nowhere does it prohibit woman from lying down with woman. I guess that means it's ok to be lesbian.) Yet, fundamentalists frequently cite the biblical prohibition to justify their anti-homosexual rants. Hypocrites! Bashibazooks!

      --
      Thank God I'm an atheist!
    108. Re:Another giant step backward... by pbhj · · Score: 1

      >>>"nowhere in this entire chapter are we given to understand that Abraham believe that God would raise Issac from the dead"

      Nowhere in Nate4D's post did I notice him say that the Bible is a complete record.

    109. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      If you are unable or unwilling to accept or even understand this simple fact about what a Theory is, then you have no business even entering this conversation.
      What the hell is your problem? Re-read my post. Am I advocated for putting anything relating ID in a scientific text book? No. I suggest that a good textbook should address the holes in the Theory of Evolution.

      I am trained scientist. I know about theories, and laws, and facts.

      Thanks!

    110. Re:Another giant step backward... by joshmccormack · · Score: 1

      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?

      Valid question. Some people believe God is a lot smarter than they are, they may not understand everything, and they need to have faith. It's tough for them to work with all the suggestions that they're completely wrong and some try to offer suggestions of why things are the way they are.

      why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution?
      For some Intelligent Design isn't their whole idea about the beginning of life and the world. They may believe that life came into being largely as it is now.

    111. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if you never learned to read?

    112. Re:Another giant step backward... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Actually he was right. Most Christians - by a very subtantial margin - accept evolution.

      It is only in the United States that evolution is any signifigant issue, and that varies greatly from region to region. Deep in the Bible Belt it's quite possible everyone you run into will reject to evolution. Go to almost any major metropolitan area and the surrounding suburbs and you've been hard pressed to find anyone who actively rejects it.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    113. Re:Another giant step backward... by Rallion · · Score: 1

      Ok, fine. Lay out for me some experiment I can do in which one of the possible outcomes disproves the existance of God or the theory of ID.

      I said this to a Christian once. It didn't go well. They said, "I can't, because God DOES exist! You can't disprove something that exists!" Rather missed the point, I think.

    114. Re:Another giant step backward... by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Are you not capable of reading? ingram just said, "humans and monkeys evolved from a common ancestor". Evolution didn't 'stop' for other primates, it made them into what they are today.

      You are making the usual Fundie/Creationist mistake of assuming that human beings are the pinnacle of evolution, that the human form is perfect and is what every molecule of DNA strives to be. Uh uh. Chimps and gorillas and the rest are as we see them because that's what worked out best for their ancestors. Evolution heads blindly towards local optima. The human form is actually astoundingly grotesque. The only things we've got going for us are our overdeveloped frontal lobes, vocal cords, social organization, and hands. Beyond that, we are physically weak, poorly armored and possessing of no natural weaponry which is _not_ compensated for by a fast or large breeding cycle, have mediocre immune systems, abyssmal tissue regeneration, nonexistant protection from the elements, terrible skeletal structure for bipedal movement (our knees point the wrong way and a segmented spine is absolutely the worst thing to make a load-bearing vertical column out of), have lousy digestive systems for our omnivorous diet, and are atrociously sense-deficient compared to other animals (practically no sense of smell at all).

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    115. Re:Another giant step backward... by korekrash · · Score: 1

      Considering that the christian god is so petty and ego driven as to be offended when I use his name in vane, he must be an asshole. Also, about using ID as an alternative to evolution; the Babylonians http://faculty.gvsu.edu/websterm/Enuma_Elish.html> believed the earth was created by multiple gods and then man was created by Enki in a story called Enuma Elish. And what of the Greeks Theogony? If ID is to be taught in schools, shouldn't we teach all of the versions so that the child can make a TRUE decision? Or, should we just teach them the one that we can Factually prove to be the most relevant in the same way there are many theories in Physics, but we teach the ones that are accepted as being as close to the truth as we can come? Oh yeah, the closest we can come to proving anything about creation is evolution! If you or your children want to learn about legend and myth, take the appropriate class and don't expect science class to be where it is found, until the religious world can produce some form of foundation for their story. Until then, it's just a modern Enuma Elish. P.S. If anyone says it is because we now know those are just stories to explain the physical world to primative man....well in another 2000 years they may be saying that about creationism/ID! -- Ahh, not so cold now, can't wait to get there, this handbasket sure is comfortable!

    116. Re:Another giant step backward... by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      I'm going to have to disagree with you on this one. "Most"? 90% of the Christians I personally know tell me that the Bible is the literal word of God, and evolution is one of Satan's attempts to derail good Christians and keep them from the kingdom of Heaven.

      I know a lot of Christians.


      Aren't Catholics Christians too? There's a hell of a lot of Catholics, and it's not a religion that takes a literal view on everything in the Bible, in my understanding. (On the other hand, there's that whole communion issue, which seems rather odd -- "Funny, it doesn't taste like Christ-blood.")

      Anyway, the point I'm making is that just because you may be surrounded by a lot of Christians, it doesn't mean that they're all the same. Most Christians, numerically-speaking, aren't living in the United States.

    117. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, what about all these fossils! Perhaps the biggest threat to the theory of evolution is marked absence of such a theory in the fossils. Sure, some "scientists" in the past have carefully arranged sets of bones in an order to give the impression something evolved over time. Even some frauds still exist in the textbooks today (horse evolution example) that are taught as valid. Carefully arranging data to fit a preconceived notion is one of the pillars of evolution. Don't you dare try to tell somebody that because you will be met with personal attacks, namecalling, stereotyping, etc. But the fact still remains is evolution is based on assumption, supposition, superstition, etc. Evolution is jokingly classified as SWAG science (Scientific Wild @$$ Guess). Whatever you want to call it but it doesn't bear any resemblance to science, since science is simply knowledge gained by observation.

      There is a verse in scripture that says "God uses foolish things of the world to confound the 'wise'". God knew full well that some would reject Him and He will give them enough ammo to allow them to make complete fools of themselves. Here's a prime example. The verse found in 1Kings 7:23-26. You will find the measurements of King Solomon's brass bowl. Atheists, and Bible scoffers and the ilk will point to that verse and claim that the Bible somehow implies that the value of pi is 3.0. And if you glance over that scripture without doing the math yourself, you will think the same thing! But if you take all of the measurements INCLUDING THE thickness of the bowl, you will find the measurements are correct and pi doesn't come out to 3.0 as some foolishly contend. God uses foolish things of the world to confound the "wise". For more info. on the vers in 1Kings 7:23-26 see http://members.aol.com/gillslits

      Pasteur, (a real scientist!) said that a little knowlege in science estranges man from God but a lot of knowledge in science brings them back to Him. Before someone tells you that all life as we know it is the result of organic evolution, don't be afraid to challenge such a notion, even though it is fashionable for the "scientific community" to personally attack you, rather than hear your argument.

    118. Re:Another giant step backward... by John+Harrison · · Score: 1
      As I understand it, they don't want ID taught, they just want to emphasize that evolution is a theory. I think that a large number of people are troubled not so much by the theory of evolution, but by the holes in the observable evidence.

      Of course saying that there are problems with evolution gets athiests fired up about as much as evolution gets fundamentalists going.

    119. Re:Another giant step backward... by paiute · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a theory, and not a fact. Much in the same way that 'gravity' is a theory and not a fact.

      Evolution is an observed fact.
      Natural selection was the hypothesis.
      Observations and tests reinforced the hypothesis until it became a theory.

      Gravity is an observed fact.
      Gravity waves are the hypothesis.
      Until they are observed and confirmed, there is no theory of gravity.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    120. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Look, if you are studying Western History, and it does not cover in depth the history the Catholic Church, a great disservice is being done unto you.

      You cannot study anthing serious about America without knowing about Christianity, European religon, and the reformation, the counter-reformation, etc. Literature, art, music, world events, wars, politics - all of it is influenced by Christianity.
      This is true to a much lesser degree about other faiths. The teachings of Confucious are interesting, but not in terms of their impact on American history, literature, or culture. Right now in this country schools have almost entirely removed any mention of religion. And it's a travesty! Not because religion is true, or right, or correct, but because it is so essential to the national character past and present!

      Having a single class that talks about religion is garbage. It has to be integrated appropriately into the subject at hand. I know students now in high school studying the civil rights movement but have no idea how deeply religion tied into this movement. A main unifying cause between blacks and whites in the south - what caused many whites to side with the blacks in a fight for civil rights - was common religion. How can you understand the character and achievements of a many like Dr. Martin Luther King if you do not know that he was reverend, and that his father was a reverend? How many students know anything about his namesake? What does it say about him that he was named after the founder of the Lutheran denomination? About his upbringing?

      Removing this line of thinking from a class on the civil rights movement is an abomination of history!

    121. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could dictate it to a scribe.

      Once done, you would have no problem printing, binding, and reproducing it.

    122. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My biggest problem with evolution is that, supposing it were true, we would have to expect to see life evolving on other planets. Given the laws of probability and the ages of the other planets in our solar system and outside of it, you would expect to see life much more advanced than our race. And yet with all the power of our current technology we have yet to find evidence that life is anywhere in the universe but here. Odd, isn't it?
      If life simply evolves from chemicals, then you would also expect life forms to evolve out of the chemicals on Mars, on Jupiter, et. al. But you don't see it. Life requires specific chemicals, specific temperatures, specific energy, vast amounts of time, and a ton of coincidence. Now this doesn't mean that evolution is false. It simply means that evolution does not explain our purpose or existence any better than intelligent design. What it does do is bury any questions we may have in millions of years of chaos theory. What has interested me as a mathematician is what if the entire universe was designed like a fractal? Certain rules were put in place so that the limit point would be our existence. Think of a fern in an IFS fractal. Each point moves randomly about through the various transformations but no matter the order it will always trace out a set pattern defined by the rules we set. So in the end, I believe that it is simply a matter of belief. You can believe that the rules simply were, in which case they would be god. Or you can believe that there is a God who has a higher personality from which we derive personality, a higher set of knowledge from which we derive our knowledge. It really isn't that much different than believing that there is some lower form of matter from which we derive intelligence from which we derive personality. All that differs is whether you put yourself in your egotistical human arrogance at the top of the pyramid or somewhere in the middle. Take your choice.

    123. Re:Another giant step backward... by djmcmath · · Score: 1

      ID is nothing more than a sham to try to work around that pesky "separation of search and state" thing that our forefathers were bright enough to put into that pesky "Constitution."

      --Our forefathers didn't put "separation of church and state" into the Constitution. SOCAS was actually in a set of completely independent letters written by one of the framers. The idea never actually made it into the document. Nice try.

    124. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As to fossils... If there were a being capable of making the entire Universe in say 6 days, is there any logical argument that the same being could not create a few fossils?
      Besides, what about that recent discovery that some T-Rex bones were not yet fossilized? Are most of these "70 Million year old" bones not really so old? Science has been terribly wrong about fossils and their ages before.

      Science can never prove or disprove the existance of any supernatural being. By definition Science studys the Natural World, any suprenatural being is simply beyond the scope of Science to study (that is the definition of super-natural).

      Which ammendment is about the "seperation of Church and State"? There is none. The first amendment says that the Government (Schools) can do nothing to suppress any form of speech, even that about religion, in school. A few radicals want to suppress religion for personal reasons. It is another example of the Supreme Court ( a group of people who were never elected by the general public) writing Laws of their own (which is illegal, but happens all the time).

      Congress only allocated the money to build the Capitol Building after a Church agreed to use it to meet in it on Sundays. The Stat and the Church were intended to always work together; the State providing the muscle and the Church providing Moral guidance. Some people don't like guidance of any kind.

      Every time the State arrests someone for killing someone else (or for theft) the State is inforcing one of the 10 Commandments: "Thou shalt not kill". I don't see anyone claiming that all murderers should be set free because of "Seperation of Church and State".

    125. Re:Another giant step backward... by MilenCent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Honestly, I'm a Christian, and I've never met another Christian who spouted crap like "God put them there to test our faith"....

      I have. ... That's just flaming stupid.

      I agree.

      The problem with Intelligent Design is that it's a transparent attempt to make the doubt of evolution seem scientific, much more than a credible theory. Instead of being built from the ground up as science first, it seems custom-built to get into classrooms by any means necessary. That's not just bad, it's evil. Evil, callous, cynical, manipulative, and dangerous.

    126. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      I have been struggling with these questions as well. Are there people who believe the bible is literally true in every word? If so, what portion of the nominally Christian population do they represent?

      I have met a number of people who claim to believe the Bible to be literally true, but when asked about specifics say that those passages are metaphorical. I have come to the conclusion that the literalists are ignorant, but consistent. The non-literalists are generally better educated but have no consistent way of determining what is true and what is not. There is no way an outsider could determine ahead of time by means of a set of rules what is to be taken literally and what is not. It all seems to come down to what the reader believes is true, but if I disblieve it all, then it all appears to me to be literary license, including that Son of God thing, but Christians all get in a bind when you start talking like that.

    127. Re:Another giant step backward... by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 1

      Intelligent Design is just as "scientific" as evolution. Evolution as a whole isn't scientific.

      What is the scientific theory of ID?

      And virtually all biologists would disagree with your opinion that evolution isn't scientific.

      Indeed, evolution itself argues for the possibility, even the likelyhood of intelligent design. Do you think that of all the planets in all the stars of the galaxy, we humans are the first intelligent race to evolve?

      We very well might not be the first intellegent species in the universe, but that does not make any arguement in support of ID.

      Personally, I don't think that public schools should teach any origin theories. Kids don't need it. "Where do we come from?" is fundamentally a religious issue, along with "Why are we here?" Just leave it alone and let the parents explain it.

      Yep, lets just not teach the scientific theory that is the foundation of modern biology.

    128. Re:Another giant step backward... by Philosinfinity · · Score: 1

      The vast majority of christians that I know of believe in evolution. The reconcile their beliefs in that and god by claiming that god designed life to adapt to its environment. Not that I believe in god, ID, or science... but word around the campfire is that the vast majority of christians are not these fundamentalist ID types.

    129. Re:Another giant step backward... by Vaughn+Anderson · · Score: 1
      ...why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution?

      When I was in 6th grade they showed us these fradulent drawings of the fetus looking like a frog, chicken, etc... these were lies from the 50's or so, yet in the 80's were still part of the education system even though many people knew they were fradulent to begin with. Is this one of the facts that support evolution? A blatant lie?

      Established does _not_ mean "true" or "proven".

      The small 'missing link' remains found in Alaska, later to be found a monkey. The amazing missing link tooth found in Nebraska, later is found to be a pigs tooth, etc...

      All this "evidence" get's spread around very quickly. But the fact that this "evidence" is later refuted categorically is not spread at all, so there is a common belief that there is a lot of proof of evolution, when there really isn't. This reminds me of bunch of stories about wmd's....

      As for intelligent design... it's just a buzzword to avoid bringing religion into this. :P

      One statement I'd like someone to debate with me on though. How can scientist believe in a theory that violates the law of entropy, where the energy should be dispersing into uniformity?

      Entropy is proven law, yet seems to be not discussed in the same discussions as with the psudo science of evolution.

    130. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      I have no idea!

      I am not a creationist, or a believer in the literal bible.

      I am sure you could find one if you went looking, though, and ask him!

    131. Re:Another giant step backward... by FunkyMonkey · · Score: 1

      The thing about Fundamentalism is, it's fairly unique to the United States, and even then, it's fairly unique to the Deep South, and even then, it's fairly unique to only a handful of denominations.

      If you consider Minneapolis to be Deep South, then I agree with you. There are a lot of them up here too.

      I was raised in Iowa in an evangelical fundamentalist church and they believe the bible is the literal word of God. All of it. I recently visited home and went to church with my parents (to avoid an ugly confrontation) and their church has grown dramatically in the 15 years since I attended regulary.

      Don't kid yourself, these freaks are everywhere and spreading like a nasty virus.

    132. Re:Another giant step backward... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      "Not pass the buck of onto some God figure"
      [[[One of the main differences between evolution and ID. Evolution says this just kinda fell into place randomly. ID denotes that someone essentially wrote the underlying code. There are even deist atheists who find the latter makes much more sense. There are evolutionists who still believe that intelligent design was necessary. Why?

      Let me ask you this....a lot of us here are programmers. Have you ever just set a brick on your keyboard and watched it randomly generate compilable code? No...I don't think you have. But that is exactly what the main group behind evolution expects people to believe. Intelligent Design just adds in that some entity (God, advanced aliens, whatever) programmed the code. And is this really so hard to believe as mankind itself begins to enter the realm of "genetic coding". How long until we venture out into the stars? How long until we genetically code an animal to fit a particular habitat on some hence unknown planet and it reaches a point to question "how did we come about?" Sure, we're left with the unanswered question "where did the designer come from" but it's a fair pairing to the question that is left in general "where did the universe come from". One just looks a step back and says "the particular universe we live from came from a particular designer" What lies outside of that, I do not know.

      I think there was movie called the 13th Floor (could be wrong title). In which a man creates a virtual world in the 1950's era. He was, essentially "the creator of that world" only to discover that he was a creation inside a similar world. One from our future. Maybe such is that case....but those questions are currently unanswerable by science.
      ]]]

      "what about all these fossils?"
      [[[They have a logical explanation...they believe most of the fossil formations occurred during the flood. I do find it interesting that you have all these fossils of fish with erect fins, etc. These fossils show clear evidence of a quick burial alive.]]]

      "Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils..."
      [[[That is still a much debated view in the eyes of many. There has not been any transitory examples.]]]

      "where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old? I've asked creationists this question, and they've actually replied that they were placed here by God to test our faith."
      [[[Than you talked to poorly knowledgeful creationists. First off, the age of the earth. 6,000??? or 6,000,000,000??? Well, we understand that time is relative. In order to determine the rate and speed of time one would have to know what God's mass and velocity is. Furthermore, many creationists have serious doubts about the accuracy of dating methods used on fossils. There are two major reasons. 1) because of many known cases of inaccuracy 2) because there are some who question whether "C" is truly constant and whether it might be slowing down. There is even growing question with regards to this issue within secular scientific communities.]]]

      "Now, I don't know about you, but I have a serious problem with this hypothesis. I for one refuse to believe that God would give us brains capable of rational, abstract thought, and then plant fake clues to punish those of us who had the gall to use those brains to attempt to understand the world we live in."
      [[[Guess what....most creationists agree with you.]]]

      "Of course, this is the same god who told Abraham to sacrifice his only son to Him, and waited until the knife was actually descending to say "Psych!"."
      [[[And if you understood that he was giving an example of a future event and the purpose and intent than it's not such a hard thing to understand. In fact, if you go and read those chapters you'll discover a very interesting clue to this fact. God tells Abraham to sacrifice his son, his only son Isaac. But any well read scriptural scholar would recall that Abraham in fact had "two sons". T

    133. Re:Another giant step backward... by bigjocker · · Score: 1

      If you want to teach ID on the religion class, go for it, but IT'S NOT SCIENCE. Can you prove it? Can you disprove it? No!!!! It's Phillosophy disguised as science, so it belongs on the 'religion' and 'phillosophy' class.

      Teach it along the Platon writings, not along Darwinian writings. That the problem: ID'ers want you to look at it as a science, as astrology or future-telling, but it's just religion.

      --
      Life isn't like a box of chocolates. It's more like a jar of jalapenos. What you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
    134. Re:Another giant step backward... by kev0153 · · Score: 1

      When I clicked on the "read more links" the comments were up to 666 (my filter is set at 0)

    135. Re:Another giant step backward... by joncue · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      "The rest of Bush-voters are the dumb mid-west sunday school peasants who can only count to two (that many barrels in their shotguns). They simply succumb to Dumbya (more precisely the jews who hold his puppet-strings). The middle or America is still in the middle ages if you evaluate based on what you find in the heads. They would be burning witches if it were not against the FBI." There's some intelligent discourse, oh wait, I am a Midwestern hick and am not supposed to be able to use words with multiple syllables

    136. Re:Another giant step backward... by quisph · · Score: 1
      If you are discussing the birth place of a famous person, and there exists some doubt about the location, most decent textbooks discuss the question.
      Only if there is reasonable evidence on both sides of the question. If, on the other hand, you have extant but incomplete documents versus the rantings of a lone nut who keeps harping on the missing pieces (without providing any real contradictory evidence himself), this might qualify as "some doubt," but the textbook is under no obligation to discuss the latter's opinion of where the birthplace might be.

      You seem to be arguing that since evolutionary theory is not complete, we must teach intelligent design. But this is a false dilemma; even if evolutionary theory is in question, there is no reason to assume that ID is the only alternative, let alone an equivalent one. Likewise, we are not obligated to give voice to the flat-Earthers' delusions in astronomy textbooks.

      Creationists are fond of pointing out things that evolutionary theory seems unable to explain, and viewing them as a triumph for ID. But again, it's a false dilemma; ID can't explain them either. If evolutionary theory is "full of holes," then ID is almost entirely empty space. If evolutionary theory was somehow proved to be 100% false in one fell swoop, this would not provide any additional support for ID. Science doesn't work that way.

      By analogy, if you succeed in proving that Mr. Jones was not born in Topeka, this does not automatically mean that he was born in St. Louis. You have to provide positive evidence that he was born in St. Louis. Otherwise, you're just trying to prove it by process of elimination, and you have a long way to go.

      ID simply isn't science. Some of it is philosophy, and could be taught in that context (along with the philosophical counter-arguments, of course). Some of it is pure bullshit, and shouldn't be taught anywhere. But none of it is science. It does not belong in science textbooks.

    137. Re:Another giant step backward... by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      And if you study fossilization, I believe that you would find that the catastrophic answer makes more sense
      The catastrophic answer may make sense, but it's the scientific version not the Christian version. The one time I attempted to read a Creationist magazine (on display at my local Baptist church) I had to physically restrain myself from grabbing a pen and annotating all the dumb mistakes (examples available on request).

      Science's foundation is the questioning of established ideas, not the dogmatic defense of them.
      As a result, scientific theories tend to be better-thought-out than equivalent religious theories, because if they're false they get debunked faster. Hence scientific theories will generally be more dependable. What was your point here again?

      C'mon, people, take your evolutionary blinders off for a moment, and examine the two theories critically, instead of spasmodically twitching whenever anyone mentions ID.
      Right. Care to give us any evidence for belief in some undefined "other" that created everything from scratch?

      Incidentally, take what I say with a pinch of salt cos I currently have a minor grudge against Christianity. However, I believe that this conflict of interest doesn't invalidate my points.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    138. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You weren't taught that he was a reverend? Odd, I was. But keep in mind that I was educated as to the facts of the situation. Speculation as to why King Jr. did what he did is really up to me.

      And the United States is NOT a Christian nation. It is made up of a variety of peoples, and a variety of religions. The paren'ts comment about Islam holds quite true. To use your own words (with some changes):

      "You cannot study anything serious about America without knowing about Islam, Middle Eastern religion, and the Shiites, etc. Literature, art, music, world events, wars, politics - all of it is influenced by Islam."

      That holds quite true for a number of other religions.

      And one last thing. Knowing about a religion and being taught the tenets of said religion are two separate things, IMHO. Would you agree with that?

    139. Re:Another giant step backward... by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 1

      Create a God Detecting Device (TM). If it fails to detect God, then God does not exist.

      The details of this device are proprietary, and good luck finding Linux drivers.

    140. Re:Another giant step backward... by daVinci1980 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Actually, Southern Baptists in general believe that the bible is the literal word of God. Both the old and new testament.Just a few links.

      Public school is really not an appropriate place for you to teach about the "wonders" of Christianity. Unless you plan on covering the negative impacts that Christianity had on the world as well. (For example, the Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, the holding back of scientists through threat of excommunication, etc.) You would also need to cover (as the other poster suggested) the other important world religions. Christianity isn't even the *dominant* religion on the planet, in terms of number of believers.

      Are you planning on discussing the origins of Christianity as a pagan religion? Or how the religion evolved as a way to subjugate the newly conquered Roman masses? Or do you think that stuff should be glossed over because it's not really relevant to the conversation at hand?

      Discussing ID or creationism in school exactly violates the seperation of church and state. It is a religious view held by one group of church-goers that is not accepted by anyone outside of their religion. The actual text of the first amendment says that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." Teaching ID in schools is a not-so-subtle way of pushing impressionable children to find more answers at their local christian place of worship.
      I am stumping for a time and place in school for a reasonable discussion of what non-scientists believe. (Emphasis added)

      And herein lies our difference. I don't think that the public education system (grades K-12) is an appropriate place to discuss what anyone "believes." Talk about it in college. (Even state-funded college, so long as the class is optional). But keep it out of our public primary schools.
      --
      I currently have no clever signature witicism to add here.
    141. Re:Another giant step backward... by nickos · · Score: 1

      Don't you mean 616? :D

    142. Re:Another giant step backward... by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Honestly, I'm a Christian, and I've never met another Christian who spouted crap like "God put them there to test our faith". That's just flaming stupid.

      Really? I have.

      Not being a geologist, I wouldn't know. Some of the geologists present care to elaborate?

      I have a biotech background, but don't practice in the field. When radioactive elements are found in rocks, the ratio between element and decayed element can be used to measure the age of the rock. If the ratio is constant throughout the sample, it's a good guess that the sample was originally pure, and not a mix to begin with.

      Rocks in the same layer, if they are layered, are usually close in age. This isn't the only method for dating rocks, but it was one of the earlier ones used (by Lise Meitner et all around 1910-20, roughly) and the one that I know about.


      However, most IDers look at it with something like Occam's Razor in mind - why would God introduce that much extra complexity to his creation process? If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort.


      So, for that matter, would historic religion. Why wait a few thoudand years to redem humanity.
      Why wait to send a savior?

      Occam's razor is seriously overused. The simplest explanation is often not the best. But if you have two explanations that are equally good and equally complex, only then would you choose the simpler.

      --

      ___
      It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    143. Re:Another giant step backward... by Hast · · Score: 1

      Just FYI "macro evolution" (which isn't a scientific concept AFAIK) is an observed fact in both flora and fauna.

      Besides AFAIK evolution doesn't require there to be a single source of life. Only creation doesn (the creator). For all we know life may very well have spontaniously emerged on multiple places on Earth.

    144. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing how you can read that whole article in 1 minute flat! Or are you just showing off your bias against Jews and Christians?

    145. Re:Another giant step backward... by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Funny

      Lay out for me some experiment I can do in which one of the possible outcomes disproves the existance of God

      Simple: God is love, and is perfect, and created man in his image?

      Therefore, diarrhea proves that God doesn't exist: Q.e.d.

      --

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

    146. Re:Another giant step backward... by Paladin128 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      By that logic, one shouldn't teach evolution as the origin of species; evolution does, in fact, happen in nature -- we can observe this. But teaching it as the origin of all life on earth is a philisophical discussion, and is not provable, at least with current data.

      Again, I'm quite religious, and believe that God worked by planting the seeds for life in the universe and used evolution to craft all species, but I wouldn't discuss that part in a science class. If I were teaching, I stick with the facts, and probably give nods to Darwin's "Origin of Species" as the biggest work that modern evolution theory sprung from, but would certainly not say that it factually provable that evolution is how all species came into being.

      --
      Lex orandi, lex credendi.
    147. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      I am not saying we should ignore the impact of Isalm on America. However, the impact of Christianity on American history and Western History is so much greater than that of Isalm or any of the eastern religions that no serious historian would equate them. Include them when relevant - that's the best guide. American was settled in the north by religious refuges of an extremely fundamentalist nature. This is very instructive about many things in American history, up to and including the Civil War.

      There are so many topics being stripped of any religious connotation that it's really shocking>

      Knowing about a religion and being taught the tenets of said religion are two separate things,
      "Knowing", I guess, in my view, is understanding. I dont think you have to read large portions of the bible, or delve deeply into the points of faith to understand the Christian faith, but a degree of familiarity is called for, I think. For example, you probably do not need to know about the inner workings of the Catholic church, but you probably do need to know about the pope, why he runs the Catholic church, and his relationship to the monarchs of Europe. Knowing that Christians worship Jesus as God in the same person is pretty much required; knowing that Catholics believe in the myster of transfiguration is probably not.

    148. Re:Another giant step backward... by william.gunn · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately, you simply did a bad job of bringing across the matchmaker metaphor.

      I'll use someone else's words (from the jacket of Dawkin's "The Blind Watchmaker"):
      "One of the most famous arguments of the creationist theory of the universe is the eighteenth-century theologian William Paley's: Just as a watch is too complicated and too functional to have sprung into existence by accident, so too must all living things, with their far greater complexity, be purposefully designed."
      Of course, the book from which this quote was taken also does a much better job of refuting the metaphor than the people who replied to you.
    149. Re:Another giant step backward... by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      I think is a big problem with many, many Christians! Your education as a Christian shouldn't start and end as a child! The creation story is great for children! It is instructive about the nature of God, and can be easily understood by small minds. If you stop your education at that level, don't be surprised if you have a child-like understanding of God and Christian faith!

      A factual correction: I received Christian instruction on and off til the age of 17. I still discuss religious issues (in fact I'm mostly at least as keen to discuss stuff as the local Christians). I still regularly get told that Genesis is literal truth. In fact, there's a perfectly nice engineering student living three floors below me who would strongly disagree with your generalisation.

      As such, I can't accept the statement that Creationism constitutes a child-like understanding of faith. Whether or not it's very dumb is a completely different argument but, unless you're defining child-like as "that which seems dumb to me", slapping that label on Creationism is inaccurate. Remember that not all Christians hold the same views as the ones you may have encountered.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    150. Re:Another giant step backward... by blamanj · · Score: 1

      The Bible is not a single book, but a collection of many books. Which books were included in the Bible was determined by the Council of Nicea...

      It seems amazing to me, but very few of the fundamentalists I've encountered know things like this. One would think, since they are so Bible-focused, that they'd be the most interested in it. In fact, it seems to be just the opposite. Not only do they typically not teach such things, they also oppose the textual analyses that have basically determined that there were four difference sources that were edited together to make up the Pentateuch, which Pauline letters he actually wrote, and so on.

    151. Re:Another giant step backward... by scottc229 · · Score: 1

      I'm no expert, but since when do Lutherans not believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of G-d?

    152. Re:Another giant step backward... by jbessie · · Score: 1

      I understand that we may not be the evolutionists "pinnacle of evolution". However, the thing I never understand about this whole argument is that if we are so badly put together, how did we manage to survive all these years against better-suited creatures? There are few animals that couldn't kill us given the chance. If evolution is correct, it would have taken a while for our "overdeveloped frontal lobes, vocal cords, social organization, and hands" to evolve. In that time period, how did such a poorly armored creature survive?

    153. Re:Another giant step backward... by holiggan · · Score: 1

      "(...)if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct(...)" Well, if this is true, then the least of our concerns is evolution. How about the parts that imply that incest (for example) is "ok"?...

      --
      "A sysadmin is a cross between a detective, a police officer, a gardener, a doctor and a fireman"
    154. Re:Another giant step backward... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      What I don't get is why these freaks can't just accept the idea that perhaps evolution is part of whatever "intelligent design" they believe in?

      Because the entire point of "intelligent design" is to oppose evolution.
      It's an act of subterfuge, motivated in bad faith by the desire to conserve old religious beliefs. It is hypocrisy, once you take that into account, their behaviour makes sense.

      --

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

    155. Re:Another giant step backward... by daVinci1980 · · Score: 1

      This differs from my main point (and so I don't want to get sidetracked), but I found a few links...

      Funny, and very fitting to the topic at hand

      A link discussing Newton's theory of Universal Gravitation

      Things moving towards other things is an observed phenomena. "Gravity" is the name we gave to the force that causes this. Thus "gravity" is a theory.

      --
      I currently have no clever signature witicism to add here.
    156. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      You weren't taught that he was a reverend? Odd, I was. But keep in mind that I was educated as to the facts of the situation. Speculation as to why King Jr. did what he did is really up to me.
      I am not talking about Speculation. I am talling about, for example, his letters from jail cells, which are deeply religious. If you just learn about the letters without mentioning their content, you are missing why they were important. These letters were read to white and black churches all over the country, and helped turn the tide of public opinion by appealing to a core Christian belief in equality before God, and social justice.

    157. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God clearly states in the Bible and Quran that Adam was the first human being created. Period. Then he created Eve. Re-production and re-production lead to us. No animals and no monkeys.

      Abid Kazmi
      $3cUr3h4cX

    158. Re:Another giant step backward... by Mr.+Arbusto · · Score: 1
      Lutherans (all major Synods in America): Do not believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God. Believe in Evolution.

      I can't speak to the rest, but I know all but ELCA believe the entire Bible is the word of god.

    159. Re:Another giant step backward... by kalikiano · · Score: 1

      We can go on forever back and forward on this topic between ID and creationism. But most people here talk about what they think is true just by faith because they dont know the facts. There're facts for both sides of the story, is one of them the truth? Or maybe both are true? humm... let Google be your guide. A good place to start: http://reasons.org/ (God and science)

    160. Re:Another giant step backward... by Golias · · Score: 1

      Yep. If you are neither a Roman Catholic nor a Fundamentalist, your lack of an "absolute" authority means that you are left to rely on your own judgement to decide what you believe, and given the deeply flawed nature of human judgement, that's a precarious position to be in.

      I see it this way:

      I've never been to Norway, but I believe that a Paris is there because enough sources which I consider reliable (not perfect, but reliable) have told me that Norway exists.

      Also, I have seen some indirect evidence that Paris exists. Not enough evidence to "prove" the existence of Norway, but enough to compel me to accept that it must exist, especially given the teachings of authorities which I consider reliable mentioned in the previous paragraph.

      I believe God exists for the same reason.

      Could I be wrong? Sure. However, just as a biochemist must proceed with biochemistry beginning with the idea that what he knows about evolution is correct until shown otherwise, so I must proceed with my spiritual life beginning with the idea that what I've concluded about God is correct until shown otherwise.

      Revision of axioms about God are difficult and slow in coming for most people, but I've made them twice in my young life so far and find myself no worse for wear.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    161. Re:Another giant step backward... by WaxParadigm · · Score: 0, Troll

      Just a question for you... What do you think a newly-created world would look like (how does one distinguish a newly-created world from one billions of years old)?

      Would a God capable of creating the entire universe and everything in it not be able to create a world with what appears to be decayed organic matter?

      Would it be intellegent to create a world with matter in varying stages at the beginning (basically a world with it's ecology/geology already set in motion)? Would a God that's powerful enough to create matter be restricted to only creating living matter and then waiting for it to decompose...or could he create decomposed organic matter?

      To say that fossles and fossel fuel are contradictory or mutually exclusive with creationism reflects a serious consideration/understanding of what creationists believe...and how powerful/amazing they see God as being.

    162. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Paley was a fine writer, and I should have done as you did and found a well-written explanation of the Watchmaker. Thank you and accept my apologies!

    163. Re:Another giant step backward... by Golias · · Score: 1

      I've never been to Norway, but I believe that a Paris is there because enough sources which I consider reliable (not perfect, but reliable) have told me that Norway exists.

      In case you are wondering about that jumbled sentence: I started writing my analagy with a reference to Paris, but then edited to "Norway", as it sounded like I might have been talking about Paris Hilton instead of Paris, France.

      It would have been amusing, but perhaps distracting, to use Miss Hilton as an analog for God.

      Unfortunately, I failed to over-write "Paris" once in that line. This is what happens when you edit text manually instead of using regular expressions the way God intended. ;)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    164. Re:Another giant step backward... by FreakyControl · · Score: 1

      Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution? This is like saying that a particular statue could not have possibly been carved by ancient man, because it is clear that it was in fact carved with a stone tool. Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us? Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.

      Exactly. As a rather religious person myself, I have never really had a problem with evolution. I also could never understand why people take the bible exactly to the word. Heck, even for the creation of the world story, ever think that "7 days" is just a means of classifying a process of events? Besides, what exactly did God base his day on? If I were a being that existed eternally, I think I would have a rather different notion of the passage of time. A day isn't even the same on other planets, let alone before they all existed. I think that it's pretty good that the Bible got the order right, though, seeing as how the the author of Genesis wasn't looking at the fossil record.

      Likewise, I don't think that accepting evolution precludes the existance of God. I don't understand why there are so many scientists that have the attitude of, "Well, since science gives us explanations of things there is no God." Just because we know the mechanism behind something, doesn't mean we know the "why" behind it. The two are not mutually exclusive, nor does one set of beliefs hinder the other. Just look at Louis Pasteur.

      So yes, I think that by looking at theories (yes, it is still a theory) such as evolution, it provides a wonderful way to look at how exactly God guided the creation of things. That's just my personal belief, and anyone is of course entitled to their own. Of course, I DO think that it should be pointed out to students that evolution is still a theory. A pretty darn good theory, but a theory nonetheless. Leave matters of faith to your parents/church to teach you and your own brain to evaluate all of the options.

    165. Re:Another giant step backward... by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort.

      That sums it up nicely, I thank you.

      "Presuppose": preconceived judgment. Evolution contradicts what they were indoctrinated to believe as impressionable youths, therefore it MUST be wrong.

      --

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

    166. Re:Another giant step backward... by Spankophile · · Score: 1

      When you deal with the super-natural, anything goes. Here's another explanation that I love - this time used to explain why so many other paegan religions had similar "Christ-figures" that predate christianity.

      "Diabolical Mimicry" or "Plagiarism by anticipation." That is, the Devil, knowing that Jesus would be coming, preemptively created these paegan religions to confuse us.

      So, these fossils might also have been placed by the devil to look older than they are, just to trick us.

      If you can use the same "authority text" to show that the rocks could have been placed by God, or Satan - what kind of authority is that?

      Ah well, probably just another test.

    167. Re:Another giant step backward... by CFTM · · Score: 1

      Your statement reminds me a bit of the movie "The Usual Suspects"; often people decide that they know how something unfolds so it's just a matter of letting them create the story that they desire.

      Personally I think we should take all the fundamentalists of the various religions and put them all in France. Then let's build a wall around france and fill it with water, the world would be a better place :)

    168. Re:Another giant step backward... by WaxParadigm · · Score: 1

      You're incorrect about Lutherans. They believe the bible is the literal word of God...and they believe in creationism (in 6 days, not creation + evolution).

    169. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      The creation story told to kids is designed and modified for kids. If you run into people who have no more education on Christian matters than sunday-school, you are very likely dealing with a person who has a child-like understanding of Christian faith. I am not saying that creationism and underdeveloped Christian education are exclusive, just that they are often found together.

      Just because you received education until the age of 17 does not mean you have an adult understanding of Christian faith. You may - it just depends.

      "Child-like" wasn't mean as a slur. It's just a description of what your education is. Sunday-school is preperation for a more full education in Christian faith. If that's all you have under your intellectual belt - Sunday school - you will not have a fully developed Christian conscience.

      You can be a well educated Creationist, and if you are, you will recognize that the foundation of your faith in Creationism does not start and end at "because Gensis says so".

    170. Re:Another giant step backward... by learn+fast · · Score: 2, Interesting

      More evidence that they couldn't be literal days is that God lined up all the different species of animal on Earth so that Adam could name them. Given that there are actually millions of different species of animal on Earth (a fact the Bible's writers would not have known) there is no way it could have taken a literal day to do this.

    171. Re:Another giant step backward... by m50d · · Score: 1

      ID is not used as a theory. It is not drawn up modified based on the observed facts. It does not make falsifiable hypotheses. It doesn't belong in science classes any more than determinism does.

      --
      I am trolling
    172. Re:Another giant step backward... by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      You can believe that if you want. No one has a problem with it.

      Hell, just ask scientists how many of them believe in Murphy's Law, or the hosts of superstitions that many people believe in. Many of them do.

      It's the presenting ID as an 'alternate' 'scientific' 'theory' in schools that's the problem. Scientists don't do that.

      (It's not alternate, because the only workable ID concept asserts 'Everything happened like the theory of evolution said, but God did it.'. It's not scientific because science starts with facts and makes theories from it, not the other way around. And it's not a theory because theories have to be falsifable.)

      ID in reality is merely a thinly disguised way to claim the existence of God has equal scientific validity as...well, no position on God, which is science's normal position.

      Hell, I believe there's some sort of metaphysical aspect to reality. I, personally, don't think it's random chance humans evolved. Maybe someday I'll write some philosophical threaty on what I think the meaning of life is. But I can see ID for the crock of shit it is.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    173. Re:Another giant step backward... by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      The oil companies would say differenly. The recently reported slow replenishment of oil fields suggests that this may not be the case. Regardless, it proves that our current models concerning the formation of oil deposits is incorrect and need to be revised.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    174. Re:Another giant step backward... by operagost · · Score: 2, Insightful
      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?
      What about them? Nearly all of them are of invertebrates, yet the examples given of macroevolution are nearly always those based on dubious fragments of vertebrate fossils. Some in the scientific community are so obsessed with the prospect of finding missing links that they do things such as invent new hominid species based on a single pig's tooth.
      Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution?
      Because the evolutionists keep focusing on the theoretical transition from ape to man, and most Christians are not comfortable with the idea of god making millions of primates and finally declaring one 'man' and giving it a soul.
      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    175. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The biggest problem with this opening reply is that it brings out the old "ID = fundamentalist" cannard.

      If you observe your cellphone and conclude that it couldn't assemble itself, and therefore some intelligent agency must have been at work in it's design and assembly ... this is hardly a "religious" argument.

      The notion of ID might have religious overtones. If life is part of a design, there must be a designer. But then again, any sufficiently advanced technology looks like magic, doesn't it?

      I am unsettled by the notion of teaching religion in public schools. I am equally (and maybe moreso) unsettled by concensus-science dogma being presented as uncontestable fact.

    176. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Thou shalt not kill was dealt with very extensively by Aquinas. If you haven't you should definately read the tracts about war, justified war, and agression.

    177. Re:Another giant step backward... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      If you look at the original Hebrew, the word translated "day" in Genesis has the same meaning as if I said "In my fathers day, automobile fuel was 35 cents a gallon". It refers to a time period. The references to "morning" and "evening" are the same. If this was not the case, there would be no way to count the days until the 3rd "day", since thats when the sun and moon became visable on the surface of the earth.

      The earth is several billion years old. The universe is much older. Those who think that the bible claims the earth was created in 6 literal days simply have not done enough research on the matter.


      And latter on, the same word is used to mean "day", as in the seventh day is the Lord's day, and you will honor the sabbath.
      If the bible is God's word, he's got a twisted sense of humour, using irony like that...

      BTW, Asimov said it better than you ;-)

      --

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

    178. Re:Another giant step backward... by Paladin128 · · Score: 2

      Just because the term "macro evolution" is not typified in most textbooks, does not mean it is not a valid concept. It means, simply, evolution on a large scale. I would not consider that which we observe in flora and fauna to be macro-evolution; I think we mostly disagree with terminology. There is no concrete proof that all multi-celled life descended originally from simple single-celled organisms. This is a theory -- a highly credible and rational one -- but should be taught as such.

      Another term I used is "micro evolution", which would obviously mean evolution on a small scale (such as breeding cattle to maximize milk production, or the small differences between animals that are of the same species that have adapted to the specific needs of thier envrionment). I'm not talking about new theories, rather I am differentiating based on the scale and scope of evolution -- which is disputed.

      Yes, it's possible that life was formed in multiple places and there are no common ancestors to all current forms of life on earth. I'm not a biologist, and I don't know enough to present evidence for or against this.

      --
      Lex orandi, lex credendi.
    179. Re:Another giant step backward... by operagost · · Score: 1

      There's something else we haven't proven: that oil comes from decayed biomatter. Just because it's organic doesn't mean it was once alive.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    180. Re:Another giant step backward... by everphilski · · Score: 3, Informative

      You are misteaken, most Lutherans identify with a literal interpretation of the scripture and an anti-evolutionary stance. You must just know ELCA lutherans, who are known to be liberals.
      Wisconsin Synod lutherans: WELS Evolution
      Lutheran Church Missouri Synod:Evolution
      ELCA however does not make a formal stance on the issue. They are the more liberal branch of the Lutheran church and are almost roman-catholic in their practices.
      There are about 20 Lutheran branches but these are the big three. Lutheranism is most popular in the midwest, particularly Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa and South Dakota. Lutheranism is a conservative sect that follows a literal interpretation of the scripture. -philski-

    181. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who said: "I used to be outraged, now I'm merely amused."?

      I don't know which is worse, the fundamentalists who know nothing about the theory and underpinnings of evolution, or people who understand the underpinnings of neither but insist on name calling on the subject... I also suggest that you look up the term 'Ad Hominem' (as well as the names and definitions of other logical fallacies ('straw-man' comes to mind)).

      I won't bother with your last point (God using evolution as a tool) because
      1) I haven't really thought it through and come to a conclusion one way or another
      2) My gut feel is, no. But, per point 1, I haven't thought it through to form a chain of logic through to a conclusion.

      1) The 'Theory of Evolution' is an enormous subject. Some is good science, but a large portion appears to be conjecture (more sadly, conjecture piled on conjecture). Let's at least try to be a tad more exact here.

      There are three things general disagreements in the two theories:
      The origin of Life,
      The origin of Species,
      and Macro/Micro evolution.

      There is NOTHING in the theory of evolution to explain the origin of LIFE. Several theories, but no way to test them (and, quite frankly, the theories don't have a lot to recommend them from the bio-chemical point of view although new stuff from the ocean floor is facinating). Most actually show a shocking lack of bio-chemical knowledge. Martin's experiments in amino-asid production from the 1970's notwithstanding (as the nature of the structure of his experiments make the results meaningless in this context).

      There is not a whole lot of evidence for trans-species migration that is, migration from one species to another. Much speculation and theorizing, but not hard evidence as such. The most common example in the popular press labeled as 'evidence' currently put forward, is that species of bird change beak form with a change in environment. They also change back but they don't, as far as we can tell with current evidence, change species. This is the difference between micro and macro evolution.

      Then also, there is species of blue-green algae. From one variant to another there is as much as a 30% variance in the cytosine count. Goodness, a 30% variance in genetic material and still be the same species?

      Fossil bones show a pretty big variance within a species over time. OK. So what. Ask any biologist whether bone structure or soft tissue tells you more about species identity. Since we have no soft tissue to study, some major assumptions must be made in order to make the theory of evolution work. Consider that there is a larger variation (as a percentage) in genetic material between my wife and myself then between myself and the great apes. You may put your own jokes here. My point, however, is that similarity does not necessarily denote congruity.

      The current theory and evidence for macro-evolution still has quite a bit of circular logic in it. Certainly too much to be so all-fired bigoted about it. Also, you might want to study the history of seeking the mass of the electron to see how subtly false assumptions and prejudice seeps into even the 'hard' sciences.

      Personally I find it fascinating that, currently the most successful method to find oil and gas is to use an 'ancient earth' model in your exploration and research. However, the 'ancient earth' model doesn't explain why it's still there and still under tremendous pressure. It's a fascinating universe to live in, ain't it?

      2) Abraham/Isaac. Perhaps studying the WHOLE story with an open mind might be beneficial. God spent a significant amount of time trying to teach Abraham. Try taking anyone from a poly-theistic fetishististic society and teach them mono-theism. The depth's into which fetishism infiltrates your life and society is amazing. Note the number of 'Christians' with good luck charms or who read horoscopes. (For those of you without a dictionary, fetishism isn't (necessarily) about sex. It is t

    182. Re:Another giant step backward... by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Well, they didn't use those words exactly. I believe it goes something like this:

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.

      That was based on the writing of Thomas Jefferson, who believed that there should be "a wall of separation between church and state".

      So, no, it's not written into the constitution. But it might as well be.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    183. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution? Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us?

      I beleive the point of ID is that the exact same sequence of events that you call "evolution" and attribute to random processes, they call "design" and attribute to an intentional process.

      It thereby trumps all the old scientific arguments against creationism by claiming that the process by which creation took place was evolution. To borrow a phrase from the Georgia Secretary of Education, the only difference between evolution and intelligent design is whether the "gradual changes over time" result from randomness or God.

    184. Re:Another giant step backward... by djmcmath · · Score: 1

      Yes, good question, what about all these fossils?

      That's one of the things that really bugs me about the evolution camp. "Lookit thuh fossils! Lookit thuh fossils," they chatter, happily spewing forth this nonsense as if there was some record of evolution neatly laid out in the fossils. Sadly, precious few of the people who extol the important of the fossil record in support of evolution have actually bothered to look at it. Had they done so, they'd probably find themselves much less excited about pointing other people to it as evidence of their misbegotten faith. You see, the fossil record doesn't support evolution at all. Quite the contrary -- the closest you can get to supporting evolution with fossils is the frightfully stupid theory we call "punctuated equilibrium," an idea shunned by even the most devout evolutionists. Phillip E. Johnson's "Darwin on Trial" (no, he's not a Christian) examines that issue in detail, among others.

      The other great problem with the evolution camp is the refusal to recognize that atheism is a religion just like any other. Belief in no god is equally unprovable, equally untenable from a scientific standpoint, and therefore equally religious. Unfortunately, they place themselves on some kind of scientific high-ground, as if they had already disproved the existence of god scientifically. They beat up on any and all religions on the grounds that anyone who hasn't spotted the self-apparent non-existence of god as an idiot -- while providing no evidence to support their wild claims. They foist off their atheism in schools to the exclusion of all else, citing "the Constitutional separation of church and state" as some kind of battle cry, most never learning that the Constitution doesn't even contain that expression, and none admitting that atheism is just as religious as anything else.

      (rolls eyes) What nonsense.

    185. Re:Another giant step backward... by theguyfromsaturn · · Score: 1

      That sample is probably not representative of the Christians in the world. 100% of the Christrians that **I** know take the text of the Bible as an allegory (For the record most of the people I know are Christians.). That being said, my sample is no more representative of ALL the Christians than yours.

      It's pretty fair to say, however, that outside of the U.S. you will have a very hard time finding a Christian who takes the Bible literally, or a clergy that pushes that notion.

      --
      I like my dinosaurs feathery, and my pterosaurs hairy (or is it pycnofibery?)
    186. Re:Another giant step backward... by roastedMnM · · Score: 1

      "Which books were included in the Bible was determined by the Council of Nicea..." I like to add that Nicea was much more of a declaration against the 'falicious' books propogated by the gnostics etc. and not nearly so much a declaration of which books where part of the canon as this was already (mostly) settled in the case of all the included books (well there was some question about ester i think, but that is off the top of my head).

    187. Re:Another giant step backward... by CFTM · · Score: 1

      The bible is ripe with this sort of translational errors; Christianity has created an entire mythology surrounding the "Anti-Christ" when it's only mentioned in passing in revelations and I think Matthew [although I'm no theologian]. Moreover, when referenced in Revelations it is a plural; the logical progression that follows lessons the control that the religious leaders would have had over people. But if they create a bad place with a bad man to torture you they can control you...I love organized religion :)

      Oh well it's as perfect as we are which is to say very far from it...

    188. Re:Another giant step backward... by pomakis · · Score: 1
      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils? Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils...where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old? I've asked creationists this question, and they've actually replied that they were placed here by God to test our faith.

      The way I figure it, if God placed all placed all of those fossils in the ground for us to find, then it seems obvious that he wants us to believe in evolution (regardless as to whether or not it actually happened). We could easily ask of those who don't believe in evolution "why do you so readily ignore and disbelieve the evidence that God himself has placed there for us?"

    189. Re:Another giant step backward... by skaffen42 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Which is kind of sad. Jesus would have really hated his legacy. The Christian Right especially would have pissed him off.

      I'm an atheist, but I figure I would have liked Jesus. After all he was pretty much a commie-hippy-pinko-liberal, so we would probably have been voting for the same guy come election day.

      --
      People couldn't type. We realized: Death would eventually take care of this.
    190. Re:Another giant step backward... by WaxParadigm · · Score: 1

      "I have met a number of people who claim to believe the Bible to be literally true, but when asked about specifics say that those passages are metaphorical."

      Try reading the Bible, it's not that hard. When you see a phrase that goes like this: "The kingdom of heaven is LIKE...", you know it's a simile. Generally speaking one can determine if a given verse is literal, figurative, metaphorical, or other by by looking at it's context...much like any piece of good writing. If you try and take things out of context, that's when you get in trouble.

      You can do this with about anything. Got some video of a politician roasting themself...cut it right and you can make it look like the person is a real jerk (but anyone who has seen the prior 30 seconds or the following 30 seconds knows the context).

      So, when you read the bible, please don't put on blinders, ignore context, and come to the prejusiced conclusion that people who do read it are inconsistant or ignorant...they've simply paid attention to the previous and former 30 seconds so they make sure to take the clip in proper context.

    191. Re:Another giant step backward... by hawg2k · · Score: 1

      The "clear scientific evidence" of evolution isn't proven fact. It's theory. That's why it's called the "theory" of evolution. It's a house of cards. God did not place this stuff there to test our faith, the scientific dating etc. doesn't account for a world wide flood. Therefore things appear to be older than they are based on how deep they were buried etc. None of the fossils ever found can be PROVEN to represent a less evolved version of any of the current species. You can only dig down so far before you stop finding any fossils of any kind. Where's all the fossils of the lesser evolved entities . Furthermore, the first and second laws of thermodynamics throw a huge dent into the theory of evolution. I enjoy finding out "how" God did things as well, and we discover things like that every day. I, however, stop where the theories diverge from the Bible. In the case of evolution, how powerful can God be if he has to clumsily go through a process of evolution to get his working model "ready for production". From a scientific point of view, Creationism/ID is no more "provable" that evolution is. My beef is why did I get brainwashed as a child that this "theory" was scientific fact, when it's not. I say present all the theories to our youth and let them form their own opinion.

    192. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn those foul heathens who pick and choose wich articles of faith to believe in.

      I think i'll post something about it on the internet.

      Right after I drive my car to the grocery store and get cheese in a can.

    193. Re:Another giant step backward... by Nate4D · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nowhere in this entire chapter are we given to understand that Abraham believe that God would raise Issac from the dead after the sacrifice...in fact, that renders the entire idea of a sacrifice pointless. No, Abraham had no reason at all to believe that Issace would be returned to him. Hebrews 11:17-20 is internally inconsistent with Genesis 22.

      No, it is not.

      For the passages to be internally inconsistent, it would have to say explicitly that Abraham did not expect Isaac to be raised from the dead.

      This is not said.

      And you know, if you believe that a sacrifice that ends in resurrection is pointless, you do not understand the Christian faith. All that we hold to hinges entirely on a sacrifice that ends in resurrection - Jesus' death on the cross.

      But, that's entirely OT.

      Here's some information on radiocarbon dating for you.

      So, what I got from that was, "Radiocarbon dating exists. It hinges upon some assumptions that can't accurately be made unless you've been around the object for the entirety of its existence. When you get radiocarbon data on an object, people often disagree on how to interpret it."

      It's about the Christians who want the Creationists dogma taught as fact side by side with evolution.

      I don't know any who want that. I'm sure some exist, but I don't know them. The people I know who would like ID taught in public schools simply want it mentioned as a possibility - not necessarily in conflict with evolution, not necessarily better, not "We know that evolution is false and WE ARE ALWAYS RIGHT!" They just want an acknowledgment that ID is a legitimate perspective to hold, and maybe a quick rundown of how the data we currently have can be interpreted in favor of ID, and possibly even a relatively young earth of 8 - 14000 years (ie, wide range of species comes from the creativity of the designer, not evolutionary means; large numbers of fossils in various locations could be the result of a worldwide flood; under catastrophic conditions, major geological revamps can happen fast, ref. Mount St. Helens, etc.).

      I think this is all from me today - finals this week...

      --
      "Oh, I like geeks way better than I like humans." - Mari Sarris
    194. Re:Another giant step backward... by Ulysses · · Score: 1

      I think really what we disagree about is who is a Christian. A Christian in demographic terms is a person who says he believes in Jesus as more than historical figure. For me, that's not a Christian.

      Believing in Jesus is not enough! People who stop their learning about the faith at sunday-school level are missing what the true essense of being a Christian is about.


      I hate to say this, but that is just the sort of intelectual bigotry that is perpetuating this problem. Just because you believe that they are not proper christians, won't stop them from believing that they are, and that their view of the world is correct. Just telling them that they are wrong won't make them any less of a problem for the rest of us. It is the duty of the scientific community as a whole, whatever their religious belief, to help educate everyone, so that they can understand the world to the best of their ability.

      This is, I believe, the key to the whole issue of ID. Those who have created, and are promoting this idea are composed of those who have only a simplistic, black or white, understanding of their faith, and the world in general. I think these are people who, for whatever reason, are unwilling or unable to think for themselves. They want to believe that there is a simple explanation for the world, and that following a simple set of rules will allow them to be successful in life.

      This is all well and good for them, and I have no objection to them leading their lives in this fashion. My objection comes when they try to force their beliefs on the rest of the world, and to limit others to their own level of understanding.

      Whatever the label; christian, scientist, etc. we cannot allow our educational system to be controlled by one group, students should be given all the facts in a clear unbiased manner, and be allowed to draw their own conclusions.

      That said, I don't believe that ID represents a valid theory, and won't until someone can provide concrete, verifiable and reproducable evidence that god, or this intelligence, exists. Until such time, ID is not a valid topic for science classes, and discussion of it should be limited to philosophy and religion classrooms.

      --
      -- If it weren't for the voices in my head, I'd go insane from loneliness. -Me, Myself and I
    195. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong... "yom" is just like the English day: "In my father's day, it took 4 days to travel across the country driving during the day". 3 meanings: rough time period, 24-hour day, and the time between dawn and dusk.

      If you examine the Bible, you'll find that any time "yom" occurs with a number, it means a literal, 24-hour day. Any time it appears with "evening" and/or "morning" it means a literal 24-hour day.

      So when God says "evening, morning, number, day" it means a 24-hour day as plainly as it can be stated.

      You may not like that, but that is how Hebrew is.

      Research Russell Humphreys' white hole cosmology for an interesting alternative idea.

    196. Re:Another giant step backward... by Golias · · Score: 1

      Well, I'll be jiggered.

      I knew that the WELS and Missouri Synod Lutherans were a bit more legalistic than the ELCA, but I had no idea that they considered creationism as central to their dogma. In fact, I was long under the impression that this was not the case.

      Oh, and for the record, I would not really call Lutheranism a "conservative sect." The Lutheran denomination is a product of Northern Europe, where, as I understand it, the Lutheran Church does not resemble American Fundamentalism at all. If anything, the "liberal" and "almost Roman Catholic" ELCA probably reflects global Lutheranism much more closely, from what I've seen.

      Perhaps somebody from Norway or Germany could chime in and enlighten us.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    197. Re:Another giant step backward... by Skye16 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Actually, it mostly just opens the door for a whole host of other questions, one of the most damning being "why would God seek to mislead us, so, unless he's a fucking asshole?" Seriously, if you don't want your kids to do something wrong, do you then seek to tempt them to do it just so you can say "hahahaha, you're grounded! woo! bet you didn't see that coming!"

    198. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Believing in Jesus is not enough! People who stop their learning about the faith at sunday-school level are missing what the true essense of being a Christian is about."
      The other Christians do nothing to change this, which is why the Christian Taliban have taken over your religion.
      Religion, like all systems based on BLIND (did I mention blind?) faith and blind obedience is easily hijacked by demagogues. The Falwells have taken over, and will not give Christianity back without a fight. You will not fight.

    199. Re:Another giant step backward... by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      It is a sad fact that most people graduated from public school with no conception whatsoever of what effect the Christian faith has had on American history, culture, world events, and the direction of the world! It's a travesty! Scientists have pushed so hard against religion it's almost absurd. Even if religion were scientically undeniably proven false it should be studied, understood, respected, by educators, scientists, schools, and students. It is a major force in so, so many ways!

      You're decrying the lack of humanities in school, which has nothing at all to do with science at all.

      Actaully, I take that back. Humanities is a 'science' to some extent. A social science, but a science nevertheless. It's the studies of humans, basically sociology + history.

      So waht you're actually complaining about is the lack of science in school, a specific one. That instead of, say, biology, we should spend some time on 'the human condition'.

      Which is a perfectly valid complaint, except...it's not hard science sucking up time in schools that could be used on humanities. At my high school, you could graduate with just one physics class, that really didn't touch on anything at all. It's remedial math and whatnot that's sucking time.

      But, hey, if you want to start campaigning for the inclusion of humanities in school (Which will certainly include Christianity. You can't talk about the Western world from 70 AD to present day without Christianity.), I'll be right there with you. Just don't blame science for what the schools ignore.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    200. Re:Another giant step backward... by mttlg · · Score: 1

      It's called the Watchmaker approach.

      And I could come up with a few other things to call it, but you probably wouldn't care to hear them. The fundamental flaw here (or at least the one I feel like drawing attention to at the moment, feel free to find your own) is that it is reasonable to assume that a person will have a basic understanding of the operation of a watch and what goes into the manufacture of its components. Considering that most of the world's watches, particularly those of the digital variety, are known to have in fact been constructed by sentient beings (though some would argue about the sentient part), it is not unreasonable to assume that something that looks exactly like a watch, acts exactly like a watch, and may even bear a "Made in Taiwan" stamp has not come about by natural means. Of course, none of this means that the person is not completely off the mark and can't recognize the clear byproduct of some sort of naturally occurring freak transdimensional hiccup. Now, unless you happen to be an ancient Magarathean, I doubt you are well versed in the construction of planets and their associated accessories. I mean, just how many have you even gotten a good look at?

      Some textbooks go out of their way to antagonize religion.

      Hey, don't blame science for the textbooks. If someone found a completely accurate textbook in the middle of a field, they would probably use it as proof of a supreme being, because it sure as hell wasn't printed on this planet.

      We shouldn't pretend that science knows all the answers about evolution, or how life got to the point that it is now.

      We don't pretend that science knows all the answers to anything. Oddly enough, the only people I see claiming that science claims to have all the answers are the ones claiming that it doesn't. The whole point of science is to take what we currently understand and expand it, usually by showing that our previous understanding was incomplete, oversimplified, or just plain wrong. This is only a loosely cooperative process, resulting in lots of disagreement and internal politics. There is no one answer about anything, and even if there is, previous answers and misinterpretations of the answer will remain floating around out there for quite some time. The ultimate test of science is whatever works; beyond that, it's all up in the air and open for debate.

      Intelligent design is an alternative explanation for what happened to start the evolutionary processes that we know work.

      Then it should be floating around in the scientific community as we speak and will bubble up into textbooks as soon as its merits are shown to some textbook editor who doesn't know a thing about science. That's how everyone else's pet theories get into textbooks, why should yours be any different?

      Yes, there are gaps. This is what critics say about the gaps. End of story!

      But where do you draw the line on which critics you include? Your concept works well in a system with one critic (preferably one who is only critical on a small number of items), but it doesn't scale well. How do you tell the "believes drool to be the universe's true currency and urinates on petunias because they asked him so politely" nutcases from the "brain the size of a planet, not that you'd understand or care about what I have to say" geniuses who are just way ahead of their time? We can't even all agree on whether Nostradamus was a visionary who could see into the future or just really fun to have at parties, and he's been dead for centuries. With the attention span of the average American teenager approaching the smallest interval of time that can be measured by watches not found in the middle of a strange field, you really have to go with the best fit solution and print "Here there be monsters" around the outer edge.

    201. Re:Another giant step backward... by WaxParadigm · · Score: 1

      Problem is that Jefferson, if he were alive today, would probably consider secularism to be a religion, and would think that it's the one being endorsed by the government. The forbiding of religion is the same thing as endorcing secularism/athiesm. The founding fathers wanted government to be 100% blind to religion (to neither forbid or force religion).

      The fear they had was well founded (given history) - that those in power would forse their beliefs onto others. We, today, are forbiding religion from virtually anything that receives tax dollars. That is forcing one's beliefs onto othes, and is what Jefferson feared.

    202. Re:Another giant step backward... by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      Anyway, the point is: Stop thinking for yourself!

      Yup alright, we're clearly on /. where the above is "insightful".

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    203. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      90% of the Christians I personally know tell me that the Bible is the literal word of God,

      Most Christians aren't really Christians. They think they believe a lot of things that they've never really thought about at all. They're just following the cult, believing whatever their pastor tells them and filling in the blanks with their own imagination.

      There are many, many places that it is all but impossible to believe literally. Anyone who claims to has either never read them or doesn't know what "literally" means. (maybe both)

    204. Re:Another giant step backward... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      It depends on what denominations are common in your area. The more liberal ones, like the Evangelical Lutheran Church (my former abode before I went Discordian agnostic), don't teach the Bible as literal truth. Conservative denominations like the Baptists do.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    205. Re:Another giant step backward... by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      The best way to point out flaws in science would be to look at science at the turn of the last century.

      Damn, I mean, the century before last. You know what I mean.

      Anyway, when they had everything figured out, except the pesky question of the speed of light and photovoltic effect, which brought us relativity and quantum theory at basically the same time and completely changed everything.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    206. Re:Another giant step backward... by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      I am not saying that creationism and underdeveloped Christian education are exclusive, just that they are often found together.

      Ah, my bad. I'd agree that simple stories are the best way to get facts into people - for example, early education in science includes such wonderful ideas as glass being solid (I had such a row with my primary school teacher over that one!), Newtonian physics being accurate and rainbows being caused by refraction (accurate but it's a hell of a lot more complex than that).
      However, it would seem that your perception of the stories as being simple is in no way the consensus. In particular:

      You can be a well educated Creationist, and if you are, you will recognize that the foundation of your faith in Creationism does not start and end at "because Genesis says so".

      I believe that most of the Creationists I know would say that that's always going to be the best reason to believe in Creation. I can ask one if you'd like.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    207. Re:Another giant step backward... by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      Yep, lets just not teach the scientific theory that is the foundation of modern biology.

      You don't need evolution to teach biology any more than you need string theory to teach gravity.

    208. Re:Another giant step backward... by Distinguished+Hero · · Score: 4, Informative

      Except that neo-conservatives aren't all that religious. Religion has never been and probably never will be a central tenet of neo-conservatism. Just because neo-conservatives hate Christians a little bit less than they hate socialist peaceniks doesn't mean that they are the same thing.

      Maybe you should look up what a term means before you use it. From wikipedia:
      "But domestic policy does not define neoconservatism; it is a movement founded on, and perpetuated by an aggressive approach to foreign policy, free trade, opposition to communism during the Cold War, support for beleaguered liberal democracies such as Israel and Taiwan and opposition to Middle Eastern and other states that are perceived to support terrorism. Thus, their foremost target was the conservative but pragmatic approach to foreign policy often associated with Richard Nixon, i.e., peace through negotiations, diplomacy, and arms control, détente and containment (rather than rollback) of the Soviet Union, and the beginning of the process that would lead to bilateral ties between the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the U.S. Today, a rift still divides the neoconservatives from many members of the State Department, who favor established foreign policy conventions."

      --
      Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
    209. Re:Another giant step backward... by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 1

      I think that the real problem that these people have with Evolution is not actually with the scientific evidence supporting it. That's just incidental BS that they come up with to try to sound scientific. Their problem isn't so much with the idea that Evolution even occurs--as it's been observed time and time again (at least on the micro scale).

      I think that the main problem they have is with the whole "man evolved from ape" bit, because it destroys any notion they have about men being divine creatures designed in the image of God. They're not particularly imaginative folks I guess, because to them that seems to be the only reason for life to be worth living, and the only reason that people should even be good to each other. It's the very basis for their moral code, and as such it's quite sad.

      Of course, most reasonable Christians don't derive their morals solely from the Bible, and are able to make Evolution work along with their faith just as you described. But these other sad sacks think that without the Adam and Eve story being true we might as well beat each other over the head with rocks and bones and whatnot. Of course, these are the same people who wage holy wars and kill gays, so I'm not so sure how mentally stable they are in general :/

      Sorry, this is becoming a rant. I'll stop now.

    210. Re:Another giant step backward... by wizard992 · · Score: 1

      The white mice put them there. Where have you been?

    211. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 6000-year old thing is not in the *literal* translation of the Bible, it's something that has been added on by various fundamentalists over the years, after "research" or whatever.
      In any case, it seems like so many other things, slashdot gets the topic confused with their disgust with the majority of the proponents of the topic. Sure, there are tons of idiotic manic fundamentalist christians out there, but just because they are stupid doesn't mean what they believe is. Most of the time, the idiotic arguements people cite "christians" believe are actually just an arguement that they heard from some representative of the faith, and, given that many of the representatives are less than exemplary, they use the flawed arguement as a means to debunk christianity, a train of logic as unsound as those often given by the proponents of christianity.
      IN short, I'm sick of these knee-jerk, pseudointellectualist philosophical bullshit that comes up everytime I hear about religion these days. I imagine a world without a God often, and believe in *the possibility* of evolution, because fossils don't "prove" evolution, but rather, provide evidence for the process. For God's sake, or for the sake of future meaningful philosophical discussion, consider the opposing arguements' viewpoint for once, don't just try to disprove it with hasty and flawed logic. Philosophers have been trying for literally thousands of years to prove or disprove the existence of God, and they can't do *either*. Neither can you, slashdot reader, in all your pride.

    212. Re:Another giant step backward... by sconeu · · Score: 1

      If you look at the original Hebrew, the word translated "day" in Genesis has the same meaning as if I said "In my fathers day,

      Nice try. The actual Hebrew (tranliterated) is, "Vay'hi erev, vay'hi boker, yom echad", or quite literally, "And there was evening, and there was morning, one day". The word "yom" means "day" as most of us understand it.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    213. Re:Another giant step backward... by saltydogdesign · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm no apologist for either neo-cons or fundies, but you need to keep your facts straight:

      neoconservative != fundamentalist

      The former has nothing to do with religion, and the two are in bed together only because they share certain goals, namely the establishment of a strong Israeli state.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    214. Re:Another giant step backward... by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Neocons couldn't care less about this stuff. They just use it cynically to mobilize their "base," people for whom this stuff is the most important thing, but who are ultimately getting screwed because they don't realise that it's the economy, stupid.

      And they say that the left doesn't share their "values." Hmph.

    215. Re:Another giant step backward... by WaxParadigm · · Score: 1

      I would say you're making poor assumptions that show a lack a basic attempt at an intellictual understanding of ID. A God that is powerful enough to create matter out of nothing surely would not be limited to creating a world where Europe and the Americas were initially attached. I imagine this God would have the power and freedom to decide to put them 240 meters closer than they are today.

      I think you're making poor assumptions about what a new created world and an evolved world would look like. You're assuming they would look different, when there is no reason to believe they couldn't look EXACTLY the same. If God can create the universe and everything in it in 6 days, is he limited to creating only living matter and forbidden from creating some matter in a partially or fully-decomposed state?

    216. Re:Another giant step backward... by l3v1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Europe and America separate at the rate of 4 cm/year

      Yup, and what do you call your "assumption" that this speed has always been linearly the same, along the couple of years that have passed ?

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    217. Re:Another giant step backward... by Waltan+Hammett · · Score: 0

      Exaaaaaaactly. Theories be they all (gravity, evolution, etc.).

      I remember hearing once that "The difference between a new theory and the old theory is that the new theory is wrong in more subtle ways."

      So, there's no such thing as a "dissenting" theory. Show me one that's wrong in more subtle ways. Meaning:
      1) it explains what the "old" theory explains, just as well;
      2) it explains something that the old theory doesn't; and
      3) it still is wrong. Admit it. It's best to assume they all are. Then only the religious folks are righteous (but we knew that already).

      --
      W = (-president)^1/2
    218. Re:Another giant step backward... by wwpfeifer · · Score: 1

      I totally agree.

      When I grew up in Germany, religion was taught in the public schools. In religion class, we were taught about God, and thus about creation. In biology we were taught about evolution. There was no problem. I didn't learn about the enmity between "creationists" and "evolutionists" until I came to the US.

      To the anti-evolutionists: Your argument seem sto hinge exclusively on your belief that the bible supposedly says the earth is only 6000 years old. Please consider that this belief may be flawed. Talk to the vast majority of language experts who have gone over the original text and concluded that this interpretation is incorrect. To the anti-creationists: Your argument seems to hinge exclusively on your belief that there is no god. Please consider that it is not possible to scientifically prove a negative. You may argue that there is no god with attributes that you decide he must have, if you were to accept her existence. But that's the classic strawman argument.

    219. Re:Another giant step backward... by Speare · · Score: 1

      I independently decided long ago, according to my own personal faith, that we are currently IN the "sixth day" of creation. As it turns out, others have had the same interpretation. "One day for God is like a thousand years." Israeli physicist Gerald Schroeder's explanation. Perhaps the "seventh day of rest" corresponds to the thousand-year calm described in Revelations.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    220. Re:Another giant step backward... by jridley · · Score: 1

      they were placed here by God to test our faith

      If that's so, then the same could be said of any branch of science. If you assume an omnipotent being that's trying to mindfuck us, then you can't even really trust anything, even your own senses.

      It's just as possible (if not moreso) that the bible was put here to test our faith in some other religion that was passed down via oral tradition only, and actually died a thousand years ago, and we're all thereby screwed for eternity.

      A bunch of stuff in daily use was designed using "theories" - including color TV; the electron gun placement takes relativity into account. Ask them if they're willing to forgo watching TV, because it was designed using an unproven "theory" that's not backed by biblical teachings.

      These boneheads fundamentally do not understand the basic operation of the scientific method, or they'd realize what a moronic argument they're putting forth. Religious people have this fundamental need to be "right" - they can't relate to a system where what you believe to be "right" today can be disproven, and tomorrow you're going to have a different set of beliefs based on your new evidence.

      Not too surprising that the same group of people said that Kerry was "flip-flopping" when he actually changed his mind on an issue based on new evidence. To them, there's right and wrong, and if any evidence comes to light that shows their "right" to be wrong, then the evidence must be flawed.

      Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us?

      I know many people, including scientists and people who have taken lifetime religious vows, who choose to see the intricacies of nature as testament to the wonder of God's creation. By contrast, the ID people choose to see anything that isn't described in some holy script to be the work of the devil.

      It just comes down to what you want to believe. If you want to think that the books of the Bible are the complete and infallible truth in the world, and all else is distraction and satanic propaganda, then you're going to be at odds with most of the people, most of the time. Unfortunately they get control through deception (because any means are justified by the ends, if you have deluded yourself this much) and push changes upon those too apathetic to care.

    221. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ha ha...*somebody* obviously believes in perfect uniformitarianism.

    222. Re:Another giant step backward... by akalaniz · · Score: 1

      1. Why do I say religion (as opposed to faith in the existence of God) should be discouraged?

      1.1---The pernicious tendencies of religion and the religion dividend---

      Beyond the history of religion as a pernicious force (e.g. inquisitions, holy wars, etc.), and beyond its continuing ability to divide (e.g. President Bush, "God is on our side." versus President Lincoln, "I hope we are on God's side."), religion exacts a tax on the development of our civilization that can be measured in lives lost due to wasted effort. How much time, money and effort has gone into filling the coffers of the Jimmy Swaggerts, the popes, and other religious leaders? Could not the money for building new churches instead be donated to cure cancer? Science does work. Childhood leukemias are now highly (above 90%) curable, whereas just 50 years ago they were nearly always fatal. Or how about putting some of that wasted money into education for better schools and higher paid teachers? There are likely thousands of worthy causes struggling for cash that is otherwise wasted on religion. Now, I do realize 'some' nominal amount of church money does go into cancer research and other good causes, by what fraction of it? Half? I doubt it. So cut out the middle man and send 100% of the cash to the good causes. Then instead of wasting time at church functions, people could put time into their communities. Yes. Some nominal amount of church time is spent on improving communities. But what fraction? Half. I doubt it. Cut out the middle man, and while you're cutting out the middle man, cut out the hypocrisy as well. Why do good members of faith X, Y or Z do their good deeds? Out of the goodness of their own hearts, or for the Holy reward of life after death for Christians and a harem for suicide bombers? The religious do good to save their own skins and the skins of those they care about.

      2. What is wrong with morality based on religion?

      2.1---NO DOUBT there is trouble with religion---

      This, NO DOUBT, is what religion is predicated on. No doubt equals faith and conversely. Having NO DOUBT is the innate trouble of most religious doctrine. That is, religion, by its own construct, is innately pernicious, because only under a moral philosophy of NO DOUBT can entire hordes of religiously motivated people throughout the ages, by reason of their NO DOUBT faith, become (Teutonic) Nazis, KKK members, al Qaeda members, witch burners, lynchers, homophobes, misogynists, child molesters, and other numerous types of nefarious -obes, -ists and -ers in order to raze entire civilizations, pillage, plunder, murder, maim, destroy, burn books, imprison scholars, discriminate, rape, butcher, segregate, and slowly eviscerate other peoples. (I'm certain I missed a couple of good ones.) And these religiously motivated people committed these crimes and atrocities against humanity without a doubt in their minds for they were following the will of their God, NO DOUBT.

      2.2---Does lack of religion imply degeneracy?---

      If there is no religion, no faith in God, then what? Can there be no morality as Immanuel Kant would insist? Why does religion have to equate to morality? How many millions of atheists are there out there following the same basic morals of the faithful? Don't kill, steal, cheat, etc., help others, etc., these morals need not have anything to do with religion. These morals, which try to hem our wanton natures, make good sense if one wants to enjoy the fruits of civilization. Does the lack of religion make the enforcement of such morals impossible? Ask the millions of atheists.

      3. Can there be alternative, less dangerous moralities?

      3.1---Morality based on the scientific method is less arrogant and thus less dangerous---

      The scientific method is based on doubt up to reproducibility. Cold fusion ala Fleshman and Ponds turned out to be bullshit. It could not be reproduced in other labs. But to follow a scientific based morality is more than this. It is to doubt ev

    223. Re:Another giant step backward... by qcomp · · Score: 1

      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?

      They were placed there so that we find them, concoct abstruse theories, which we present at big conferences and elaborate on in lavishly illustrated tomes and generally mess up everyone's mind so that the mice finally find the Answer.
      And of course there was intelligent design -- or who would say that Deep Thought was not intelligent?
      Now I hope they'll teach more about that design that in schools someday ;-)
    224. Re:Another giant step backward... by wwpfeifer · · Score: 1

      I totally agree.

      When I grew up in Germany, religion was taught in the public schools. In religion class, we were taught about God, and thus about creation. In biology we were taught about evolution. There was no problem. I didn't learn about the enmity between "creationists" and "evolutionists" until I came to the US.

      To the anti-evolutionists:
      Your argument seems to hinge exclusively on your belief that the bible supposedly says the earth is only 6000 years old. Please consider that this belief may be flawed. Talk to the vast majority of language experts who have gone over the original text and concluded that this interpretation is incorrect.

      To the anti-creationists:
      Your argument seems to hinge exclusively on your belief that there is no god. Please consider that it is not possible to scientifically prove a negative. You may argue that there is no god with attributes that you decide he must have, if you were to accept her existence. But that's the classic strawman argument.

    225. Re:Another giant step backward... by Analogy+Man · · Score: 1
      I would be interested to hear the response from those advocating school prayer and intelligent design in science class when the morning prayer is lead by Brother Akmed and the science class is tought be Longbow Running Bear.

      I would think a few months of that would have them feeling pretty good about teaching theology at home and in church.

      --
      When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
    226. Re:Another giant step backward... by jonin · · Score: 1

      I fail to see what law congress is making or what religion it is prohibiting the free exercise of...

      Whether or not I agree with Thomas Jefferson's personal view points about what he believes is a different story. The man also had slaves (granted it was accepted at that time) but thank God that wasn't in the constitution either.

      Just because it was his personal view point, doesn't mean it should be in the constitution. I think it was with good reason that the constitution was not created by the viewpoints of just one person.

    227. Re:Another giant step backward... by william.gunn · · Score: 1

      You've made a good point that a discussion of historical events should include the total cultural context in which they occurred. That takes care of history class. In science class, however, we're not concerned about cultural context.

      It's not considered important to mention in a discussion of how a nuclear reactor works that we were the ones who developed the science only because our research program received a kick in the pants from the scientists, mostly German Jews, who fled their home country.

      I agree with you that the removal of happenings from their cultural context is terrible, and that the removal of mention of religion isn't what educators should be doing. However, when the student are in science class, they should be learning about science.

      Just about every statement presented as fact in a high school biology text book is actually under investigation. Things are presented as fact because it's not the place of high school biology to present all the nuances of current scientific thought. You have to take it in stages. Everyone should know the germ theory of disease, and that a cell is the basic unit of life. Leave nuances such as viruses and prions for a later date or for interested students. You teach people how to think, and how to use the scientific method. One of the key principles of any theory is that it is must be, in principle, falsifiable. Evolution is, in principle, falsifiable, because you could do an experiment asking, for example, "does an organism evolve to be "fit" for its niche, or do the organisms remain unchanging, only proliferating if the happen upon a niche that happens to be compatible with them?" The outcome of the experiment would either show that organisms don't change, or that they actually do adapt to their surroundings. Since you can do the experiment, in theory, evolution meets the criteria for a scientific theory.

      Is ID falsifiable? Can you do an experiment that proves that some higher power didn't "set things into motion"? You can't do that any more than you can prove or disprove the existence of a higher power. You can't do the experiment, therefore it's not a scientific theory. Therefore, it belongs in a discussion of cultural influences, not scientific ones.

      ID is just fancy footwork by conservatives and neoluddites to try to sneak discussion of religious beliefs into science class. Should it be discussed? Sure, but science class is for science. It's for discussion of the best theories we currently have. In the pitifully small amount of time you have left after teaching the facts, as we now know them, you can discuss exceptions and nuances such as gaps in the fossil record. Ideally, you'd wrap everything in a statistical treatment, so that you could assign probabilities to every theory from "humans evolved from slime" to "god created us yesterday" and score them according to likelihood, but there simply isn't time, and statistics aren't covered well enough in high school anyways.

    228. Re:Another giant step backward... by intheory · · Score: 1

      Regarding the fossil record: There is not "clear evidence" of the evolutionary process. On the contrary, there has not been a single transitionary fossil or interspecies fossil found. Look at the Cambrian explosion, where all the major groups of life which we know today appear in the with no evolutionary ancestors. There are no groups which have been identified as ancestral to any of the phyla, and geologically these phyla seem to have appeared suddenly and simultaneously.

      As for your creationist friends who tell you fossils are here to test our faith or whatever, I think they don't quite get it.

      Here's the deal. Biblically speaking, disease, pain and death didn't exist until after Adam and Eve committed sin.

      Evolution requires millions of years, with death and disease present prior to man. That simply doesn't work with a Genesis-based creation structure.

      If life had been around for millions of years, full of disease and death prior to man's existence, then there really was no Garden of Eden and Adam and Eve, thus no original sin. That means that Christ's death means nothing. That means that Christianity is completely worthless.

      Evolution is an attempt to eliminate God from the world, whether scientists say so or not. Science must operate completely objectively. My problem is that it doesn't. It seems most scientists simply refuse to even consider ID or a theistic creation model, which is a subjective approach to science. They model their work soley on a millions-of-years evolution approach, which I think is poor science.

      I tend to ramble and get off topic with this stuff, so I'll cut short here. I just wanted to help clarify why there is such a chasm between evolution and creation models. Evolution is a direct assault on the Biblical model of creation, which is a direct assault on Christianity.

    229. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "Fake clue" argument is an interesting one for anyone acquianted with some of the dead ends of science. A century and a half ago when science had determined that (1) light was a wave, and (2) all waves must move through some substance, we concluded that there must therefore exist an "ether" permeating the universe. That was wrong. Were these fake clues???

    230. Re:Another giant step backward... by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      Ok, fine. Lay out for me some experiment I can do in which one of the possible outcomes disproves the existance of God or the theory of ID.

      Nothing new, but so you also know, the inability to yet disprove something doesn't mean that it is naturally true. I believe some God exists. Still, I wouldn't demand proof from anyone. Why ? Because it's a belief, ain't no need to prove. I also believe in evolution, because I am a man of facts, of science, of engineering, of proofs, meaning I also believe my eyes not just my heart.

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    231. Re:Another giant step backward... by Legato895 · · Score: 1

      the main problem here is as follows. there are so many different aspects of christianity. there are many people on this earth that while they believe Jesus is the son of God and died and rose for our sins, they can have a different view on any number of other topics. this can be brought on by their culture or how they were tought, to what they haven't learned or looked into.

      what does this mean?

      you can ask any christion these questions and get any number of answers. i was there at a point, i would know. it wasn't too long ago that i had no idea how to defend my faith in a scientific way. christiantity has abandoned science due to old doctrin and a proceved lack of importance. that is why you get people saying (in reference to the bones) "it tests your faith!" type of statements.

      anyway, the creationist's trump card is the flood

      why is the gographic table so mixed up, all over the world? why are bones jumbled all over the place? why do the bones appear to be in a slow evolutionary step up from 'un-evolved' to the more complex species? sure evolutionry therory could explain this, but so could a world wide flood as mentioned in genisis.

      as the flood waters pulled in, what would be the first to drown/get covered by mud and debris? the slower animals. things like squid and 'lower lifeforms' may be small and slow, but they are by no means less complex. all the geological column shows is a trend of smaller slower animals down low all the way up to larger more advanced animals.

      further more, how are there massive sheets of rock that are said to be of an older era than the rock directly underneith them? the rock is dated by the lifeforms found in them (for the most part, i am well aware of the few sloppy methods of radio dating) using the proceved time it would take to evolve, while the creatures themselves are dated by the strata they are found in! also take note, that for the most part, most of the fish and other animals we have found in the lower levels of rock are still alive today.

      anyway, im sure ill be ripped apart for the lack of spell check or heaven knows what else. in reality im an 18 year old kid wasting away art class. i've read many heated debates and books on this but hell, im still learning! sure, some of you will say 'this type of though is dangerous' or whaever else you can use to belittle me, or put down my faith that i have every right to have, but ultimately there is just as much evidence supporting evolution as creationism (with out being bias) and neither one will ever be proven. i haven't checked down the other threads here, but there are 800+ if i remmeber correctly. this is obviously a very heated topic for many people, please keep an open mind, and realise that not everything you read in national geographic is truth. try reading from both parties and find a middle ground, because both sides have valid and logical explinations. sure some of the creationist's story relies on devine events, but really, how much more faith is needed to go from "all the matter ever simply came into exhistance" to "God which came into exhistance, made all the matter"?

    232. Re:Another giant step backward... by bruce_s_r · · Score: 1

      Actually, the previous verse shed further light on this, due to the motives of the builders.

      Gen 11v4:
      Then they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves and not be scattered over the face of the whole earth."

      It was their arrogance and pride which was at least the initial cause of their downfall and destruction.

    233. Re:Another giant step backward... by gid-goo · · Score: 1

      There are two deaths of god: the death of god after which everything is permitted, and the death of god after which nothing is forgiven.

    234. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      I believe that most of the Creationists I know would say that that's always going to be the best reason to believe in Creation. I can ask one if you'd like.
      Their belief in Creationism does not start and end with Genesis, I should hope. Ask one, and e-mail me if you can! Thanks!

    235. Re:Another giant step backward... by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      One could say evolution explains the continued survival of a relatively small group of people from ancient Palestine after 4000 years.

      When you think about it, there must have been thousands of tiny groups like that.

      One of them, however, invented monotheism, and said 'Don't worship other Gods', and because of that they never got assimilated.

      It's evolution in action! Survival of the fittest group! Their religion kept them apart. No one took their religion, and they didn't take anyone else's.

      Then, later on, a mutation of this religion said it was okay for others to take the religion, and it near-immediately took over half the world.

      Which I guess shows the theory of 'punctuated equilibrium'. Instead of a bunch of tiny changes, one person gets magnified into one huge change that changes everything.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    236. Re:Another giant step backward... by downwa · · Score: 1
      I agree that a God that created us would expect us to use our brains. However, at least give both sides of the debate a fair hearing (which is what I believe is being asked for).

      The problem is, the fossils that supposedly clearly point to evolution, don't actually do that so clearly after all. Darwin had a theory for which he was trying to find evidence, and since then, the evidence has been increasingly against the theory.

      If you look at the supposed age of fossils, as I have, you will discover a series of assumptions which depend upon each other in a circular fashion. For example, these fossils are X million years old because they are in this layer. This layer is X million years old, because we found Y fossil in it, which we know to be X million years old, because it is always found in the same layer elsewhere. Other dating methods make assumptions of (for example) constant radio isotope decay rates (when in fact we know the rates can change based on outside factors). There are the stalactites that are "millions of years old", which turn out to have grown in the last century. And the fossilized trees, which look strangely similar to ones covered by Mount St. Helens.

      Regarding point two, there are those who don't see a conflict between evolution and a creator. It is certainly possible, if you disregard the biblical record. The problem here is if you believe there was death (evolution over time) before "sin", then there is no logical basis for a savior. Then, the reason for the existence of Christianity is gone.

      So, to be consistent, you must either throw out Christianity or evolution. Before you discard Christianity, I suggest at least giving a fair hearing to the intelligent design argument-- from an informed scientist, not a "bible beating fundamentalist" who doesn't really know why they believe what they believe. Check out this site by a noted biologist, former atheist, who based on the evidence he uncovered, became a creationist:

      http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_main.h tm

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    237. Re:Another giant step backward... by tezbobobo · · Score: 1

      yeah... maybe... There is still no accounting for the gaps in the fossil record nor the early development of the hylocampus (- spelling? horses-ish). Secondly, where are the tenets of a good scientific rationalisation, for example repeatability?

    238. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I've asked creationists this question, and they've actually replied that they were placed here by God to test our faith. Now, I don't know about you, but I have a serious problem with this hypothesis. I for one refuse to believe that God would give us brains capable of rational, abstract thought, and then plant fake clues to punish those of us who had the gall to use those brains to attempt to understand the world we live in.



      That is something I've thought about for a while and I have come to a conclusion about why things appear older than they may be (in the case of God being the creator of the universe):



      Let us assume God created the universe in a literal 6 days. He created a mature universe, including a mature earth. This includes rocks which have certain amounts of material that can be considered in a mature state, such as partially decayed carbon14, and full grown trees, and mature humans.



      Now, can we agree that this would make sence from God's point of view, to create a mature universe? A literal interpretation does seem to indicate that. So what does this mean?



      We know through science that certain things "should" take a certain amount of time to happen. We know the half-life of certain elements, and how long it may take for a star to form. We know that it should have taken thousands of light years for us to even be able to see certain galaxies we can currently observe; But what if God set that all in motion at the beginning? There is no rule that he must wait for anything, he is omnipotent by definition.



      I would be very interested if anyone can refute that an omnipotent intelligent designer could create a mature universe. No flames please, I think it's very interesting.

    239. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      God didn't destroy the tower because he dislikes knowledge, he destroyed the tower because he was afraid of what people could accomplish.

      I don't wish to be disrespectful, but the concept of an all-powerful all-knowing creator of the universe being afraid of a tower isn't something I can accept.

    240. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old?

      here is a fossil of a hat. Obviously its less than 6000 years old.

    241. Re:Another giant step backward... by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yes, their pride and arrogance caused them to make the tower.

      But that's not why God destroyed it. There's nothing in there about that. He destroys it because they're right, they can make a tower that reaches to the heavens, and then they could do anything they wanted.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    242. Re:Another giant step backward... by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      "Honestly, just what is the deal with these fundamentalists?"

      Actually, Intelligent Design is not the fundamentalist movement -- that's Direct Creationism (btw, I am a Direct Creationist).

      The Intelligent Design movement consists largely of theistic evolutionists. One of the most prominent, Behe, believes in Universal Common Ancestry and many evolutionary ideas. He simply rejects Darwinian evolution as the source of _all_ biological systems.

      "Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution?"

      It does not. Most of the people opposing evolution are opposed simply because it removes the atheistic assumption from evolution. The charge of fundamentalism is actually a cover for the real objections. Most fundamentalist organizations -- AiG, ICR, CRS, distance themselves from Intelligent Design because ID does not assume a Biblical outlook.

      As to your questions about us fundies:

      "One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?"

      What would you expect if the world were covered by a large deluge? In the words of Ken Ham, you would expect "billions of dead things, covered in rocks, laid down by water, all over the earth."

      What about fossil succession?

      (1) It is not as clear as evolutionists claim
      (2) Most of the succession can be accounted for by ecological zonation
      (3) Many of the species that the evolutionary interpretation of rocks show as being extinct for 70 million years have shown up living and unchanged.

      Another issue is convergent evolution. This is the Darwinian epicycle. And when you have entire groups of "convergently evolved" species (see the placental/marsupial convergence), you see that these are not the results of random mutations.

      What about radiometric dating?

      The funny thing is that C14 dating supports young earth creationism. All living things have C14 in them, which should disappear entirely in about 100,000 years. However, all fossils which have been tested still have C14 remaining in them. This was supposed to have been caused by other factors, such as penetration by bacteria or the creation of new C14. However, this has also been shown to be true in diamonds, which date to 50,000 years to 70,000 years (the labs can detect up to 90,000 years). If the flood is true, then the adjusted C14 date would be 5,000 - 6,000 years. This is true of many diamonds tested.

      Likewise, coal and oil, stalagtites and stalagmites, and even opal can be formed quickly. AiG is actually opening a Creation Museum which they will have a cave made of real rock, and then they are going to have you calculate how many millions of years the museum has been open based on stalagtite length :)

    243. Re:Another giant step backward... by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You just reminded me of the Penn & Teller Bullshit! episode about creationism. They have some very, very good points in there and it's well-worth watching.

      Any time you hear "intelligent design", you are really hearing people trying to masquerade religion as science - but as soon as they start trying to prove their "science", the whole thing falls apart. Science does not accept an "absence of evidence" as being proof for something.

      I mean, the whole bit about the earth being created in 7 days (6 if you don't count the siesta), noah having every one of billions of forms of life on his ark, etc. It's all pure bullshit that even the most simple, uneducated mind should be able to see-through with a moment's rational thought.

      But the problem is that they can't take the bible for what it is - a heavily edited compilation of stories based on numerous authors that suggests a moral guideline that people should use. They're petrified that if one part of the bible is found to be false, that their whole belief system will crumble. Maybe rather than basing their religion on poorly written pseudo-fiction, they should base it on something a little more concrete.

      And you want to talk about god being an asshole (again from P&T), just remember how he kills every first-born child in egypt, floods-drowns-kills everyone in the world except Noah, etc... Hell, that's millions of times worse than the worst war-crimes ever committed on earth, but since it's "god", it's OK?

      Pure Bullshit!

      N.

      --
      "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
    244. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The big problem is the methods. Science (a search for truth), proposes a hypothesis and tests by trying to disprove it.

      Superstitious people, people using models based on invisible all powerful supernatural creatures (gods?) to relate to the universe, propose a hypothesis and do everything they can to find any basis for it to be plausibly true.

    245. Re:Another giant step backward... by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Well, granted, it doesn't say why God feels that having 'nothing human plan to do would be impossible for them' is a bad thing.

      However, that's all the motive that's given. It's not about human hubris, it's about human ability.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    246. Re:Another giant step backward... by anagama · · Score: 1

      God didn't give us brains -- Satan did. That's what the whole apple thing is about. I suppose if I wasn't an athiest, I'd have to worship the better diety.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    247. Re:Another giant step backward... by mankey+wanker · · Score: 1

      It seems like a small point, but I believe the neocons use fundamentalists as Hitler used German supramacists - they are simply an exloitable power base and nothing more. The problem the neocons are having and that Hitler also had is that the ideology of the power base must eventually be appeased.

      Maybe that's putting it too simply, but it's close to the truth.

    248. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      but word around the campfire is that the vast majority of christians are not these fundamentalist ID types.

      Except in the Bible Belt. For those non-Americans. The Bible Belt runs from Alabama/Georga over to Texas. It's also where most of the anti-gay hate crimes and extreme criminal punishment happens. Scary place.

    249. Re:Another giant step backward... by runderwo · · Score: 1
      Things moving towards other things is an observed phenomena. "Gravity" is the name we gave to the force that causes this. Thus "gravity" is a theory.
      You're splitting hairs, but you're still wrong. The force is not a theory. The existence of the force which we refer to as 'gravity' is trivially provable by observation under a classical system of mechanics - we observe things moving towards other things proportional to their mass, which requires a force of some sort. What causes the force, presumably 'gravitational waves', is a theory because their existence has not been proven yet.
    250. Re:Another giant step backward... by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      Methodists: Do believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God, but most do not believe that Evolution contraticts it.

      I grew up methodist and never saw this belief enforced. I would have described it as Methodists believe the bible contains the wisdom to live happily, but can not always be interpreted literally.

      But then, I did lose my faith anyway, so maybe that's just what I believed while I was losing it.

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    251. Re:Another giant step backward... by LnxRocks · · Score: 1

      One primary problem with this discussion is that neither ID or evolution is science. Both are religious and based on faith. No one saw creation and no one has witnessed macro-evolution. One side places its faith in scientists another in Scripture. By calling evolution science, people are decieved into beliveing that it can be proven - it cannot. Both sides have explanations for such things as fossils - for the ID side a catastrophe such as the Noah's Flood (fossils do require rapid burial). Also, evolutionist ignore evidence which contradicts their positions such as DNA being found from ages where it should be totally gone and the fact that there are not clear cut transitional lifeforms

    252. Re:Another giant step backward... by sirwnstn · · Score: 1

      Honestly, just what is the deal with these fundamentalists?

      We must deal calmly and reasonably in open dialog with those who want to dialog openly, calmly and reasonably. :)

      You bring up some good points, but there are plenty of clues in the fossil record that can be used for both sides of the arguement. I offer up one: the Cambrian explosion. They say before that, there was practically nothing- no fossils of fair sized life forms, let alone transition species of any kind. One side says it's possible that this is evidence supporting creation. The other side says this is evidence supporting the idea of evolution in "spurts" as some scientists have postulated. Either way, we can argue till we're blue in the face. It all depends on one's initial assumptions. One side starts with the assumption that there is more to this universe than what we physically "see." They end up with creation/intellegent design theory. The other side starts with the assumption that there is nothing more to this universe than what we can physically "see." They end up with evolutionary theory. But both sides are not necessarily ignorant or "unscientific." In fact there are many real, reasonable, credible scientists out there who are having a tougher and tougher time with evolutionary theory, so they've proposed a new theory. It's just science, pure and simple. It's like the atomic Bohr model. It doesn't work anymore, so you find a better model. Some folks are honestly just reaching out for better models.

      As for your second point of view, you are right. Intellegent design doesn't necessarily have to conflict with evolution. It's Evangelical Christianity that conflicts with it. Under that doctrine, evolution- at least the part about survival of the fittest, cannot be a tool of God to create us. Evangelical Christianity assumes that before the "fall of man", all life was created, and there was no sin and therefore death on earth. Therefore there could not have been species dying, giving rise to new species. If there was death before the "fall of man", there would be no "fall of man", and if there was no fall, there would be no need for Jesus and his dying for the sins of the world. Christianity is nothing without Jesus and his work (C.S. Lewis- Mere Christianity). That's why most true-to-their-faith Evangelical Christians are against evolution, because, logically it takes Jesus out of the picture.

    253. Re:Another giant step backward... by william.gunn · · Score: 1

      A wonderful discussion that you can and should have in a discussion of cultural influences in our nation's history.

      In science class, however, you should be talking about organisms and atoms. You should be presenting the best available facts, knowing yourself that they're all currently under investigation. The second thing you do in science class is discuss how to use the scientific method. How observations become theories, and what we're being taught is the thory that has floated to the top of the pile. What has allowed it do do this is experimentation. Experimentation affects only scientific theories, ones that can, in principle, be proved wrong. No experiment can prove or disprove that a higher power "set things into motion". This means that ID isn't a scientific theory, and belongs in a discussion of cultural influences, not scientific ones.

    254. Re:Another giant step backward... by mbbac · · Score: 1

      Teaching any form of religion in public schools does establish a state religion. As such, it violates the first amendment.

      Once all of the theologians get their theocracy that they're so hungry for, I'll be the one laughing when they realize their particular brand of religion isn't the one being mandated.

      --

      mbbac

    255. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "separation of search and state"

      Why do you hate Google?

    256. Re:Another giant step backward... by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 1

      Actually, it mostly just opens the door for a whole host of other questions, one of the most damning being "why would God seek to mislead us, so, unless he's a fucking asshole?"

      No, not really, they have "faith". That's the point. Kids may ask why God wants to mislead them, but adults will tell the kids that they have "faith", and that dinosaur bones and other 'artifacts' are tests of their faith.

      --
      -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
    257. Re:Another giant step backward... by william.gunn · · Score: 1

      Your sig points out the importance of punctuation, not capitalization. It also points out something else...

    258. Re:Another giant step backward... by Belgand · · Score: 1

      I think this is obvious. The Magratheans planted them as they were a necessary part of the programming.

      Some people just completely fail to see the point. Even Douglas Adams, a noted atheist, shows us the validity of intelligent design. Also planets made of solid gold.

    259. Re:Another giant step backward... by johnnyb · · Score: 1, Troll

      "It's very funny to think that the neo conservatives go to war over oil - the compressed remains of million year old creatures, yet believes the world is young."

      There is no evidence that oil is made over millions of years. In the lab it is produced quickly, just as coal, opal, petrified objects, fossils, stalagtites and stalagmites are formed.

      There is a museum that has a petrified ham, which was petrified in only one year. Likewise, stalagtites and stalagmites can grow in just 50 years. Layered sedimentation is actually based on particle size of flowing material, and not of millions of years of layering. An entire layered sediment canyon was created in 3 hours by the Mt. St. Helen's eruption.

      http://www.creationism.org/sthelens/MSH1b_7wonders .htm

      Some other interesting links:

      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v24/i4/ca nyon.asp
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs2003/1209misso ula.asp
      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v17/i2/su rtsey.asp
      http://www.icr.org/pubs/imp/imp-155.htm
      http://www.icr.org/pubs/imp/imp-157.htm

      Also note that a young earth creationist correctly predicted Uranus's electromagnetic field, while those believing in millions of years were incorrect.

      http://www.icr.org/pubs/imp/imp-203.htm

    260. Re:Another giant step backward... by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      Neocons may or may not be religious themselves. But they most definitely use Religion as a tool to gain support for unrelated policy.

    261. Re:Another giant step backward... by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Don't forget the whole Sodom and Gomorrah thing. Are they really trying to say that every single person in both of those cities were guilty of the most heinous sins imaginable, including the infants?

      I have a question about the "great flood", though. This is God, right? If he wanted to test Noah, all he had to do was say "hey, a big flood is coming". If Noah built the boat, then okay. He's been tested. Then all God has to do is say "okay" and blink and every animal but the two he chose could live. Why bother with a flood when you're Omnipotent? Just make them fall over dead, or disappear, or turn into blades of grass, or pick them all up as one and cast them into the sun. Seriously, if I were going to wipe out every person and animal on the planet but two of each species, I would do it in a fun way. I mean, hey, I'm already murdering billions of organisms. What's a little torture after that?

    262. Re:Another giant step backward... by downwa · · Score: 1

      If you only take part of the Bible as literally true, your faith will fall like a pack of cards. What is the logical reason for the need of a savior if death (evolution over time) came before sin?

      On the other hand, you don't need to check your brain at the door when becoming a Christian. Here's a noted biologist, former atheist, who became a creationist based on the evidence he discovered:

      http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_main.h tm

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    263. Re:Another giant step backward... by tempest69 · · Score: 1
      You distinguish the newly created worlds by the amount of packing residue left on them. Like your new microwave still has little clinging bits of foam stuck by static, newer worlds have chunks of pumice still stuck on by gravity.


      Really whats puzzling is why would God bother to make "fake" decomposed organic matter, that was never really alive. If God really needed to wait for it to decompose it would imply that He is bound to the same laws of time that we are, that's kinda a pretty weak interpretation of the Almighty.


      So really I kinda see creationists as believing in a weak version of God that is either stuck by time, and impatient or a shallow God that is ok with a veneer of reality. Either way seems a pretty lame version of The Ultimate.


      Storm

    264. Re:Another giant step backward... by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Yes, gravitation can also be explained in a such way: "Gravitation is the force created by evil spirits trying to pull you into the Earth, gravitation is countered by the force of angels trying to lift you to the Heaven. The force of evil spirits is inversly proportional to the square of the distance between you and the Hell (i.e. the center of the Earth)..."

      ID _can_ be taught at schools (for example, I had philosophy classes at school), but certainly not in _science_ classes.

      And ID is not a science, because it lacks: scientific proofs (direct or indirect), predicting ability and a non-contradictory model. Evolution, on the other hand, has lots of indirect proofs, some predicting ability and a good model (moreover, a mathematical model).

    265. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good thing we know in *our* culture that Paris Hilton, Pam Anderson, and Angelina Jolie are the *real* saintly women!

    266. Re:Another giant step backward... by l0tu53at3r · · Score: 0, Troll

      hmmm...i thought he rested on the 7th day and it was good so he just sorta stopped creating...from that point all i remember is him being vengeful (read: destructive) and then forgiving (also read: passive).

      --
      ---Excuse the bad English, I'm American---
    267. Re:Another giant step backward... by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

      That's actually quite an interesting point. If I had to conjecture, I'd say that our very lack of specialisation makes it possible for us to survive, as although there are few places that we survive optimally in, there are also few places where we can't survive at all. One of the best things we gain from our oversized brain (and we would have to gain something significant from a survival point of view, because developing and maintaining our brains takes a lot of energy) is an ability to adapt.

      On a long-term timescale (millions of years), it's unlikely that we'll stay so unspecialised. We're quite 'young', as far as species go. As soon as we specialise, and get stuck in our ways, we've signed our long-term death warrant. See the panda for an example of what can happen if you specialise on a particular type of food; indeed, see the dodo for what can happen if you *do* find yourself in a paradise for a long period of time -- your ability to defend yourself atrophies away, and you get eaten by the next predator to wash ashore (in the dodo's case, that predator was us).

    268. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I believe the traditional reply at this point is: "Fine, fossils can form relatively quickly, but the rocks you find them in can't." Not being a geologist, I wouldn't know. Some of the geologists present care to elaborate?

      I doubt it would do any good. The Creationists, eh, I'm mean IDists, discount much of geology as well, especially all dating methods.

    269. Re:Another giant step backward... by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      People are often selfish and do things they shouldn't. Just because someone claims to be affiliated with a particular group or belief, then violates the principles of that belief, it doesn't mean that the group or belief has sanctioned or changed to include that behavior.

      Also, the first Crusades were a response to Muslim "convert or die" aggression. ("The trigger for the First Crusade was Emperor Alexius I's appeal to Pope Urban II for mercenaries to help him resist Muslim advances into territory of the Byzantine Empire.") Last I checked, such things (Crusades, Inquisition, etc.) were being taught already.
      Christianity, or at the very least, its principles, were critical to the formation of the USA. Therefore, its principles should be taught in school, as they were prior to the 1950s!

      Lastly, the 'church and state' thing was to prevent the establishment of a State religion, not to obliterate all traces of Biblical wisdom or basic Christian principles from our society. Go read George Washington's farewell address, for example.

    270. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Of course, this is the same god who told Abraham to sacrifice his only son to Him, and waited until the knife was actually descending to say "Psych!".
      In other words... "If your god told you to jump off a bridge, would you do that too?" Apparently Abraham would.

      Some people just can't understand a dare.

    271. Re:Another giant step backward... by jafac · · Score: 1

      This tiresome division is one of the reasons why "non-denominational" Evangelical churches are popping up like wildflowers all over America.

      I used to agree with that - but the non-denominational churches really are not. Most of them are derivations of Pentacostals, Nazarene, or Charismatic sects. Most of them, from what I've found, are along the lines of your characterization of Baptists. Although some are very liberal in their beliefs towards scriptural inerrency. . .

      This movement is here for a reason. My theory is that it's either a general backlash against modernism, or it's a millenial thing (where the armchair eschatologists, after reading Revelation, decide that since it's the year 2000, we're necessarily in the prophesied "end times" - etc.)

      There was a similar phenomenon around the year 1000. I think that in about 10 years, when it becomes obvious that the "end" is not nigh, some of this shit will settle down. I hope.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    272. Re:Another giant step backward... by ss_Whiplash · · Score: 1

      I fully agree with those who think that evolution and intelligent design are not mutually exclusive. I think it's perfectly reasonable that an intelligent God could create the earth in a way that it can evolve and adapt. The thing that bugs me most about this whole story is that these groups that supposedly want "separation of church and state" are really doing nothing but trying to stifle freedom of speech and freedom of thought. The Constitution says that government cannot ESTABLISH a religion. This was done because the church pretty much ran government way back when and persecuted those who believed differently. So this does not mean that schools cannot study religion and religious ideas. What it means is that schools cannot pick a religion and force people to believe and punish them if they don't. I don't think that talking about the possibility of intelligent design violates that separation whatsoever.

    273. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You're not gonna hit me, right?"
      "Nah man, have a little faith! Now close your eyes.."

    274. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I being one who reads the Bible literally would be more than happy to discuss the Truth of God's Word.

      If I might be allowed to state my position instead of having it stated for me as you have so boldly taken the liberty of doing in your post.

      The reason I don't believe the secular view of evolution and the age of the earth is because there is no actual proof only assertions and theories founded on assertions.

      Let me give you a couple of examples:

      1. Radioisotope dating, you need to give an approximate date before the dating process can be applied.
      2. The theory stating the earth is 15 billion years old is based on Hubble's assertion about the Doppler shift, this has never been proven. Please don't get Hubble's law confused with Hubble's assertion or theory because one is proven and one has never been proven and does not stand up well to scientific scrutiny.
      3. The big bang theory, this is a math model of the creation of the universe that has never been proven just like many other math models that will never be proven. This particular model requires the universe to be infinite, have no center or edge. Alternate math models using the theory of general relativity prove a six day creation and a young earth. The young earth model is based on a universe that is finite, has a center and an edge, this model predicts the universe is 15 billion years old at the edge, as we see it, and less than 10,000 years old in the center galaxy, again as observed.

      Put the 3 together and you get theorists looking at the layers of the earths crust and mapping the age of each layer to the age of the outer edge of the universe and all the timelines are skewed by billions of years. This assumes time is a constant and does not take time dilation do to gravity into account, this is sloppy science.

      Unfortunately you all base your belief on unproved theories that you are stating to be facts, if you do the study you will find the scientific flaws in your assertions about the fossil record and the age of the earth.

      Until what you are saying is proven conclusively like Hubble's Law or the law of Thermodynamics it is only a theory based on a model that has never been proven.

      BTW - Evolution defies the Law of Thermodynamics!!!! How do you reconcile that exception?

      I being a Christian, a scientist and a skeptic need absolute proof and do not hang my hat on a theory that sounds plausible. Many of the scientists that are proposing Intelligent Design were pillars in the secular scientific community and found too many contradictions and flaws in the current scientific view; as a matter of fact, they could not find one absolutely proven scientific fact that contradicts the Bible!!!

      In other words you all have been deceived by bad science, please don't mistake a theory for proof no matter how plausible it might sound, proof is proof and theory is theory. If you had asserted the speed of light was finite 500 years ago you would have been ridiculed by the scientific community much like you are ridiculing the scientists of today that believe in Intelligent Design.

      I have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ and He proves His love for me every day of my life, based on this relationship and spending years researching the Bible I know the Truth.

      I am posting this message out of Love, not because I want to argue about the finer points of the current scientific view, because I want to testify of the great Love God has for His children.

      God bless you and keep you.

    275. Re:Another giant step backward... by dilvish_the_damned · · Score: 1

      Ahh, I see where the confusion is. Let me explain:
      Its easier to comprehend if you consider that there are plural Intelligences at work here.

      [dinos]...where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old?

      The fossiles were placed by the Devil in order to prove the non-existance of God.

      In all seriousness, no matter what peoples credentials are, they see God where they wish to see God, despite the more obvious answers. I consider this behaviour to be a mild insanity, or an example of a weak belief in their own ideals.

      Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.

      But it does not prove Gods existance either, and they themselves strive for proof, possible due to lack of faith.

      --
      I think you underestimate just how much I just dont care.
    276. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we have a Creator who makes humans in his own image and then, a couple of thousand years later, suddenly goes "Shit! I've made them too good. Silly me." and fixes it.

      Hardly a definition of an infallable being.

    277. Re:Another giant step backward... by yetanothertechie · · Score: 2, Informative

      Christianity isn't even the *dominant* religion on the planet, in terms of number of believers.

      Yes it is

      --
      Facts are stubborn things.
    278. Re:Another giant step backward... by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      I think is a big problem with many, many Christians! Your education as a Christian shouldn't start and end as a child! The creation story is great for children! It is instructive about the nature of God, and can be easily understood by small minds. If you stop your education at that level, don't be surprised if you have a child-like understanding of God and Christian faith!
      And therein lies one of my biggest problems with current Christian dogma. Two centuries ago, the Bible was the literal, unvarnished word of God. The Puritans were not children, with "small minds", they were mature, thinking adults, and for them, the Bible was true.

      Now, you're telling me that my Biblical teachings shouldn't have ended at childhood, that I should look beyond the actual words of the Bible for some other meaning. Well, point the first: I've been studying religions, Christian and otherwise, all of my life. It's been a passion for as long as I can remember. Twenty years of that can be classified as "not childhood". I make this point, not to applaud my age or my learning, but to point out that just because I reference Sunday school doesn't mean that was the end of my study.

      Are you telling me that the creation story is false? A fable designed for children? That doesn't work, on many, many levels. The Bible was most assuredly not written for children, nor intended for them. The stories, as written, were intended to portray the truth of the word of God, not bed-time stories. Unless you're willing to tell me that the people who put the Bible together were wrong, in either the scope of their endeavor, or the reasons for it, stating that the opening of Genesis was intended for children is, if you'll forgive me, a bit simple minded.

      The Bible has been portrayed as the true word of God (not the fables of God, not the metaphorical allegories of God) for hundreds of years. Now, you'd like me to believe that it's ok, that the conflicts that exist between Genesis and scientific reality don't matter because the Bible was intended to be a children's story?

      Nope, not buying it. I'll accept that the stories themselves, in their unwritten, oral tradition, were intended as allegories and cautionary tales. But the Bible itself was created to reflect the word of God, not fables, not children's stories.

      You're a Christian and you're trying to fit your view of the Bible into the bigger picture of the world around you. I can appreciate that. But I don't think that re-inventing the history and purpose of the Bible is going to help you with that in the long run.

      Yes, my demographic for Christion is one who believes that Jesus the Christ is the son of God. The Bible tells them that "whosoever believeth and is baptised shall be saved". For most of the Christians I know, it's as simple as that.

    279. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My take: the Genesis account is a true "abstract" of the "paper" that is creation.

      Which one? There are two...

      "Everything is created in 7 days" and "Adam and Eve in the Garden"

    280. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Contradictions and the Bible are hardly foreign to each other.

    281. Re:Another giant step backward... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      For most Christians,

      I've always wondered one thing when people start this. Which Christians? Moromons, Protestants, Catholics, Jehovas Witnesses, Gideons, Eastern Orthodox or any of the others? It really annoys me when all get lumped together this way.

      this is not an issue. Evolution is a thoery that seems close enough to fact. Creationists will argue against the merits of Darwinian evolution all day, and will be right. The working theory of evolution is based on Darwinian thinking, but it didn't just stop there. It is highly refined, and able to empiraclly observed.

      Even Pope John Paul II said that Evolution was not incompatible with the Roman Catholic teaching.

      However, the real issue is, what do we teach? You teach the fact, with respect for dissenting viewpoints, just like any other topic. If you are discussing the birth place of a famous person, and there exists some doubt about the location, most decent textbooks discuss the question. Evolution and counter-evolutionists should work the same way. There are holes in the most complete theory of evolution. They should be addressed. You can point out it is a theory that is not able to entirely proven, like a mathematical equation might be.

      Unfortunately, whenever something relating to religion comes up, it seems that the seperation of church and state is interpreted to mean that any recognized organized religious viewpoint can not be spoken of, and only one that scours any mention of religions viewpoint from its text can be talked about. This goes for many things, not just evolution.

      Thanks for a decent, reasonable explanation. I rarely get to read these on slashdot.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    282. Re:Another giant step backward... by untaken_name · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the whole Sodom and Gomorrah thing. Are they really trying to say that every single person in both of those cities were guilty of the most heinous sins imaginable, including the infants?

      According to the Biblical account, there were 9 or fewer. You see, had 10 virtuous people been found, in the entire city, it would have been spared. (Let's not even go into the possibility that it was an allegory)

      Your question re: why doesn't God just since he's omnipotent? Well, what good are we as an amusing diversion if the rules don't stay consistent, or if we're not warned of their changing? I mean, God went to all the trouble to create an entire universe with physical laws, why wouldn't he just work within them? Another way to look at it is this: God created the rules of the game, and after 'cheating' a few times, He decided to just let the players play. That's why He sent Jesus, in order to change the rules (for the last time, according to the Bible). Note: I'm not espousing any viewpoint, I'm simply trying to provide explanation in the framework you provided. I'm of the personal opinion that if God exists, then logically there's no way for us to know what His reasons are. It would be like an ant trying to comprehend the actions of a skydiver. I doubt The Sims characters understand why you make them do what you make them do, either.

    283. Re:Another giant step backward... by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Just a question for you... What do you think a newly-created world would look like (how does one distinguish a newly-created world from one billions of years old)?

      Would a God capable of creating the entire universe and everything in it not be able to create a world with what appears to be decayed organic matter?

      Would it be intellegent to create a world with matter in varying stages at the beginning (basically a world with it's ecology/geology already set in motion)? Would a God that's powerful enough to create matter be restricted to only creating living matter and then waiting for it to decompose...or could he create decomposed organic matter?

      To say that fossles and fossel fuel are contradictory or mutually exclusive with creationism reflects a serious consideration/understanding of what creationists believe...and how powerful/amazing they see God as being.


      Have you ever considered that being a creationist is a sure sign that God makes mistakes because he made you? To find truth is christianity. To beleive in our God and to worship him as the gateway to salvation. Not to rebute 200 years of scientific evidence with some pithy idea that doesn't hold water.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    284. Re:Another giant step backward... by dual_boot_brain · · Score: 1

      The same place God came from...

      --
      There is no reset button in life; however, there are bonus levels.
    285. Re:Another giant step backward... by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      According to common sense, an infant that can't do more than eat and shit is not going to be guilty. If it is, then God made it that way, as it doesn't have the mental capacity to make any choices at all.

      As far as creating the rules and not breaking them - I'm pretty sure a catastrophic flood that covers every inch of land on the planet is, at best, a bending of the rules. You'd think God would be a bit more pure than to find a technicality and run with it, especially if he's going to presume to judge us.

    286. Re:Another giant step backward... by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      Huh. Let's see... if all of these major branches of the Christian faith concede that evolution is likely to be real, then there's no one left to contest it, right? All of the news stories lately about textbooks being altered and church groups picketing to remove evolution teachings from schools are being done by... who?

      Meanwhile, I look over my cube wall to my neighbor (a Catholic) and ask, "What do you think of evolution?"

      He says, without even looking up from his monitor, "It's sin, pure and simple. Poisoning the minds of our kids. Now stop bugging me, I've got stuff to get done."

      Apparently, everyone you're around thinks a bit more than that. Obviously, I need to move again.

    287. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Particle size does not produce the layering seen in the geologic record. (if it did we wouldn't see millions of layers with similar structure, but a few dozen layers with radically different composition).

      2) The is huge evidence that oil is made over a period of millions of year in nature. It is true that by using a process discovered in the last decade one can produce oil in hours. There is *zero* evidence that this is how nature did it.

      3) No one is saying that it always takes a long time to petrify something. In fact, it is commonly known that under the right circumstances it is trivial to petrify things. One example of "the right circumstances" would be a global flood. If that had actually happened there would be millions of times more fossils than are actually found in the geologic record.

      4) stalagtites can indeed grow more quickly under the best of circumstances. This is why geologists look for other evidence of water flow rate and mineral content to determine how long it took for artifacts in specific caves to grow. (this, btw, it a recurring theme in creation. It's very amusing that the creationists think *they* understand science but that the entire scientific community has missed the boat)

      5) The uranus prediction is utter nonesense since it seems to predict any field. Plus, it's very amusing that he brags about being published in a "peer reviewed creation journal". Oh well, I suppose that's what you do with your memo after it's rejected by actual journals.

    288. Re:Another giant step backward... by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      Probably one of the better points I have seen. the main problem with Christianity and most other religions, is that the nut cases are the loudest, the ones making the fuss, the ones in control now. Modern day corporate religion is just impossible to take seriously. Just too many know-it-all, ignorant, fear mongering jack asses taking the ship over. But you have to expect this in something that is based in fear anyways. The above poster is right though, these people (Taliban, Al-Qaeda, Christian Coalition, The Falwell's, etc) have taken your beliefs over and will not give them back without a fight.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    289. Re:Another giant step backward... by jerktar · · Score: 1

      God created light on the first day but didn't create the sun and the stars until the 3rd day. Obviously God forgot that stars are the source of light.

    290. Re:Another giant step backward... by naily · · Score: 1
      Or, to try to put it more succinctly: intelligently designed to evolve. Now, that's a pretty clever god.

      It's just such a shame that (s)he doesn't appear to bequeath such smarts to his/her most ardent followers...

      --
      We all live in a state of ambitious poverty. -- Decimus Junius Juvenalis
    291. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      [I]f a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?
      I've never heard "to test our faith," but I've heard The Great Flood credited. Remember, when God opened the heavens for fourty days and fourty nights, guiding Noah to first create an ark and save all the animals (or Manu, if you follow the Hindi myth, or Utnapishtim/ Atrahasis from the Babylonian version - thanks Wikipedia! )? Unfortunately, it wasn't big enough for the dinosaurs and unicorns. And The Great Flood also answers the notion of the Ice Age.
    292. Re:Another giant step backward... by Big+Smirk · · Score: 1

      The way I understand it: Some creationalist believe that dinosaur bones are from creatures described as 'dragons' in myth and in the Bible (don't ask me what section, don't know, don't care). So they existed concurantly with man. As for fossilization, they claim that the process can be accelerated. I believe someone found a hat that was fossilized by Mt. St Helens. The biggest problem they have is not any artifact on earth, but the existance of star-light. (We can see a star 30,000 light years away so the light originated 30,000 years ago) Take that to us being able to see other galaxies and you are able to at least put an lower limit on the age of the universe. The young earth creationalists will tell you either a) we don't know everything about the speed of light or b) light seems to be slowing down (in fact it isn't, just our measurements seem to be getting more accurate and we tend to round down more than round up).

      --
      TODO: create/find/steal funny sig.
    293. Re:Another giant step backward... by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct"

      The problem with people who want to literally interpret the Bible is that most people do not know that Genesis is not the earliest set of events on Earth in the Bible. This and the fact that to literally interpret the Bible you have to literally interpret the original languages, not the English translation of the Bible.

      The Bible describes that Satan was in residence on Earth before the garden of eden and the events in Genesis 1. However, since this is not discribed in Genesis, but later in the Bible, most people (especially those who do not study the Bible intensely) do not put it in its proper chronological context. This usually stems from the fact that most people do not realize that the timeline of the Bible runs from a time eons before the Garden of Eden and is not written like a chronological history book.

      Secondly, the events in Genesis 1 do not tell us how long Adam and Eve were in residence in the garden before the "Fall". Since man was immortal in the pre-sin state the time of residence could have been immense.

      As for people being tested in their faith this concept is silly when they do not have the knowledge of the Bible that that faith is supposed to be based on. This "problem" is epidemic though. The "problem" as I see it is that people are representing themselves as Christians and yet they do nok know enough about their own theology to properly discribe it to someone else, much less line up what they believe with the scriptures that they supposedly hold in such high regard.

      My evidence of this is in the religious right trying to legislate morality and introduce things like ID to the school system. These behaviors (activism) are the actions of people trying to help God. This is tantamount to, in a Biblical-thought centric mind, getting out of a flying jet to push; God being the jet.

      Some of the principles of the Bible that are in direct conflict with these actions are these: God is omnipotent and does not need our help, the world is currently controlled by Satan by decree of God, government is for providing safety and freedom for ALL the people who live in it, even God does not try to interfere with the free will of mankind, the burden of communicating the Word of God is specifically entrusted to believers (not schools!), faith is the basis of Christianity (not rationalism or philisophical argument). In the face of all these principles that are directly described in the Bible I cannot see how anyone calling themselves a Christian could be party to trying to manipulate the government in this way.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    294. Re:Another giant step backward... by untaken_name · · Score: 0

      Point the first:
      Why should God be bound by human common sense?

      Point the second:
      How do you know how many infants were in the city?

      Point the third:
      Re: the flood:
      The term 'world' referred to the known world at that time, to those writers.

      Also, I rather think it's a bit more presumptuous to judge God, rather than for Him to judge us, if He exists.

      Just saying.

    295. Re:Another giant step backward... by Cutting_Crew · · Score: 1

      just because you say you are a Christian surely doesnt make you one. you can go to church and sunday school and not be a Christian. Christianity is beliving the God sent His only Son to die on the cross to save your sins and mine and that he rose from the dead, the ultimate sacrifice that would save us from sin(eternal separation from God). It is also living for Jesus, living to the best of your ability how Jesus lived and preaching the gospel to all nations. People are not perfect of course but its all whats in the heart and God can see a mans heart and his intentions. evolution has not been proven and is just a theory. why cant ID get a fair shake and at least we have have equal teachings on both? besides isnt that what the ACLU and other have been wanting.. equality?

    296. Re:Another giant step backward... by Paladin128 · · Score: 1

      This isn't teaching religion... it's teaching a theory. Some people made a point that maybe it should be taught in another class, like sociology or philosophy. I have no problem with this. I do, however, have a problem with teaching an un-proven theory as fact. And frankly, the only reason to do this would be to promote atheism (which is a faith).

      Do you also think that religion shouldn't be mentioned in history class as well? A local school just approved a history textbook that goes so far out of its way to paint history devoid of religion, that it doesn't mention the fact that the crusades were (at least in name) religious wars. That is, quite frankly, dishonest.

      The schools are going too far... in a local high-school, a kid can get suspended for having a bible in his back-pack, or wearing a cross or crucifix. This only applies to these items... students are fully allowed to wear icons or carry holy texts from other faiths -- just Christians are persecuted here. I could site dozens of other examples, just in my county of NJ, but you get the point.

      Do I believe there should be religion classes in public high-school? Nope. Do I believe various religions merit mention in certain topics of study (mostly history)? Absolutely.

      --
      Lex orandi, lex credendi.
    297. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have been saying this since I was wise enough to understand evolution theory, and it's religious implications.

      Who's to say that God didn't create a rock, capable of sustaining life, and throw a bunch of chemicals on it that allow the formation of life and watch it all unfold, like a great chaotic terrarium, or clockworks?

      Maybe "and on the seventh day god created man..." is an oversimplification, to describe something the bible writers didn't understand.

      I am a firm believer in "intelligent design, which allowed for evolution to happen" theory.

      After all, where did all the matter in the universe come from? It had to come from somewhere, did it not? It didn't just all materialize and big bang one day... unless it came from somewhere. If you can explain that somewhere, where did the somewhere come from? The universe didn't happen by itself.

      I think that the universe is god's clockworks, he set it up, and its just ticking... evolution is a very small side effect of this. To think that god created man in the image of himself is presumptuous and not a little self important...

      The bible is a book. Like any book, if 1000 people read it, 1000 people will have a different take on it. That means there is a different version for everyone who has translated it to English. Likewise these versions have evolved through time. Most likely there has been simplification, and expansion on concepts, depending on the author.

      That's what's wrong with fundamentalists, they accept the bible, at it's letter, to be the word of god, which it isn't. It's the word of the last person who translated the word of the person who translated .... all the way back to the apostles, who may or may not have gotten it right when they described what happened. Depends on how good their memories were.

      The old testament is similarly impure. We only know what's in the dead sea scrolls. Who wrote them? Were they first generation, second, etc?

      just my opinion...

      l8,
      AC

    298. Re:Another giant step backward... by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      The point is, you don't need to explain the why of gravitation at all in order to teach it. You don't need to explain the origins of biology in order to teach it.

    299. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution can't be the tool that God used. It contradicts everything that the Bible says.

      Example: Evolution says that the sun was made before everything else.
      The Bible says that there was another sources of light for the first few days of creating.

      Evolution says that things have been around for millions of years, which is why we see so many fossils.
      The Bible says that there was a huge flood that killed most things on the earth, which would cause the fast development of fossils.

    300. Re:Another giant step backward... by Iloinen+Lohikrme · · Score: 2, Informative

      I myself am Finnish and lutherian so I quess I can comment on this one. In Finland lutherians are quite moderate, sometimes very liberal.

      The church teaches about creation and it's supposed to be taken as symbolical event of man turning to bad. They don't say there wasn't big bang or evolution, they just say that god made this. The point is that evolution nor big bang conflict with bible. In school evolution is teached, but it's not preaced. Again they just say that science says that this happened, and there are this and that evidence of it. In religion classes creation is thought. No conflict.

      As a generalisation, in Finland it's up to each one to decide what he/she believes in, or if one choce to not to believe. Same thing in scandinavian countries.

    301. Re:Another giant step backward... by UnrefinedLayman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is that this opens the door to a host of other bullshit ideas. If we give credence to ideas that cannot be proven and outright defy proof then we will slowly slide into giving other such ideas weight.

      Would creationists object to the teaching of reincarnation in schools? On what grounds could they object? There are people who truly believe that reincarnation happens, but there is no evidence that links reality with that idea, just as there is no evidence to link creationism with reality.

      The reality is that the universe simply is. If there were a creator, that creator made the universe appear to be very old and very structured. For all intents and purposes, the nature of the universe is such that it presents itself to us as being this way. In other words, the universe is either very old and structured or its laws endowed by its creator make it appear to be something it is not. Which of these things can be proven?

      Schools are for teaching science and reason, not religion. The constitution explicitly says the government will not establish religion. Why do people insist upon having the government teach their children religion rather than church? Who is the better faith-leader: a committee, or a reverend?

    302. Re:Another giant step backward... by geoffspear · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well, there's the Book of Esther, where the queen is killed for refusing to show off her hotness for the king's buddies.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    303. Re:Another giant step backward... by sdjunky · · Score: 1
    304. Re:Another giant step backward... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      2) There is *ZERO* evidence that this isn't how nature did it. Since we weren't there... unless of course it happened during the great flood.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    305. Re:Another giant step backward... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Most secular Jews are not neoconservatives - when the vast majority vote Democrat, though above the average wealth, that's obvious. Yet there are a lot of neoconservatives. Where do you get your bold assertion?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    306. Re:Another giant step backward... by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To the degree that there is any truth to what you are saying you are getting the situation exactly backwards. Evangelicals are ~30% of the population of the country. Religious conservatism is a large and powerful political block with significant political clout.

      Neo-Conservatives (strictly speaking) are a very small group of like-minded intellectuals with no political power base. They have *influence* through their ideas and the force of their arguments, but no *power*. The religious right as a political movement has the power in many places to get you elected or not. The neo-cons can argue to those with power (including but not certainly not exclusively the religious right) that you should or should not get elected.

      It's also worth noting that the political/intellectual movement most ardently opposed to the neo-conservatives is also closely aligned to the religious right. The title "paleo-conservative" was coined in self-conscious opposition to the neo-conservatives and Paleo-cons like Pat Buchannan while relatively weak politically have their strongest following within the religious right.

    307. Re:Another giant step backward... by RobbieGee · · Score: 1

      Wether creationism is true or not isn't interesting in this case. The point is that creationism has not been proved while evolution has (to the point of accepted science).

      This is how I got convinced myself: Given a set of rules, random mutations will elevate those individuals which best fits them. Doing a quick computer simulation of a simplified evolutionary system is relatively trivial. Nature's evolution works principally the same way, it's just more complex/detailed. Evolution WORKS, this cannot be disputed. Wether evolution is what got us here is a _discussion_ best left to the philosophy classes.

      My point is that some people thought that evolution didn't match their belief system, and so it had to make way in the schools for something they could believe in. Their holy grail is the 'intelligent design', which in my opinion is creationism packed in some pseudo-science coating. (Yes, I've read about the flagellan rotary motor).

      --
      If you get this, we're 10 of a kind.
    308. Re:Another giant step backward... by Culture · · Score: 1

      However, evolution disproves literal biblical inerrency, which to the conservative power structure would be even worse than proving God did not exist.

      --
      ----- There are two kinds of people in this world, my friend; those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
    309. Re:Another giant step backward... by tyroney · · Score: 1

      Correct. You can dig around on the UMC website, and when you finally find their doctrinal statements, they just mention the bible. I couldn't find any statement about their current stance on just how inspired etc. they believe it is.

    310. Re:Another giant step backward... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Well, midwestern hick, you're not smart enough to understand that saying a part of some group is some other group selected by several criteria (dumb, mid-west, Sunday school, peasants; possibly filtered further by "can only count to two") does not state that all members of a group selected by one of those criteria share all the others. Got that? And supplying a couple of sarcastic cliches, like "there's some intelligent discourse", and "words with multiple syllables", as your sole rebuttal merely confirms that you might indeed meet more of those criteria.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    311. Re:Another giant step backward... by Cutting_Crew · · Score: 1

      you all are missing what Christianity is all about.. its not about who is Baptist , Catholic, Lutheran or any other form of "Christian" derivatives. Its all about having a deep loving relationship with Jesus...and believing that He is the Son of God, he was crucified for our sins as the ultimate sacrifice and that he rose again. thats what separates Christianity from other 'religions'. It's all about Jesus. no one belief other than Christianity offers eternal salvation.

      Jesus predicted in the Bible before he died on the cross that His name would be a stumbling block to many, that people would hate you because you believe in me. He was right on target. He also said that FEW will walk the straight and narrow path and that FEW will make it the kingdom of heaven. One of Jesus' commandments is to go into all the world and preach the gospel of Jesus Christ. if that is what we believe in then why shouldnt we have the right to teach ID with the same weight as evolution? just my 2 cents.

    312. Re:Another giant step backward... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Oh, yeah, it must be "the jews". It couldn't be all the raving looney poser "Christians" we see in public and on TV all day. Funding Republicans, setting their policies, and putting on Zionist airs to further their insane dreams of armageddon. Right, it must be the Jews - Wolfowitz has a wireless remote on both Rumsfeld and Bush, not Billy Graham (who's also secretly a Jew, right?).

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    313. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the creation story is unimportant

      This is definatly not true. Without the garden of eden, there is no foundation for the concept of original sin. If there's no original sin, then there's no point in Jebus dying on the cross.

    314. Re:Another giant step backward... by maladil · · Score: 1

      For the first point: The fossil record is an embarrassment to evolutionists. As a student of not only I.D., but also the debate itself on this issue, I would love to know what fossils have been found that support evolution. There are millions of fossils that exist of all kinds of creatures, but the problem for evolution is that there are no fossils that exist of a transitional form. If this is not true, then why are scientists still looking for "the missing link?" That problem is obvious enough to some evolutionists that in their desperation to offer an explanation for the complete lack of transitional forms, they developed the theory of "Punctuated Equilibrium." That theory says that evolution doesn't happen slowly over long periods of time, but rather in an explosion. The concept is sort of like a chicken hatches from a lizard egg, and not a half chicken-lizard. However I don't think even the most brazen evolutionist would construe their once beloved archaeopteryx to fill that bill. If the author of this post believes that the sheer number of fossils that exist today bolsters evolution, then they are greatly mistaken. Fossils do not require a lot of time to form. Many fossils have been shown to be created in less than a century. As an aside, the issue of the age of the Earth is not tied to Intelligent Design. I firmly believe in the Biblical account of creation, and everyone would probably describe me as "one of those fundamentalists", but I'm not convinced that the Earth can only be 6,000 years. We do not know for certain, how long the days of creation were. Moses never specified if they were 24 hour days or not. According to ancient Hebrew, there were multiple meanings for their word for "Day." As a personal bias, I think it was most likely to be 6,000 years based on the genealogy of Genesis, but only God knows. For the second point: There are many very well respected Christian scientists who believe in Evolution as the means by which God brought man into existence. I respectfully disagree with them on both scientific grounds, but more importantly on theological grounds. The fundamental reason that Christians will come out of the wood work when ever Genesis is challenged is because it provides the foundation for the rest of the Bible. If man was not created perfect and fell into a life of sin terminated by death, then there is no need for a savior. If we evolved as a cosmic accident resulting from purposeless processes over a long period of time, then Jesus was wrong in his doctrine, and therefore couldn't have been God as he claimed to be. In Matthew 19:4-6 Jesus quoted Genesis 2:24 as his defense of marriage and by extension the creation of man by God. I think in the interest of defining what the debate is really about, I will say that no "fundamentalist" has any problem with the idea of evolution within a species. We have actually seen that take place in our life times. What we argue is evolution between species. That has never been seen to take place. In addition, there is no evidence that it ever has. There are a lot of theories, and I commend people much smarter than myself for attempting to get to the bottom of their quandary as creatively as they have and continue to do, and as long as their ideas are regarded as theories, then Christians and scientists alike will have no problems. The problem begins when one scientific "theory" is given the weight of scientific fact. When science books are written, evolution is assumed to have happened, and the rest of the book is written from that context. The problem is that scientists aren't any closer to proving their theory today as they were when Darwin proposed it in this book, "Origin of Species." But what do I know? I probably believe the Earth is still flat, right?

    315. Re:Another giant step backward... by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      It's still on the front page, and has over 1,500 comments. So the only chance for your prediction to come through is to roll the counter over...

    316. Re:Another giant step backward... by Culture · · Score: 1
      You silly twit. What matters is what is says in the King James Bible, which King James hired God to write. In the KJB is says day, which in Engilish, the official language of God since the KJB was written, means 24 hours plus some small change.

      You have obviously not applied reasoning and science to your position.

      --
      ----- There are two kinds of people in this world, my friend; those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
    317. Re:Another giant step backward... by SamSim · · Score: 1

      Mark Twain wrote:

      In the space of one hundred and seventy six years the Lower Mississippi has shortened itself two hundred and forty-two miles. That is an average of a trifle over a mile and a third per year. Therefore, any calm person, who is not blind or idiotic, can see that in the Old Oölitic Silurian Period, just a million years ago next November, the Lower Mississippi was upwards of one million three hundred thousand miles long, and stuck out over the Gulf of Mexico like a fishing-pole.

      You want to be careful how you extrapolate things like that. Who says the relationship is linear? Who says they were originally together anyway? Yes, the 6000 year figure is off, but arguing with bad logic just makes the issue more tangled, and lowers the credibility of everybody else who's trying to argue the evolution issue. Please check your facts.

    318. Re:Another giant step backward... by BetaJim · · Score: 1

      Your right. But, I would want students to receive as complete an education as possible. Leaving out the origins of modern biology and evolution just because some people don't understand (and some seem to refuse to try and understand) evolution doesn't cut it with me.

      --

      "Drug related crime" is a misnomer, "prohibition related crime" is the more accurate and correct phrase.

    319. Re:Another giant step backward... by ut59049 · · Score: 2, Funny

      This weekend I watched an amazing PBS series, "Evolution". I would higly reccomend it to anyone interested in this topic, regardless of where you stand on the issue. It catches you up to date on all of the current research and scientific evidence.

      One of the segments was entitled "What about God?" which included a segment about a leading creationist Ken Ham. One of the absurd things he told his audience was, "If someone tells you millions of years ago, respond to them by saying 'Were you there?'"

      So I looked up this guy, and he is building a CREATIONIST MUSEUM!!!!!! It is somewhere in Kentucky, and they are installing the exhibits right now. I seriously thought this was a joke when I looked at the virtual tour.

      http://www.answersingenesis.org/museum/

    320. Re:Another giant step backward... by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 2, Informative

      Young-Earth Creationists and their modern counterparts frequently pull out the "Last Thursday" argument, without knowing it. God made the earth with the fossils in it, with starlight from distant galaxies already en route, etc. There is no scientific evidence that could refute such an assertion. Similarly, there is no scientific evidence that could refute the notion that the universe was created Last Thursday, by my cat, Sidney . (Yeah, my site is ancient and moldy.) Any bit of evidence you could think of was created that way by God 6,009 years ago, or Last Thursday. Occam's razor cuts the argument off, though.

      Old-earth creationists frequently argue that the biblical order in Genesis is exactly the order that geologists found. Except it isn't. Genesis has land plants before fish, and birds before land animals. So it's exactly correct, except for where it is wrong.

      "Intelligent Design" is just creationism after the lawyers figured out a way around the 1987 case (whose cite escapes my poor brain.) The arguments in Behe's _Darwin's_Black_Box_ and Dembski's Explanatory Filter (that's a concept, not a title) have been refuted many times over.

      Still, the American Taliban wants what it wants, and will keep getting it until a majority of American voters have their eyes open and see what they're doing to our country.

    321. Re:Another giant step backward... by Melkman · · Score: 1

      How improbable it is doesn't say sh*t since all outcomes are equally improbable. The only thing it sais is that if you'd take an other planet exactly like earth it will almost certainly not develop the human species. Or even mammals. What will develop (if something develops at all) is something just as improbable as we are.

    322. Re:Another giant step backward... by mbbac · · Score: 1
      This isn't teaching religion... it's teaching a theory
      It isn't a scientific theory. It's a SWAG.
      And frankly, the only reason to do this would be to promote atheism (which is a faith).
      Atheism is not a faith.
      Do you also think that religion shouldn't be mentioned in history class as well?
      There is a difference between teaching religion and teaching about religion. There is nothing wrong with teaching about religion.
      A local school just approved a history textbook that goes so far out of its way to paint history devoid of religion, that it doesn't mention the fact that the crusades were (at least in name) religious wars. That is, quite frankly, dishonest.
      I'd imagine this is more due to pressure from theists than atheists. The theists want to repaint history with a brush that makes them look good.
      --

      mbbac

    323. Re:Another giant step backward... by wheany · · Score: 1

      Well, I guess I'm no Nostradamus then. Well, actually, my prediction is probably just as accurate as his were.

      (...and of course you could say that if it has more than 1833 comments when it leaves the front page, my prediction would still be true, but that's no fun)

    324. Re:Another giant step backward... by TGK · · Score: 1

      Experiment to prove/disprove the existance of evolution:

      Step 1: Get a bunch of e Coli bacteria from a biological supply store.
      Step 2: Culture said e coli on a variety of media (sheeps blood, sugar, etc). Say... 20 cultures per media.
      Step 3: Take half of each media culture group and set it aside. These will be your control group.
      Step 4: Introduce small doses of antibiodics to the test (non-control) group, with doses incresing weekly. Dose each test-group culture once per week at the same time.
      Step 5: After 15 weeks have gone by you should now be dosing your test colonies with a pretty substantial antibiotic dosage. In week 16 dose both the test colonies and the control colonies with the week 15 dosage of antibiotics.

      Outcome 1: Both the test and control colonies die out at equal rates - if this outcome occurs we will fail to uphold the evolutionary hypothesis.

      Outcome 2: The test colonies die out at a much reduced rate from the control colonies. If this outcome occurs we will uphold the evolutionary hypothesis.

      Hint: Having done this experiment myself, guess which one happens?

      As for the big bang and the creation of the universe, science does not now not has it every claimed to adequately explain the very early universe. Things that happened before the big bang or what caused the big bang are not something that scientists are prepared to make reasonable conjectures about.

      We can extrapolate backwards from what we do know and suppose that the universe was created in a socking great explosion. What caused that... well... hard to say. For now, that's the realm of philosophers and theologins.

      If you really want to learn about this I recomend some of Steven Hawking's scholorly work... not his popular stuff, though that's a fun read. Be warned though, the math is more than a little intense.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    325. Re:Another giant step backward... by JohnFluxx · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Here's a question that I've never heard answered or even asked before..

      The people laughed at Noah building his boat, right? So ergo they knew where his boat was. Now the boat was big enough that there was no way that he could move it.

      Now I don't know how much water would be needed to float a boat that big, but lets say as small as 1 meter.

      Now if you were bad and evil and all that, and the water level started coming up to your waist, _and_ you knew where there was a boat.. wouldn't you try to hijack it? And there would be a fair number of people too.

    326. Re:Another giant step backward... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Actually In typical Hebrew faction there are THREE ... 1 In the beginning God Created the Heavens and the Earth.
      2. Seven days
      3. Man

      Hebrew narrative customarily goes from abstract to specific in order of importance and usually includes 3 versions ... Non-contradictory, but Generally duplicated.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    327. Re:Another giant step backward... by LovedByGod · · Score: 1

      Brother:

      Quote: "We do not know for certain, how long the days of creation were. Moses never specified if they were 24 hour days or not."

      Your problem is not with Moses, it is with God because He wrote it with His own finger:

      Exodus 20:11
      "For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the LORD blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it."

      God said six days plain and simple, six days as understood by Moses at the time of the Exodus from Egypt.

      God bless you and keep you

    328. Re:Another giant step backward... by Emetophobe · · Score: 1

      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?

      Thats what I've always wondered. According to Genesis, god created man on the 7th day, it fails to mention any dinosaurs that came before us. One reason I believe why the original writers of this story failed to mention dinosaurs, is because they had no knowledge of them at the time. Also, the possibility that they believed themselves to be the supreme race, why else would they state "God created man in his own image".

      Im my opinion, the bible is as believable as greek mythology. The bible has been translated so many times over 2000 years, it reminds me of the old game we used to play as little kids called broken telephone. Who's to say that they translated it correctly? Men have been putting women in their place for thousands of years (wrongfully), and of course in the bible, it was Eve who ate the apple and ruined it for everyone.

      Also in the bible, it states somewhere that incest is a sin. Ok, so how did Adam and Eve's kids have kids? If they were the original couple, their children would have had to have sex with each other to continue breeding more humans, and so forth. That is something that always bothered me. The bible is filled with so many hypocrisies, its hard to even dissect it and get one clear message.

      This is just my opinion, I have nothing against religious people, as long as they don't force their beliefs on me, I will return the favour.

    329. Re:Another giant step backward... by Golias · · Score: 1

      Exactly the sort of confirmation I was hoping to hear from somebody in your neck of the woods.

      Ain't the web grand? :)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    330. Re: Another giant step backward... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Presenting Intelligent Design [...] as an alternative alongside teaching evolution is perfectly OK. Teach the kids the conflicting theories, let them use thier own intellect to sort it out.

      Do you think schoolkiddies are adept at sorting out pseudoscience from the real science? Should we also teach them cold nuclear fusion, Alien Invasion Theory, Raelism, Scientology, Hindu cosmology, etc.?

      > The point is, teaching this theory is not advocating or prostheletizing any particular religions

      Intelligent Design 'theory' exists for the sole purpose of smuggling biblical creationism past the courts.

      Look at what the people on the Dover school board have actually said about it.

      > but at the same time, it is allowing for rational intellectual discussion.

      Since when is teaching logically flawed propaganda to schoolkiddies a rational intellectual discussion?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    331. Re:Another giant step backward... by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      28" 'Take the talent from him and give it to the one who has the ten talents. 29For everyone who has will be given more, and he will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even what he has will be taken from him. 30And throw that worthless servant outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.'

      I always found Christianity (and all other religions) to be thinly-vailed, convoluted and vicious set of excuses for the greedy in case they need to get muderous for profit.

    332. Re:Another giant step backward... by bflong · · Score: 2, Insightful

      no. we are in the 7th "day", the one he is resting from his massive creative works on. The saying one day is as a thousand years is just, well, a saying. It's meant to show that time is far, far diffrent for God. That makes sense concidering that time is only the way it is inside the universe, which is something God created. We could speculate about that for days.... :)

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    333. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both. My point being that the holy writ is a speck on the tip of an iceberg of detail.

    334. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A person who says he is a Christian is a Christian. "

      - This is wrong. Does everybody who says they are a programmer actually know how? Do all who call themselves skaters actually skateboard? People can lie about being a christian just like they can lie about anything else.

    335. Re:Another giant step backward... by misterpies · · Score: 1



      "However, most IDers look at it with something like Occam's Razor in mind - why would God introduce that much extra complexity to his creation process? If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort."

      Huh? In what sense is simply creating (for the sake of argument) a single cell and letting evolution chug along "wasted effort" compared to sitting down and individually designing every single lifeform (which also involves making sure the whole ecosphere meshes together properly)? I don't regard the latter as the simpler solution.

      And surely if you believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing God, you must accept that evolution is the only acceptable explanation for all the design flaws in living creatures. If God did it all personally, why did he include genetic diseases, cancer, myopia...

      On the other hand, if life on Earth was created by Magratheans, that might explain a lot.

      --
      The author of this post asserts his moral rights.
    336. Re:Another giant step backward... by Paladin128 · · Score: 1

      It isn't a scientific theory. It's a SWAG.

      I didn't say scientific theory. I said theory.

      Atheism is not a faith.

      To believe that there is no supernatural still takes belief. It still takes faith in one's beliefs.

      I'd imagine this is more due to pressure from theists than atheists. The theists want to repaint history with a brush that makes them look good.

      The crusades were just an example. This book went to much further lengths, such as not mentioning that the original pilgrims that settled in New England were largely Puritans seeking freedom from religious persecution, or the mention that Gregor Mendel was a Catholic monk. Or the role of Confucious in Chinese culture. There were plenty of good things done by religious organizations throughout the centuries, as well as bad.

      And no, the pressure was from atheists who were offended by thier children learning about religion.

      --
      Lex orandi, lex credendi.
    337. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely. The implementations are as flawed as the mortals implementing them.
      The Christ Himself, though...

    338. Re:Another giant step backward... by bani · · Score: 2, Insightful

      opposition to Middle Eastern and other states that are perceived to support terrorism

      Lollerskates!

      News flash:

      11 of the 19 hijackers were from Saudi Arabia

      The current administration and neocons are staunch supporters of Saudi Arabia.

      I guess we can just chalk it up to a "perception problem" then.

      If you want to go after states which support terrrorism, go after Saudi Arabia , not Iraq.

    339. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is: what evidence do you have for your view of creation? vs. What evidence do mainstream scientists have to support their view.

      The way I see it, the balance is

      1) strict interpretation of a few chapters of Genesis

      2) thousands of biologists, geologists, paleontologists, etc., etc., making tens or hundreds of thousands of careful *observations* about what is there in the world.

      That you believe #1 over #2 is what makes you a pathetic, bible-thumping idiot, instead of someone willing to accept reality.

    340. Re:Another giant step backward... by mikeswi · · Score: 1

      "Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils...where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old?"

      That's easy. Slartibartfast and crew buried those there when they were building the planet. :D

    341. Re: Another giant step backward... by Paladin128 · · Score: 1

      Since when is teaching logically flawed propaganda to schoolkiddies a rational intellectual discussion?

      Such was probably about 40% of the stuff I was taught in public high-school, as well as in my liberal arts classes. Subjective relativist crap.

      So, it's OK if atheists complain that thier kids have to hear someone mention God but it's not OK for Catholics to complain when the teachers tell them premarital sex and contraception are good things that they should be partaking in?

      --
      Lex orandi, lex credendi.
    342. Re:Another giant step backward... by corngrower · · Score: 1
      Regarding the creation myth in Genesis, it's completely unimportant to Judeo-Christian beliefs.

      Actually, this is incorrect theologically for many denominations. The idea of 'salvation through Jesus Christ' is based on the concept that man is in need of salvation. And this is based on the original sin of Adam and Eve. If they didn't exist, then no original sin, and no need for the salvation through Jesus Christ. Ooops.

      It may not be very important to typical Judeo-Chrisian believers, but without this, the whole theological basis of some of these denominations would be in need of a major overhaul.

    343. Re:Another giant step backward... by Golias · · Score: 1

      The place people get hung up on is that word "literal."

      Also, there's a lot of room for disagreement on what is literal and what is metaphor.

      Seeing as Genesis 1 and Genesis 2 cover a lot of the same ground, seemeingly contradicting each other on some factual details and even using a different word for "God," a lot of Christians have resolved this dissonance by accepting that the entire creation story is pretty much poetry and metaphor.

      To insist otherwise is to believe that what we call the "sky" is the result of God separating the oceans, and that night and day are not defined by being on the shady side of the Earth at any given moment, but are because of the physical separation which was created between darkness and light.

      Context is something which is frequently open to debate.

      One of my favorite examples of a translation dispute:

      "Thou Shalt Not Kill."

      Just about everybody understands that this is one of the Commandments... except some scholars have pointed out that ancient Hebrew had different words for "kill" (slaughter a living thing), and "murder" (maliciously kill another person), and the scriptures use the word which more closely translates to "murder."

      This nuance completely re-frames the debate for Christians in terms of everything from capital punishment to war to abortion to vegitarianism.

      And that's just a dispute over translation! When you get into the fuzzy world of deciphering context (both language context and cultural context), you raise even more areas where the "correct" reading is wide open to debate.

      For example, which Hebrew laws in Leviticus should a Christian adhere to, and which can be ignored?

      Almost no Christians wear tassles on their clothes, avoid eating bacon, or send their wives out in to the wilderness during "unclean" days, yet many Christians will condemn various perverse sexual behaviors based on the very same set of Hebrew laws, against the objections of more liberal churches.

      Some Christians interpret these disputed laws as mainly applying to the Nation of Israel at that specific time in history, and shrug much it off as laws which don't really apply to us... or worst case, laws which we will be forgiven for wrongly assuming to no longer apply.

      Other Christians adopt Hebrew laws which most Christians (including "literal" Bible believers) feel free to ignore. For example, the Seventh Day Adventists strictly keep the Hebrew Sabbath, while nearly all other Christians set aside Sunday, the day after the Sabbath, as their day for religious rites and congregating.

      As soon as you throw contextual interpretation into the mix, you are no longer accepting the Bible in a "literal" sense, and rather are making your own judgements on when the spirit and letter of the law are aligned and when they are not.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    344. Re:Another giant step backward... by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1



      Unfortunately, it wasn't big enough for the dinosaurs and unicorns.

      Big enough for elephants....but not for unicorns?

      Just how big do you think unicorns were supposed to be, anyway?

      (Also, there were plenty of small dinosaurs, you know...)

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    345. Re: Another giant step backward... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > So, it's OK if atheists complain that thier kids have to hear someone mention God but it's not OK for Catholics to complain when the teachers tell them premarital sex and contraception are good things that they should be partaking in?

      Who, precisely, is saying both of those things?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    346. Re:Another giant step backward... by GenSolo · · Score: 1

      Re: Two

      I personally subscribe to the idea that evolution in and of itself is plausible, however the spontaneous formation of life from the "primordial soup" that started the process seems like something cooked up by an infinite improbability drive. As such, I see no reason to consider "intelligent design"--that is to say, the idea that God created the universe and designed it in a way that produced humans through whatever process, including evolution--less likely than randomness as a first cause. Frankly, however it worked, spontaneous genesis of life violates accepted laws of biology (ie, all life comes from life and all cells come from cells), so why can't we all just agree that something very very unlikely happened, we don't know why it happened, but damnit we're glad it did?

    347. Re:Another giant step backward... by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort.

      An infinitely powerful being could have created everything at once in no time at all and be done with it. An infinitely powerful being would not have needed to rest after that. Yet that being supposedly did. We can therefore conclude that that either there are limits to this being's powers, or that this being had some other reason for doing things that way.

      In other words: an infinitely powerful being might use evolution for the same reason that that being took 6 whole days to finish its creation: because it felt like it.

    348. Re:Another giant step backward... by Zphbeeblbrox · · Score: 1

      Eh... you have been talking to the wrong creationists then. I for one don't believe the fossils have to be as old as you say they do for numerouse reasons. As for evolution as a tool I have just one question? Why? Why use it as tool when you can just create it all at once. You only need evolution as a tool if you believe the evidence points to evolution occuring. The point of the case in question is that some people don't think it does. Beat em on that and forget the whole side issue of evolution as a tool. It just distracts the issue.

      --
      If you see spelling or grammatical errors don't blame me. I tried to preview but IE here at work borked the CSS
    349. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or maybe (s)he DOES bequeath such smarts to his/her most ardent followers and you mistakenly identify his/her most ardent followers as ones that say they are.

    350. Re:Another giant step backward... by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      Teach the kids the conflicting theories, let them use thier own intellect to sort it out

      How about we just teach children that Christians, Muslims, Jews, Budhists, Hindus, Aboriginals, atheists, etcetera all disagree about which god, if any, there is, and what, if anything, he has commanded us to do, and then let those kids make up their own mind?

    351. Re:Another giant step backward... by ifwm · · Score: 2, Informative

      While I don't disagree, I could easily refute you by saying Hitler was from Austria.

      The fact that the origin of those terrorists was in Saudi Arabia is only relevant if they were supported by the kingdom. (I think they were, are, and will be in the future)

      By the way, I agree with your point.

    352. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Concerning TripMaster Monkey's issues with fundamentalists:

      ID has nothing to do with Creationism. Creationism (in the mainstream) has to do with believing the Bible as it's written (ie, the early chapters of Genesis being literal history, not allegory, etc). ID on the other hand, only says that the universe shows too much evidence of design to have not been designed; it does not speculate who or what that designer was/is, or when the designer did the designing (although most IDers tend to accept the multi-billion years age for the universe/earth).

      Concerning your issue about Creationist interpretation of fossils, it's extremely obvious you have no clue, whatsoever, of mainstream Creationist thinking. In short, in the beginning there was no death of animal/human life. With the introduction of sin (entropy) with the eating of the forbidden fruit (probably not an apple, but a now-extinct fruit), the whole cosmos changed, including the introduction of blood-sucking in mosquitos, the experimentation of eating meat (both animals and humans were vegetarian prior to "The Fall"), and thorns and thistles in the garden and front yard. Over the next 16 and a half centuries, conditions got really bad, and perhaps in a similar way to how humans are supposedly causing global catastrophe today via Global Warming, the environment eventually rebelled and the earth turned inside out (the fountains of the great deep opened), and vast quantities of water in the upper atmosphere or from space descended upon the earth; what we refer to as Noah's Flood. If such a global flood occurred, it would pretty much wipe out any evidence of the earlier world, and would have deposited vast amounts of sediment, burying billions of animals and plants in conditions ideal for fossilization (how many large groupings of animals, or even individuals, do you see being fossilized in normal conditions today?), in roughly the order from bottom-dwelling sea organisms to swimmers to shoreline critters to slow-moving reptiles to faster moving small mammals to higher-flying birds to more agile and smarter apes and humans. All this would have taken place in about a year, rather than 250 million years.

      The point is, your statement indicates complete ignorance of the typical Creation model in favor of a "straw-man", which I have only ever heard raised by anti-creationists, and never by a creationist.

      Your second point just seems to agree with the IDers; they're not saying that evolution did not occur; they're saying chance, random processes did not do it all.

    353. Re:Another giant step backward... by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      The original sin exists without Adam and Eve. The story of Adam and Eve is an allegory of why we need a relationship with God and the nature of that relationship. There isn't a cause-effect situation here, God was always there and a relationship to God was always important. Man would still need salvation and still be guilty of original sin without Adam and Eve.

      You're probably right about some sects, but these are outside mainstream Christian theology. I'd probably argue that they're cults that have broken off, their basic theology is heresy from the perspective of traditional Christian theology and has historically been persecuted as such. At the very least, they represent a schism like Catholocism and Protestantism, or Catholocism and Eastern Orthodox.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    354. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, sure. An omnipotent being can do that. But: Why bother making a world that doesn't look like you made it.

      If a world created six thousand years ago to look like it was formed billions of years ago is EXACTLY the same as one that actually was formed billions of years ago, you might as well treat it as one that was formed billions of years ago... at least you'll enjoy visiting natural history museums that way.

    355. Re:Another giant step backward... by Paladin128 · · Score: 1

      I have no problem with that. In fact, I found the best and most objective class I'd taken on world religions was by a very orthodox Catholic priest who is pursuing a PhD in History. In the class, there were Catholics, other Christians, Muslims, Hindus, Atheists, Buddists, and agnostics/athiests. All appeared to agree that he was fair and even-handed, and he did not preach in the classroom.

      --
      Lex orandi, lex credendi.
    356. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      JohnFluxx writes that "It's very funny to think that the neo conservatives go to war over oil - the compressed remains of million year old creatures".

      That's assuming the standard interpretation of oil production/chronology is correct. Creationists tend to believe that the oil reserves are the remains of billions of dead things that were rapidly buried in the Flood of Noah only about 4K years ago, and being under intense heat and pressure since then have turned into oil.

      That viewpoint is given some weight (though not proved) by the conversion of pig manure into crude oil in a 20-minute process. This article (http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/07/0 701_040702_pigoil.html) indicates that the process has been known for decades, but with lower crude oil prices wasn't economical to develop. Now that crude oil is around $50/barrel, they're looking it into again.

      The point is, it doesn't require millions of years to form oil; it just takes the right conditions. Whether the standard interpretation of millions of years or the Flood interpretation is the correct one will be left to the reader to decide. But at any rate, the "neo conservatives" are not being internally inconsistent, which is implied by your post; they're only inconsistent if they accept the standard interpretation of oil formation.

    357. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the "neo conservatives" went to war over oil, how come they didn't take over the oil fields in Operation Desert Storm? Or even the war with Iraq for that matter?

      And it is a common belief that it takes billions and billions of years to make oil or coal. Actually you can produce coalified wood under labratory conditions in only a matter of hours. And also if it takes millions of years for coal to form, why is it that people have been known to find necklaces, bells, soles of shoes, spark plugs etc, in coal seams? There has even been found a petrified tree trunk that runs through several layers of coal seams. So if we stop and think about what we are seeing, even the not so sharpest tool in the shed can come to the conclusion that it simply doesn't take that long to produce oil or coal.

    358. Re:Another giant step backward... by internic · · Score: 1
      really, why not lay out an experiment for me that can disprove the numerous theories put forth by evolutionists that try to explain what happened before the big bang (you know, I mean here we have essentially nothing or a tiny super-singularity but what was before. I've heard a half dozen theories but I don't see a discernable test for any of them.

      The theory of natural selection and Darwinian evolution doesn't have anything to do with the big bang. They're independant theories based upon mostly independant evidence. One could be true while the other is false. In any case, for the moment both seem to explain our observations pretty well. The question of what happened in the very early universe (strictly speaking this is not before the big bang, actually slightly after) is still open, but trying to figure out possible explanations and test them is what many many scientists are up to. For any scientist studying these issues, obtaining testable ideas is the ultimate goal. Reading some accounts of what's going on in Physics may not give you that impression, but's it's the truth.

      WMAP is probably one of the most recent and most successful attempts to directly measure evidence from the early universe, but experiments at RHIC and elsewhere are also probing the physics that would have been important at that point in time. These experiements are constantly giving us new data to help us understand the early universe and rule out many candidate theories about what might have been going on then. This is precisely the sort of thing that differentiates legitimate science from pseudoscience like intelligent design.

      --
      "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
    359. Re:Another giant step backward... by maladil · · Score: 1

      Do you mean to imply that every word of the Old and New testament were written by the "finger of God" rather than by men who were inspired by the Holy Spirit? Or just the tablets that Moses brought down from the mountain?

      In Genesis chapter 1 and Exodus 20, the original Hebrew the word for "Day" was "Yowm". The definition of "Yowm" was variable and derived by context. Here is a link to an online concordance that is worth looking at more than re-writing. http://bible.crosswalk.com/Lexicons/Hebrew/heb.cgi ?number=03117&version=nas

      The use of "Yowm" does not provide a clear cut definition for the period of time by rules of language, but if we use context, then it can be inferred as a 24 hour period,,, but who's to say?

    360. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did we get into talking about George Lucas? Score -1, Offtopic for that.

      Honestly, Slashdotters and their running jokes... ;-P

      (Score +0.5, Meta-humour?)

    361. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes, as a Christian, I think we would have been better off leaving the Old Testament to the Jewish people, and focusing on the New Testament as our entire bible. :)

      People take ancient stories as literal historical fact, when there are obvious problems with that. The exact events are lost in the mists of time - get over it. Personally, I believe in God absolutely, but don't understand him. I will never believe in Evolution until someone explains to me how reproductive systems evolved in higher life forms. If schools teach evolution to my children, I will tell them it's just one of the possible methods God used to develop life before he created man - no conflict, no denying my faith, as long as I look at Genesis in the correct light which is as a history retold, and reworked for thousands of years.

      Jesus never spoke about the age of the world. I figure I'll ask him in about 60 years. Hmm, is that all the time I have left! Better stop wasting time arguing evolution on SlashDot!!

    362. Re:Another giant step backward... by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      "Particle size does not produce the layering seen in the geologic record. (if it did we wouldn't see millions of layers with similar structure, but a few dozen layers with radically different composition)."

      Why not look at the experiments?

      http://www.answersingenesis.org/tj/v3/i1/laminatio n.asp

      "2) The is huge evidence that oil is made over a period of millions of year in nature. It is true that by using a process discovered in the last decade one can produce oil in hours. There is *zero* evidence that this is how nature did it."

      "3) No one is saying that it always takes a long time to petrify something. In fact, it is commonly known that under the right circumstances it is trivial to petrify things. One example of "the right circumstances" would be a global flood. If that had actually happened there would be millions of times more fossils than are actually found in the geologic record."

      How many would there be?

      "5) The uranus prediction is utter nonesense since it seems to predict any field. Plus, it's very amusing that he brags about being published in a "peer reviewed creation journal". Oh well, I suppose that's what you do with your memo after it's rejected by actual journals."

      Well, Humphreys gave a number range, and it was _within_ his, and it was NOT IN the range given by others. His ranges did not overlap theirs.

      "It's very amusing that the creationists think *they* understand science but that the entire scientific community has missed the boat"

      Except that you are separating creationists from scientists. There are many creationists who are scientists. One of the more influential in biology was Mendel, who showed that the genetic traits he discovered disproved evolution.

      The scientists you are referring to are going off of a priori assumptions of naturalism, and for naturalism to be true, there must have been long ages that have passed. But when you remove that assumption, you find that the interpretations of the data that give long ages were more a product of the assumption of naturalism than the only reasonable method of interpretation.

    363. Re:Another giant step backward... by q2bruiser · · Score: 1

      It is very interesting, to me, when intelligent people consider a great piece of software or a cool car and think of how wonderful it is "designed". However, the same consider a universe infinitely more complex and say, "it happenEd by chance".

      Call me a moron, and many will, but I cannot say it happened by chance.

    364. Re:Another giant step backward... by cheese_lord · · Score: 1

      Of course big oil companies and their cronies *cough* George W. Bush *cough* have never lied to us.

    365. Re:Another giant step backward... by joncue · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the point, my sarcasm must have gotten in the way. Let me spell it out for you.

      People from the midwest aren't a bunch of ignorant hicks. There are a few things that come out of the midwest that you may have heard of, automobiles and food, for example. Some of the most advanced manufacturing and farming techniques are developed in this area (those creative midwest hicks).

      The other irony I find with the previous statement is the sterotype of a certain group of people. I am inferring that this is coming from another person that thinks that anyone religous is a conservative hypocrite (ie: left winger). This is the same group that rails against any type of sterotype that they don't like, then turns around and really believes that they are being logical and making a valid point by using the very thing they claim to hate (again, the stereotype).

      I really thought that most people, even ones I don't agree with, were smart enough to know that there is diversity within every group. Yes, there are midwest hicks, and there are nutjobs living in every part of the country and world, but to pigeon hole and entire group of people because of their politcal and/or religious views is insane. I have heard on conservative radio that this stereotype was held by certain groups of people (before you start into a rant about conservative radio, I also listen to liberal radio to get both sides) but didn't believe it. Maybe there is some truth to the statement.

    366. Re:Another giant step backward... by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Please provide a definition of the terms so we may design this experiment:

      Define this "God" that is to be proved or disproved. What do you mean "God"? What are the charateristics of this entity? Describe it's abilities.

      This is one of the biggest problems with "God"...ask 50 people to define "God" you get 50 answers.

      I think its pretty easy to show that the "God" as depicted in the book commonly know as "The Bible" is not real, as the book itself is full of cntradictions, errors and outright falacies.

      So feel free to define what you mean by "God" and we can go forward with an experiment.

      Of course, I might be the Devil trying to lead you astray. Or God himself try to test you.

      Be careful.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    367. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to add.
      Second in size, after Roman Catholics, christianity is Orthodox Christianity (mostly Eastern Europe and Middle East). They do not believe that Bible is literal word of God, and they accept Evolution.

    368. Re:Another giant step backward... by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      The Christ Himself, though...

      Christ as presented to us is a whishful-thinking fantasy. I would concede that probably a real person existed who had attempted to improve the society by preaching tolerance and love of others ... and ended up with what George Bush would call a "catastrofic success". His (already somewhat naive and ill-thought-out) teachings were perverted and mis-used as soon as they left his mouth ... for the express purpose of doing things he so vehemently oposed. Sad case testimony to human naivete, stupidity, lust for power and greed.

    369. Re:Another giant step backward... by jbessie · · Score: 1

      That's pretty much the kind of post I would expect from an AC. I don't think my view is a "strict interpretation of a few chapters of Genesis". Perhaps if you read Genesis and then read what my view is you would have more substance to whatever anti-Christian agenda you are pushing.

    370. Re:Another giant step backward... by Golias · · Score: 1

      While I agree that many (not all... perhaps not even most) of the "non-denominational" Churches have a somewhat Pentacostal feel to them, I disagree that this is a backlash against modernism, nor a millenial thing.

      Most of the people I've meet from such strongly Charismatic groups are not typically millenialists. They live as if they are in the "End Times" because the apostles did the same thing. In their world-view, it's actually considered virtuous to operate under the assumption that the "end is nigh," even if it later turns out that it wasn't.

      Nor are they really anti-modernists. While they may embrace the mystical side of their faith more than most of us are used to in Western Civilization, and devote a greater part of their free time to prayer and worship than your typical once-a-week nominal church attendee, I would not consider their world-view any less "modern" than a Shinto follower in Japan or a faithful Roman Catholic.

      Also, I'm not convinced this is all that sudden of a phenomenon. The "Jesus freak" movement of the 60's was much the same, and shares a lot of traits with the prohibitionists of the 20s the revivalists of the 1890s, and the abolishionists of the 1850s.

      I think, like Communist/Socialist ideology, it's a meme which doesn't really go away, so much as skips a generation or two now and then.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    371. Re:Another giant step backward... by Jookey · · Score: 1

      I've asked creationists this question, and they've actually replied that they were placed here by God to test our faith.

      I have heared this argument before. I simply reply that science does not investigate the way the universe is. Sience investigates the way the universe appeares to be.

      This thread is about ID. ID is not a religious theory. It is a scientific theory, albiet one with a wholesale lack of evidence. School boards should simply be informed that there is no experimental evidence for ID and it shouldent be taught untill some is found. They did not teach special relativity in grade school in 1905. They waited untill there was experimental verification. Similarly they should wait for experimental verification of ID until it is taught in school(which they will probably never find since it is a pece of crap theory).

    372. Re:Another giant step backward... by nacturation · · Score: 1

      Ok, fine. Lay out for me some experiment I can do in which one of the possible outcomes disproves the existance of God...

      Oh joy... another "please prove the negative" request. I will disprove God as soon as you disprove that there is an invisible magical pink unicorn in orbit around the Earth. Can't see it? Of course not -- it's invisible! Nothing can detect it, but it's there. Can you disprove it? I look forward to hearing of the details of your experiment.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    373. Re:Another giant step backward... by Plankt0n · · Score: 1

      I think you are both correct. Saudi is worse in many ways than the others because they play both sides. And lie about it. (I am a conservative who questions the motivations of our ties to Saudi. It seems to me that there should be someone telling Bush that the very appearance of an ethics violation counts as an ethics violation in the business world.))

    374. Re:Another giant step backward... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      If you're gonna quote the Bible, admit that you're not arguing against ID, you're attacking Christianity. The two are different (I know several ID people who are strongly anti-Christian, and a lot of Christians who don't like ID).
      The problem with that argument is that it's only the Christian fundamentalists that are trying to get ID into schools, and they're doing so in order to further their religious agenda.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    375. Re:Another giant step backward... by muonman · · Score: 1

      The grandparent got it right. The neocons are exploiting the ignorance of the fundamentalists. The neocons' power base is not that small, especially in financial terms, since it consists of 'Corporate America'.

      The way to tell who's exploiting whom is to see who gets the 'real' legislation. The fundamentalists get thrown crumbs, and the corporates get the real benefits. This school board crap is just one of the crumbs.

      The sad part of all this is that the fundamentalist foolishness would be seen as what it is and die a well deserved death, if their corporate buddies didn't manipulate the press to make it seem as though they had a real case, which attracts the non-fundamentalist ignorant to give them credence which can be exploited for neocon votes.

      --
      Anything NOT worth doing is NOT worth doing well...
    376. Re:Another giant step backward... by shawnseat · · Score: 1

      The assumption that rock melts at the same temperature now as then. If it ever moved anywhere near fast enough, the friction against the aesthenosphere would liquify the continents. (Hint: Young Earth Creationists SUCK at thermodynamics.)

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    377. Re:Another giant step backward... by MooseBoy · · Score: 1

      I can tell you I understand your absolute skepticism, but I do have a question to pose. If you think about it from the Bible believer's perspective for just a second... They believe that God created all there is in the universe, you may not believe it, but that is not a prerequisit for this. Ok, if you look at another form of creator, say an artist who does sculpture. (I will give you that this is a crude representation, but I think it helps explain their point of view). If the artist were to destroy his art when he finished for whatever reason, could you say the same of the artist as you said of the Bible believer's god? You may be dissappointed, even upset, with his decision to destroy the beautiful sculpture, but it is still the perogative of the artist to do so. As it is with the Bible believer's god, because it is his [god] creation [the universe] it is his [god] perogative to do as he pleases with the creation. They further their argument, a ridiculous complication when viewed by outsiders, by believe that their god is absolutely just, good, and loving.

    378. Re:Another giant step backward... by Tsu+Dho+Nimh · · Score: 1
      "An entire layered sediment canyon was created in 3 hours by the Mt. St. Helen's eruption."

      Actually, it was the sudden melting of the snowpack after an eruption the following year. What the excited creationists fail to mention is that all that erosion was done through LOOSE dirt and volcanic ash, not rock. The Toutle river was merely reclaiming its riverbed from the ash and landslides that clogged it, not cutting a whole new channel through meters of bedrock.

    379. Re:Another giant step backward... by bani · · Score: 1

      Also, gwb makes a lot of fuss about 'totalitarian' and 'undemocratic' regimes. Well, you dont get any more totalitarian and undemocratic than saudi arabia (except maybe north korea). Even iran and pakistan are sorta democratic now.

    380. Re:Another giant step backward... by Clod9 · · Score: 1
      > What Christian fundamentalists find so threatening about evolution is that a literal interpretation of the bible forbids it.

      I disagree with this statement. I think what Christian fundamentalists find so threatening about evolution is that, if it is true, then God can be rejected as unnecessary from the general worldview.

      The real threat, if I am a fundamentalist Christian (and I am), is not that I can be proven wrong somehow in MY belief; but that others, whose beliefs are still changing or not yet formed, can be convinced that God doesn't exist or is unimportant. Specifically, it is MY children for whom I am most afraid.

      If some atheistic professor in a liberal university wants to study fossils in a dry and distant land, and write many books about it, that's fine by me (as long as I don't have to waste too much of my tax money to pay for it). But if he wants to TEACH MY CHILDREN THAT I AM WRONG in my belief in God, I am categorically opposed to his activity and will not rest while he continues.

      My reaction is pretty much the same as that same atheistic professor's response is when the school board votes to require Bible study in his son's classroom. Neither reaction is unsurprising.

      If evolutionary theories were taught the same way gravity is taught (namely, by having the kids study the empirical facts), and if the Bible were brought into the classroom purely as literature, then neither side would have a problem. But we all know that both sides don't stop at these sensible boundaries. Give a fundie a chance to preach salvation, and he'll do it. Give an atheist a chance to tell the kids that Man evolved without any supernatural influence, and he'll do that, too.

      I know that ID is a sham. It's the same sham as the artist's conception of life among the early hominids seen in any textbook. They both seek to establish a worldview, without presenting any facts. Let's concentrate on teaching science, shall we, and not keep trying to undermine parents?

      BTW, I think Evolution is the single most important reason parents are resorting to homeschooling. The only problem for the atheists is that homeschooled children tend to tower academically over those who have gone to the public-school-factory-indoctrination institution. And the more shrill the argument over ID gets, the more you'll lose to the homeschools, and the more sharply divided America will continue to become. We really can't afford that as a nation. We need kids who can learn to compromise with opposing viewpoints, otherwise we're toast.

    381. Re:Another giant step backward... by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      The most ironic part about the flood killing in Noah's time is that such would conceivably be justification for abortion. I mean, the only logical basis for why God has any right to go about killing so many people is because he's their father and created them, so he has a right to destroy them. By that logic, a pregnant woman and the father created the fetus and therefore have a right to destroy it (include comments about the wicked acts of the unborn baby, as necessary--or "original sin" conceivably). If human life is so important, why is it okay for God to go about killing some and not saving others from harm? Oh well..

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    382. Re:Another giant step backward... by fbg111 · · Score: 1

      Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.

      Yes, but as you pointed out it casts significant doubt over the veracity of the bible, hence their problem with it. And if I may observe the obvious, the scientific method that allowed humanity to finally become something more than a bunch of stick-wielding, depth-perceiving, talking animals requires hypotheses and theories to be proved before being accepted as truth, rather than disproved before being accepted as untrue.

      --
      Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
    383. Re:Another giant step backward... by lspd · · Score: 1

      Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us? Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.

      The real problem is that religious fundamentalism doesn't allow for the idea that any one individual has a more complete understanding of god that any other individual. In ridding themselves of the pope, clergy, philosophical reflection, and religious tradition, they have made it impossible to view the bible as anything other than a literal document. If the creation story is false then it opens the possibility that anything in the bible might be false. If anything in the bible is false, then you need clergy to guide you into a full understanding of the bible.

      The insistence that creation absolutely must have happened as descibed in the bible is a fundamentalist issue, not a Christian one. The Catholic church, for example: "does not have an official position on whether various life forms developed over the course of time. However, it says that, if they did develop, then they did so under the impetus and guidance of God, and their ultimate creation must be ascribed to him."

    384. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems that you're thinking in terms of a bathtub being filled nice and gently.

      Instead, think in terms of the ark being built a couple of kilometers outside of town. You're in town, having a mint-julep breakfast on the porch, when all of a sudden a huge earthquake shakes the earth, and a few km up the road a 40-meter wide fountain of water breaks through the earth's crust and shoots into the sky about 6 or 40 km. A couple of minutes later water starts pouring from the sky in torrents. About this time you're beginning to think, "Hey, maybe Noah's onto something". So you gather your family and try to hustle them into the horse cart, and then realize the horses are so skittish they're uncontrollable, so you all start running toward Noah's. Assuming you can run at a decent speed for several kilometers, you should be at Noah's in about 30 minutes. Unfortunately, the usually ankle-deep creek running between town and Noah's is now about chest deep and charging down the channel furiously, along with great tree branches and the ocassional cow; that explains why you keep tripping over field mice and jack rabbits running for higher ground. After finding a way across the creek-cum-river, eventually you get to the ark, only to find the sheer walls covered in pitch and impossible to climb. You didn't think to bring a ladder or a grappling hook. The scaffolding is still largely in place, so you start scampering up on it, only to find the door sealed shut. The only windows are along the roof's center line, another 10 meters higher. Scaffolding reaches up that high, but not the section on which you're standing. So down you go, and then over to the section of scaffolding that reaches the roof. When you get close to the roof, you discover that the water pouring off the roof is torrential and prevents you from being able to get a foot/handhold. The ground shakes again, and half the scaffolding collapses. The ark shifts half a meter from the part of the scaffolding you're standing on, moving the wall of water pouring from the roof so that it hits your 12-year old kid who is one level lower, knocking him off the scaffolding to his death below. Your neighbor arrives about that time next to you, and pushes you out of the way to try climbing on board the ark. He makes it up, and makes it to the windows, only to find that they're battened down from inside. He knocks and screams, but over the noise of the flood, no one inside hears him, being too petrified at the sudden commotion to realize they might could pull a few stragglers in through the windows if they'd just go to the upper deck and check. The earth shakes again, shifting the ark; the neighbor loses his footing and gets washed over the side to his death, and your scaffolding collapses, plunging you to your death.

      Bummer. If you'd just paid attention to Noah before the crisis arrived instead of laughing at him because you'd never witnessed such a flood before, believing therefore that it "couldn't happen".

    385. Re:Another giant step backward... by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      Education isn't complete without a firm grounding in the economic theories of Karl Marx or the philosophy of Nietzsche either, but you don't see that being taught in high school.

      The point is: no education is complete, especially in high school. We have to pick and choose what to teach, so why not leave out something that causes political and religious conflict?

      It would be a much better use of time to teach kids rational thought, how to use a library, and how to question authority (without going off the deep end of discarding authority altogether).

    386. Re:Another giant step backward... by Sanction · · Score: 1

      You are aware that the second law of thermodynamics only applies to closed systems, and that the earth, receiving a constant stream of energy from the sun, is not a closed system? I fail to see what there is to debate.

      --
      Well I'm the doctor and I say you're dead, so shut up and take it like a man!
    387. Re:Another giant step backward... by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1
      Science never proves things! Math, geometry, logic, and maybe even religion prove things. But science just comes up with theories. True, you can't prove evolution without a control planet and another billion years. Neither can you prove gravity - how can you prove it won't stop tomorrow? How do you know there isn't some mass to which gravity doesn't apply? You can't prove anything in science, because you can't prove a negative, such as "There are no exceptions to this theory."

      I'd be hard pressed to define science better than you just did: "You've got evidence, and you can come up with theories to fit the evidence."

      Note that I'm using prove in the sense of "determine to be true," not in the sense of "test." Science does test things. But no matter how much it proves (tests) theories, it can never prove them true.

    388. Re:Another giant step backward... by arevos · · Score: 1

      You've hit the nail on the head. Creationism is no more a scientific theory than an the idea that an invisible magical pink unicorn orbits the earth. I believe that's what the GP post was trying to point out.

    389. Re:Another giant step backward... by mclaincausey · · Score: 1

      That oil might not be made of organic remains, it could have been formed from abiogenically during the primordial geological phases--which, if true, would also conflict with young earth creationism (or, as I like to call it, Willfull Stupidity).

      --
      (%i1) factor(777353);
      (%o1) 777353
    390. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The boat was closed up before the water started rising, so how could these people get on the boat to hijack it? Furthermore, since everyone has been sentenced to drown anyway, I'm guessing that "thou shalt not kill" provision was lifted for a while and anybody coming near the boat got a spear through the eye from above said boat. Furthermore, if God is bringing about a flood, maybe He gave everyone who considered hijacking a heart attack? That's too damn easy to explain.

    391. Re:Another giant step backward... by The_Lawn_Wranglers · · Score: 1

      Good Post. Let me first say that I believe in the literal interpretation of the Bible and find it disappointing that the Creationists you spoke to actually thought fossils "were placed here by God to test our faith". You did ask a good question though. What about all these fossils? First off, there aren't that many. If there were billions of years of evolution it should be easier to find some better proof. Only 0.0025% of ALL fossils found are vertebrates with more than a single bone. There has only been one Stegosaurus skull that has been found. Really? They (dinosaurs) dominated the earth for millions of years and we can only find one? There should be billions and billions of little Steggy heads in the dirt and we found one. The same is true for humans or the transitional 'things' between apes and humans? Where are they? No, the Lucy and Piltdown hoaxes don't count. And if there were billions of years of evolution, where are the links? You may be told in schools "there are links" but there aren't. If you do a little research on your own you can find this out. Evolutionists will agree that the lack of transitional fossils is troubling. Even in animals that are good at leaving fossils. For example, sea turtle and their shells. Shells leave good fossil records and there is NO evidence of any tweeners. No one animal (of the billions that should have lived) that is between the primitive reptiles and turtles. Why no evidence? Answer: They didn't evolve. Or what about the unmineralized ('unfossilized') dinosaur bones that have been found? Some of which even have blood cells in them. How are they 65 million years or more old? Answer: They're not. I disagree with Intelligent Design but lets clarify what it is. The 'intelligent design' movement is not so much attacking evolution as it is chance evolution (Naturalism). They have no real concern with the authority of the Bible regarding such matters as the global Flood, the original perfection of creation, the six days, and so on. They also believe in the billions of years of death and suffering before mankind appeared. All of which, of course, contradict the Bible. No one should believe in both Intelligent Design and in the Bible being 100% accurate. You are correct, "ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us". Here's another interesting problem for evolutionists. The moon currently 'drifts' away from the earth at 4 cm a year. Doesn't sound like much but, if the earth (and moon) are to really be 5 billion years old then it doesn't add up. At the current 4cm/yr drift the moon and the Earth would have been in physical contact 1.4 billion years ago.

    392. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      And therein lies one of my biggest problems with current Christian dogma. Two centuries ago, the Bible was the literal, unvarnished word of God. The Puritans were not children, with "small minds", they were mature, thinking adults, and for them, the Bible was true.
      That's not true! In fact, the Puritan interpretation of the Bible was no "literal unvarnised word of God". I dont know where you got this assumption, but it's false. I am working on reading The Puritan Papers, and in their own words they do not believe in the literal truth of the Bible like you might conject. For example, the Anglican church regarded various portions of the Bible to literally demand that women be subservent, however, for Puritans, the role of women was far more revered, which was extrapolated from scriptural treatment of Mary.

      Now, you're telling me that my Biblical teachings shouldn't have ended at childhood, that I should look beyond the actual words of the Bible for some other meaning.
      No, no. I am not telling you that. Sunday-school is primarily teaching the bible stories, which are undisguised parable. They actually say in the text "This is the parable of XXYY". This is the childish teaching I am talking about. The parable is a method to illustrate. But the parable is not the message, the message is the message.

      Twenty years of that can be classified as "not childhood". I make this point, not to applaud my age or my learning, but to point out that just because I reference Sunday school doesn't mean that was the end of my study.
      I am not suggesting it was. If you are creationist by passion and true belief, great, good for you. However, many creationists are so because they think they should believe in the literal truth of the Old Testament. For some demoninations, this is the teaching. For others, the creation story was taught out of nothing more than tradition. Let me give you a real example. The Catholic church has taught the creation story since the earliest days of the church, however, as far back as 400AD there are recorded discussions that the creation story is a parable, like many others. During the Nicean Council it was almost left out of the bible proper. It was kept however because it was instructive, but not because there was evidence of divine inspiration. Unlike the divinely inspired books, Genesis's origins are not traced back to an author, and no inspiration is attached.

      So whats the point? It depends on your faith and your denominations teachings. You assume that 200 or 300 years ago people had uniform Christian beliefs, and this patently false!

      Unless you're willing to tell me that the people who put the Bible together were wrong, in either the scope of their endeavor, or the reasons for it, stating that the opening of Genesis was intended for children is, if you'll forgive me, a bit simple minded.
      No, it's not intended for children! The bible story version of it, with big colorful arks and animals lining up and moses smiling and leading everyone onto the boat, and the bit about theres always hope and God always forgives and the super-happy depicition of it clearly is. It's a retelling of Gensis.

      Nope, not buying it. I'll accept that the stories themselves, in their unwritten, oral tradition, were intended as allegories and cautionary tales. But the Bible itself was created to reflect the word of God, not fables, not children's stories.
      That is patently false. You need to research the Bible. The Bible is a collection of various books. Some of the books are works of history, written by the fathers of the faith. The New Testament is largely the depiction of the life of Christ, mostly told by contemporaries. The Old Testament is made up of civil law - the Law or penetauch - the History - Macabbes I & II, - and letters between the tribes of the Chosen people.

    393. Re:Another giant step backward... by Vaughn+Anderson · · Score: 1
      ...the second law of thermodynamics only applies to closed systems,

      "Thermal entropy is a measure of the amount of thermal energy in a closed system that is not available to do work. Entropy can be measured in an open system, too, but this introduces additional variables and physical laws."

      http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/richard_car rier/entropy.html

      From a possible crazy person, but his explainations are in support of evolution...

      It seems you have not removed entropy from the discussion. Feel free to elaborate or prove the above comment as innacurate, but if you are to spend the effort please provide proof, as I am interested in learning, not merely believing.

    394. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Hebrew word is "yom", and just like the English word "day" can mean a literal solar period (approx 24 hours) or a period of time, like bflong says. The meaning is determined by context.

      There are several grammatical reasons for believing the word refers to a normal day in Genesis 1, and with it meaning "period" in Genesis 2:4. I won't go into those reasons (anyone interested can find the info on the web); I'm just saying that bflong is incorrect when he implies that the word as used in Genesis always refers to a "time period" rather than a literal day.

      As far as there being no way to count days without a visible sun and moon, that is also incorrect. All that was needed was a period of dark (evening) and a period of light (morning), which were established three days before the greater and lesser lights (which we assume to be the sun and moon) were created.

      As far as people thinking the Bible claims the earth to have been created in 6 days goes, Moses seemed to have believed that (Ex 20:11), as did Jesus, as he claimed that Adam and Eve were created at the beginning of Creation, not 12.99 billion years later (Matt 19:4). A few million years of death and violence also does damage to the Biblical concept of death and violence being the result of Adam's sin, and of everything being "very good" prior to that sin. It forces God to be proclaiming millions of years of hard life and struggle and disease and carnivorism as being "very good". If you just read the Bible, and don't try to marry it to any preconcieved notions, I believe you'll find that it claims the cosmos to only be a few thousand years old. That may or may not conflict with modern science (and most will claim it does conflict), but that's what the Bible teaches if you just take it at face value.

    395. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that according to the bible everyone who is born is a creation of God, our children do not belong to us, however God does have a legitmate claim over all of his creation hence the reason we do not have the right to destroy what belongs to God, I know we kill animals, plants, but since God created it all he certainly had the "right" to give us dominion over all the earth.

    396. Re:Another giant step backward... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      People who believe in religion out of fear are operating at the lowest levels of spirtuality.

      When raising children, for example, you go through phases of education. When the child is small, base training is how the child is taught. Go near the hot fire, you smack them on the behind and tell them loudly and scarily, "NO!". When the child is older you teach them about heat, and what burning is, and what it will do to you. You help them to hone their natural defenses. Recognize that pain should be avoided. As they reach maturity, you help them realize that pain is not the punishment, but the warning.

      People who act religiously out of fear are afraid (often literally) of the fire.

    397. Re:Another giant step backward... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Who says the relationship is linear? Who says they were originally together anyway?

      The geologic evidence does. You can date the rocks from the ocean floor on either side of the ridge. You can also observe the alternating pattern of magnetic field reversals preserved in the rocks. You can find fossils from the same species on South America and Africa.

      The Americas *were* once joined with Europe and Africa, and it *has* taken millions of years to reach their current positions.

    398. Re:Another giant step backward... by Filmwatcher888 · · Score: 1
      Too bad your linked article says nothing about Islam's "convert or die" aggression. The Muslim and Moorish conquerors wanted territories, just like the Europeaners did. But the Islamic forces did not hide their desires behind religion like the West did.

      As a matter of fact, the quoted articles speaks of the Muslims allowing pilgrims into their lands, and even the allowed recontruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. The article doesn't mention the fact that Jews still lived in Jeruselem as well. Islam, at its heart, teaches tolerance for "Brothers of the Book".

    399. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honestly did you ever read the Bible? Slashdot is filled with people who like to make claims about articles and books they've never read, don't be one of them. Read it for yourself and decide, don't take other peoples word for it.

    400. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's more like, a couple of thousand years later he suddenly goes, "Hey buddy, fuck you! You didn't listen to me, so you don't get to be this good anymore!"

    401. Re:Another giant step backward... by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      Where do you live, anyway?

      Let's break it down, shall we?

      Catholics: Do not believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God. Believe in Evolution.


      Though correct, not accurate. If you think of "literal" in the sense of the fundamentalist way of thinking about things, you're right. Catholics are a bit fuzzier in their thinking than this. The Christian Bible is good for instructions, historically accurate, but must be understood in the light of faith, the mystery of the cross, and tradition. Within this context, Evolution is understood much in the same way that Higher Criticism is (Pius XII). If it's not useful for faith, it's worthless.

      Lutherans (all major Synods in America): Do not believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God. Believe in Evolution.

      Episocpals: Do not believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God. Believe in Evolution.


      There are VERY conservative branches of both of these Churches. Though, their conservative elements tend not to be Fundamentalist, as in acceptance of the "Fundamentals of Faith", they CAN be just a Biblical literalist as a run of the mill fundamentalist. Though in the States, the Episcopalians have a LARGE liberal faction.

      Methodists: Do believe that the entire Bible is the literal word of God, but most do not believe that Evolution contradicts it.

      Wrong. Depends on the Methodists and seminary. I think only about 20% of Methodists consider themselves liberal, where the remaining 80% is split 40/40 between the moderates and conservatives. Methodists have a fairly strong Fundamentalist element (as in the dictionary definition of Fundamentalism which includes biblical literalism), though the Higher Critics are tolerated within the church, barely.

      Baptists: Mostly believe that the Bible is the literal word of God. Most (not all) Baptist denominations consider Evolution to be contrary to their beliefs.

      Along with pretty much anyone else out of the pietist/revivalist/holiness movement do.

      I think I hit most of the major ones.

      Presbyterians (very similar in make up and belief to methodist), the entire "back to the word of God" non-denominational movement (which is getting quite strong with the youth), all the sub-branches of the holiness movement (AME, Assembly of God).

      I think you'd be really surprised by the number of people who are Fundamentalist. You have to understand, most Fundamentalist aren't like the ones on TV. They're "normal", they're your bosses, they run your favorite cafe, they don't go around scaring people and are just as annoyed at the screaming preacher on the corner as you are. Many of them, just don't believe in Evolution, but that's irrelevant, because there are starving people to feed.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    402. Re:Another giant step backward... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Intelligent Design is just as "scientific" as evolution.

      Wrongo. Please describe how one can objectively determine whether something has been designed or not. Please explain the mechanism that the designer used. Please explain how the concept of ID could be disproved.

      Evolution has 150 years of painstaking research behind it. ID has some people saying, "Things are too complex. There must have been a designer."

      You've got evidence, and you can come up with theories to fit the evidence, but in no way can you prove it without a control planet and another billion years.

      You can't *prove* a scientific theory. Any of them. A theory is the best you ever have.

      Personally, I don't think that public schools should teach any origin theories. Kids don't need it.

      Except that the theory of evolution underlies all of modern biology and genetics.

    403. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RobbieGee claims that "Evolution WORKS, this cannot be disputed."

      But that's the whole point of ID; they (and other non-evolutionists) dispute that claim. To prevent an open hearing of their case simply because you can't imagine your beliefs to be disputable is rather arrogant.

    404. Re:Another giant step backward... by zardo · · Score: 2
      Evolution has just become a way for the atheists to indoctrinate kids. Not that the theory is bullshit, just that the science teacher out there will harness it to preach their own anti-religion gospel.

      I was thinking the other day, I'm not a religious person, haven't been to church since I was about 16, but I really want to show off my backyard kitchen to the folks in the neighborhood. Should I start "the church of showing off cool stuff you made in your spare time"? I was thinking if enough people joined, we could collaborate, like the electricians give wiring advice. Damn, what I really want is a structural engineer to help me remove the support column in the basement so I can fit a pool table down there. :(

      Does such a thing already exist?

    405. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      "Try reading the Bible, it's not that hard."

      I have read the Bible, some parts many times. While I agree that the reading isn't all that difficult, I keep coming to different conclusions about what it says from those of the believers.

      Examples off the top of my head are that in the Adam and Eve story, the Snake tells the truth and God or God(s) lied. Jacob wrestled God, not an angel, and was kicking his ass until God cheated and hit him in the crotch. God tells his people to sacrifice their first born children to him in Exodus and confirms that he did this in Ezekiel.

      Christians always tell me that I should not interpret these plain statements in the Book as literal. I see no reason not to.

    406. Re:Another giant step backward... by nathan118 · · Score: 1

      It doesn't really matter what you think. According to the bible, belief in Christ is all that's needed for salvation. In case you've lost touch with your Sunday school days, just read John 3:16. Yes, it really is that simple. That is the "true essence" of being a "Christian." Then again, that's just a label, so who gives a flip. You either believe Jesus is the Son of God, he died for you, and rose again, or you don't. Doesn't matter what you call it, or how you define it. So continue running around yelling "you're not christian enough!!"

    407. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      "If you are neither a Roman Catholic nor a Fundamentalist, your lack of an "absolute" authority means that you are left to rely on your own judgement to decide what you believe, and given the deeply flawed nature of human judgement, that's a precarious position to be in."

      I disagree that lacking an absolute authority is problematic. I have always believed that I have a responsibility to be in the best position to make decisions for myself.

      I disagree also that Catholics and Fendamentalist Christians have absolute authorities. I think they both give lip service to absolute authorities, but, if you think about it, if they really believed in them, there would be no Protestants, just all Papa-loving Catholics.

    408. Re:Another giant step backward... by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1
      whishful-thinking fantasy
      I agree that this is one view, and, also, that if you can disprove the New Testament, that all His followers are wishful thinkers par excellance
      His (already somewhat naive and ill-thought-out) teachings were perverted and mis-used as soon as they left his mouth
      Genuinely curious as to your preferable model for behavior. Christianity (especially 1John) explicitly rejects the idea that it is a 'magic wand' for the individual; the derivative of sin w.r.t. time for the individual should be negative, but anyone claiming to achieve perfection while mortal is clearly not IAW REF(A).
      Sad case testimony to human naivete, stupidity, lust for power and greed.
      OK, the messengers are mortal (which I do not mean as a toss-off).
      OTOH, I like Tillich: "Man is existentially estranged from the essential goodness of creation in God's image", which isn't meaningful if you're assuming an atheistic position, I suppose.
      As I was trying to get at in my first post; without some sort of theistic model, i.e. a purely mechanical view of reality, I'm still not seeing the differnce between virtue and anarchy. The utilitarian argument seems weak; when the heart stops, so what?
      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    409. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution is a theory with no concrete proof of this being "corrent" .same is bible as any other religious book. we are not even certain about how many changes
      have been made in bible so far. but thats not the point. Now since both are theories why not let our offsprings find out whats true. we just cant eliminate one base on our "opinion"

    410. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bzzt! Wrong.

      It was only the "beasts of the field" and the "birds of the air" that Adam named, and probably only the "kinds" rather than species (generally, "kinds" are considered to be more broad than species; a dog/wolf/dingo ancestor would be a kind; a Great Dane or American Red Fox would be a species). This would still leave a substantial number (Henry Morris estimates 3000, which is 2/minute over a 24-hour period), but that's not quite such an insurmountable problem as the scenario you suggest. Add to that the concept that Adam's brain/mind was considerably more advanced than is ours today (as is suggested in Creationist thought), and the problem is lessened even further. Think Data of "Star Trek: The Next Generation", giving names as quickly as Q can produce animals, and you have a good idea that 24 hours is plenty of time to name 3000 animals.

    411. Re:Another giant step backward... by daVinci1980 · · Score: 1

      I don't hate religious people. I don't particularly care one way or the other whether someone believes in Jesus, Muhammed, the Dalai lama, or no holy man at all. What's important are good, tolerant people who are willing to use their brains. I am happy for you that you found happiness in Jesus. I truly am. I hope you can be happy for me that I don't require Jesus for validation in my life and my character. I know I'm being the best person I can be without an organization telling me so.

      But none of that is what this argument is about. This argument is about using public funding to further one's religious agenda. That is unacceptable in my (and the current courts') opinion. Evolution does not further anyone's religious agenda, it is religion agnostic. As are all valid scientific theories.

      --
      I currently have no clever signature witicism to add here.
    412. Re:Another giant step backward... by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      But there is no third party to say "hey, don't flood that planet... oops, too late, bad God." There is only God and his creation, so either we assume that the elements of his creation have moral validity (in which case I'm sure they'd mostly disagree with God's "right" to wipe them out), or they don't, in which case only God can have moral validity and the question of whether he does right or wrong is meaningless. If we additionally accept the validity of any moral structure apart from God's, we must then accept that God was wrong to kill so many people. If we don't accept such a structure then the entire argument becomes a tautology.

      However, that's kind of moot as it's a bad analogy. Artists generally don't want their sculptures to love them back. God, however, wants to not only have ultimate power of life or death over us but also to have us love him of our own free will. I'd say that these are more or less incompatible - if such a God exists, I'd recommend he visit a good shrink.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    413. Re:Another giant step backward... by LovedByGod · · Score: 1

      Exodus 31:18
      "And he gave unto Moses, when he had made an end of communing with him upon mount Sinai, two tables of testimony, tables of stone, written with the finger of God."

      The literal context of "Yowm" in Exodus 20:11 is a 24 hour day.

      God bless you and keep you.

    414. Re:Another giant step backward... by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      I'd hoped that the non-collapse of society in 2000, and again in 2001 (for those who can actually count), would've kicked this movement in the teeth; but it doesn't seem to have happened yet. Perhaps we'll have to wait until 2034 (i.e., 2000 years after the end of Jesus' "first coming").

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    415. Re:Another giant step backward... by TGK · · Score: 1

      You nailed it. Note your use of the word "magical." Science can prove the nautral, not the supernatural. Magic is, by definition, supernatural.

      So of course it can't disprove it. If you belive in the Unicorn and there's no experiment that can prove or disprove its existance then it is a matter of faith, not fact.

      The existance or non existance of the unicorn is irrelevant. But we can all agree that it oughtn't be treated as a fact and added to high school text books everywhere.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    416. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This "essense" can also be experienced by other social groups that believe in the same, faith based belief structure. Psychology of religion is quite enlightening. And I'll tell ya, the mere want of a better world for all who reside in it can also be a great "motivator". One that promotes peace without prejudice. One that realizes the injection of critical thought will provide better solutions and correct ill-gotten opinion. Not one that forces judgement merely because words in a book said I should.

    417. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      ""If you look at the original Hebrew, the word translated "day" in Genesis has the same meaning as if I said "In my fathers day, automobile fuel was 35 cents a gallon"."

      Have you looked at the "original Hebrew" version of Genesis?

      Have you ever known anyone who had looked at the "original Hebrew" version of Genesis?

      Can you point to any place where there exists an "original Hebrew" version of Genesis?

      I'll give you a hint, the word "Genesis" isn't Hebrew.

      Other than that, you might have a point.

    418. Re:Another giant step backward... by SamSim · · Score: 1

      Didn't say it didn't, just saying you've got to be careful.

    419. Re:Another giant step backward... by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1
      I know several ID people who are strongly anti-Christian
      I call bullshit. Name them (assuming they're published, on record as both pro-ID and anti-Christian).
      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    420. Re:Another giant step backward... by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Genuinely curious as to your preferable model for behavior.

      My view is that there are some basic rules and obligations for any intelligence operating among other intelligences which establish their mutual relationship. This view is based on a principle that all sentient beings have some inalienable basic "rights" in relation to others in the universe. The rest flows logically from there.

      Christianity attempts to address this issue, but it lacks internal logic and consistency (perheaps because it was concocted out of haphazard collection of pre-existing dogmas and beliefs). For example: one of the wisest and most beneficial elements of Christian teachings is the doctrine of "Do onto others as you would have them do onto you". In theory, it leads to societal support of all of its individuals and in vast majority of persons would also result in personal happiness.

      As I was trying to get at in my first post; without some sort of theistic model, i.e. a purely mechanical view of reality, I'm still not seeing the differnce between virtue and anarchy. The utilitarian argument seems weak; when the heart stops, so what?

      There are two separate issues here: one is the operation of society and individuals within. We are inherently wired to find certain things good for us and certain things objectionable. We form societies to make the good things happen to us more often then the bad ones. Simple logic and common sense should take it from there to sane rules of society. Mathematically speaking, mutual cooperation (aka commune) would be the optimal scenario ... if ... and only if.. all members of society were rational. Unfortunately this does not work that way because most are not and prefer to try to abuse others for gain. Utilitarian argument has a lot in common in some places with the Christan one, because I believe that in essence, Christ was attempting to perform this sort of social engineering project to make everyone better off. My hat off to him for trying but at the same time as we already know, the project failed rather spectacularly.

      As to "after-life", sicence is simply not qualified to answer certain questions, sometimes because they are simply posed incorrectly (such as "How kind is color Blue?"). This fact however does not render it somehow less potent and less applicable within its own domain. In short, the "explanatory" part of religion is fine in the realm of pure fantasy but as soon as it crosses into the realm of discoverable phenomena, it is toast.

    421. Re:Another giant step backward... by Bullfish · · Score: 1

      As a Canadian, I am glad we don't have kooks like creationists on the same scale. They are an oddity here. Far be it from me to tell people south of the border how to live (in spite of how the shrub and condominiumlisalisalisa go about things), but I would like to point out that this small vocal group are making you guys look and sound like a bunch of hillbillies.

      And Monkey, these kooks do not respond to reason. To them reason is the anti-religion.

    422. Re:Another giant step backward... by lionheart1327 · · Score: 1

      That's a great point and something that I always think about when people try to interpert the Bible literally.

      Accepting that God did dictate the Bible to Moses, think about it, was he going to say...

      "Well, you guys are a nomadic desert people who have just been freed from centuries of slavery and have no education or understanding of science to speak of, but I'm going to tell you how the universe works.

      First lets start off with atomic physics, molecules, then on to sub-atomic physics, quarks, leptons, quantum physics, string theory.

      After we're done with that I will start on the size and age of the universe, special and general relativity, extra solar systems, planet and solar formation.

      Oh yeah, and the Earth is 5 billion years old, here is the principle of evolution, genetics, bacteria, viruses, dinosaurs.

      Hey Moses, did you get all that?"

      Yeah, right! Their brains would have fried. So instead, God, being the super-smart deity that he is, wrote a book with a simple origin of the world and explanation of its laws also filled with good lessons to follow in the future. People will figure out the truth when they're ready for it anyway.

      So, God lied! Why? Because we weren't ready for the truth.

    423. Re:Another giant step backward... by dublin · · Score: 1

      the dissenting viewpoints aren't based in science. In fact, they're based on the very opposite of science - assuming something to be true first and then making the information fit.

      Actually, this description is at least as applicable to the evolutionists as it is the ID folks. A good article in this month's Science Against Evolution (which is an unbiased, science-only look at why evolution is not scientifically credible) makes the point: recent discoveries of non-decayed, non-fossilized organic tissue, including blood and blood vessels from T-Rex bones found in Montana, show the lengths scientists must go to to avoid the reasonable and logical question of the fossil's age, given the extreme unliklihood of blood surviving for 65 million years. The best and most reasonable explanation is that they're not that old, but that that's heresy to the church of evolutionary "science", and cannot not be tolerated, because that truth would threaten not science, but dogma.

      The pursuit of the truth must be made even-handedly and without bias. The simple fact is that neither Creation nor Evolution can be scientifically proven. Both theories seem to have a great deal of trouble with certain parts of the evidence, and reactionaries on both sides are way too quick to toss evidence that doesn't support thier view. In the end, though, the real evidence (not necessarily the prevailing interpretation of that evidence) is what reflects truth and reality, not wishful thinking.

      --
      "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
    424. Re:Another giant step backward... by dublin · · Score: 1

      Except for the gays, though, right? Boy howdy, all that stuff in Leviticus about unnatural sex sure does still apply!

      You hardly need to do that - the New Testament is not at all ambiguous on the subject - just of fthe top of my head, try reading Romans Chapter 1, from about verse 18 right through to the end of the chapter, IIRC...

      There are many other places where it's quite clear in the NT that homosexuality is unacceptable - there are a good many NT verses that make it very clear that "gay is not OK..." To claim that homosexuality is only mentioned and prohibited in the OT is just flat ignorant and wrong. Read before you spout off...

      --
      "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
    425. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow."
      -Ecclesiastes 1:18

      Point me to a passage that says otherwise.
      (And this passage is total crap!)

    426. Re:Another giant step backward... by rho · · Score: 1

      I'd like to see some links that prove macro evolution. I've never seen such proof myself, and it would be very eduational.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    427. Re:Another giant step backward... by shanen · · Score: 1
      Hmm... Hypocrite? No, I think they sincerely believe it, so it isn't hypocrisy per se.

      The basic problem is that the Bible is filled with logical inconsistencies, and the Bible thumpers can't actually be sure of anything. In the simplest logical terms, if you accept "A and ~A" are both true, then *ANYTHING* is true. Logic is part of reality, so the result is that the Bible thumpers have to selectively ignore or forget about various parts of the Bible.

      In conclusion, if the Bible really is the work of God, you have to conclude God is an idiot. The fundamental problem is that we now know how to encode and represent information reliably--but we have only developed the required mathematics of information theory fairly recently. Therefore, the Bible could have used information theoretic principles to avoid problems in the transmission of God's message. It doesn't matter that the Bible was written before we humans knew how to do this. If you insist God is intelligent, then he would already know information theory and would have used it to avoid the kind of problems we see now--including the abuse of "His word" to support all manner of contradictory positions.

      One more thing. The standard of historical scholarship in the Bible is really appalling. It's not like an omniscient God would have needed any fact checkers.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    428. Re:Another giant step backward... by dublin · · Score: 1

      The geologic evidence does. You can date the rocks from the ocean floor on either side of the ridge. You can also observe the alternating pattern of magnetic field reversals preserved in the rocks. You can find fossils from the same species on South America and Africa.

      The Americas *were* once joined with Europe and Africa, and it *has* taken millions of years to reach their current positions.


      You make two assertions in your last sentence. The first is a "possibly, even probably", based on the evidence, the second is conjecture. Creationists would argue that those many layers were produced in a great global catastrophe (a flood). (BTW - Have you noticed that if you're a scientist, you're free to posit any sort of large-scale catastrophe you like to help explain teh cataclysmic extintions in the fossil record - Supernovae, giant meteorites, etc, so long as it's not a flood?)

      And niether theory has good answers for some very large-scale effects that do exist: like the thousands of square miles of sedimentary layers that were somehow "flipped over" *intact* to produce a mirror image with the seabed in the middle. (There are a lot of areas like this that are ignored by evolutionists becaue the answers only make things worse - things like giant fossils that make no sense unless ancient earth was *very* different from the wildest imaginings of evolutionists.) Science cannot adequately explain origins at this time, and any claim to the contrary is based on a dogmatic need to disprove the existence of God.

      --
      "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
    429. Re:Another giant step backward... by jfruhlinger · · Score: 1

      I'm not unaware of this -- I have read both Old and New Testaments -- but not being a Christian or a religious Jew, I don't feel bound by either. But the people you see picketing the funerals of people who have died of AIDS and such always seem to pick the Leviticus citation to put under "GOD HATES FAGS" in their signs.

      Honestly, my point still stands: people who claim to be driven by religious motives to change government policies are much more fervant in their moves to ban things that they themselves know they'll never do. For instance, the NT is staggeringly specific on the issue of divorce. In Matt. 19:9, Jesus said, "I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for marital unfaithfulness, and marries another woman commits adultery." To the best of my knowledge, of the major Christian denominations in the US today, only the Catholic Church follows this particular verse to the letter, and even the Catholics have not anytime recently tried to remove divorce as a legal avenue for dissolving a civil marriage in this country. Yet the number of civil divorces is I'm sure an order of magnitude greater than the potential number of gay marriages. So why is exactly zero serious effort Christian being put into banning civil divorce? (Note that I'm talking about civil marriage and civil divorce. Any religious denomination is free to withhold religious approval from any marriage it doesn't approve of, as the Catholics routinely do for second marriages where the divorced spouse is still living.)

      jf

    430. Re:Another giant step backward... by rho · · Score: 1
      It's a fair question: we can't make observations of the past. Part of science is observation and testing, and we cannot test the past. We can observe the present, form theories about how things progressed, and then test what historical records we have to see how correct we are, but that's far from a sure thing.

      For example, you notice that rocks fall from the banks of a river as the banks erode. You can count the number of rocks in the river bottom and extrapolate how long that river has existed.

      Fine as far as it goes, but it doesn't account for a) rocks being washed downstream; b) rocks being washed in from upstream; c) meteors, or; d) kids chucking rocks for grins.

      There are several questions that evolution has yet to demonstrate itself as a solution. Information creation, for one. To be an evolutionist, you have to believe that you can turn a starfish into a man, and the mechanism for that is woefully incomplete. Gene transcription errors? The genome seems to show a capability for repairing errors as some experiments have shown. Mutations? Mutations are rarely beneficial, and have not in recorded experiments created meaningfuly new information--at least not that I've seen.

      Take bacteria. We can grow and rapidly generate bacteria generations, but we have yet to turn a non-flagellated bacteria into a flagellated one. Again, at least I have not seen such research. If you have a link, I'd be interested to see it. I've seen lots of experiments where devolution takes place--breeding the eyes out of cave fish, for example--but never where a jellyfish grows an eye.

      Finally, two things: the PBS "Evolution" series had the ring of propoganda to it. The thing that struck me from the series was the portrayal of Darwin and the "representative" Christian on the HMS Beagle. It was a laughably sarcastic farce, based on largely nothing but bias. Also, the mean-spirited response of evolutionists towards Christians doesn't inspire confidence in the strength of their arguments. Nobody argues against the existence of gravity--it's provable and observable--but when evolutionists (most of whom are simply so because they were taught that it was true beyond all doubt) resort to namecalling. Well, I'll just say ad hominem attacks might work on USENET, but only there.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    431. Re:Another giant step backward... by BetaJim · · Score: 1

      The point is: no education is complete, especially in high school. We have to pick and choose what to teach, so why not leave out something that causes political and religious conflict?

      I understand your point, and I would like for each student to have a good grounding in rational and skeptical thought. But I refuse to give in to the imbeciles trying to spread this nonsense. I'm sorry that some people's religious beliefs are so weak that they are threatened by science.

      In our technological society the spread of pseudoscience needs to held in check when ever possible. This kind of baloney is a real danger. If people believe nonsense like this, what else will they be susceptible to? I wish that "The Demon Haunted World" was required reading in every school...

      --

      "Drug related crime" is a misnomer, "prohibition related crime" is the more accurate and correct phrase.

    432. Re:Another giant step backward... by dublin · · Score: 1

      You can be a well educated Creationist, and if you are, you will recognize that the foundation of your faith in Creationism does not start and end at "because Gensis says so".

      Ultimately, as Cornelius van Til pointed out, everything will be determined by your presuppositions, though. For me, I've found that the world, including origins, makes much more sense from both a scientific and theological point of view, if that initial presupposition is that God exists. In fact, it was science, not religion, that led me to my current belief not only in creation, but a young earth. Tha data is wildly inconsistent, but overall, when approached with an open mind, I truly believe that it's easier to reconcile the known *facts* withteh idea that the earth is a few thousand years old than with the idea that it's billions of years old. Nevertheless, from a scientific point ovf view, it's a hash at best.

      As for belief - that's easier. You one really significant choice in this life - God exists, or He does not.

      If He does not, then if you are bold enough to be logically consistent and intellectually honest, you will necessarily reason to the point of the existentialists. This means there is no right, no wrong, not even any truth, and certainly no meaning. (Why not rape, kill, and steal, then? Why should it be wrong to harm others?) It also means there is no love, no care, no poetry - only the mindless interaction of randomly assembled chemicals.

      On the other hand, if He does exist, then we can see His love in each other and in His creation. Life has meaning, right is right, we have a place and a purpose. Good things can exist, because they flow from His goodness.

      In a very real way, this is the *only* choice we ever have. Make it well.

      --
      "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
    433. Re:Another giant step backward... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Let's see, you're hanging all this on someone because you infer that they're a "left winger". Then you apply your stereotype: they must think that anyone religious is a conservative hypocrite. You even go so deep into this complete hypocrisy as to say "the same group that rails against any type of sterotype that they don't like", then rail against their hypocrisy. It's so self-contradictory that it's recursive. And it ignores the entire point of my last post: the post to which you objected didn't just say "midwestern" derisively; it cited several other combinatorial factors to specify an especially pernicious brand of person, self-selected by many choices into a well-defined subculture. That you identify with it, based solely on your membership in a group that shares only one quality (AFAIK), says more about your membership in that ignorant, reactionary group than anything else we're writing in this thread.

      I don't think you can really claim that "cars" are a product of the "midwest". Detroit is hardly representative of Midwest culture, especially considering its large African-descended population. Detroit, like Chicago, is a coastal city, for more reasons than just the abundance of water: it's connected by the water to a vastly greater diversity of people and ideas than is the rest of the middle longitudes of the US. Because of that, it attracts the most enlightened and ambitious midwesterners (and other would-be cosmopolitans). This distinction is especially obvious when looking at the party voting in American counties last November: not just the oceans and Gulf are bluer, but also the lakes and even the rivers. That clear correlation has to do with accessibility of strangers, and strange ideas, without distrusting them as "outsiders" - and the ability to arrive as a stranger, departing the much more limited offerings of "inland" homogenous culture.

      The agriculture is similarly not claimable as a midwestern invention, except that it does draw most of its value from the tribes who developed the land and the crops in the midwest. Which the current inhabitants inherited from recent ancestors who killed most of those actual innovators, and are destroying the quality of both the product and the ecosystem that sustains it.

      So you are really leveraging your "midwestern" identity into ownership of a legacy created mainly by others. Including neighbors even less curious and open-minded than you are. You'd do well to abandon the constraints of that label, and just join the general American population. For better or worse, that's our true legacy.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    434. Re:Another giant step backward... by Python · · Score: 1
      My understanding of the fossal record seems to align itself with those scriptures, i.e., there are explosions of species and changes in those species, but hardly any links between the "kinds".

      With all due respect, that is because you really don't understand the fossil record. Transitionary forms, or "links between the kinds" as you put it, are common in the fossil record. So, to respond to your statement "This pretty much rules out reptiles evolving into mammals, etc, unless you can find a way to reconsile that" here are some cut and dry references that reconcile this non-dilema:

      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-transitional/p art1b.html#mammTransition from synapsid reptiles to mammals

      http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/birds/archae opteryx.htmlArchaeopteryx lithographica

      http://www.asa3.org/ASA/resources/Miller.htmlTaxon omy, Transitional Forms, and the Fossil Record

      Fossils are also VERY rare, which explains that even though its hard to find fossils (very hard) and yet transistionary forms are COMMON in the fossil record. Case closed on this, they are all over the place and cover all the "kinds".

      http://scienceviews.com/dinosaurs/fossilformation. htmlThe Formation of Fossils

      So, you on board now?

      --

      Python

    435. Re:Another giant step backward... by vistic · · Score: 0, Troll

      Hey I have only one problem with fundamentalists: that they exist. They certainly have a right to exist... I'm just saddened that they actually do.

    436. Re:Another giant step backward... by The_Lawn_Wranglers · · Score: 1

      What Hebrew word are you referring to? Did you actually research the meaning of this Hebrew word or are you regurgitating something someone told you?

      The Hebrew word for day used in Genesis 1 is 'yom'. Each time this word for day is used in Genesis 1 it is preceded by "the evening and the morning". These can be found at Genesis 1:5,8,13,19,23,31.

      Outside Genesis 1, "yom" is used 410 times, and each time it means an ordinary day. Why would Genesis 1 be the exception?

      There are other words in Hebrew such as olam or qedem that are suitable for communicating long periods of time.

    437. Re:Another giant step backward... by Random+Utinni · · Score: 1

      I believe the traditional reply at this point is: "Fine, fossils can form relatively quickly, but the rocks you find them in can't."

      Not being a geologist, I wouldn't know. Some of the geologists present care to elaborate?


      Well, from what I remember from undergrad at Cal, mummification can happen fairly quickly under the right conditions, but fossilization is a whole other story. Fossilization is the replacement of biological structures in bone with mineral deposits... the bone actually turns to stone. This takes some time... more than just a little while.

      More importantly, the real issue is how people who hold to Young-Earth Creationism deal with radioactive dating techniques. For example, with really old fossils, they use the decay of Potassium-40 to Argon-40... half-life of over a billion years, so it's easy to get accurate readings dating fossils at well over 6000yrs. Check http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/2437 /radiodte.htm

      If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort.


      I dunno... if you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, by definition nothing would be a waste of effort.
    438. Re:Another giant step backward... by eklitzke · · Score: 1

      Christianity isn't even the *dominant* religion on the planet, in terms of number of believers.

      Actually, it is

      --
      #include ".signature"
    439. Re:Another giant step backward... by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      My biggest problem with ID people is that at some point their arguments become little more than:

      "Because it's made of MAGIC!"

      I had a hard time believing that when I was 6.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
    440. Re:Another giant step backward... by dcam · · Score: 1

      This is GWB logic. If you aren't with me, you are a terrorist.

      --
      meh
    441. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A sculpture doesn't have feelings.

      Here is a question for you.

      Is it not wrong for a mother and father to kill their child?

    442. Re:Another giant step backward... by mmkkbb · · Score: 1

      Matthew 25:14-30

      true the talents mentioned don't literally mean what we use the term for today, but the meaning is fairly clear.

      ecclesiastes 1:18 is a common sentiment. how many times have you heard "ignorance is bliss"?

      --
      -mkb
    443. Re:Another giant step backward... by martinX · · Score: 1

      I know several ID people who are strongly anti-Christian

      I call bullshit. Name them (assuming they're published, on record as both pro-ID and anti-Christian).

      Fox Mulder. He knows Aliens created earthlings.

      Dana Scully might be another believer, too, but I think she's a waverer.

      --
      When they came for the communists, I said "He's next door. Take him away. Goddam commies."
    444. Re:Another giant step backward... by paiute · · Score: 1

      What causes the force, presumably 'gravitational waves', is a theory because their existence has not been proven yet.

      Ack! If they have not been proved to exist, then the existence of gravitational waves is a hypothesis. Not a theory. A theory is concrete, dented by bullets, uncracked.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    445. Re: Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The voices in his head. The ones that tell him to touch his peepee.

    446. Re:Another giant step backward... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      The first is a "possibly, even probably", based on the evidence, the second is conjecture.

      No, the second is a fact too. It has nothing to do with layers. It has to do with the age of the rock (igneous) on either side of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. There is also a pattern of magnetic field reversals preserved in the rock.

      And niether theory has good answers for some very large-scale effects that do exist: like the thousands of square miles of sedimentary layers that were somehow "flipped over" *intact* to produce a mirror image with the seabed in the middle

      Um, what? It's not difficult. Folding due to slow defomration of the crust.

      things like giant fossils that make no sense unless ancient earth was *very* different from the wildest imaginings of evolutionists.

      Example please.

    447. Re:Another giant step backward... by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
      I know Christians who think that evolution is the tool God used to create us. However, most IDers look at it with something like Occam's Razor in mind - why would God introduce that much extra complexity to his creation process? If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort.
      Which is more effort:
      • Create a set of physical laws that result in millions of species developing and evolving on their own, or
      • Design each one of those species seperately?
      If IDers think the second option is the one that best satisfies Occam's Razor, then I can only assume they understand Occam's Razor about as well as the understand evolution (ok, cheap shot, but the point remains).
    448. Re:Another giant step backward... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Jesus predicted in the Bible before he died on the cross

      Considering the earliest gospels weren't written until decades after Jesus' death, I don't find this "prediction" too convincing. :)

    449. Re:Another giant step backward... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      One of Jesus' commandments is to go into all the world and preach the gospel of Jesus Christ. if that is what we believe in then why shouldnt we have the right to teach ID with the same weight as evolution?

      Sigh. A) Because not everyone accepts the Bible as true and B) because ID is not a scientific theory.

    450. Re:Another giant step backward... by coaxial · · Score: 1

      I actually have the creationist answer to that. Back in the time of Noah, the continents were linked to form the super-continent Gwandanaland. When God sent the Flood, the amount of water held in the thick, cloud covered super oxygenated atmosphere (Think Venus, but liveable, and with tons of oxygen that for some reason enabled people to live for hundreds of years) could not provide enough water to cover the world, so the extra water had to come from somewhere. This secondary source was a vast underground aquifer, or an underground ocean as it were.

      The water also sprang forth from the ground, ripping the contentents apart and washing them to their current locations. The mid-Atlantic ridge is scar left from this ripping. So you see, just like the Grand Canyon, the mid-Atlantic ridge was actually formed in a matter of hours, not millions of years.

      They also went on to say that rain never fell until the Deluge. As proof they pointed out that most dinosaur tracks don't have imprints from raindrops in them. However one set of tracks does, which proves that it was formed during the Deluge.

      If dinosaurs existed as antediluvidian creatures, as opposed to be merely bones placed to test our faith, then the question begs to be asked, "Why did Noah think that 'Gather two of every animal' didn't apply to dinosaurs?"

      Honestly, I saw this on TCT a few years ago. It was quite entertaining.

    451. Re:Another giant step backward... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      I think what Christian fundamentalists find so threatening about evolution is that, if it is true, then God can be rejected as unnecessary from the general worldview.

      Oh rubbish. First off, evolution (defined as the change in heritable characteristics of a species over time) is true. We've watched it happen. Secondly, evolution and God are not mutually exclusive. How do you know God isn't using evolution to build His creation?

      But if he wants to TEACH MY CHILDREN THAT I AM WRONG in my belief in God

      Please cite any instance of any scientist doing such a thing.

      My reaction is pretty much the same as that same atheistic professor's response is when the school board votes to require Bible study in his son's classroom.

      Except the Constitution supports the professor in that case.

      We need kids who can learn to compromise with opposing viewpoints, otherwise we're toast.

      You can't compromise on scientific truth though. There's no compromise between Newton and Einstein. Newton's theory, when pushed to the extreme, turned out to be wrong. You don't hear physicists arguing for a compromise between viewpoints.

    452. Re:Another giant step backward... by coaxial · · Score: 1

      However, most IDers look at it with something like Occam's Razor in mind - why would God introduce that much extra complexity to his creation process? If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort

      Not if you look at the universe as an elaborate system. Then it becomes elegant, self-organizing, beautiful. The universe as God's lava lamp as it were.

      Very much a deist view, but I guess that's god I like. One who doesn't perform miracles, because miracles implied he had to hack the system, and change the laws of physics for some special case. If you have to do that, you've designed the system poorly, and a being of infinate power and knowledge wouldn't do that.

    453. Re:Another giant step backward... by Cutting_Crew · · Score: 1

      obviously we are not reading from the same Bible...most of the new testament was Jesus teaching parables, and preaching and teaching to his disciples.

      The Gospels we written by people living in Jesus' time. Matthew the first of the gospels was written by himself.. as he was one of Jesus' 12 Disciples.

      the 2nd gospel Mark was written by himself who was a confidant of Simon Peter, who as you recall if you actually read the Bible was also one of Jesus' 12 Disciples. It is well known that Mark got a lot of his writings of the book from Simon Peter and who none other than Simon Peter would have been the best resource of the real happenings of Jesus and his teachings?

      Luke, the 3rd gospel, written by himself also had close ties to Jesus...he writes the gospel according to most of what he got from Mary and also from his walkings with Jesus along with Paul on many occasions. He also records the walk to Emmaus, which was when he and some other walked with Jesus AFTER he had been resurrected, this shows that Jesus was still human even after being resurrected.

      The 4th gospel, John was also written by himself as he was an apostle of Jesus as well. Who more would be able to accurately account the walkings and preachings of Jesus as well as his teachings during his lifetime? He also is the author of the 3 Epistles and Revelation as John fleed to the Isle of Patmus.

      Every gospel were written by men that all had close ties with Jesus, 2 of which who were disciples and the other 2 who walked with Jesus because of their friendship with some of the Disciples and because of their first hand resources and accounts of which i have described above VERY briefly.

      are you telling me that these 4 gospels are not accurate or are you reading from the same BIble that i am reading from? or perhaps you really havent read it but merely at best glanced over it and made your own conclusions instead of studying the Word and really knowing the facts??

    454. Re:Another giant step backward... by 4d49434841454c · · Score: 1

      >
      >what about all these fossils?
      >

      Lets look at some of the fossils evolutionists have used to support their claims:

      "Neandethal Man": This famous skeleton found in France turned out to be the skeleton of and old man that suffered from severe arthritis.

      "Nebraska Man": Built up from a single tooth that was later found to be from an extinct pig.

      "Piltdown Man": The jawbone turned out to be from a modern ape.

      The fossil record does not support evolution and Darwin himself admitted this. Millions of transitional life forms would need to exist to prove the theory of evolution. However, not a single "missing link" has been found.

    455. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then again, many very intelligent people (including myself) like to hack things they have made, so maybe God would just want to do so, & therefore design the system to need hacks. The Bible says things were created "very good," not perfect as some people seem to think. Adam & Eve were immortal, but does that imply perfect? It says Satan will exist forever, but that does not imply that he is perfect.

    456. Re:Another giant step backward... by duffahtolla · · Score: 1

      From Mathew 25:

      "27Thou oughtest therefore to have put my money to the exchangers, and then at my coming I should have received mine own with usury"

      You cant get clearer than that. It isn't praising skills or intelligence. It is teaching that hording money is "wicked" and "slothful". and that the proper thing to do is give it to the "exchangers" and get some "usury".

      usury Pronunciation (yzh-r)
      n. pl. usuries
      1. The practice of lending money and charging the borrower interest, especially at an exorbitant or illegally high rate.
      2. An excessive or illegally high rate of interest charged on borrowed money.
      3. Archaic Interest charged or paid on a loan.

    457. Re:Another giant step backward... by arron_nz · · Score: 1
      The creation story is great for children! It is instructive about the nature of God, and can be easily understood by small minds.

      I don't see how evolution would be difficult to understand for young minds at a fundamental level either. In fact, understanding the creation story really goes hand in hand with a compliancy towards christianity. How could you possibly teach creation without a god involved? Sure you could teach ID without a god, but that would not be a great story for children.

      I've found that this is a creationist behaviour - making a completely irrelavant statement as some sort of excuse to teach the creation "story". Fact is, it's not a story, it's more of a brainwash.

      It's taken me 4 years to forget what I learned in my christian school upbringing which involved constant "spirituality" (read: creation) classes.

      Disclaimer: 15 y/o athiest

      --
      garble
    458. Re:Another giant step backward... by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

      The neocons' power base is not that small, especially in financial terms, since it consists of 'Corporate America'.

      No, the "neo-cons" does not consist of "Corporate America". I know it's a hot buzz-word these days but "neoconservative" has a meaning beyond "people who's politics I disagree with". There is a perfectly good term for "Corporate America": "Corporate America". "Neoconservative" are something entirely different. Very few neoconservatives are known for their corporate ties. They are almost entirely academics and intellectuals that cycle between various univeristies, think tanks and mid-level government positions. There are sympathetic businessmen that fund their think tanks and foundations but that makes them no more synonomous with "Corporate America" than Moveon.org is for being funded by George Soros.

      Neo-conservative traditionally refers to a particular group of formerly hard-left intellectualls that gradually moved to the right in their thinking from the early-60's to the mid-80's. Most were members of the Socialist or Communist parties. They grew disillusioned with communism: "Mugged by reality" as Irving Kristol (the classic example of a "neo-conservative" and the one who popularized the term) put it. They moved steadily rightward with various detours into Trotskyism, Schatmannism, the Social Democrats USA, Anti-communist Trade Unions and the Scoop Jackson wing of the Democratic party.

      It's a much more fascinating bit of history than the bland over-use of the term would suggest. It may also be a bit more instructive about their actual motivations and the potential dangers of the thinking than simplistic caricatures of *other* political movements misleadingly applied to people that are NOTHING like the caricature. In many ways they are still liberals (as any Paleo-con will quickly point out) They are *idealists* they still have the same utopian zeal that they brought to the Fourth Socialist International. *THAT* is what the danger is, NOT the venal corruption you are accusing them of. Sincerity and idealism are good things, but these guys have often gotten things very wrong in their zeal to bring about the liberal democratic world order they invision... getting things wrong on the scale that these guys are trying to operate is a very dangerous thing.

    459. Re:Another giant step backward... by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      As an athiest/agnostic (No matter what I read, the two terms still seem unclear in meaning. Am I unicorn-athiest or unicorn-agnostic?) I do wonder if anti-religion is a religion and can, or even should, teachers attempt to not have 'athiest' teachings, whatever that means.

      Hmm I'm going nowhere with this, so switching to your second point.. ;)

      I have thought about the latter quite a lot, and even spoke to some venture capitalists about ways to make such a thing economically viable. I was thinking the first step would be to run an evening class at a local school to teach kids about electronics etc.

      As for removing a support column - measure twice and cut once *grin*.

    460. Re:Another giant step backward... by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Yes, I've been told off by quite a few posts and I have to be honest that I used the word in ignorance.
      Serves me right for trying to use a word that I hear all the time but don't understand.
      Ignorance of the worst kind :(

    461. Re:Another giant step backward... by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

      Didn't notice someone made this very same post 8 hours before you?

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=148046&cid=124 08959

      Anyhow, the short version: Most popular by adherents today, yes. Dominant religion on the planet, no.

      --
      Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    462. Re:Another giant step backward... by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Hmm, it's a bit strange to hear this theory because most of the creationalist sites that I've seen tend to go to quite long lengths to argue that the flood was a local one - in a small area only - in order to solve other problems (where did the water go etc).

    463. Re:Another giant step backward... by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      "... the conflicts that exist between Genesis and scientific reality ..."
      The scientific process is not really in conflict with Christianity.
      The fossil record was mainly laid down by the flood in a very short timescale. Fossils do not form except under ideal conditions; oxygen must be removed, the organism must be buried in nutrient rich water more info....
      The fossil record also has a conspicuous lack of "missing links" more info....
      I could go on all day pointing out problems in other areas of science that raise no problems for a young earth and a literal interpretation of the bible.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    464. Re:Another giant step backward... by HuguesT · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Absolutely correct, compare Saudi Arabia with Iran, although Saudi Arabia had their very first elections last week.

    465. Re:Another giant step backward... by RobbieGee · · Score: 1

      Evolution works, i've run simulations on my own computer and there are algorithms using the principle of evolution to tweak values in use in systems today. Many games use a simplified version of these to tweak the difficulty automatically.

      Noone is preventing anyone an open hearing of intelligent design. What I am against is pushing a proven theory aside to something which has not been proven. Intelligent design provides a couple good arguments, but arguments are NOT proof! I'm not even sure that it is currently possible to prove that the universe was created in the way that's claimed, but until it is, it does not have any place in science.

      It is extremely hard to get a theory accepted as hard fact (or as hard a fact as science allows itself), and that is the way it should be. We've had thousands of years of doing it 'the other way' and it didn't work.

      --
      If you get this, we're 10 of a kind.
    466. Re:Another giant step backward... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      Um... God liked the pretty patterns?

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    467. Re:Another giant step backward... by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1
      Genuinely curious as to your preferable model for behavior.
      My view is that there are some basic rules and obligations for any intelligence operating among other intelligences which establish their mutual relationship.
      Christianity attempts to address this issue, but it lacks internal logic and consistency (perheaps because it was concocted out of haphazard collection of pre-existing dogmas and beliefs).
      I submit that, in either case, there is an assertion of a context for inter-relationship between intelligences, and at some point, every view engages in hand-waving, whether or not such is labeled 'faith'.
      The irony is that, the more you read what Jesus actually is recorded as saying, the less 'New' you see in the New Testament.
      Utilitarian argument has a lot in common in some places with the Christan one, because I believe that in essence, Christ was attempting to perform this sort of social engineering project to make everyone better off.
      Again, that is certainly a viewpoint, but I'd offer that some trees on the fringe may have been mistaken for the forest. :) The Good News excels this viewpoint by a couple of orders of magnitude, but I wear my bias on my sleeve.
      As to "after-life", sicence is simply not qualified to answer certain questions, sometimes because they are simply posed incorrectly (such as "How kind is color Blue?").
      My favorite question along these lines is, 'what preceded the Big Bang'.
      Science is about the implementation, the Bible is a requirements document. "After-life"? Yeah, I specialize in not being overly anxious about it. The two things I anticipate are:

      -Closure on these endless arguments

      -Unambiguous answers to questions I cannot fathom, like, from whence came the idea for transcendental numbers?

      Justice for all the lawyers and politicians may be briefly entertaining, as well.
      Calls for justice have to be handled cautiously, though. I think it's in Proverbs somewhere about "whoever digs a pit shall fall therein"...

      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    468. Re:Another giant step backward... by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      Of course I have, I grew up in an extremely strict Roman Catholic family. Why do you think I believe the Christian God to be such a fucking douchebag?

    469. Re:Another giant step backward... by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      God said to Abraham kill me a son
      Abe says, man, you must be puttin' me on
      God say no, Abe say what
      God say you can do what you want Abe
      But the next time you see me comin' you better run
      Abe says where do you want this killin' done
      God says out on Highway 61
      (with apologies to R. Zimmermann)

      I think this says it all about the fundamentalist fucktards.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    470. Re:Another giant step backward... by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      The scientific process is not really in conflict with Christianity.
      Didn't say it was. I said there are conflicts between Genesis and scientific reality. Notice that I didn't lump all of Christendom into that.

      Your theory about the flood creating all of the fossils is very limited, especially considering that the fossils in question are being found in multiple layers... if they were all laid from one event, they'd be at the same layer, or at least in clost proximity.

      Please feel free to site other problems in other areas of science that show that a young earth is viable. I'm truly interested. From my current perspective, the dinosaurs alone are reason to label the Noah story as myth, while you seem to perceive it as fact.

    471. Re:Another giant step backward... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      Have you noticed that if you're a scientist, you're free to posit any sort of large-scale catastrophe you like to help explain teh cataclysmic extintions in the fossil record - Supernovae, giant meteorites, etc, so long as it's not a flood?)


      No, you're allowed floods as well. You just have to explain:

      1. Where do the water come from?
      2. Where did it go afterwards?
      3. Where are the marks in the rock records to indicate it?

      Giant meteorites have some nice properties to them:

      1. They come from the sky. We know there's lot of big rocks out there - we can see them with telescopes.
      2. They leave impact craters, and boy the Earth has a few doozies. Roughly every large circular formation on the Earth is from a meteor impact (such as, oh, the Gulf of Mexico).
      3. A large enough meteor will quite literally set the air on fire - an exploding shockwave that burns up everything as it goes around the Earth only to rebound on the rest of the wave on the other side.
      4. "Smaller" (but still huge) meteors will simply throw several cubic kilometers of water (but _not_ enough for a Biblical Flood!) and dust into the atmosphere blocking off the sunlight for months. They'll also happily cause major volcanic eruptions from the tectonic shockwaves, adding more fun and games to the atmosphere.
      5. Both sort of impacts would leave distinctive marks in the rock layers (such as a really thin layer of iridium), which turn out to actually be there and be more or less uniformly distributed.

      Giant Floods don't have these characteristics. Scientists tend to need both a possible explanation and the evidence before they consider a theory as being potentially true.
      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    472. Re:Another giant step backward... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      If you presuppose an infinitely powerful being, evolution seems like so much wasted effort.


      So what? He's infinitely powerful, right? Maybe he needed to introduce that much complexity simply to make some element of challenge to it all.
      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    473. Re:Another giant step backward... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      If you look at the original Hebrew


      Which is exactly why a lot of fundamentalists focus on translations via prayer for added accuracy, and look rather disdainfully at those who go and ask the Jews for an English-Hebrew dictionary...
      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    474. Re:Another giant step backward... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      Except that Intelligent Design doesn't count as a theory. The trick with a theory is that you can use it to explain some of the evidence, then make predictions about what other types of evidence is out there so you can explain that to.

      Evolution counts as a theory because you can do this. Take, for example, the evolution of the sabre-tooth tiger. You can predict that the teeth evolved to penetrate tough hide, which was also evolving to be tougher. The fossil record bears this out. You can also predict that this cycle (sharper/longer teeth vs better armour) would probably play itself out a few times, and sure enough, the fossil record indicates that as well.

      Intelligent Design doesn't count as a theory because saying that "God made it like that" doesn't let you make predictions about the nature of future evidence.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    475. Re:Another giant step backward... by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      Well said. Thank you for the insight. I will certainly be following up on the books you refer to... they seem to present a picture of the Puritans I wasn't aware of.

      I have certainly read the Bible, several times. I admit that I haven't done much research into the individual books, other then those in the new testament and the Apocrypha.

      We've had a slight misunderstanding on one large point. I'm not a creationist, by any stretch. I'm not even Christian, though I have been baptised, and was raised in a Christian household. My issue with the Bible is exactly what you've brought up here, that it (to my thinking) can't be a literal work that accurately reflects the words of God. However, in the environment in which I was raised, and by the people at the church I attended, it was presented as such. In my dealings with the Christians around me in my life, many of them (not all) consider it as such. My problem with the "Intelligent Design" paradigm is that it seems to be trying to reshape the Bible, to restructure the dogma so that it can survive alongside current science. This strikes me as hypocritical.

      If any person today tried to re-define the ancient Greek godhead in such a manner that it might seem plausible alongside current science, they'd be a laughingstock. But because the ID crowd has the Bible as the centerpoint of their argument, they're taken seriously by far too many people.

    476. Re:Another giant step backward... by mmkkbb · · Score: 1

      Look at the 3rd definition. Read other translations and commentary and cross-references. This is a parable and you have missed the point.

      --
      -mkb
    477. Re:Another giant step backward... by joncue · · Score: 1

      First of all, I did not sterotype all left wingers as thinking that anyone religious is a conservative hypocrite. That deduction was made about a single person based on his/her comments on slashdot (and I say his/her because the post was anonymous, at least you used your username). So your first paragraph in the previous post I disregarded as an honest misunderstanding. If I wasn't clear on that, I apologize. I don't think anyone voting blue is an idiot. Many of my peers are liberal and we have some very good discussions. Obviously from my statements, I am right leaning, but not without thought. I have no problem being critical of a Republican.

      I did not ignore the point of your last post, he did sterotype an entire group. "Anyone else that voted for Bush is..." So he was talking about anyone else that voted for Bush. Furthermore, and I quote: "The middle or America is still in the middle ages if you evaluate based on what you find in the heads." This statement cleary states that the entire middle of America, ie: midwest, is ignorant. I don't know anyone here that wants to burn witches (which was also a claim he/she made). There are some wacko's here, and ours tend to be right wingers. A lot of people here belive the exact same thing about the coasts, a bunch of out of control left wing wackos, which do tend to be in the major metropolitan area. I don't subscribe to this particular way of thinking, and believe, from experience, that the wackos in those areas tend to be left wing wackos, but most of the people in those areas are NOT ignorant left wing nutjobs.

      I happen to work in the automotive industry and, although there is a lot in Detroit, most of the assembly plants are no longer located there. The entire GMT800 platform (full size trucks) are built in the midwest. Janesville, WI, Oklahoma City, OK, and Mishawaka, IN are not exactly Detroit. There are also many automotive plants in Ohio, Kentucky, et al.

      I never claimed that agriculture was a Midwestern invention. What has been done in the midwest, however, is maximizing what can be done on a small piece of land. I noticed in your remarks that you think the current farmers are destroying the quality of the product and the ecosystem. While I am not an agricultural expert, it seems to me that they are doing more work with less land, and many farms are being turned into housing developments because of the overcapacity that the innovations made in farming have created. So there is less land being used for farming, and more land being used by people for living, I am confused as to how that is destroying the ecosystem.

      Another observation I have made in this particular thread is that, so far, I have been called "closed minded", ignorant, and asshole to name a few (your's was not the asshole comment). I have not resorted to name calling (unless you consider "left winger" name calling, but I figured the guy/girl would be proud of that particular label) and have only debated with facts and my conclusions given the information. You have stuck, for the most part, to facts and your opinion, with only a couple of cheap shots. Why is that.

      I really do enjoy intelligent discussion, but the person that started with the ingorant midwestern crap really was out of line. I think even you would admit that there are intelligent people and stupid people everywhere.

    478. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks Trip! You are not too far off! And I am a pastor!!! (one that actually graduated from Seminary instead of the Homer Simpson internet variety!) heh

      I believe that even randomness can have a purpose and design..yep even fractles are a form of design and beautiful in thier own way..and God is "big enough" to handle evolution etc....

      The thing that anyone reading the bible must understand that Genesis was written to explain why and who....not how...if peple could just grasp that fact then they could realize the purpose behind creation....and te answer was not to explain how! heh.

      argonhollums@gmail.com (---I'm not too much of a coward...just lazy!)

    479. Re:Another giant step backward... by duffahtolla · · Score: 1

      3. Archaic Interest charged or paid on a loan. God wants you to load money and charge interest. I thought that was clear. This is how you "reap what you have not sowed" What have I missed?

    480. Re:Another giant step backward... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      "Matthew Shepherd Burn In Hell" is a product of Midwestern innovation. The automotive and agricultural industries' innovations are not - they're invented in Detroit and at coastal research/marketing centers. Of course the culture of hundreds of millions of Americans doesn't reduce to a pair of arbitrary signals. And of course there are smart midwesterners and dumb coasters. There is, however, a real difference in coastal/landlocked culture in this country. People on the coasts welcome novelty more than people inland, who tend to fear it. That is reflected in fear of foreigners, fear of newly expressive members of society (gays, women, minorities), and even technical innovations. The nature of that fear, and the repression it's built on and leads to, is largely denial, so its practitioners often don't accept that they're even practicing it.

      Coastal people have more sources of enlightenment than evangelicals telling them "what god really meant was...". The flow of people seeking enlightenment (at university, or nightclub) is largely from the midwest to the coasts - the enlightenment doesn't flow back nearly as much. Learning how to think, rather than what to think, is more distinctive of coastal than inland culture. There are, of course, plenty of exceptions (including inlanders who've returned from satisfying stays on the coasts). And of course the coasts have no monopoly on enlightenment, which has no intrinsic location.

      You've been basically polite and reasonable, even though we disagree. I post mostly to think through issues, but I enjoy influencing people. I measure my tone to the recipient - only a couple of points have seemed to require more pointed delivery. I would recommend you look back at your own writing to see what provoked the insults, if you want to learn more about how your projected preconceptions can be more apparent to others than to yourself. Your indulgence in somewhat hypocritical attacks on "stereotypers" indicates to me that you have more to learn about yourself than you realize.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    481. Re:Another giant step backward... by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      Fine. Phrased the other way my point was that Evolution is as unscientific as Intelligent Design.

      Saying that given enough time and enough space anything can happen, no matter how improbable, pretty much covers the theory of evolution creating new improved species.

    482. Re:Another giant step backward... by millennial · · Score: 1

      OK, fine. You go tell the Pope that he failed as a Christian because he didn't convert all the Jews. I'll take a few steps back.
      Go tell all the people at my church that they're not Christian, and they're going to Hell, because they don't believe every single thing you said. Yes, there's nothing more Fundamentally Christian than telling other religions that they're Satan-inspired and that yours is the only right way.

      --
      I am scientifically inaccurate.
    483. Re:Another giant step backward... by zardo · · Score: 1
      I can tell you the difference between an atheist and an agnostic, in the real world, political sense. It's more of a social attitude than anything else, these days. If you really don't give a damn what people preach, and sortof have an inkling in you that there may be a god but that you just can't determine anything about that god, then you are an agnostic.

      If you simply believe there is no god, and that that is a provable fact, you're an atheist. In my opinion, both deists and atheists commit the same fallacy in reasoning. The agnostics are the one's who're truly use sound reasoning, and personally I think they have a better outlook on life than the other two.

      I think its funny when people debate religion, I often wonder why they don't just break it down to the fundamental root of the argument, who's better? I'm better than you, I know what I'm talking about, you aught to just believe me. It's just silly.

    484. Re:Another giant step backward... by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      You appear to be confusing "Muslim" with "anti-Christian". That's a list of Muslim IDists, all right, but I see no evidence that they're anti-Christian. One is described as "active in the interfaith community"; another even writes "From the Muslim point of view, in fact, Christians are the closest friends and allies in the world." So, try again.

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    485. Re:Another giant step backward... by joncue · · Score: 1

      I don't know what "Matthew Shepard Burn in Hell" is, but I am gathering it was some sort of gay bashing publication from a wacko homophobe. Frankly, I couln't care less what people do in the privacy of their own homes, even if I happen to think it's wrong.

      I think a lot of what people say about the inland culture is a matter of perception. You percieve that we are afraid of anything different, and we perceive that the coastal areas are afraid of any kind of rules and/or religion. Even the very mention of the word brought profanities and insults to anyone who happens to believe in God (not from you, I appreciate that you have been pretty civil).

      I don't know anyone afraid of "newly expressive members of society" around here. What I will say, without apology, is that behaviours can be very disturbing, and my perception from way over here in Indiana is that places like California and New York seem out of control. Rampant drug use/abuse, violent crime, high taxes to support the results of those behaviours, etc.. all, in my opinion, stem from the breakdown of people willing to follow the rules, combined with the breakdown of the "midwestern" family values that are ridiculed.

      I also enjoy influencing people, so long as they are as reasonable as you have been. I have thouroughly enjoyed this. At the least, I have had good communication with someone who thinks things through even though, as you say, we don't agree.

      Also, if you look back through this thread, you'll see that the first time I posted anything was after the anonymous coward had already posted ridiculous claims and insults toward the midwest, so I could not have provoked the insults he delivered, and his second, and most charming, "asshole" comment was because of the way a message was formatted, not because of the content of the message. You, on the other hand, only threw out a couple of mild remarks that followed my sarcasm (which was only intended as humor, but did spark off an interesting discussion), which I can understand.

    486. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the problem is that they can't take the bible for what it is - a heavily edited compilation of stories based on numerous authors that suggests a moral guideline that people should use.

      Yes, what about forgiving your enemies, being nice to people, not killing anyone, and things like that? Perhaps they lump those together with the incest and ritual animal sacrifice.

    487. Re:Another giant step backward... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      You might be interested in what some of your fellow Midwesterners (Kansans) are notorious for perpetrating, following the lethal beating of Matthew Shepherd elsewhere in the Midwest. And you might be interested in finding out for yourself how you haven't heard about all that, though it resonates so closely with your local culture, and is certainly compelling news.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    488. Re:Another giant step backward... by Suidae · · Score: 1

      Regarding the creation myth in Genesis, it's completely unimportant to Judeo-Christian beliefs. It was thrown in there as an example of the omnipetence of Yaweh, not as an explanation of how the world was formed and life was created. To claim that the purpose of Genesis is to inform you of the how's and why's of creation is to completely miss the point.

      This is the best part about religion. You can make up any explanation of why something is the way it is, and nobody can show you to be wrong.

      You can even start an entire new religon, or just fork an existing one Just make up what you want, claim divine inspiration, and you're golden (reference Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon, and L. Ron Hubbard and the Church of Scientology).

    489. Re:Another giant step backward... by Suidae · · Score: 1

      Why bother making a world that doesn't look like you made it.

      Its more fun that way.

      But seriously, you can't ask 'why' of any motivation of a god. Either there is no real 'why' because the god is a fictional character, or because a gods motives are beyond the capacity of humans to even begin to grasp.

      Just pick a belief system that makes you feel warm and fuzzy and keep your eyes open for actions that arise from that belief system make you or your fellow humans unhappy. Adjust as necessary to balance the unhappyness with whatever lifestyle you find necessary. Reality check occasionally by opening your mind and visiting with people with many other belief systems. If you find you have to make laws to keep people in your belief system, you're probably doing something wrong.

    490. Re:Another giant step backward... by ezeri · · Score: 1

      You have some serious issues with dislexia or are just reading the wrong book if what you found was any of those things. The only example that I can even say you mearly took it out of context was Jacob wrestled God, and even then he wasn't hit in the crotch, thats your addition. If you willing to just make stuff up on the spot your only deluding yourself.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    491. Re:Another giant step backward... by joncue · · Score: 1

      Okay, I read the web sites you linked to and, I will agree, that those are nutjobs (who should have gotten the death penalty, btw). But they only represent a very small part of the midwest (not to mention they are in Kansas, nowhere near where I am). These are the exact type of nutjobs that get passed off in the media as representative of life in the midwest, and it just isn't the case. And for people who don't know any different to take an example like this and extrapolate that the entire midwestern population is like this would be/is stereotyping. The only thing I have in common with those extremists is that I think homosexuality is wrong, but that's my opinion and I don't try to force it on anyone else. The only thing I ask is that it works both ways. I shouldn't have to agree that it's okay either.

    492. Re:Another giant step backward... by ezeri · · Score: 1

      I'm just going to respond to one part of you post here. The part about eating bacon and the old Testament Laws. There is a distinction between things that are sins and things that are unclean. The laws regarding food, cleanliness, etc, were not introduced because those issues were sins, they were there for one of three reasons, for the benifit of the people, so seperate Isreal from the nations around them making them visibly unique, and to point toward the coming of Jesus. Some of these laws crossed over one or more of the three groups. But the important thing to know is that violating these laws was only a sin because doing so would be diobediance to God, not because they were inherantly sinfull. This is in contrast to laws regarding murder, theft, sexual sins, etc. Since "perverse sexual behaviors" is very vaugue and could mean alot of different things to different people, I'll just lay out the guideline, and you can check what ever you were thinking of against it. If it is not sex between a man and a woman who are married, then it is a sin, thats realy the only guideline. The bible is very clear that the comming of Jesus and his death and resurection frees us from the Old Testamant Laws, but those are different from things that are sinnfull. If someone wants to still follow one or more of the Old Testament Laws, ie. Seventh Day Adventists, that is there perogative, but not required, and in fact advised against.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    493. Re:Another giant step backward... by ezeri · · Score: 1

      The same thing could be argued against evolution, that it is a transparent attempt to make an athiestic world view logicaly sound. I personaly believe strongly in ID, not because I find the evidence for a biblical creation to be strong, but because I find the evidence for evolution to be very weak. And so, not having any reason to believe that the bible was not literal in the story of creation, I'll continue to believe that, and continue to read new discoveries and theories with intrest and a large grain of salt. And yes I do understand evolution very well, far better than most posters here, so please don't respond with the typical "you don't understand evolution" argument, because it's not a valid argument. Having said that, the reason I will defend the teaching of ID in schools as a theory other than evolution mainly has to do with the the way evolution is taught in schools. It is not taught as a scientfic theory that best describes how life could have formed by it self, but is instead used as an "in your face christians, we don't need your God" attack on christianity and religion. And like anyone whos "team" is being attacked, I like it when the attack is countered. Now of course in the big scheme of things I don't consern myself over evolution vs creation other than as an intrest, because it's not a central tenent of my beliefs, and they are in no way dependent on the outcome. But then on to the mistaken view that ID has no scientific backing, that is just false. Yes it requires a "non-scientific entity" to work, but regardless of popular falicy, that does not make it any less scientific. Science is mearly a process of determining the truths of nature, and how things work. Just because one aspect of a theory does not allow itself to be tested by the scientific method does not invalidate other testable or indirect evidence for that said theory. If you want to look into some "hard science" done by creationists, take a look at some of the work done by D. Russell Humphreys, especialy in his book, "Starlight and Time" or Michael J. Behe just off the top of my head. ID is not "custom-built" to get into class rooms, I realy have no idea where you get that idea from. Especialy since ID spans several differnt groups of thought. It covers everything from guided evolution to a literal biblical creation, and keep in mind, ID is not the newer of the two theories, evolution was proposed as a replacement for ID, not the otherway around.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    494. Re:Another giant step backward... by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      Now if you were bad and evil and all that, and the water level started coming up to your waist, _and_ you knew where there was a boat.. wouldn't you try to hijack it? And there would be a fair number of people too.

      Or in lieu of hijacking, sabotage?

    495. Re:Another giant step backward... by Sanction · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how the ability to measure entropy correlates to the idea that entropy will increase. From later in the same article:

      The Second Law of Thermodynamics states, in effect, that the thermal entropy of a closed system will never decrease. In simpler terms, this only means that the amount of energy available to cause real changes in a system will never increase, and will always decrease whenever any of it is actually used to cause changes in that system (n.b. since motion is the natural state of all objects--see below--an object which continues to move on inertia alone, or a system which oscillates between two states ceaselessly, is not "changing").

      The reason only some energy is "available" in a thermal system is that in order to be available for work it must be capable of moving, and energy can only move from an area of high temperature to low, because fast particles impart energy to slow ones, not the other way around (technically, the distinction is really between high and low energy particles, but the visual metaphor of "speed" is easier to grasp for purposes of illustration). It follows that (drawing on this illustration) if all particles are equally fast or slow, neither can impart any energy to the other, without any changes cancelling each other out. Without any variations, i.e., at perfect equilibrium (which can never be reached in a finite time, only approached), thermal energy cannot cause anything to change. The energy distribution is already the same everywhere, so all kinetic transfers of energy cancel each other out, and nothing gets done.

      Notice once again, the increase of entropy and drift towards uniformity depend on a thermally closed system, which the earth is not. The sun is a constant source of incoming thermal energy, which provides the energy required to be free to do "work" in the terms this author uses. How does evolution conflict with this?

      --
      Well I'm the doctor and I say you're dead, so shut up and take it like a man!
    496. Re:Another giant step backward... by Vaughn+Anderson · · Score: 1
      I fail to see how the ability to measure entropy correlates to the idea that entropy will increase.

      Obviously by your own statements you are saying that entropy won't increase, but I said was that entropy will fluctuate. Sometimes it will be more and sometimes less, as earth is a complex system.

      But by the theories presented in evolution we are supposed to believe that a one celled organism suddenly exhisted at one point ( I will go along with this ) but that it's energy level _increased_ for millions of years.

      What caused this? Why is it that only "living" things have had a constant focusing and increasing amount of energy, where as say the sun, earth, ....everything else, are all _losing_ energy!

      Please do explain, I am really not intelligent in these matters and barely understand basic physics, but I have serious misgivings about evolution because it has never been _proved_ to be true. Neither has ID, so I'm not debating between them.

    497. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      "You have some serious issues with dislexia or are just reading the wrong book if what you found was any of those things. The only example that I can even say you mearly took it out of context was Jacob wrestled God, and even then he wasn't hit in the crotch, thats your addition. If you willing to just make stuff up on the spot your only deluding yourself."

      Spoken like a true Christer-fundie.

      Here are the quotes straight from King James's version of the Holy Book:

      Human Sacrifice

      Exodus 22: [29] Thou shalt not delay to offer the first of thy ripe fruits, and of thy liquors: the firstborn of thy sons shalt thou give unto me. [30] Likewise shalt thou do with thine oxen, and with thy sheep: seven days it shall be with his dam; on the eighth day thou shalt give it me.

      Ezekiel 20: [25] Wherefore I gave them also statutes that were not good, and judgments whereby they should not live; [26] And I polluted them in their own gifts, in that they caused to pass through the fire all that openeth the womb, that I might make them desolate, to the end that they might know that I am the LORD.

      Jacob Wrestling God

      Genesis 33: 24 And Jacob was left alone; and there wrestled a man with him until the breaking of the day.25 And when he saw that he prevailed not against him, he touched the hollow of his thigh; and the hollow of Jacob's thigh was out of joint, as he wrestled with him.26 And he said, Let me go, for the day breaketh. And he said, I will not let thee go, except thou bless me.27 And he said unto him, What [is] thy name? And he said, Jacob.28 And he said, Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel: for as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed.29 And Jacob asked [him], and said, Tell [me], I pray thee, thy name. And he said, Wherefore [is] it [that] thou dost ask after my name? And he blessed him there.30 And Jacob called the name of the place Peniel: for I have seen God face to face, and my life is preserved.31 And as he passed over Penuel the sun rose upon him, and he halted upon his thigh.32 Therefore the children of Israel eat not [of] the sinew which shrank, which [is] upon the hollow of the thigh, unto this day: because he touched the hollow of Jacob's thigh in the sinew that shrank.

      I guess in reading these things you have to understand what the language means, but seeing "God face to face" seems pretty obvious. "Hollow of the thigh" means groin.

      In the Ezekiel quote above, "to pass through the fire" means sacrifice there and many other places in the Bible. It should be obvous that "openeth the womb" means give birth, probably specifically the first time.

      No, I don't have a reading problem, but, then, I am not blinded by "faith" either.

    498. Re:Another giant step backward... by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      The same thing could be argued against evolution, that it is a transparent attempt to make an athiestic world view logicaly sound.

      "Could be argued" is a weasel term. Anyone can argue anything. I could argue that you don't exist, even if it's obvious that you do. The thing about evolution is that it's been around for a while, has built up a serious amount of scientific backing, and provides a rational explanation for a wide range of problems far outside of, let me be blunt here, your rather limited perspective upon it.

      Remember: Darwin wasn't an athiest, and although his conclusions troubled him mightily, he was intellectually honest enough to not discount them simply because they didn't fit in with what he thought true.

      I personaly believe strongly in ID, not because I find the evidence for a biblical creation to be strong, but because I find the evidence for evolution to be very weak.

      If this is true, then it would not be a reason to believe in Intelligent Design. It would merely be a reason to not believe in evolution. Don't be afraid to have no opinion! If more people weren't, it'd be a sunnier world. ... I'll continue to believe that, and continue to read new discoveries and theories with intrest and a large grain of salt.

      Skepticism is good. Science is built upon skepticism; that's what makes it powerful, when it is performed correctly, because peer review double-checks conclusions arrived at by experiment, theories are open to attacks, and in the end scientists slowly form descriptions of reality that are correct to, to use a metaphor, more and more decimal points.

      That's why Intelligent Design is dangerous; it's not performed correctly in the cases of which I am aware, but the media is not aware of this. Any time they see a conflict they go "hey, fight!" and zoom in with their cameras. Some frankly ludicrous ideas have gained coinage this way lately, like faked moon landings, monkey heads on Mars, etc.

      And yes I do understand evolution very well, far better than most posters here, so please don't respond with the typical "you don't understand evolution" argument, because it's not a valid argument.

      I hope you'll pardon me if I do not merely take your word for it. Arguments are valid or not valid for reasons other than mere assertion.

      Having said that, the reason I will defend the teaching of ID in schools as a theory other than evolution mainly has to do with the the way evolution is taught in schools.

      That is terrible, stupid, and wrong!

      You don't teach Issue A because you don't like the way Issue B is taught. Instead, you argue that Not-B should be taught, which is NOT, in this case, the same thing as A.

      But I disagree with you in either case. There is no important science built upon Intelligent Design, while there is a lot of important science built upon evolution. The fact that it hasn't tumbled apart by now speaks volumes about evolution's validity.

      It is not taught as a scientfic theory that best describes how life could have formed by it self, but is instead used as an "in your face christians, we don't need your God" attack on christianity and religion.

      I deny your assertion. It is your responsibility to prove it now, or at least demonstrate it convincingly.

      And like anyone whos "team" is being attacked, I like it when the attack is countered.

      That's part of your problem, if I may be so bold to point out such problems. You're thinking of it as "us vs. them." You've defined the world into two groups, when it's not nearly as simple as that. But, in trying to form a rhetorical "us," you risk the development of a "them" specifically to counter you. Then you'll point to it and say "See! It was there all along!"

      But then on to the mistaken view that ID has no scientific backing, that is just false. Yes it requires a "non-scientific entity" to work, but regardless of popul

    499. Re:Another giant step backward... by cartmancakes · · Score: 1
      where exactly did they come from if the planet is in fact only 6000-odd years old?

      Luckily there are many people who believe in the bible, yet can also accept the fact that the "days" referred to in the Genesis account of creation refer to periods of time, and not necessarily litteral days, or even 1000 years each.

      I've never believed that religion and science contradict each other. I believe in the bible whole-heartedly, and I also believe in science. Two truths cannot dismiss each other. Therefore, they must both be true, and work together, instead of against each other. If science has proven that the Earth is 4.6 billion years old (not sure about the exact number there), and the bible says Earth was created in 6 days, then the 6 days must be figurative, as a lot of things in the bible are. I don't know why creationists can't accept or even ponder this thought.

      How many times have you heard the phrase "in my day?". Pretty obvious, huh?

    500. Re:Another giant step backward... by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      There is no need to turn a starfish into a human because evolution doesn't propose this. Evolution proposes turning a fish into a lizard, and a lizard into a furry non-lizzard, into a human.

      There are branches of life that are separately distinct from one another. Next you'll be claiming that evolution has to prove able to turn a rose into an elephant.

    501. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Lollerskates!


      Don't you ever let me hear you talking like that again!
    502. Re:Another giant step backward... by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      Have you ever taken a soil sample, in a test tube, added water and shaken it?
      You get a lot of nice even layers as the soil particles settle to the bottom. Each layer contains particles that are the same size / density.
      On the other hand if these layers of rock took so long to form why is there no evidence of soil? Why are the layers so even?
      Then of course there's the evidence presented by the recent Mt St Helens eruptions.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    503. Re:Another giant step backward... by suitti · · Score: 1
      One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct

      It's worse. It's a literal interpretation based on a bad translation. It's really common to use, for example, the King James English version, or even the Volgate (latin), rather than more original ancient greek texts. The greek does not use the word "day".

      The Roman Catholic Church still preaches science based on Aristotle, arguably obsolete in his own time. For example, a Sun centered solar system predates Aristotle.

      And then, one must ask, for what? What possible use is an ignorant congregation, who will believe any drivel even in direct contradiction of evidence?

      It gives all of Christianity a bad name.

      And they call themselves conservative.

      --
      -- Stephen.
    504. Re:Another giant step backward... by ezeri · · Score: 1

      Congrats, you've found the skeptics annotated bible, and learned to parrot everything they post without actualy putting any though into its validity. You are blinded by faith, just not a faith in God or christianity.

      Exodus 22: [29] Thou shalt not delay to offer the first of thy ripe fruits, and of thy liquors: the firstborn of thy sons shalt thou give unto me. [30] Likewise shalt thou do with thine oxen, and with thy sheep: seven days it shall be with his dam; on the eighth day thou shalt give it me.

      And where does this say to sacrifice your first born? It doesn't thats your suggestion.

      Ezekiel 20: [25] Wherefore I gave them also statutes that were not good, and judgments whereby they should not live; [26] And I polluted them in their own gifts, in that they caused to pass through the fire all that openeth the womb, that I might make them desolate, to the end that they might know that I am the LORD.

      Try reading the rest of the chapter (hint this was punishing them for there idolatry and wickedness)

      And once again, you post a passage that shows, woops, he wasn't hit in the crotch, you realy made that up. It is the the sciatic nerve that it is talking about. And no "to pass through the fire" does not mean sacrifice here, or else where (where do you get these ideas?). Also, I notice you gave up on the idea that God lied to Adam and Eve while the snake told the truth, I'm very curious where you got that idea from.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    505. Re:Another giant step backward... by coaxial · · Score: 1

      But God himself is perfect, and through extension eveything he does is perfect, otherwise he would not be perfect.

    506. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course the article doesn't spell out what Muslim invaders did to the conquered races. For that, you need to look in a factual history book.

      As for 'tolerance', please. Don't make me dig out those verses out of the Koran that explicitly say the duty of a Muslim is to slay the infidels, Jews, and Christians. No, not all Muslims believe that - but, that's what their marching orders are.

    507. Re:Another giant step backward... by thesaintar · · Score: 1

      I believe there is no separation of church and state in the US. Beacuse there's a president that quotes his god to justify what he does. The best example of true separation of church and state are the french, because they completely abide by the rules of laïcite, and these rules govern government, schools, justice, etc.

    508. Re:Another giant step backward... by Flambergius · · Score: 1

      A church is much a product of the society it lives in. Scandinavian societies could be considered post-cristian and the main churches here reflect that. The lutherian churches have more or less found their niches in promoting values like tolerance, pacifisim, community and compassion than any dogma. I would say that for most part they are trying to out of theology business altogether.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers - Pablo Picasso
    509. Re:Another giant step backward... by wesweeks · · Score: 1

      The deal with Fundamentalists is that they suffer from a psycological flaw that prevents them from correctly interpreting rational truth, and this flaw is their strong belief in the absolute truth of the bible. Believe in something strong enough, and your mind will find ways to make your internal version of reality conform to this belief. It is as if they were wearing red tinted glasses and those of us without shades are trying to convince them the sky is blue, when they can clearly see that it is red. It is a losing battle.

      Ask a young earth creationist about the fossil record, and they excuse it as god testing our faith. (though I would call it lying). Ask them how they got the petroleum in their cars, how the light from distant galaxies could have travaled billions of years, or any other factual evidence for the roughly 15 billion year age of our universe and they will filter it through their belief first, and provide a cop out answer based upon the supernatural. In a way it isn't their fault, it is due to the construction and limitation of our brains.

      Everyone has beliefs. It is only when those beliefs are held as MUST be true instead of being open enough to allow confilicting viewpoints that might change those beliefs to enter that the our minds close and we become incapable of reason in regards to anything that might conflict.

      It would be easier to get a camel throught the eye of a needle then to get a Fundamentalist to see anything that would question his belief!

      Two great sites:
      http://www.ignorantdesign.com/
      http://www.passionoftheatheist.com/

    510. Re:Another giant step backward... by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      This is the best part about religion. You can make up any explanation of why something is the way it is, and nobody can show you to be wrong.

      Yes and No. Yes, you can come up with a completely new theology to explain how to achieve your moral goals, but once you do explain it, you have to remain consistent and logical. Arbitrary systems are avoided by humans.

      You'll find consistency and reason after base assumptions in any religion you examine. Sometimes it's difficult to find, but that usually because of a misunderstanding of the theology's basic assumptions.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    511. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      "Congrats, you've found the skeptics annotated bible, and learned to parrot everything they post without actualy putting any though into its validity. You are blinded by faith, just not a faith in God or christianity."

      My my, you fundies get all bent out of shape when anyone questions your religion, don't you? You will recall that this was exactly the response I said I always got when discussing these topics. It is nice to see that you are keeping in rude step with your co-religionists.

      "And where does this say to sacrifice your first born? It doesn't thats your suggestion."

      No, if you had any knowledge of the Bible you would know that phrase is used repeatedly in admonitions against just such acts in connection with "pagan" dieties.

      Examples:

      Murder of Children Forbidden: (not my topic heading, but I took all these quotes from an anti-abortion site to avoid retyping them, not a "skeptics" site)

      Lev 18:21 And thou shalt not let any of thy seed pass through the fire to Molech, neither shalt thou profane the name of thy God: I am the LORD.

      Lev 20:4-5 And if the people of the land do any ways hide their eyes from the man, when he giveth of his seed unto Molech, and kill him not: Then I will set my face against that man, and against his family, and will cut him off, and all that go a whoring after him, to commit whoredom with Molech, from among their people.

      Deu 18:10 There shall not be found among you any one that maketh his son or his daughter to pass through the fire, or that useth divination, or an observer of times, or an enchanter, or a witch,

      2 Ki 16:3 But he walked in the way of the kings of Israel, yea, and made his son to pass through the fire, according to the abominations of the heathen, whom the LORD cast out from before the children of Israel.

      2 Ki 17:17 And they caused their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire, and used divination and enchantments, and sold themselves to do evil in the sight of the LORD, to provoke him to anger.

      2 Ki 21:6 And he made his son pass through the fire, and observed times, and used enchantments, and dealt with familiar spirits and wizards: he wrought much wickedness in the sight of the LORD, to provoke him to anger.

      2 Ki 23:10 And he defiled Topheth, which is in the valley of the children of Hinnom, that no man might make his son or his daughter to pass through the fire to Molech.

      2 Chr 33:6 And he caused his children to pass through the fire in the valley of the son of Hinnom: also he observed times, and used enchantments, and used witchcraft, and dealt with a familiar spirit, and with wizards: he wrought much evil in the sight of the LORD, to provoke him to anger.

      Jer 32:35 And they built the high places of Baal, which are in the valley of the son of Hinnom, to cause their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire unto Molech; which I commanded them not, neither came it into my mind, that they should do this abomination, to cause Judah to sin.

      Ezek 16:20-21 Moreover thou hast taken thy sons and thy daughters, whom thou hast borne unto me, and these hast thou sacrificed unto them to be devoured. Is this of thy whoredoms a small matter, That thou hast slain my children, and delivered them to cause them to pass through the fire for them?

      Ezek 20:26 And I polluted them in their own gifts, in that they caused to pass through the fire all that openeth the womb, that I might make them desolate, to the end that they might know that I am the LORD.

      Ezek 20:31 For when ye offer your gifts, when ye make your sons to pass through the fire, ye pollute yourselves with all your idols, even unto this day: and shall I be inquired of by you, O house of Israel? As I live, saith the Lord GOD, I will not be inquired of by you.

      Obviously, the anti-abortionists conveniently leave out the original Exodus 22:29 instruction from Yahweh to his people to sacrifice their first born children to him.

      "Try reading the rest of

    512. Re:Another giant step backward... by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Well do you simply believe there are no invisble unicorns, or have some sort of inkling that there may be invisible unicorns?

    513. Re:Another giant step backward... by Khazunga · · Score: 1
      My favorite question along these lines is, 'what preceded the Big Bang'.
      Simple enough, even if not satisfying: We'll never know. Nothing crossed the frontier of the Big Bang, not even information. Go read A Brief History of Time for a better explanation. We can hypothesize that Big Bangs are cyclic (with either Big Crunches or random matter/anti-matter energy/anti-energy dissolution in between). If this holds true, before the Big Bang was another universe, and after the next Big Bang there is another one. I specially like this theory, because the number of iterations is infinite. The probability of the exact initial conditions for the current universe are non-zero (or we wouldn't be here), and thus we shall be here again sometime in the future (scientific-based reincarnation).
      --
      If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you
    514. Re:Another giant step backward... by Khazunga · · Score: 1
      Mutations are rarely beneficial, and have not in recorded experiments created meaningfuly new information--at least not that I've seen.
      Go read up on genetic algorithms. They not only evolve, are not only a proven theory, they are used in the field in inumerous fuzzy logic applications.
      --
      If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you
    515. Re:Another giant step backward... by ezeri · · Score: 1

      First off, stop using the KJV, and if anyone quotes something from KJV, and you care about acuracy, check it with a different translation, the english language has changed enough since the translation that it is not very usefull just on that merit alone.

      And once again, Exodus 22:29 does not in any way tell people to sacrafice there first born to God, you can pretend it does all you want but the words are not going to change. God is saying that the first born should be given to him, that does not mean sacrifice, that means dedicated to him, sanctified in his name.

      And back so Ezekiel 22:25, no he wasn't testing them at all. Its not a commandment he gave them in this verse, its an action, he says, I did this to them as punishment for there wicked ways. This is a chapter on here is how Isreal screwed up, and this is the punishment they got. You either know your changing the meaning of this to fit your aim, or you didn't read it at all, stop being dishonest to yourself.

      And to repeat, "to pass through the fire" does not mean human sacrifice, it mean to take the life of, it can be used often to describe human sacrifice, but so can the word kill, as in "they killed there first born". But the main point is that this was not a command, that is pretty obvious just reading the verse, let along the contex that it is in.

      And on to Genesis, God tell Adam, eat of any fruit except of that one tree or he would surely die. The thing your missing is that in the bible death is used for two seperate things. There is physical death and spiritual death. Physical death is obvious, spiritual death is a seperation from God. So when Adam ate the fruit he was cut off from his relationship with God, because sin entered his life. First off, why would God want Adam to know evil, you say that like its a bad thing. Now the snake tells her, that surely you will not die (a lie) and the rest truth, but spun in a way to make it sound like its not a bad thing. And so man ate of the fruit, and was cut off from God, ie he died.
      And in 3:22 God is talking to Adam and Eve, no them eating of the tree was not a worry to God, and not Adam was not already subject do death.
      The bottom line is that God told them the truth and the snake lied to them, and what he said that was true was twisted.
      And now for the Jacob and the nerve. Once again, stop relying on an old translation, the English language has changed, if you want to argue that it doesn't refer to the sciatic nerve you can take it up with the Hebrew Scholors. And it was not God himself that wresled with him, it was an angle of a preincarnate christ.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    516. Re:Another giant step backward... by zardo · · Score: 1

      There are invisible unicorns. I'm buying one for my wife for her birthday.

    517. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      "And it was not God himself that wresled with him, it was an angle of a preincarnate christ."

      Yeah, sure, just quote me the verse where it says that. Aren't you supposed to be explaining to me, pursuant to my original post, how a non-believer could read the Bible and understand what is to be takern literally and what is not?

      Your approach seems to be that, regardless of the words, such as "saw God face to face," the Bible only means what you say it means. Frankly, that doesn't give me very much comfort.

      By the way, I used the quotes from the King James version because: a) it is easy to pull up on the internet and cut and paste from since the copyright has expired; b) it tends to be the "authoritative" version to non-Cathloic Christians. I prefer the New Jerusalem version myself. It is a well done, scholarly, translation. It was approved by the Catholic Church as being an accurate translation, though I suspect most fundamentalist Protestants would not like it. I'll tell you, the language in the New Jerusalem Bible doesn't get any better for your point of view, and, in fact, makes it more clear what is being said.

      Here are the two quotes about human sacrifice from the New Jersusalem Bible:

      Do not be slow about making offerings from your abundance and your surplus. You will give me the first-born of your children; you will do the same with your flocks and herds. for the first seven days the first-born will stay with its mother; on the eighth day you will give it to me. Exodus 22:28

      And for that reason I gave them laws that were not good and judgements by which thy could never live, and I polluted them with their own offerings, making them sacrifice every first-born son in order to fill them with revulsion, so that they would know that I am Yahweh. Ezekiel 20:25.

      By the way, these aren't the only two places in the Bible that talk about human sacrifice, just the two that I have been referring to. I realize that Christians like to interpret the Exodus verse as meaning to make the first born priests, but that contradicts the business about the first born animals, unless you think that animals can be priests of Yahweh. Also, it contradicts the strict rule that priests only come from one tribe: Aaron's.

      Again this comes down to interpretation (and I would argue, deliberate mis-interpretation) rather than actual words. I could put whatever "interpretation" I wanted on the Iliad or any other piece of mythology, for that matter. What is so special about the Bible? Other than the dirty parts, I mean.

    518. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'ld like to have a creationist explanation about the magnetic patterns in the ocean crust, other than God did it to make us think.

      As a matter of fact, there is: Hydroplate theory. Hydroplate theory expains every geological feature you could think of, and some you wouldn't.
      Information of Hydroplate theory: http://www.creationscience.com/onlinebook/PartII.h tml

    519. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With evolution atheists are trying masquerade teaching atheism in schools. That's a violation of church and state.

      You should separate your biblical bias from your scientific analysis of intelligent design and then you might have an argument.

      Science does not accept an "absence of evidence" as being proof for something.

      There is no proof for evolution. You can't look at fossils and use them as evidence for evolution. You have to prove evolution in a lab and until someone can show that a fish can evolve into a dog in the lab then evolution is not proven. If someone can prove in a lab that an ape can evolve into a human then they can prove evolution but there is no direct proof of this.

    520. Re:Another giant step backward... by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      It explains a lot, but is totally incompatible with tons of existing observations about geology, as well as basic physics.

      Therefore, it is unscientific hokum.

    521. Re:Another giant step backward... by ezeri · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sure, just quote me the verse where it says that. Aren't you supposed to be explaining to me, pursuant to my original post, how a non-believer could read the Bible and understand what is to be takern literally and what is not?

      You got it right later on when you pointed out that it does come down to translation and interpretation. But if you are looking for a verse that says it was an angel, try Hosia 12:4. Just like with english today words mean different things in different contexts, its difficult to get it right with out serious study on how each author uses different words and sayings, and what previous works he would have been gettting phrases from.

      Regardless of how many time you try, it doesn't tell them to sacrifice there first born. Just because you or someone else who has an elementary understanding of the bible things it might be eluding to it does not make it so. Every biblical scholar (and yet there are pleanty who are not christian) would disagree with you.

      And no you invent what christians interpret this verse to be, it does not refer to the first born being priests. It's a dirrect reference Numbers 3:46-48. If you want to understand the bible, your going to have to put some serious time studying it. You can't just jump in our all of the references to things you need to know are going to be lost on you. Your right you could put whatever "interpretation" on the Iliad or any other work and people would ignore you, so what makes you believe your qualified to put your "interpretation" on the bible, especialy considering its far more difficult that most other works?

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    522. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      "You got it right later on when you pointed out that it does come down to translation and interpretation. But if you are looking for a verse that says it was an angel, try Hosia 12:4. "

      I am aware of that verse, however, I was specifically looking for a verse that said it was an angel of the preincarnate Christ. Don't cop out on me.

      By the way, that verse says Angel in the KJV, but says "in maturity he wrestled against God" in the New Jerusalem Bible, so it still doesn't make your point. Not to mention that the speaker in Hosea is not praising Jacob, but talking about how he is a sinner, so the oft stated premise that the original verse is an analogy to prayer is even wrong.

      "Just because you or someone else who has an elementary understanding of the bible things it might be eluding to it does not make it so."

      Who said I have an elementrary understanidng of the Bible, you? I have studied the bible for 25 years. I was raised a Southern Baptist and continued in that faith until I came to understand the Bible. It was my understanding of the Bible that lost my faith for me.

      "Every biblical scholar (and yet there are pleanty who are not christian) would disagree with you."

      This is a silly statement, since I have quoted you the relevant portions of the New Jerusalem Bible, hence you knew before making it that there are at least some Bible scholars who agree with me, namely the translators of that particular edition. If you don't believe my quote, they are easy enough to verify.

      I would also point you to Leviticus 27:26-29, as well as Judges 11:29-40 for further elucidation on this issue. There are more sections of the Bible that deal with this than just those. Also, your theory about this doesn't explain why "dedicating" their children to God was a problem for the Hebrews as we find in Ezekiel. It seems it would only be a problem if they were actually killing them.

      "And no you invent what christians interpret this verse to be, it does not refer to the first born being priests. It's a dirrect reference Numbers 3:46-48"

      And what are the Levites doing? They are redeeming the first-born of Israel. If you go further in Numbers you will see that God states that just as he took the first-born of Egypt (killed them) all first born, human or animal, belong to him.

      Your right you could put whatever "interpretation" on the Iliad or any other work and people would ignore you, so what makes you believe your qualified to put your "interpretation" on the bible, especialy considering its far more difficult that most other works?

      Perecisely my point about the Iliad. No one will buy an interpretation that is not related to the plain meaning of the words. However, people buy interpretations of the Bible that have no conenction with the plain meaning of the words, but are based on their then-current notion of what morality is. 3,500 years ago it was not surprising to Abraham that God wanted him to sacrifice his first born son. 3 years ago when some woman stoned her kids to death in Texas by God's command, they put her in jail. Regardless of what Christians think, times change and moral notions, even their own, change with them.

      I disagree the Bible is more difficult than other works. Some of the difficulty lies in the fact that people try to reconcile contradictory passages in portions of the compendium that we refer to as the Bible even though these passages were written centuries apart and even by people of different cultures. They are difficult to reconcile precisely because they are irreconcilable. It would be like trying to reconcile the different articles in a volume of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

      What you need to do is read your Bible once with your eyes open and not clouded by layers of gloss you have been given through your life.

      One final point you might want to think about in considering human sacrifice in the Bible is this: isn't it a little silly for a Christian to doubt human sacrifice in the Bible since to do so would require him to forget about the sacrifice of Christ on the cross for the sins of the world?

    523. Re:Another giant step backward... by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      That's a fascinating perspective. So you're saying that all of the lower layers in the Earth's crust are comprised of heavier, larger chunks, and the upper layers are all lighter, smaller bits? So, for instance, you'll never, ever have a sandstone layer below a heavier limestone or marble layer? You might want to do a bit more research on that one.

      You don't have soil between the layers of rock, because the soil got compressed to the point that it became rock. That's how sedimentary rock forms. No evidence of soil? How about plant fossils? What'd they grow in? Oh, I know... they were picked up by by the flood waters, and deposited below several layers of rock.

      What do you mean by "even". Are you referring to the depth of each layer, or the levelness? Depth is hardly even in most fossilized layers, they can vary from portions of an inch, to several feet thick, depending on the layer and location.

      The "evidence" pointed out by this (not a all biased) article doesn't speak to what we're talking about here at all. It says that canyons that geologists claim took thousands of years to be carved may have been done in a shorter time. This isn't a news flash. The advent of new canyons after flash-flooding has been observed for decades. It has nothing to do with layering of fossils, other than those created due to volcanic upheaval.

      Since you're obviously going to insist that the Noah's ark myth is real, perhaps you can give me some good answers to the following questions:

      Other than the real issue of cramming two of every living creature into this ark (and the fact that the insect population alone would've maxed it out) - how did these creatures get re-distributed after the flood? How did places with unique creatures get populated? Let's take Australia as a good example... it has many, many creatures that don't exist anywhere else, yet were apparently on the Ark. How'd they get back home to the island after the flood?

      Where was the food stored that kept many thousands of creatures alive for forty days and nights?

      If the entire earth was flooded to such depth that the Ark ended up on a mountain top, where'd the water flow to afterward? Bear in mind that the entire Earth had to have one smooth surface of water for this to work - to get that kind of altitude, you have to have hundreds of times the amount of water currently on the surface of the Earth. Where'd it go?

      Why isn't the ENTIRE Earth smooth and flat? With the exception of the mountain ranges, upheaval on this level would deposit the earth evenly across the continents, right? Valleys would be filled in, low-lying area built up.

      If the answer to any of these questions is "God did it", then you're all done trying to claim that science backs up the story of Noah's ark.

    524. Re:Another giant step backward... by complete+loony · · Score: 1
      "... lower layers in the Earth's crust are comprised of heavier, larger chunks, ..."
      No, the flood would have been a very turbulent time. At any time portions of the flood waters may have been relatively still, or causing massive erosion. While in small areas and across a few layers this might be true I wouldn't expect it to hold for the entire rock layers.

      Noah's ark. This topic has been investigated by heaps of people, that was just the first link returned by google, there may be better ones.

      Natural selection does occur. Animals procreate and mix their DNA together and create a new combination of genes. This process does not create any more information, but different features of the animal are selected. In a small population with heavy inbreeding the animal becomes more specialised, information is lost, and the amount of variation among the offspring is reduced. This is not the result of random mutation, which destroys information, it is a pre-programmed ability. For example, from a basic wolf, we now have all the various dog breeds.

      After the flood and massive climate changes, there were short periods of ice ages. This would have created the neccessary land bridges for animals and people to migrate to all of the main continents. Though people may have used boats and may have transported some kinds of animals.

      The oceans are *now* very deep. there is easily enough water to cover the earth to a depth of 3km if the ground layer at the time was flat. There is plenty of evidence of tectonic plate movement, I would assert that this took place over a short time frame. As the plates collided the mountains would have been raised up. The water would have then flowed very rapidly off of the land masses carving the great canyons and river basins of the world.

      This seems to be a reasonable introduction. disclaimer, I haven't read it all so I can't say if I agree with everything presented.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    525. Re:Another giant step backward... by runderwo · · Score: 1

      You can have a theory with weak supporting evidence or a theory with strong supporting evidence. A theory with no supporting evidence at all (yet no contradictory evidence) would be a hypothesis. You are probably correct that gravitational waves are a hypothesis at the moment rather than a theory, but that depends on what constitutes supporting evidence to you.

    526. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To rephrase "to make us think", perhaps he did it to make a realistic-looking backdrop for this drama to play out in; much like video game developers when they try to make realistic environments. It's just that God's computer has a much more powerful particle system than NVidia.

    527. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why bother making a world that doesn't look like you made it.

      Almost all computer simulations - from atomic bomb simulators, to flight simulators, to doom - try to model things in a way that fit their particle-system & geometry engine well, and have interesting intial conditions. Why should god be any different in this.

    528. Re:Another giant step backward... by benna · · Score: 1

      Its sad, but you can't argue with these people. They just don't understand science.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    529. Re:Another giant step backward... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1
      "But the important thing to know is that violating these laws was only a sin because doing so would be diobediance to God, not because they were inherantly sinfull."

      And where in the Bible does it explain the difference between "inherently" sinful things and things which are sinful just 'cause God said so.

      I will posit that you are expressing an unorthodox view of scripture. I believe the orthodox Christian view is that all sin is disobediance to God and vice-versa. I think orthodox Christians would not accept the notion that there is an absolute morality that exists independent of and without regard to the existence of God. To orthodox Christians, nothing can exist independently of God.

      I do know a couple of athiests and some pagans who would agree with you, though.

    530. Re:Another giant step backward... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ID is nothing more than a sham to try to work around that pesky "separation of search and state" thing that our forefathers were bright enough to put into that pesky "Constitution."

      Most people don't know this, but nowhere is "separation of church and state" mentioned in the Constitution.

  2. Provable? by Bananatree3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Evolution has been shown to be very accurate throught the past century. Granted there might be small little holes in the theory, but Intelligent Design is swiss cheese comparatively.

    1. Re:Provable? by BoomerSooner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just like religion. It's a bunch of made up bullshit with so many holes in it the only way someone can be stupid enough to believe is to call it "faith".

      It's sad really that people live their lives in fear of what will happen after death than how they can make the world a better place for everyone while they are alive. Religion is the root of all evil.

    2. Re:Provable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religion is the root of all evil.

      I thought money was the root of all evil? Ohh, wait, the praise of things money is religion.

    3. Re:Provable? by spiralscratch · · Score: 1

      Your comparison is a disservice to swiss cheese.

      Unlike intelligent design, swiss cheese has some solid parts.

    4. Re:Provable? by Ioldanach · · Score: 1

      Evolution may be a theory with a few small holes, but you can't really compare it with Intelligent Design. Evolution is a theory with observable states that just happens to have a few kinks left in it. On the other side, Intelligent Design cannot be tested or observed, and thus is a hypothesis, not a theory. Once it can be moved into the realm of a theory, I'll consider how many holes it has.

    5. Re:Provable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen. Testify!

      http://www.randi.org/

    6. Re:Provable? by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Religion is the root of all evil.

      You're shortsighed. If you had studied more about history, you'd find out that fundamentalism was a reactionary movement against secular humanism and atheist darwinism.

      AND current rejection of religion (including yours, probably) is nothing but a reactionary movement against christian fundamentalism. But let's go further. Have you seen the increase in new age, psychics stuff, tarot, pseudoscience, UFO cults?

      It is another reactionary movement against the world's secularization. Because men cannot find happiness without spirituality, they're falling for cheap spirituality. Their parents already rejected more established forms of spirituality, so this generation's rejection against existing churches slowly becomes a tradition-based prejudice, as first-hand experiences are now lost.

      This is like a pendulum. Without finding a good middle, mankind is doomed to go from one extreme, to the other. Everytime becoming more and more radical. Be it in religion, philosophy and even in politics.

      No, religion is not the root of all evil. Man's stupidity and selfishness is.

    7. Re:Provable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the LOVE of money is the root of all evil. Ironically, it's from Paul, in the Gospels.

    8. Re:Provable? by Proteus · · Score: 1
      Your comment presupposes certain things about religion that are not representative of religion as a whole. For example:
      It's sad really that people live their lives in fear of what will happen after death than how they can make the world a better place for everyone while they are alive.
      There are many religions that do not promote or teach a fear of death or even believe that something occurs afterwards. Rather, religious beliefs on the matter of death stem from a general human fear of death. When you think of it, fear of death in its basic form is an extention of the self-preservation instinct. The common beliefs of "you don't really die when you're dead" began as comfort: "you don't just die when you're dead, you go to heaven and live with God", or "you come back as another form of life".

      They stopped being comforting when religious leaders realized they could manipulate the actions of others by suggesting that these comforting outcomes could be revoked if certain tenets were not observed.

      However, though the world's major religions are all guilty of such historical manipulation (for the most part, individual sects may vary), it is not a result of being a religion. Rather, it is a result of those particular religions beings successful because they tap into natural human fears successfully. There are many other religions that believe a person merely passes into nonexistance upon death, and that doing good works for others while alive is the only path to immortality (through rememberance).

      I, personally, find that simple comments like your "Religion is the root of all evil" often stem from a rather shallow understanding of religion and personal spirituality (which are separate things, IMO). Religion (and spirituality) are not just for stupid people - much of religion may attract stupid people through the promotion of stupid ideas; but, that doesn't negate the value of all religion for all people.

      One of the virtues of the scientific process is open-mindedness. Another is flexibility. I suggest that people who fail to exercise those when considering religion and spirituality are just as foolish as the religious fundamentalists who preach tolerance while damning homosexuals.

      --
      We may not imagine how our lives could be more frustrating and complex—but Congress can. – Cullen Hightower
    9. Re:Provable? by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

      ID's not even a hypothesis. It's a remark, a commentary, a doctrine, a faith -- but it's nothing to do with science.

    10. Re:Provable? by m50d · · Score: 1

      What, because people are fundamentally evil and only fear of hell holds them in check? I don't think so. People don't need an excuse to do good, but there are plenty of people who will only do evil if they can claim it's for the right. Religion gives them a way to do this. On the whole it makes the world worse.

      --
      I am trolling
    11. Re:Provable? by BoomerSooner · · Score: 1

      Right and religion is made up by man. You'll notice I didn't say Spirituality was evil? Religion was the beginning of the formation of society having people live in fear of [insert god(s) here].

      Fear is how we live our lives collectively and until people learn that it isn't a solution, we will be doomed to religious wars and intolerance.

      Spirituality is a good thing, (Organized) Religion is not.

    12. Re:Provable? by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      Spirituality is a good thing, (Organized) Religion is not

      Rebuttal:

      1) You'll change your mind when you read the papal encyclicas "Populorum Progressio", "Pacem in Terris" and "Nostra Aetate" (and the previously mentioned "Fides et Ratio" by JPII).

      2) Any non-fundamentalist christian (belonging to 'mainstream' or 'historical' christian churches) can easily rebuke your statement that religion (at least christianity) is based on fear. Precisely the popularity of evangelical christianity was due to the novel idea that God loves us.

      3) Did I mention that pope Benedict XVI's main goal is to build inter-religious dialog?

      4) Maybe what you're against is not organized religion per-se, but the abuse of power that a hierarchical structure (such as organized religion) allows. Just ask Stalin, was he religious at all?

      5) People can be educated on destructive cults and their manipulation of the masses. Go to www.freedomofmind.org (a cult deprogrammer's site) and get the books. Did I mention that the methods Bush used to manipulate the people after 9/11 are VERY SIMILAR to the ones destructive cults use?

      Conclusion: Sorry to bash you with this, but your ignorance regarding organized religion _IS_ an example of the religious intolerance that you claim to be against.

    13. Re:Provable? by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      "No, religion is not the root of all evil. Man's stupidity and selfishness is."

      And religion is the most honest representation of stupidity and selfishness, so that kind of works out nicely.

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    14. Re:Provable? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Living without fear of life after death leads to more evil

      Actually that statement appears to be false.

      To the extent we can estimate "evil" based on "criminal", it appears that the belief in life after death leads to MORE evil. Prison populations show a somewhat lower percentage of atheists than the general population. Atheists appear less likely to commit crime - less likely to do 'evil'.

      I guess an alternate explanation would be that atheists commit just as much (or more) crime than religious folk, but that atheists are somehow smarter and less likely to get caught. Chuckle.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    15. Re:Provable? by trixillion · · Score: 1

      No, religion isn't the root of evil (whatever that is.) But orgnanised religions do seem to make good people better and bad people worse. Its that latter quality that gives religions a bad name and reputation. If religions could find a way of reigning in their worst members (and preventing said individuals from leadership) then religion would be a net plus. But as it stands, by my calculus, it is a net minus. We would be better off and a more neutral people if we abondoned such superstitions.

    16. Re:Provable? by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I can see the intelligence in believing that everything made itself . . . . . from ROCKS!! Brilliant. Thats been proven when? where? Ah, but you see, asking for scientific proof is just too much to handle for a truly scientific theory. You just need to believe it because someone said it, not that there is ANY proof of it whatsoever. Very scientific! Gregor Mendel would have called you ignorant for believing something to be science with no proof, but he's just silly. And it fits sooo nicely with atheistic belief we shouldn't ask for scientific proof. Any science applied here and the whole theory goes up in smoke.

    17. Re:Provable? by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      Fine, just prove evolution with science and the debate ends there. The fact that it has never been scientifically tested, observed or proved should be no barrier to believing it, unless of course evolution needs science. Its so silly to ask for some scientific proof of some theory that is supposed to be scientific. We should just take it as an article of faith, I guess, like religion. BUt doesn't some proof have to be somewhere before its thought to be science?

    18. Re:Provable? by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Your use of the term "rock" is extremely vague, and ignores the fact that plenty of inorganic chemistry is not silicate.

  3. Evolution is intelligent design by Kim0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    By this, I mean that the process of evolution is a thinking intelligent process. Or to state it another way: Evolution is intelligent.

    This means that all signs of evolution also will be signs of intelligent design, simply because evolution is a form of intelligence.

    So, instead of the intelligence reciding in the metaphysical head of a super
    natural being called God, it resides in DNA and their interactions with the
    world through life and death.

    All this according to the Kolmogorov Complexity definition of intelligence.

    Intelligence is the process of rationally building and testing theories about
    the world, and then using those theories for useful stuff. DNA is mutated,
    recombined, merged through sex, and otherwise changed. These changes are
    hypotheses about the world, in the form of new life forms trying to survive
    there. Thus life forms which do not reproduce are falsified hypotheses. The
    useful stuff is survival.

    As for those people preaching intelligent design:

    They are all religious, and do not know what theories or evolution are. They
    just pretend and believe they know. Remembering this, they are easily exposed,
    as long as you yourself really know what theories and evoution are.

    Kim0

    1. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Kim0 · · Score: 1

      >Otherwise you are redefining the terms and arguing from there - not the clearest way to argue.

      So, I am redefining the term "intelligent design" by pointing out that evolution can design intelligently.

      Kim0

    2. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it can't. It's just search.

    3. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by eggoeater · · Score: 1
      So, instead of the intelligence reciding in the metaphysical head of a super natural being called God, it resides in DNA....
      I always thought that DNA received too much attention when talking about evolution. Yes, DNA is the fundamental component by which evolution takes place, but I like to think of evolution as an emergent property of DNA. It's like somebody who studies hydrodynamics just talking about water molecules.
      There are many facets to evolution and the study of DNA and how it mutates, etc., is only part of it.

      I really disagree with your argument about evolution (or DNA) being intelligent. DNA is only one variable in a complex and chaotic equation that is evolution. For instance, evolution is highly influenced by sudden changes in environment. There are inumerable example of species that, if not for one small crucial factor, would have thrived.
    4. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by danielk1982 · · Score: 0


      By this, I mean that the process of evolution is a thinking intelligent process. Or to state it another way: Evolution is intelligent.

      This means that all signs of evolution also will be signs of intelligent design, simply because evolution is a form of intelligence.


      Its a wrong way to think about this (even though I understand your point).

      Evolution as it pertains to Natural Selection is simply a process driven by random mutations. It is as intelligent as a ball falling towards the ground due to gravity. You shouldn't use the word "intelligent" at all. It confuses the issue.

      There is however a form of Evolution driven by Intelligent Design. Genetically modified foods and animal breeding for specific traits are examples.

    5. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by tommyServ0 · · Score: 1

      As for those people preaching intelligent design:

      They are all religious, and do not know what theories or evolution are. They
      just pretend and believe they know. Remembering this, they are easily exposed,
      as long as you yourself really know what theories and evoution are.


      It is rare to see such ignorance on /. Oh wait, it isn't. :)

      You are misinformed. ID is not held by "dumb religionists" but some pretty smart people. Had you been following current events you would know the former atheist (probably the best well-known critic of Theism in general) Anthony Flew jumped ship and is now a Deist. Not a fundamentalist as the slashdot groupthink would believe.

      Why did he jump ship? Many reasons, but the primary one is a book written by Gerald Schroeder, who is an MIT-trained physicist with over 60 published articles in scientific journals. And he's a Jew, too. Not the rabid fundamentalist you painted in your post.

      See The Hidden Face of God by Gerald Schroeder for more information.

      --

      Consider the daffodil. And while you're doing that, I'll be over here, looking through your stuff.
    6. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by danielk1982 · · Score: 0


      Many reasons, but the primary one is a book written by Gerald Schroeder, who is an MIT-trained physicist with over 60 published articles in scientific journals.


      What can a physicist tell me about Evolution and Theory of Natural Selection?

    7. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Kim0 · · Score: 1

      >It is rare to see such ignorance on /. Oh wait, it isn't. :)

      It is not ignorance, but experience through many years. You judged me badly. It seems you are a bad judge of people.

      >You are misinformed. ID is not held by "dumb religionists"
      >but some pretty smart people.

      That is what you all say, but you people never substantiate that claim, and when you try, you fail.

      >Had you been following
      >current events you would know the former atheist
      > (probably the best well-known critic of Theism in
      > general) Anthony Flew jumped ship and is now a Deist.

      Never heard of him, so he is not that well known.

      Lets see.... He is 81 years old, and one of his arguments for a non christian god is:"It has become inordinately difficult even to begin to think about constructing a naturalistic theory of the evolution of that first reproducing organism,"

      At 81 years it is usual to find it inordinatly difficult to think. Personally, at 39, I do not find it difficult to think about constructing that stuff.

      As for Gerald Schroeder:
      The first thing I noted on the URL you supplied, is that Gerald pretends to know Quantum Physics. As a quantum physicist, I was not duped.

      Kim0

    8. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by m50d · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Has evolution ever passed a Turing test?

      --
      I am trolling
    9. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by tommyServ0 · · Score: 2, Funny

      That is what you all say, but you people never substantiate that claim, and when you try, you fail.

      Well, if you are the judge of who is and who isn't smart enough for your little atheist party, who would be able to convince you?

      Never heard of him, so he is not that well known.

      Then you haven't take any Philosophy classes, nor have you read anything substantial by atheists. He is well-known, and I find it comical that you believe you are the decider of who is well-known and who isn't. Can I decide who is well-known now?

      He is 81 years old

      Hmm, didn't realize an appeal to age is an actual logical argument.

      The first thing I noted on the URL you supplied, is that Gerald pretends to know Quantum Physics. As a quantum physicist, I was not duped.

      Ahh, the elitism is staggering. :)

      Your argument with Dr. Schroeder's credentials isn't with me or Dr. Schroeder's himself. Your beef is with MIT for having the gall to let him teach Nuclear Physics in their university for seven years--and for awarding him a Ph.D. in said field.

      You should contact that fly-by-night institutution post-haste to let them know of their mistake! After all, you are a quantum physicist!

      Signed,
      Notoriously bad judge of people...

      --

      Consider the daffodil. And while you're doing that, I'll be over here, looking through your stuff.
    10. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i suggest you read some work on autocatalytic networks. complex molecular networks (aka building blocks of life) are a property of chemistry.

      try taking a look at stuart kauffman's work. he spends his life researching this.

    11. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by tommyServ0 · · Score: 1

      What can a physicist tell me about Evolution and Theory of Natural Selection?

      A lot, if he's also done a lot of work in Biology, and his doctorate is in Earth Sciences and Nuclear Physics.

      Got a substantial reason to write this guy off as an idiot? Or do your presuppositions prevent you from acknowledging there is scholarship on the other side of the debate?

      --

      Consider the daffodil. And while you're doing that, I'll be over here, looking through your stuff.
    12. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by JamesD_UK · · Score: 1
      DNA is mutated, recombined, merged through sex, and otherwise changed. These changes are hypotheses about the world, in the form of new life forms trying to survive there.

      As much as you'd like to think that these changes are hypotheses about the world and credit the process of natural selection as intelligent by your given definition you've forgotten that it's just a chemical process.

      I can write a computer program to generate a number of random 'hypotheses' as you say and then test them, but I can't claim that I've endowed this system with intelligence, it's just a logic system.

    13. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      To someone without education in genetics, biology and psychology evolution may look like intelligent design, actually there is nothing intelligent about evolution. 99% of all species that ever existed on this planet are dead. That in itself should give anyone a good notion of just how stupid some evolutionary changes are.

      Evolution is unintelligent design at best, at worst it is just a sequence of random events where the entities with the best chances of survival procreate and continue their species life on this planet and the most of others do not.

    14. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by TrikerII · · Score: 1

      IANAS, however, although I do believe in ID, however , I believe ID and evolution to be incomplete. I post a question to ID, GOD, who is the creator did not state that the earth is 6k years old. Gen 1:1 only states that 'in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth'. However, this is seperate from what was done on the first day. I believe it is possible for both evolution and ID to be correct. For the evolutionists, I pose the question of the human factor. Why are we so absolutely different from even the most "closely" related animal (oragitang?). Where are the links? If this is a gradual process, there should be thousands if not millions of fossils showing the process, not these once and a blue-moon finds of things that 'might' be related. I believe that it is a combo of both creation and evolution. This would actually fit both and make the process more understandable especially when dealing w/ the age of the earth. This would also explain the missing links (since there really is no links to speak of) and would scientifically satisfy (if the facts support, which it might) both sides. Just my thoughts....

      --
      Life is to be experienced, not frowned upon. -Uknown
    15. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by renoX · · Score: 1

      > because evolution is a form of intelligence.

      Gasp, what a bad analogy..

      Intelligence is a concept applied to animals, it is a weakly defined concept sure, but this is not a reason to apply this concept to a natural phenomenon (evolution) or to a mythical super-being (God).

      Applying concept related to human/animals on natural phenomenom is rarely useful..

    16. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are some noted scientists who believe in an intelligent designer. One, a biologist who was formerly atheist, became a creationist because of the evidence he discovered in his research:

      http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_main.h tm

      As for your argument, yes, evolution is a logical system. That doesn't mean it is correct, as something can be internally logical but not have all the facts. Neither does creationism have all the facts, but the point is, it does have at least as much evidence in it's favor as evolution does.

      There are a number of misconceptions taught in schools (if not in higher scientific circles) that are not very scientific. For example, the idea that natural selection can cause evolution. Natural selection can only (as the name would indicate) choose among existing genetic material. Another one, that DNA mutations can cause evolution, is more likely, but in most known cases, it actually causes "devolution". In fact, even the cases which seem to provide benefits to the offspring can be shown to be a loss of genetic information.

      So, to summarize, it's not all as cut and dried as it might seem. Check out the evidence at the link above, and from other scientific sources who aren't blatantly anti-creationist, and give both sides a fair hearing.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    17. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Captain_Chaos · · Score: 1

      ... evolution is a form of intelligence.

      I disagree. One of the defining features of intelligence is the ability to plan, to draw conclusions from past events, form goals, and be able to consciously set out to reach those goals by applying past experience. Evolution does not work that way at all. It has no goals, it's just a simple process whose results are entirely incidental. It may appear intelligent, because the end result is so magnificently adapted to its environment, but that's exactly why people are so easily caught up in ID-type theories.

    18. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by danielk1982 · · Score: 0


      Got a substantial reason to write this guy off as an idiot?


      I didn't do that. I didn't even know who he is.
      The only thing you said about Gerald Schroeder, is that he is an MIT trained physicist with a number of published scientific articles. Evolution, and Natural Selection are generally within the realm of Biology. So, ergo, in conclusion, therefore.... his views on this particular topic are as good as that of your average ./er.

      Question, are any of his articles (those which are published in reputable scientific journals) on the existence of God, or on Intelligent Design? Peer review is important in Science, you see....


      Or do your presuppositions prevent you from acknowledging there is scholarship on the other side of the debate?


      There is no debate. Proponents of Intelligent Design would like everyone to believe there is debate. There is, in fact, massive consensus that the Theory of Natural Selection gives an adequate explanation of the diversity of species on Earth. There is also consensus that anything which has to do with Intelligent Design is unprovable Pseudoscience.

      Tell me, what evidence would you need to discard Intelligent Design? Any? I think we both know there isn't. You believe in God, and therefore you believe in Intelligent Design. Case closed. Why try to mix Science in there?

    19. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Ginnungagap42 · · Score: 1

      Evolution is not an intelligent process. People personify Evolution as "trying" things and "experimenting", which tend to give it the appearance of making intelligent choices, but the truth is (as far as we understand it) that evolution "tries" (See? Now I'm personifying it) everything. What works sticks around to leave copies of itself, what doesn't work, doesn't. It's not a completely random process, as successes build upon successes, ergo the "whirlwind in the junkyard producing a 747" argument is invalid.

      I highly recommend Richard Dawkins' "The Blind Watchmaker" for a much better explanation of the process.

      Cheers!

    20. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by WinDoze · · Score: 1

      Neither does creationism have all the facts, but the point is, it does have at least as much evidence in it's favor as evolution does.

      No, it does not. There is no scientific evidence for (or against, for that matter) creationism.

    21. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Council · · Score: 1

      Sure, I had a chat with it yesterday. It apologized for the mosquito.

      --
      xkcd.com - a webcomic of mathematics, love, and language.
    22. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by eh2o · · Score: 1

      even if we suppose that the complexity of DNA exceeds that which can be described in evolutionary theory, that does not give any endorsement for "god" (no matter how minimal). "super-intelligent wisdom begat energy" is still a non-sensical, non-testable assertion. if it was indeed provable that DNA exceeds evolution (and believe me, my world would not be shattered if this was found to be the case), it would be rather easy to come up with a number of testable scientific hypothesis to explain it -- there is no need to resort to Schroeder's nonsense.

    23. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > For example, the idea that natural selection can
      > cause evolution. Natural selection can only (as
      > the name would indicate) choose among existing
      > genetic material. Another one, that DNA
      > mutations can cause evolution, is more likely,
      > but in most known cases, it actually causes
      > "devolution".

      You moron ... natural selection, according to Darwin's original theory, is the cause of evolution. Thats why it's called The Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection.

      Desirable "traits" are selected following the rules laid out in Darwin's theory. These varied traits are caused by mutations. Mutation and natural selection go hand-in-hand. You can't have natural selection without mutation.

    24. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by shawnseat · · Score: 1
      It's horseshit.

      First error: DNA mutations can cause evolution, is more likely, but in most known cases, it actually causes "devolution". The reality is that the drastic majority of mutations are NEUTRAL, neither improving nor harming the next generation of cells (including cells formed meiotically). If this weren't so, you would've died of cancer long before you came out of your mother.

      Second error: natural selection can[not] cause evolution. Natural selection can only (as the name would indicate) choose among existing genetic material.The big problem with this is explained in the prior graf: genetic material is slowly changing. The change isn't sufficient, for a number of reasons, to result in new species very often for large animals (though it occurs regularly with bacteria, given their shorter life cycle), but it is observable. Your DNA is not exactly half that of the fertilized cells that became your mother plus your father -- but it's drastically closer than with any other pair of people, unless you have an identical twin.

      The third one is deceptive: In fact, even the cases which seem to provide benefits to the offspring can be shown to be a loss of genetic information. How do you calculate "genetic information"? If the progenitors of the mutated offspring are called your baseline, then it is a tautology that some of the "information" is lost, but it is replaced by new information.

      Number 4: scientific sources who aren't blatantly anti-creationist, and give both sides a fair hearing. This is a contradiction in terms. There are people in non-biological specialties who stumble across some bullshit that confirms their preconceived notions. There is absolutely no controversy whatsoever in the biology community on the accuracy of evolution in general. Certainly there is work done on specifics -- developmental evolution in particular is a hot field -- but descent with modification is not controversial in the field.

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    25. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Evolution is not an intelligent process.

      The firing of a neuron is not an intelligent process.

      The release of a neurotransmitter is not an intelligent process.

      And yet these processes (and many others, both known and unknown) combine to create our intelligence.

      So, why can't the processes of evolution do the same?

    26. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Evolution does not work that way at all. It has no goals...

      It has no goals that you can now fathom. Can the neuron fathom the goals of the brain?

      Making this claim is as bad as making the Intelligent design claim. Can you prove it? I think not.

    27. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Has evolution ever passed a Turing test?

      Yes. You exist.

    28. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by m50d · · Score: 1

      But I always fail them

      --
      I am trolling
    29. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      Okay, referring to this page: http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_natura lselection.htm

      Can we agree that:

      "Natural selection is an ELIMINATOR. In other words, if there are two variations of a creature, the theory goes that natural selection chooses the "fittest" or "best", and allows the "unfittest" or "weakest" to become extinct."

      In which case, there must be a large number of varieties to select from. Which is where mutations come in. Up to here, we should be in agreement. If not, tell me where I'm off base.

      Now, even well known evolutionist writers (e.g. Richard Dawkins) tell us the probability of successful combinations of mutations is very, very low. If so, the probability of having anything for natural selection to operate on is very, very low. Thus, a belief in evolution requires much faith.

      Regarding the replacement of genetic information from one of the parents, this assumes you have parents to begin with. At the individual cell's level, if you have DNA, you must have a working cell of some sort (we've at this point skipped past millions of years of evolution...). Anyway, assuming you have a working cell with DNA, any mutation will either be a change or loss of existing information. This would be analogous to (for example) a 4k memory chip with all bits set or cleared to important values. Changing any of those bits will not add additional information, as it can only replace existing values in the process. If those values were important, then the result was a loss of information. If negligible (e.g. eye color) then it was not a loss, but neither was it a gain. In no case could it be a gain, because for that gene to have meaning the cell must already have a mechanism for translating that gene into a productive feature. (In the computer analogy, there must be a separate program for operating on the 4k of data in the memory chip, otherwise the memory has no useful function).

      The same principles apply at lower or higher levels of evolutionary development.

      As for the assertion you make that "There are people in non-biological specialties who stumble across some bullshit that confirms their preconceived notions", the professor whose articles I referred to was a noted professor of evolutionary biology, with the preconceived notion of atheism and evolution, yet the evidence he found was compelling enough to change his mind.

      Sure, everybody has preconceived opinions-- but I suspect that for many evolutionists, it is their strong desire to eliminate God from the equation that drives their research. Not surprising when you consider how badly Christians have misrepresented God at times.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    30. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      By this, I mean that the process of evolution is a thinking intelligent process. Or to state it another way: Evolution is intelligent.

      Wrong, wrong, wrong. Evolution happens though random mutations and need. If you look in geological records you will find that evolution always progresses fastest when there is some kind of a disaster. How? Because some mutations are more suitable for new conditions and thus are able to push other subspecies to extinction.

      This is how homo-sapien survived and other subspecies of man did not. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo_(genus). Nature is always about competition for food. Mutations that secure more food survive. Other mutations die out. This is "natural selection" and it is *the* fundamental part of evolution.

      Neanderthals couldn't talk, we could. We survived. Natural selection time? Last ice age.

    31. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by shawnseat · · Score: 1
      Your first statement, about selection being "an eliminator" suffers from being the second step in the process (this is why I changed the order of your two points in my prior post). One of the common mutations is duplication of the same DNA sequence, which doubles the number of places mutation can occur. Many examples of these can be found, and the entire Y chromosome seems to be a multiple palindrome of this type. When you do have a duplication, depending on where it occurs, it may have no effect, a harmful effect or a beneficial effect (the recent evolution of a nylon-consuming enzyme in a bacterium is notable in this regard -- it was a gene that duplicated harmlessly, then mutated in decendants to add a new function without eliminating the old). Since the "chip" has a variable amount of "RAM", your analogy is invalid. In fact, the number of memory slots (chromosomes) can change as well: the two major differences between humans and chimpanzees genetically are that in humans some of the "switches" are turned off(!) and one of the chromosomes got stuck to another without changing its content. (This kind of mutation can also be neutral.)


      One of the other common errors is explained in your statement: The same principles apply at lower or higher levels of evolutionary development. The problem is that there exists no biological metric to describe what these are! Humans have rather average numbers of genes compared to other mammals, more than some types of bacteria, less than others, more than some types of plants, MUCH less than some others (one species of bean has about 1000 times as many base pairs as humans IIRC). The number of generations is similar as well.

      The only thing I have been able to find that this Dr. Veith has ever done is health quakery and a handful of forgettable papers.

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    32. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1
      Now, even well known evolutionist writers (e.g. Richard Dawkins) tell us the probability of successful combinations of mutations is very, very low.
      I think you're a bit confused on this point -- in particular, why do you refer to "combinations"? -- but for the sake of argument, let's say that it's right.
      If so, the probability of having anything for natural selection to operate on is very, very low.
      Wrong. First of all, even improbable events become almost certain, given enough iterations. Take a one-in-a-million event, and give it two million chances... odds are, it will happen twice. It's highly improbable for anyone to win the lottery, yet someone always does. Mutations occur in every living creature, which is a lot of chances.

      Secondly, you're ignoring the fact that what determines a "successful" mutation is natural selection, and nothing else. You're saying, in effect, "after deleterious mutations are weeded out by natural selection, there's nothing left for natrual selection to work with." Silly.

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    33. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by lukesl · · Score: 1

      I think this post is one of the more insightful things I've read on /., ever. To extrapolate from this (I'm speaking as a computational neuroscientist, not as a biologist), I would tack on the idea that the fundamental problem is that both evolutionists and IDists are tacitly anthropomorphizing intelligence. I mean, what is "intelligence" exactly? The only definition I'm aware of is some vague property that the human brain possesses. Or rather, a property of the dynamics instantiated by ionic currents in the human brain. The human brain, the only object in the known universe that everyone can agree displays "intelligence," is a nonlinear dynamical system. It's made of atoms, like anything else, and it follows the rules of physics, like anything else, although it contains some interesting nonlinearities. Anyway, when people use the word "intelligence," they're implying there's some mastermind "God"-like organism behind the scenes, but if intelligence itself is defined in a dynamical systems sense (or in some information theoretic description of dynamical systems, which is what I understand Kolmogorov complexity to be, though I need to learn more about those things), it makes sense that evolution on earth could easily instantiate dynamics that one could consider "intelligent." Because even "intelligence" is not intelligent.

    34. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      "Natural selection is an ELIMINATOR. In other words, if there are two variations of a creature, the theory goes that natural selection chooses the "fittest" or "best", and allows the "unfittest" or "weakest" to become extinct."


      In which case, there must be a large number of varieties to select from. Which is where mutations come in. Up to here, we should be in agreement. If not, tell me where I'm off base.


      You're off-base.

      Imagine the entire planet is populated with a single variety of grass. This grass only grows in certain climates. The grass speads as grass will do and the grass keeps dying at the boundries of it's prefered climate. Mutations come and go and one day a hardier grass manages to get a foot hold upon a mountain. The weather is colder and the soil rockier but after 10's of thousands of generations a beneficial mutation allows this mutant grass to spread upon the previously inhospitable areas.


      Near a dry plain a different mutation eventually allows the grass to spread upon a drier hotter climate. In time these grasses, seperated by distance and climate, become different species. Each specialized for its own particular environment.


      That is natural selection in action. And note, it is from a single species.


      Natural selection is not a species ELIMINATOR. It is rather a bad-mutation filter.


      The argument used by that website only works with a naive and limited view of natural selection.

    35. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Zeroko · · Score: 1

      I personally am a fundamentalist Christian, & I believe that the principles of evolution applie to thoughts, not to species. In the mind, thoughts compete with one another, mutate, combine, replicate, are crowded out, etc. This sounds a lot like evolution. Memory would correspond to surviving species if evolution applied to them. Furthermore, these actions give rise to intelligence in our minds. Unless someone can show that the mind does something that evolution supposedly does not do (& is not reducible to a sequenece of such actions), evolution is a form of intelligence. By contrast, God need not design the world as we think of design. If He is omniscient, He already knows how to make everything & have it work together. All He would have to do is make it. That said, we cannot show that God exists or not. We cannot even show that the universe did not pop into existence from nothing (with no cause) 1 attosecond ago. Maybe we live in the Matrix...maybe the Matrix is in God's imagination. I know I sometimes imagine universes. Nothing can be absolutely proven, of course, but 2+2!=5 even if the party says it is.

    36. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      Wrong. First of all, even improbable events become almost certain, given enough iterations. Take a one-in-a-million event, and give it two million chances... odds are, it will happen twice. It's highly improbable for anyone to win the lottery, yet someone always does. Mutations occur in every living creature, which is a lot of chances.

      Which is exactly why I mentioned combinations. In many, many cases, there are interdependent features of an organism, which would both have to have come into being by random chance at the same time. These cases drastically decrease the chances of a successful combination of mutations. Just having one of the mutations would not be sufficient.

      Secondly, you're ignoring the fact that what determines a "successful" mutation is natural selection, and nothing else. You're saying, in effect, "after deleterious mutations are weeded out by natural selection, there's nothing left for natrual selection to work with." Silly.

      Let me clarify. There is as great a chance of a random mutation reversing a favorable feature as of creating it in the first place. Thus, you cannot just have one successful selection at a time; you must have the positive selections remain "selected" while additional positive selections proceed. Thus, natural selection at the genetic level depends on a pool of successful mutations happening over time, more often than the reverse mutations.

      And, at a macro level, natural selection as we actually can observe it today, occurs by successful animal groups flourishing and reproducing, while unsuccessful ones die off. However, this selection can only occur from a diverse genetic pool. In other words, a purebred animal has lost the genetic information that would have made it a mongrel, while the mongrel has a more diverse genetic mix (which is why purebred animals have many diseases and problems mongrels do not have).

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    37. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Zeroko · · Score: 1

      The human mind searches in the form of simultaneous thought paths, with interconnection strength taking the place of natural selection, so claiming that evolution (in general - not any particular implementation) is a mere search does not preclude the intelligence thereof. Neurons just calculate, but they combine to form a brain, which can have an intelligent mind.

    38. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      Okay, I'm not a biologist, so my example may be flawed. None the less, the duplication of DNA does not add any new information, as the purpose of that DNA strand as it is read off must still be the same as before (albeit perhaps activated positively or negatively).

      Regarding Dr. Veith, I haven't compared with others but I wouldn't call nearly 30 papers "a handful". As for his health research, true, it is cutting edge, but it follows with some of the best research done by e.g. Loma Linda University and other recent research showing the benefits of a vegan diet. Definitely not quackery.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    39. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1

      I can write a computer program to generate a number of random 'hypotheses' as you say and then test them, but I can't claim that I've endowed this system with intelligence, it's just a logic system.

      The intelligence comes in the organism's choices of whom to reproduce with. That choice is something that is representative of intelligence (only higher animals are discriminating). It is also, strangely, analogous to Eve's "eating the apple from the tree of knowledge" (i.e., woman's choosing whom to reproduce with in order to change the direction of the species). I don't see the creation story as being contradictory to evolution as I see it being a primative description of evolution from the evolved species point of view.

      --
      My other first post is car post.
    40. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by shawnseat · · Score: 1

      [T]he duplication of DNA does not add any new information.... Wrong. In terms of information science, xx DOES contain more information than x (incidentally, willful confusion of information theory "entropy" and thermodynamic entropy is a frequent bullshit technique by ICR and Discovery Institute hacks -- they have opposite meanings!). It also provides a locus for new mutation while preserving the old information (in the other formerly identical strand).

      At most universities, only 30 papers (especially since in virtually all of them he is not the lead) in 25 years will lose you tenure, particularly if they are in secondary and tertiary journals.

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    41. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      Natural selection is not a species ELIMINATOR. It is rather a bad-mutation filter.

      All three varieties of grass were possible in the original genetic makeup of the grass DNA, otherwise the gene(s) which could be turned on/off by mutation would not have been there to be turned on/off.

      So, my point still stands. Yes, mutations can cause a variety of species to show up, that is well known. But all of those species, while not known of, were latent in the genetic makeup of the organism.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    42. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      And actually, no mutation is required to make this happen-- it happens regularly with animal husbandry, where the gene pool is manipulated by e.g. dog owners by selective breeding for desired characteristics. You can start with two wolves (wild stock with all genetic material present) and eventually get every variety of dog.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    43. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by duffahtolla · · Score: 1

      This is because of sex and the mixing of genes. Allows for rapid trial of different genetic combinations. Thats why evolution was so slow (and boring) prior to the invention of sex.

      The adaption to more extreme environments would happen with asexual reprodution as well, but it would require true mutations. And hence would take much longer.

    44. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by duffahtolla · · Score: 1

      No. For the example, it wasn't. The example would still work with an asexual creature that had identicle genetic makeup through out its population. It would just take far longer than normal because it would need true mutations. Your point does not stand.

    45. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1
      Which is exactly why I mentioned combinations. In many, many cases, there are interdependent features of an organism, which would both have to have come into being by random chance at the same time.
      I figured that was your angle (a standard creationist argument). It's quite wrong, of course. Show me an "irreducibly complex" feature, and I'll reduce it for you.
      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    46. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      Those who choose to believe in random chance over God, look at the same evidence as those who choose to believe in creation. What is made of that evidence depends on your worldview.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    47. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution is a process. Brains are physical entities.

      If the analogy were to hold, then you would be arguing that the Earth's biosphere was intelligent, not that evolution was intelligent.

    48. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      If the analogy were to hold, then you would be arguing that the Earth's biosphere was intelligent, not that evolution was intelligent.
      I usually don't respond to AC's, but this needs addressing.


      You're making an artificial dichotomy, kind of like saying "there's the mind and the body, and they're two seperate things." They're not. Evolution is a characteristic of the biosphere, not a seperate entity, just as the mind is a product of the body. You cannot have a mind without a body, as far as we know. Likewise you cannot have a process of evolution without something to evolve.

      So, when I speak of the intelligence of evolution, of course I'm talking about a characteristic of a physical entity. It goes without saying...

    49. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may sound like pedantry to you, but the statement "evolution is intelligent" sounds like incredibly stupid pseudo-science to me, but the statement "Earth's biosphere is intelligent", while I disagree, at least is worthy of consideration, and is reminiscent of the ant hill in GEB.

    50. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Yep, that sounds pedantic. :)

      See, to me it's not just the physical substrate that causes intelligence, it's the organization of those physical bits and the process used to achieve that organization. In the end the two are inseperable as the substrate allows the processes to occur, and the processes reform the substrate so it can attain states it could not otherwise attain.

      This may sound like pseudoscience babble for two reasons: 1) it's very abstract and high level, and 2) it is pseudoscience. :) It's pseudoscience until testable hypotheses can be created based on it, and that's probably a ways off. For one thing it would require several examples of evolving systems to which we can apply the abstraction. We only have one system now that's commonly accepted as an evolutionary system, but more folks are coming around to the idea of applying the concept to different areas.

    51. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1
      Show me an "irreducibly complex" feature, and I'll reduce it for you.

      Given how poorly science understands things even now, that requires quite a bit of hubris. The deeper we get into details, the more complex it appears. That said, there are a number of evolutionist counter arguments listed below, as to how a supposedly irreducibly complex system could have evolved:
      • Previously using more parts than necessary for the function.
      • The parts themselves evolve.
      • Deployment of parts (gene regulation) evolves.
      • New parts are created (gene duplication) and may then evolve.

      Regarding the first argument, this assumes some (unknown to us) previously useful function of the extra parts. This avoids the issue because you can always claim there was another (unknown) set of parts with an unknown purpose which assisted the evolutionary process, then was discarded. That doesn't mean it ever happened, but even if it did in one case, that doesn't disprove that other irreducibly complex systems do exist.

      Similarly, the other three arguments depend on evolution of the parts or related systems. This would imply some better conditions those parts would achieve by evolving. However, in many cases (e.g. proteins), the standard situation is against this ever happening. In the case of proteins, the chirality of life on earth is generally left handed, but in nature proteins occur in equally left and right handed distribution. This goes against probability that all left handed proteins would somehow be "randomly" chosen to form the necessary "better condition" for evolution.
      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    52. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      In terms of information science, xx DOES contain more information than x...It also provides a locus for new mutation while preserving the old information (in the other formerly identical strand).

      Even if the genetic translation process actuates the copied gene as well as the original, no new function can occur without a corresponding random change in the translator and in all related systems. In the meanwhile, the corresponding reverse mutation is just as likely to have occurred. For that to occur over millions of genes greatly reduces the odds of it happening, even over millions of years.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    53. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      No examples, eh? I thought not. Every real example I've seen offered by creationists has already been debunked. Sorry, you can't argue this in generalities.

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    54. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      The issue is not new traits, but new genetic information. For example, there are no known cases in which antibiotic resistance is the result of new genetic information. An information loss can confer resistance in several ways. New (even helpful, adaptive) traits can come from loss of genetic information (which is to be expected from mutations).

      Yes, Homeobox mutations in e.g. fruit flies can cause growth of an extra pair of wings, but those wings hindered flying due to a lack of muscles, and would have been eliminated by natural selection. And in any case, that was not a case of new genetic information being generated, but a loss of information.

      Gene duplication, polyploidy, insertions, etc., do not help explain evolution. They represent an increase in amount of DNA, but not an increase in the amount of functional genetic information--these mechanisms create nothing new. Macroevolution needs new genes (for making feathers on reptiles, for example)

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    55. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      Well, not being a biologist myself, I thought I would let you provide some examples and I could poke holes in your argument :-)

      Seriously, the "debunkings" I've seen so far have been very shallow, suffering from the logical flaws I pointed out in my previous post. I doubt you could do better than the leading scientific journals.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    56. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by WinDoze · · Score: 1

      Please understand that I do understand that worldview. I personally do not agree with it, but I do not (and cannot) refute it. No human can.

      That said, I disagree that there is scientific evidence of creation. Whether one holds scientific evidence as true or not is up to the individual I suppose, although I find it illogical (hate to use that word) to discount it.

    57. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      I don't want to discount scientific evidence either. However, due to my world view, I see different results from most of it, and in the cases I cannot explain, I suspend judgment until such time as I have more information.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    58. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by shawnseat · · Score: 1
      Even if the genetic translation process actuates the copied gene as well as the original, no new function can occur without a corresponding random change in the translator and in all related systems.

      Huh? I'm assuming the first part is referring to the control gene (so both of the copies will be switched on), and yes that must be done (it's adjacent to the gene itself, so it's not an unlikely event). I'm not quite sure what you mean by 'the translator.' There is only one mechanism for protein formation: DNA -> mRNA (+ tRNA) -> ribosome -> protein. No change in that process is required at all. The "switches" are almost fully independent, so there's not another simultaneous mutation required. And duplication is a very common mutation and is only rarely deleterious.

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    59. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by downwa · · Score: 1

      I'm not quite sure what you mean by 'the translator.'

      I was generically referring to the RNAP+tRNA that perform the transcription and translation of the gene into a protein. My point was that just adding a copy of a gene (even with modified "settings") won't cause the RNA transcription and translation to operate differently to produce different proteins than it would have normally been able to produce (i.e. within the range of capabilities it already has).

      After completing the deciphering of the ~35000 genes of the human genome, genetic researchers admitted that the relatively low number of genes means that the human genome "is a lot more complicated than we thought". Scientists once thought that in general, each gene contained instructions for building one specific protein. But now scientists are left wondering how only ~35000 genes can direct production of the hundreds of thousands of components that together make up the human body.

      How genes are "read" seems to be the key. Just like a few words can be arranged in many different ways to form sentences, so each gene can be read in combination with other genes to produce ten or more different proteins, according to what the body needs. However, what determines how the instructions are read in the DNA to produce the different products is largely unknown at this time.

      Scientists commonly claim that gene duplication is responsible for evolutionary development in many cases. However, one such article claimed that the duplicated gene changed in ways that "were not random" (in other words, not due to mutations). Perhaps a better explanation is that the two genes were designed that way, much as a computer programmer may copy, paste, and modify a working function into another slightly different function.

      Interestingly, scientists now know the genetic sequences of a few groups of bacteria which were beforehand predicted to have a pattern pointing back to a single common ancestor, as expected by evolutionists. But the results run contrary to the predictions, and (coming from an evolutionary world view) scientists postulate that different species somehow must have traded genes ("horizontal transfer"), or alternately, that life must have arisen independently multiple times. The latter, of course, would require much more favorable odds than have been shown.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    60. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by LovedByGod · · Score: 1

      "There are many facets to evolution and the study of DNA and how it mutates, etc., is only part of it."

      BTW - DNA mutation is called a disease!!!

    61. Re:Evolution is intelligent design by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      "there are no known cases in which antibiotic resistance is the result of new genetic information"

      Yes there is. Lots of it. Enough so that they've catalogued the three types of genetic alteration that can confer resistance.

      point source, mosaic, and transposon

      Read up on it here. http://info.bio.cmu.edu/Courses/03441/TermPapers/2 000TermPapers/group2/evol-mech.html#fig4ref

      Lots of references to examples of each in the article, if you want them.

      Gene duplication, polyploidy, insertions, etc., do not help explain evolution.

      No, they only are mechanisms that allow natural selection to take place.

      With only one copy of the your genetic code, get a point source mutation in the wrong spot and you die. Progress is slow. With gene duplication nature gets to play around with new things and still keep the old ones funtional. Mix in a couple of billion years and you have what you see around you.

  4. Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by kikta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, are we supposed to have a good academic discussion about where we stand on the issue or are we supposed to flame anyone who is a proponent of Intelligent Design?

    Because the summary seems predisposed towards the latter.

    1. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      Intellegent Design is equivilent to saying the world was created magically.

    2. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      "good academic discussion" and anything involving "creationism" or "intelligent design" are mutually exclusive.

      ID-proponents wouldn't know a good, academic discussion if they evolved from it.

    3. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by rknop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's the difference?

      Seriously, it's apples and oranges. Intelligent design is not science. It's religion. It doesn't belong in a science class. It might be a nice idea, but it's not a real theory in the sense of the word as used by science.

      Intelligent design is not a viable alternative to evolution. It is a viable alternative to young-earth creationism, perhaps. But it's not something for which there is scientific evidence.

      Having a good academic discussion which debates the merits of Intelligent Design as a scientific theory would be on the same level as a good academic discussion that debates the merits of the Apollo's chariot model as a scientific theory for the observed motion of the Sun across the sky.

      -Rob

    4. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by JohnFluxx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't think it's possible to have a good academic discussion about it. You either believe that in the scientific principles (all theories must be falsifiable to be valid, and occam's razor.. roughly ;) ) and so think this is wrong, or you don't believe in that, and hence cannot be argued with via logic and so cannot have an academic discussion.

    5. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by IAmTheDave · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Intelligent design is not science. It's religion. It doesn't belong in a science class.

      Wrong. People love to think that evolution is the complete explanation of life as we know it, and want to teach that as "science" and as fact. However, we still have so little true understanding about the origins of life. Assumptions are made about the first instant of life, but it cannot be recreated in a lab.

      Fact is, we will probably never know for sure. However, true science is the scrutiny of all possibilities of that which we do not know. Dismissing Intelligent Design as not being science is the same as dismissing theories of a round world revolving around the sun as heresy. It's base, uninformed, and - wait for it - close minded.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    6. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Dismissing Intelligent Design as not being science is the same as dismissing theories of a round world revolving around the sun as heresy.

      No, it isn't. One of the key factors (or, according to some people, the only key factor) which distinguishes a scientific theory from a superstition is the notion of testability and falsifiability. How can you test the doctrine of intelligent design? Don't say that it's not important -- if you can't test it, then it doesn't belong in science.

    7. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      I seem to be predisposed towards that the earth is almost a sphere.

      For most thinking people that assumption is not considered as being subjective.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    8. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by DoubleWhopper · · Score: 0

      It's flames, friend. Not just for Intelligent Design advocates, but for any idea that has a hint of conservatism. Slashdot, the harbor for open-minded geeks, is remarkably intolerant of such people and ideas.

    9. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by torndorff · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, Intelligent Design is not science because it doesn't use observer or recorder to prove theories. Instead it uses statements like "it cannot be recreated in a lab" to mean "it will never has been and never will be recreated in a lab -- you don't know, I don't know we don't know... so God did it!"

      The basis of science is that collectively we can one day understand Nature. Intelligent Design says that because a Higher Power did it there is no way we can understand it. Hence, ID doesn't qualify as science.

      That is as "academic" as this debate will ever come from the science side -- don't ask for more. For something to qualify as "science" and therefore be taught in a "science" class it has to adhere to the rules of "science". Weird how that works.

    10. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The The Dover, Pennsylvania school board's move to force SCIENCE teachers to teach their RELIGIOUS views is flamebait.

      --

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

    11. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by tez_h · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Hmm. Two questions. Would you view Newton's theory of gravitation a theory, or a fact? Now, would you view gravity itself as a theory or a fact?

      Evolution is a fact. The theory of evolution by natural selection is a theory, supported by cell biology, DNA analysis, geology, and probably all other hard science. It also makes localised predictions on the variation of alleles within a genome, as well as the traits of offspring generations of species (ones within a lab environment at any rate).

      Intelligent design produces no models, makes no predictions, and explains no currently understood phenomena. It is neither theory, nor fact.

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    12. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by tommyServ0 · · Score: 1

      all theories must be falsifiable to be valid, and occam's razor.. roughly

      Ockham's Razor is what you meant, I think.

      --

      Consider the daffodil. And while you're doing that, I'll be over here, looking through your stuff.
    13. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I can't agree with you on this. ID is based on stories created by nothing more than the "phone game" from centuries ago when there was no science. They had to come up with something to control the population, explain the world around them, and make money.

      It continues to fool even the most intelligent people today. How you can believe such utter nonsense and still post to Slashdot I'll never know.

    14. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by cpeikert · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Dismissing Intelligent Design as not being science

      ID is not science for one simple reason: it is not falsifiable. That is, it does not provide any criterion under which we can say "ID is false."

      Every other scientific theory is falsifiable. It's the fundamental requirement of the scientific method.

      It is not "closed minded" to say "this is not science, because it doesn't even satisfy the main requirement of a scientific theory."

    15. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So, are we supposed to have a good academic discussion about where we stand on the issue or are we supposed to flame anyone who is a proponent of Intelligent Design?"

      You haven't actually read what these folks have written...have you? I did, and gave them the benifit of the doubt...till I understood all the issues.

      Summary: It's an odd and limited view of religion and no view on science. After all, even the Catholic Church agrees that evolution does indeed occur...they only draw the line at the moment before the big bang and place God(tm) there.

    16. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What kind of argument is that? It doesn't address the issue at all.

      Parent says:

      A is not B. It is C. It does not belong in a B class.

      You say:

      Wrong. People like to teach B as a fact. But we know so little about D (possibly relating to A). Therefore, we should allow D in B.

      It's like the rules of logic done gone asploded.

    17. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by hhghghghh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Go ahead, disprove Evolution. If Evolution is a crock of shit it CAN and WILL be disproved. Go ahead, disprove Creationism. Oh wait. You can never prove God doesn't exist, because maybe that's the way He meant it, and He IS all-powerful.. That's why one is a scientific theory, and the other isn't.

    18. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

      Finally, an intelligent response, not one out to have me locked away as a lunatic for playing devil's advocate and supporting the possibility that Intelligent Design could be a viable "theory" (not scientific, just a theory.)

      In response to your questions:

      Gravity is a fact. What gravity is is still highly unknown and debatable. Do large mass bodies bend space-time? Is gravity between two large objects simply one getting caught in the bend in space-time caused by another? So many unanswered questions. But I place your question akin to the question "Would you view life and conciousness as a theory or fact?" Of course life exists. What it is or how it got here (or if there is an afterlife) is extremely questionable at this time.

      Also, in case anyone here reads this far down the post chain, I certainly do not proport that ID is yet a scientific theory. But it's damn sure a hypothesis. Hell, we can't design an entire life form yet, but we can, in a lab, alter DNA and genetic makeup to produce visible, observable changes in animals (Glofish, for instance. Or hypoallergenic cats.) Intelligent design at the feature level is observable and recreatable - one of the requirements for moving a hypothesis to a theory.

      But these are just my two cents.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    19. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by JohnFluxx · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    20. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Shalda · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem that the ID people face is that Intelligent Design is irrelevant to the study of the issue. In fact, the only real question is are seemingly random mutations truly random or the work of some higher power? And the answer is, it doesn't matter. In understanding the important lessons of evolution all we need to know is that natural selection occours and that seemingly random mutations occour.

      So forget for a moment that extrapolation of evolution infers that humans are related to and share a common ancestry with monkeys. Intelligent Design is all about teaching religion. If you convince kids that an intelligent higher power exists, it naturally starts to put them on the path towards organized religion, and the hope of these people is that will mean Christianity. The point of posting this to /. is not so much for discussion as it is for the awareness of this foolishness and so that more enlightened individuals can get involved and put a stop to it.

    21. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 2, Insightful

      These people should be flamed, shunned and generally made fun of in public. After all, they do upset small children.
      I think you may be alluding to the fact that generally, this is not considered good form for a debate. That's the problem, the Intelligent Design types are not interested in a debate on science, if they were, they would have dropped Intelligent Design a long time ago.

      The whole ID theory is complete bunk. It doesn't work scientifically and it doesn't work theologically. These people don't even have a basic understanding of the Intelligence they are trying to prove created life. If they did have a basic grasp of Christian theology, they wouldn't be sitting around trying to prove Intelligent Design and also wouldn't give a crap what science had to say on the subject. These are the same people that claim the US is founded on Christianity and the only valid law is God's law. They are no-nothing idiots who pollute the public discourse with illogical ramblings from time to time. Right now, they happen to have a megaphone, that does not make them any more correct or give them any better grasp on science.

      ID people should be given the same passing over, invisible treatment, as the scruffy guys with signs that say "Repent, The End is Near". So, to answer your observation: Yes, the summary is predisposed towards not having a good academic discussion with ID proponents. You can't have a good academic discussion with ID proponents, they've thrown academics out the window. Perhaps, give them a chance to see that they are not debating science, but after that, FLAME ON!

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    22. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by rknop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wrong. People love to think that evolution is the complete explanation of life as we know it, and want to teach that as "science" and as fact. However, we still have so little true understanding about the origins of life. Assumptions are made about the first instant of life, but it cannot be recreated in a lab.

      You're mixing your apples and your oranges up.

      Evolution doesn't explain how life started. It doesn't even address that. It explains how more life changes over time. It explains how more complex life may arise from simler life. It explains how one species may fade away in favor of another. But it says nothing about how it all started.

      It's also not a "fact", in the scientific sense of the word. It's a theory. Just like the theory of gravity. Facts are the basic observations, from which we build connections and understanding in order to put together a viable theory.

      Evolution represents our best understanding of the development of life. Modern biology does not make sense except in the context of evolution. It's a big topic that schoolkids aren't going to be able to fully understand in high school science classes, no more than they will fully understand Newton's theory of gravity (never mind General Realtivity). But that doesn't mean it shouldn't be taught, and that it shouldn't be taught as "the" answer.

      If we really want our kids to have a clue about science, we need to teach the process of science, and our best understanding today of how the natural world works. Insisting that creationism (whether you call it that or ID) be taught alongside evolution as a viable alternative is tantamount to insiting that you teach the Aristotlean "everything has its natural place" as a viable alternative to gravity to explain why things fall down.

      Is it closed-minded to teach kids in science that Aristotle was wrong? Is it closed-minded in science to teach kids that the world is round rather than flat? Is it closed-minded in science to teach kids that the Earth orbits around the Sun, and that the Ptolemeic model is wrong? No! Because all of those things represent our best understanding today of how the world works, and to teach the kids otherwise would be to trick them with false understanding. As far as science is concerned, Creationism is on the same level as all of those things. Evolution is what we should be teaching in science classes, because it represents our best understanding of how the world works.

      -Rob

    23. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by IAmTheDave · · Score: 0

      It continues to fool even the most intelligent people today. How you can believe such utter nonsense and still post to Slashdot I'll never know.

      This is where the obligitory "You must be new here" response comes in.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    24. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Dismissing Intelligent Design is more like dismissing Crazy Earl's hypothesis that the sky is actually purple but the Trilateral Commission uses hallucigenic radio waves to make people think differently.

      Some suppositions (I refuse to call ID a hypothesis, it's not even worthy of that) are just too stupid to waste time on. Besides which, all the more reasonable ID suppositions have absolutely zero to do with god.

      Aliens were experimenting 4 billion years ago, in an attempt to explain their own existence? I suppose that might be true.

      An superintelligent planetwide colony of bacteria designed human beings to be their spaceships, ala Greg Bear's Vitals/Darwin's Radio? Makes for a nice story at least.

      What we need to do, is pollute the ID meme-pool with these 2 ideas. Make it so that ID can't be mentioned without someone bringing those up and saying "Well, God didn't design us though, space aliens did, long ago...". Watch the biblethumpers squirm.

    25. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So then what you're saying is that string theory, multiple universe theory, the theory of evolution and a good deal many others are superstitions because they can't be tested?

      Let me just stick to evolution here. We as a species have been unable to cause evolution to happen. We cannot make a more advanced life form from a less advanced life form via mutation and natural selection. All we can do is make a life form that is the same species have more useful traits (that were previously recessive, or at least seldom seen, though still part of the genes).

      We haven't been able test evolution to determine if it's correct - and the theory is that this is because even for less advanced organisms this process takes far to long to observe.
      We can only extrapolate that it is true. The same can be said for intelligent design.

      So the two theories are on roughly equal footing at the moment as far as testability.

      As far as falsifiabilty, both can be falsified. It is important to note, though, that intelligent design actually covers more territory to be falsified, so is understandably more difficult to falsify completely.

      Evolution only states that once life happened, it became more complex through natural processes. Creationism actually covers the very natured of happening, which is a lot more ground. Incidentally, the Big Bang theory is about as hard to prove or falsify as the theory of Creationism.

      To disprove the existence of a creator, one would have to give contrary evidence that proves how all things were created. To disprove evolution, one would have to show that life became how it was a different way. The means of looking for either of these things is impossible at the moment.

      I do think you do have a point about testability and falsifiablity: anything you can't test or falsify you're taking on faith. There are a good deal more things that we take on faith than we realize. Science and philosophy used to be considered one discipline. I think we need to keep in mind how much they still are one.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    26. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that evolution and intelligent design share one common thing that make both pretty lousy science. Neither can be used to make predictions about the things they claim to explain.

      Of course evolution is a lot better and can at least predict some things, on the order of college genetics class (if I kill off small fruit flies I start getting bigger flies), but evolution as a theory that explains the diversity, behavior, and form of life on earth sucks. Given some the state of the world, in however much detail you want, at some point x billion years ago, evolution can't predict anything about today. In that sense evolution isn't really science, and this is why so many people believe in crap like intelligent design. We can't teach people that science is just things that explain previous events, given the knowledge of how they turn out. That is what made science different from philosophy, we stopped trying to do things like that, and focused on making PREDICTIONS of OBSERVATIONS.

      We need to be a lot more honest about what evolution is, because if all you are doing is trying to come up with some reasonable sounding explanation of why things are the way they are then we are no better than anyone else. Evolution is a more scientific theory than ID, in that at least it predicts some small stuff, but it is not hard science.

      Note: This doesn't mean we should be teaching ID in the classroom, that is absurd, but it is pretending that something like evolution is solid science that got us into this mess in the first place.

    27. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So then what you're saying is that string theory, multiple universe theory, the theory of evolution and a good deal many others are superstitions because they can't be tested?


      That's just stupid. A lot of the work on stuff such as string theories which you mention is precisely to design tests so as to verify or infirm it. That's why we spend billions building particle accelerators and launching research satellites, etc.


      I.D., on the other hand, cannot ever have any tests. You can't test its predictions, since it doesn't predict anything. Or when it does, it's already proven wrong by mountains of evidence.

    28. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by tommyServ0 · · Score: 0

      I stand corrected. I knew his name was William of Ockham, and had never seen it spelled with two "c's." Thanks for the correction.

      --

      Consider the daffodil. And while you're doing that, I'll be over here, looking through your stuff.
    29. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are two issues here: 1) is the topic worthy of some academic discussion, and 2) does it belong in a science class? The article addresses the latter, and the court cases surrounding the imposition of a requirement that "Intelligent Design" be taught. Here's my opinion:

      There isn't much that wasn't covered on the topic of "Intelligent Design", oh, back in the 19th century. Present-day "Intelligent Design" is a recycling of Paley's watch argument, polished up with some modern observations to give it the *appearance* of something new, but it isn't. While it might lead to an interesting philosophical discussion, and it might even be interesting to mention out of historical interest (e.g., like phlogiston in chemistry class when talking about fire), it belongs in a philosophy class, not a science class.

      If and when it ever starts making valid predictions that are reasonably well-tested (like evolutionary theory, quantum theory, general relativity, and the like), then maybe it can join the curriculum in a science class.

      It is obvious that the only reason "Intelligent Design" gathers any attention at all, in an educational setting or otherwise, is due to the dislike a subset of religious people have for their (often mistaken) perceptions of evolutionary theory. This matters as much to the scientific issue as if someone did not personally like the implications of gravity or quantum mechanics, and then wanted to advocate the teaching of some flimsy alternative because of perceived flaws in the conventional theories.

      Almost any current scientific theory has flaws. Yet, we teach Newtonian gravitation in schools. We teach a model of the atom where electrons are little balls orbiting the nucleus like planets. Why? They are useful starting points, even if wrong in details. We also teach the general relativity version of the theory of gravity and we teach quantum theory, even though both of them have their flaws (according to some people) and have detractors. Even Einstein expressed doubts about quantum theory and he worked very hard to come up with a unified theory, right? Doesn't that call the whole thing into question? It's "just a theory". And there are loads of replacements being pushed by people on the fringes that most scientists regard as cranks. Yet, I don't see school boards imposing the teaching of those alternative models of gravitation and atomic-scale processes, even though such things do exist. Why is that?

      Because we are talking about a subset of religiously-motivated people who have done their best to squeeze their religious ideas into public schools, and, if that doesn't work, at least suppress, distort, or otherwise impair the teaching of what they don't like. They ask only for "equal" treatment, which sounds very democratic and fair, yes, but it isn't the way scientific ideas get into a classroom. Time is limited, and there isn't time to present every single idea, no matter how flimsy or unsupported. Students have to be taught critical thinking and to consider alternatives, but there is a point where giving "equal" consideration to the scientific equivalent of phlogiston serves no valid educational purpose, and is clearly motivated by something else.

      Some days, I wish the people pushing for these things would just get on with it, and advocate the establishment of a theocracy. Emend the constitution if you have to. It would save alot of hassle. I mean, I'm really sorry if the current scientific theory of gravity/biological evolution/electromagnetism/"insert theory here" runs contrary to your particular religious interpretation, but that isn't scientists' problem. It's a topic for discussion in a religion or philosophy class. Advocate that.

    30. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Kineticabstract · · Score: 0
      Let's have our intelligent debate.

      I don't believe that Intelligent Design is science. I don't know that evolution is the right answer, but I do know that all portions of it derive from observation and hypothesis based upon observation.

      Intelligent Design is based upon faith, and the concept that a system as complex as a human being "obviously" couldn't have evolved naturally. This, in a nutshell, is not science. It's wishful thinking. It's an attempt to twist a current line of thinking (along with its plethora of evidence) to fit a more palatable paradigm.

      One of my main problems with this idea, though, is it's inherent contradiction with traditional Christian dogma. For centuries, we've been told that the Bible is the unaltered, absolutely correct word of God. People have died in gruesome ways for saying otherwise.

      Now, though, as the evidence for a non-creationistic universe mounts, we have people attempting to subvert rational science (as Christians have subverted many of the holidays and rites they couldn't stamp out of Pagan cultures) so that it somehow fits into some idea that might be somewhat based upon at least the idea of the Bible.

      I've read in this forum that suddenly we're to believe that the Bible isn't the true word of God, but that portions of it are. Or that the Old testament is metaphorical, but the New Testament is true. This fluctuation and change in an old system seem to me to be evidence that the system is not base upon reality. When new science disproves old, we dump the old science. When new science disproves old religion, the religion attempts to change itself to fit the new science. This doesn't make the new religion valid, just more up-to-date.

    31. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by rknop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So then what you're saying is that string theory, multiple universe theory, the theory of evolution and a good deal many others are superstitions because they can't be tested?

      Your listing evolution in with those other two is unfair. It can and has been tested, repeatedly. Not by lab experiments, but by predictions of what we might find in the fossil record. Astronomy works the same way -- we don't do lab experiments, we go out and look in the Universe. (And thanks to the finite speed of light, we're always looking at the past.) Yet there are predictions of future observations that have been borne out.

      So evolution isn't a superstition by any means, because it can and has been tested.

      As for the other two: lots of scientists would agree that it's philosophy rather than science. String theory is hot at the moment, and lots of Physicists don't think it's good science. Those who think that but understand something about it think that it's good mathematics, so it's still worthy. But is it science? Myself, I'm more on the fence. I can see that one day, string theory could well produce predictions that we could test, but they won't get there if they don't do the development they're doing now. So I want to see them continuing. String theory does show promise of explaining things that our current understanding of Physics at the extremes can't explain, so it's worth pursuing.

      As for the many-worlds interpretation--- that's a different matter altogether. That's a philosophical interpretation of how things in quantum mechanics work that you don't really need in order to employ the full predictive power of quantum mechanics. Maybe, perhaps, one day there will be predictions of the many-worlds interpretation that are different from other interpretations, at which point we could test it. But right now, it's really more a matter of how you like to think about Quantum Mechanics rather than a theory unto itself.

      So all three things you list are not comparable things, and they are all in very different states of being well-designed and well-understood scietific theories vs. being mathematics or philosophy.

      -Rob

    32. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by null+etc. · · Score: 1, Funny
      if you can't test it, then it doesn't belong in science.

      Don't tell that to Schrodinger and his cat.

    33. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by tez_h · · Score: 0
      Gravity is a fact. What gravity is is still highly unknown and debatable.
      Agreed, thought whether "What is gravity?" can, or will ever be, a scientific question is also debatable. Those who are familiar with the search for the Higg's boson, please note that the discovery of this would merely transfer the "What is gravity?" question one level down. As would any further 'explanation' of "What is the Higg's boson?"

      But it's damn sure a hypothesis.
      It may be a hypothesis, but I would not call it a scientific hypothesis. It lacks operational definitions, and, again, it does not make predictions. In fact, I have yet to read any ID paper that makes predictions, or models currently reproducible experiments that have not been thoroughly debunked, or that is not just a series of (usually unsophisticated) criticisms of current evolutionary biology. But please feel free to refer me to any.

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    34. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MOD PARENT UP

      Flamebait? Slashdot's bias is showing.

      Honestly, Kuro5hin is a second-rate left-leaning weblog - they post another story and it's /. material?

      Slow news day.

    35. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only 'cause you would look like a jerk...

      Schrodinger's cat is not a theory.

    36. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by rnelsonee · · Score: 1
      While you're hitting on a good point (Intelligent Design concerns the the origins of live, evolutionary theory concerns how life progressed), there's still two things I need to mention:

      we still have so little true understanding about the origins of life

      True, which is why we shouldn't teach it! If astrophysicists saw a strange, completely unexplainable event in the next galaxy over, we wouldn't see explanations of the event in next year's textbooks. Scientific theories should only be taught after they have been tested (hypothesis, observation, test, conclusion, peer review). A theory that has passed these tests is considered to be fact, and so true that it would be perverse to think otherwise; that's when they pass from conjecture and hypothesis to a true scientific theory.

      Dismissing Intelligent Design as not being science is the same as dismissing theories of a round world revolving around the sun as heresy

      Intelligent Design doesn't belong in the same class as evolutionary theory because no scientists consider it a theory. The number of evolutionary scientists that give any sort of credit to Intelligent Design is almost nill. I know it's not a popularity contest, but let the scientists teach and endore science classes. If you want to teach Intelligent Design, teach it in a religion class - or even philosophy. Or any class that tries to tackle the origin of life itself - not how life progressed on earth.

    37. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Intelligent design produces no models, makes no predictions, and explains no currently understood phenomena. It is neither theory, nor fact."

      No, it does better than that. It has a very simple model (the intelligent designer did it), it can predict anything that is not yet observed, and it explains everything.

      Which is also why it is not a scientific theory. It has no constraints at all.

      But it is really simple. Did I mention that?

    38. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by farbles · · Score: 1
      I disagree. I believe that only the certified Word of God (TM) should be taught in schools. You do not need a science education to work at Walmart.

      Seriously though, has it not attracted your attention that this whole debate is solely an American issue? The rest of the world recognizes that the Scientific Method is humanity's best tool for determining truth, and it isn't up for debate. The theory of evolution has endured a century of testing and refinement and is objectively viewed to be truth. Only in America is this in question because only in America are really, really stupid (or evil power-mad - take your pick) people in charge of the social agenda. And only in America are a majority of people falling for this tripe. What is the matter with y'all?

      So, go ahead y'all keep believing in the tooth fairy and meanwhile do not be surprised that the rest of the world takes you less and less seriously. At international gatherings you will be like the opinionated bigot uncle that everyone keeps trying to dodge.

      There's a good Salon article on Richard Dawkins that should be mandatory reading for anyone looking for a dose of truth.

    39. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by jlehtira · · Score: 2, Insightful

      String theory and multiple universes are superstitions currently. There's work happening on both, but no sane man would really "believe" either. The theory of evolution or big bang however are "tested" by evidence. Both do a good job explaining how the universe came to be what it is today. Religion and ID don't. Instead of explaining anything they assume someone decided things this way. I might take ID a wee bit more seriously if it tried to explain WHY the creator made the world like what it is.

      Man-made evolution can be found in artificial intelligence labs. Check Avida for example.

      Now while some theories (like Newton's and Einsteins') are very solid and very tested, evolution and big bang are not. Still they're a good deal more than mere hypothesis (like ID).

      And, contrary to your belief, theories can be disproved without proving an alternative.

      Science is a way of sound assumptions, evidence and logic. It's not a complete explanation of everything, but it's the best one, a "best guess". It's not about faith as a scientist does not have to believe in anything. A theory is more than an explanation, it's a model. Every theory allows predictions, and a theory can be valuable even when its predictions are false. So we have this set of models which seem the most likely - there's no faith in it.

      Only a wise man knows how little he knows.

    40. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't teach every theory that has ever existed about the orgins of life in a science classroom, because some have no (or very weak) evidence.

      ID is one of these that has such a poor base in science that although you may consider it a scientific theory, it doesn't change the fact that it is a scientific theory with poor supporting evidence.

      Now comes the part you should hear:

      The reason that this theory is still looked at by some circles as anything more than a theory with no basis in reality is because hardcore, biblethumping, ignorant christians like it.

      This has it's only supporting basis in the church, and thus should NOT be in public school classrooms.

      You state that Science is the scrutiny of all possibilities, but the fact is that part of science is taking the possibilities that don't work out and getting rid of them.

      Do we still tell people in schools that the world is probebly round, but there is the offchance that it's flat? No, we say the earth is round because the evidence supporting the 'fact' that the earth is flat was wrong and has no basis in fact. The same is true with evolution vs. ID. We shouldn't have ID in public schools because it's idiotic and wrong.

      If Intelligent Design had enough of a base in fact then it would be something worthwhile to put into our public school, but the facts show us that it does not.

    41. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

      A "theory" has much more scientific currency than a "hypothesis". I have to laugh when I see evolution derided as "just a theory". Young earth creationism or even Intelligent Design has a long way to go to achieve being "just a theory".

    42. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Oh believe me, I realize it seems to be a primarily American issue with regard to Evolution. Other countries hold their own misconceptions and un-scientific prejudices, most just happen to be more subtle. Wait till the US isn't top dog anymore and you'll see the same problems rise elsewhere along with the native demagogues who seek to profit from it. Your criticisms of American culture will be equally valid for whatever new affliction gains center stage.

      Also, I it's not a majority of people in America that fall for this tripe, it's a very vocal minority. Most people just don't know how to tell who is right or wrong, so they put their heads down and go back to work. You will make a grave mistake if you think this particular problem is uniquely American or if you think any other part of the world is immune to it.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    43. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by engineer_uhg · · Score: 1
      Intelligent design is not science.

      No kidding. Since the Enlightenment, "science" has been increasingly defined as "the systematic, empirical analysis of natural phenomena." Anything supernatural is precluded a priori. Thus, it's not really fair to dismiss God as "unscientific," because under today's rules, "science" isn't even allowed to talk about Him.

    44. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 2, Informative

      Let me just stick to evolution here. We as a species have been unable to cause evolution to happen. We cannot make a more advanced life form from a less advanced life form via mutation and natural selection. All we can do is make a life form that is the same species have more useful traits (that were previously recessive, or at least seldom seen, though still part of the genes).

      First, you need to stop talking in terms of 'more' or 'less advanced'. The idea of a 'ladder of life' is a very Victorian one -- our evolutionary history has few neat progressions, and our position on the tree is nowhere the top :).

      Second, you don't seem to realise the timescales involved even to make quite small macro changes through selection pressure. To take a simplistic view, our species has been capable of influencing the destiny of others (through selective breeding, for example) for no more than around 50,000 years -- on a geological timescale this is nothing at all. Even a million years (20 times longer than the maximum range of human activity) is nothing compared to the age of the planet we all live on.

      Third, I'd argue that even in the small time we've had, we've influenced many species in a very significant fashion. Like many things in life, species boundaries are not hard-and-fast binary things -- and you could argue that, for example, our selection pressure on dogs is well on the way to splitting them into incompatible groups. There are already breeds of dogs that would find it very difficult to mate without outside assistance -- if nothing else, because of the height difference :). We know that one of the major causes of speciation is lack of interbreeding.

    45. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by IAmTheDave · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Is it closed-minded to teach kids in science that Aristotle was wrong? Is it closed-minded in science to teach kids that the world is round rather than flat? Is it closed-minded in science to teach kids that the Earth orbits around the Sun, and that the Ptolemeic model is wrong? No! Because all of those things represent our best understanding today of how the world works, and to teach the kids otherwise would be to trick them with false understanding.

      No, it's not wrong to teach those things. But guess what - we DO teach Aristotle's original theories just to teach that they were disproved. We do teach that the earth was once thought flat. We do teach that once people thought the sun revolved around the earth. Teach one word of the idea of creationism or anything that in opposition to evolution, and the ACLU and parents sue the school district. Why is it wrong to teach that some believe in opposing theories?

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    46. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Imposter_of_myself · · Score: 0

      Let me tell you my slashdot experience - albeit limited.... You make an interesting comment to some post. If your comment is at all "right wing" or somehow "contradicts" the fad technology being pitched, then a bunch of morons will flame at you and their moderator buddies will mod you down. The morons flaming you will most likely only have read an article about the stuff, and never had any real experience in what they are talking about. Occasionally, you'll actually get a response that contradicts what you wrote and is accurate. Watch, this will be modded as "flamebait" - I've offended the "cultural sensitivies" of the "intelligentsia". Their position is "Good science and techology can only come from left-wing atheist, believers in evolution." I wonder what these same people would have thought of Seymore Cray and his "elves". (Try a google search for "Cray tunnel elves")

    47. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by farbles · · Score: 1
      The stats I've seen have something like 79% of Americans believing in the Virgin Birth and something like 33% believing in Evolution. This despite the fact that the Virgin Birth is a relatively recent addition to the Christian canon. I've seen statistics showing that 60% of Americans believe that you cannot be moral unless you are a Christian.

      Agreed that the driving force behind the dumbification of Americans is coming from a minority viewpoint, but when your own president believes that atheists should not be considered as citizens and cannot be patriots, minority takes on a whole new meaning.

      The US is already not top dog and so far no hoohoo from the native demagogues. America is serving now mostly as an example of the dangers of listening to demagogues.

      Just to be fair, I do want to point out I'm not an America basher, I'm a stupidity basher. It's not my fault that an awful lot of it is coming from America these days.

    48. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by tez_h · · Score: 1
      Indeed, I failed to mention aspects of falsifiability. Oh, and Occam's Razor. Invoking an undefined designer is probably the most flagrant flouting of it. Others have mentioned both of these in threads below, of course.

      Bear in mind, though, that arguments by ID proponents include attempting to cast doubt on the validity of other sciences as science, but this is merely cheap abuse of the demarcation problem.

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    49. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Of course you are wrong. Intelligent design states that Design points to a designer and if designers recreate it in a lab. That doesn't prove anything for either side, but assuming that the lab techs are intelligent it points toward intelligent design and not Random Factors.

      Creationism(distinct from Intelligent Design) also says that because the higher power created everything and said ~"Go forth and have dominion" that we should exercise dominion with knowledge and understanding.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    50. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      String theory is in principle testable, it is just not directly testable with current technology. There are some aspects of it which are testable. First it assumes supersymmetry which is being searched for at the Tevatron and will be either discovered or largely ruled out at the LHC. Large extra-dimensions which are not required for string theory but are possible are also being searched for and limits are being set.

      I'm not sure what you mean by multiple universe theory. Do you mean the many worlds hypothesis? Which is an interpretation of quantum mechanics. I believe their have been proposed tests of it, but I don't really know any details.

      As for evolution, you're just wrong. Evolution has been quite successfully tested in the lab. Resistance to antibiotics in bacteria, resistance to pesticides in insects, longevity in fruit flies have all been seen to evolve in the lab. This is of course in addition to the quite extensive fossil record which is entirely consistent with the process of evolution.

      The proponents of Intelligent Design haven't even attempted to proceed through scientific channels. They haven't submitted papers to scientific journals. They don't even attempt to practice science.

    51. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by radtea · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So then what you're saying is that string theory, multiple universe theory, the theory of evolution and a good deal many others are superstitions because they can't be tested?

      You are confusing "haven't been tested yet" with "can't be tested."

      "Can't be tested" in this context means "can't be tested, even in principle." There are oodles of ways we can test string theory, for example. It makes definite predictions about reality. If reality is not that way, string theory is false. It is unfortunate that string theory's predictions are for conditions that we don't know how to experimentally realize, which is why no one takes string theory very seriously (except string theorists, whom we keep around for their entertainment value.)

      In contrast, the proposition "The God of the Bible exists" is a something that the Bible itself says cannot be tested. God cannot be bid. End of story.

      With regard to evolution, there are all kinds of tests, from experiments on the spontaneous generation of amino acids to predictions regarding the degree of variation in adaptive vs irrelevant traits.

      For Intelligent Design the number of tests is exactly zero, and always will be.

      That's the difference between science and faith.

      --Tom

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    52. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      > We as a species have been unable to cause evolution to happen.

      Really? Curious, then, how my father's house is plagued by bugs which are immune to the pesticides used over the last 40 years.

    53. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution is two things: how life survives changes in its environment, and an explanation of how the diversity of life on this planet came about.

      One of those two things can and has been proven to occur. While we may not be able to force speciation, it has been observed, which is almost as good.

      The other is fixed entirely in the past and can't ever be tested or falsified (barring time machines). It's not pure science, it's historical approximation.

    54. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

      has few neat progressions

      Actually, it consists almost entirely of neat progressions. DNA->Cellular->multicellular->taxonomy tree

      There are whole fields devoted to the study of the neat progressions. Having neat progressions is actually considered one of the functions of evolution - in other words, if there weren't neat progressions, then evolution is less likely. But I'm sure you mean something besides "easily quantifiable changes" when you say neat progressions, so this comment is perhaps without value to you.

      don't seem to realise the timescales involved
      RTFP...I mention why evolution probably isn't testable.

      species boundaries are not hard-and-fast binary things

      Actually, they are for the most life (that being virtually all multicellular organisms). We have a hard and fast binary way to know when speciation has occurred. Two organisms are of a different species if their offsprint is always infertile. AFAIK we have not observed this.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    55. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by MBraynard · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      How has evolution ever been 'predicted' in the fossil record? How can you predict something you already know? It's more like trying to fit an theory to the evidence which cannot be tested.

      Which is fine. That's what ID does. But what ID does not do is require the tremendous leap of faith needed to believe in punctuated equalibrium or the unbelievable randomness required for evolution to have gotten from particles to people.

      The best, strongest evidence of evolution is equally strong evidence of ID.

    56. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by MerlinTheWizard · · Score: 1

      Not really. By principle, the scientific approach is not based on beliefs, contrary to what creationists (and others) like to claim. And this is exactly what distinguishes science from faith. Science is *not* some form of faith, it is the antithesis of it. Science is not so the knowledge it acquires, but the way it acquires this knowledge. And contrary to what you say, it can all be argued through logic and reason. And fortunately it can. Reason is what sets us apart from the rest of animals.

      But heck, there are even scientists which are believers, and even some that are creationists. We may argue that those don't quite embrace the scientific principles, though. They make compromises - to me, some of the worst compromises you can make as a human being.

      Again, any such discussion that would be based on what is "right" and what is "wrong" is inherently flawed. It's all the way you come to your conclusions that matters: and reason is the only tool we dispose of that most closely grasps reality. Some skeptics may say there is no reality - and on some level, that makes sense. But I dare them to keep saying that when they are, for instance, in front of a gun or dying from cancer.

    57. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      I don't put much merit in polls like that. Claiming to believe something that is a matter of faith, vs. how it impacts your life are two different things. It's like a personally religious person running for office in a secular state. They could hold all kinds of unscientific views or religious beliefs, but that doesn't change how they view their responsibility to uphold the duties of their secular office.

      If you want to point out that having someone who gives the impression of supporting these minority idiots is a problem, you won't find disagreement with me. As to the US still being top dog or not, I think it's too early to go putting a demarcation point down, but the trend is clearly there for a decline in US global power.

      As much as I like to bash stupidity, it's not tenable long-term. There's a good chunk of the world is below average intelligence and I don't think we can justify killing them all off, so we do have to learn how to deal with them. If these people are in fact of lower intelligence, then that shouldn't be that hard to engineer institutions that can survive their stupidity. Just because things aren't our fault, doesn't mean we don't have a responsibility to deal with what we're given.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    58. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Design an experiment capable of falsifying the theory of evolution.

      Remember that proving that evolution is possible is different than proving that we evolved from apes.

      Design an experiment capable of falsifying the corollary to the theory of evolution that suggests that we are evolved from apes.

      I propose that those experiments cannot yet be designed. The proof of evolution is therefore in the future. Unfortunately, the possibility of Creation cannot be excluded by experiment. At least not by any experiment I can imagine.

      The problem with teaching any cosmology at all in primary schools is that none of it is currently proved or proveable. In this circumstance, the best solution would seem to be to present as many theories and explanations as is possible in the time alloted for cosmology. This means that creation should be discussed (although the non-falsifiability should of course also be mentioned) as it is a leading non-evolution explanation of how we are here.

      I do have a bone to pic with you about one point however: Science is Philosophy.

      Philosophers bring us new ways of thinking about the world around us. Scientists do the same by introducing new theories about 'how stuff works.' In fact, the highest recognized level of mastery for a scientist is Ph.D: Doctor of Philosophy.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    59. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by rknop · · Score: 1

      How has evolution ever been 'predicted' in the fossil record? How can you predict something you already know? It's more like trying to fit an theory to the evidence which cannot be tested.

      Because we don't already have the whole fossil record in front of us.

      Evolution predicts that you ought to find certain things in the fossil record as we more completely fill out the fossil record. Those predictions in the past have been borne out.

      ID doesn't predict anything about the fossil record, since it's all just magic anyway. Anything can happen at any time.

      -Rob

    60. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Let me just stick to evolution here. We as a species have been unable to cause evolution to happen. We cannot make a more advanced life form from a less advanced life form via mutation and natural selection."

      This statement illustrates the profound misunderstanding, (or perhaps purposeful distortion)of evolution that creationists/ID'ers often have. Let's pick this apart point by point:

      Biological evolution is not about creating "more advanced" life forms. It is about the adaptation, through natural selection, of preexisting species' genetic makeup to the ecological conditions of particular times and places. To think that just because a species is chronologiclaly more recent makes it more advanced is just stupid. For all that humans gain from so-called advancements in their biology, we are prisoners of our evolutionary historoy. Hell, in terms of sheer numbers, we've got a long way to go until we are successful as bacteria, the shark, or even the common cockroach.

      Secondly, creationists argue that because we haven't caused speciation in the barnyard or the lab, it must not exist. This of course ignores the fact that speciation requires a much greater change in an organism's genetic makeup than humans have generally been interested in doing, or simply have had the time to accomplish, given that evolutionary science has only been around for about 150 years.

      For the 6000 years before that, when human genetic expeirments were confined to the far more practical, and anecdotally-based processes of animal and plant husbandry, we selected organisms to breed based upon preexisting desireable characteristics; we never wanted to change them that much, only enhance what was already there. Further, to farmers, hunters, and even cat and dog fanciers, non-interbreeding offspring would have been a liability, rather than an advantage. Why should I wawnt something new if I can't make more of them?

      Give me 2000 years and a goal of turning a cow into something that is as different from a cow as possible, and I'll give you a different species.

    61. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by MBraynard · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      You don't know what ID is. It sounds like you are confusing it with a Protestant's Bible literalism/creationism.

      Name one prediction that has been born out that could not be equated to natural selection?

      Why don't you tell us about how the fossil records failure to demonstrate the Darwinian concept of evolution has resulted in the new punctuated equalibriam theory of the day meant to shore up all of the academics who staked their livelyhood to the perpetuation of evolution?

    62. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      So what? The whole point of science is that we refine it.

      Punctuated equilibriums are chaos/nonlinear dynamical systems theory's contribution. Darwin assumed that genetic changes occur at a constant rate - because it was a good, simple model, not because there was any reason for it. Now, with more advanced maths and technology, we can start building up evolutionary theory from simple genetics, and deduce that the rate of evolution can vary. (And then, there is a real scientific debate about whether the slow, long term process or the quick leaps are more important.)

      It's not like the Origin of Species is the Word of God, or something.

    63. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by The+Bubble · · Score: 1

      We cannot make a more advanced life form from a less advanced life form via mutation and natural selection. All we can do is make a life form that is the same species have more useful traits (that were previously recessive, or at least seldom seen, though still part of the genes).

      This is, in my view, the biggest ding in the evolutionary armor. I, myself, am a seeker: I follow the teachings of the Christ, and serve, as he did, our Father; but I do not claim that I know enough about evolutionary theory to intelligently combat it.

      Having said that, I have not seen any evidence that shows new traits having been added to a genome; genetics tells us that the evolution that we see, and that is used as evidence by proponents of evolution, is not the generation of new traits (as evolutionary theory implies) but the implementation of preexisting data in the DNA.

      Has any experiment demonstrated new and useful traits being added to a genome? It seems to me that natural selection has been demonstrated, but not evolution. They are, after all, two different things.

    64. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by cbciv · · Score: 1
      Let me just stick to evolution here. We as a species have been unable to cause evolution to happen.

      Ever heard of canis familiaris? How about felis domesticus? These are two species whose environments changed through human action and who have adapted to those environmental changes.

      We cannot make a more advanced life form from a less advanced life form via mutation and natural selection

      "Advanced" is a problematic word here. I don't know what you mean by it, but evolution is a process, not a goal. It simply means that those individuals that are better adapted to their environment than others are more likely (note: not guaranteed) to pass those traits on to the next generation. Those traits may favor increased complexity (one possible definition of "advanced") or not. They may favor more extreme attibutes (another possible definition of advanced) (e.g. slow metabolic processes in sloths or fast ones in humming birds) or not.

    65. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by 1729 · · Score: 1
      The problem that the ID people face is that Intelligent Design is irrelevant to the study of the issue. In fact, the only real question is are seemingly random mutations truly random or the work of some higher power? And the answer is, it doesn't matter.

      I disagree. To fully understand evolution, we need to look at why these mutations occur. Now, I probably misunderstand a lot of things having to do with evolution. (I'm a mathematician, not a scientist.) But the Darwinian view of evolution by random mutations seems ludicrous to me. By all means, try to convince me otherwise. Show me a reasonable mathematical model for evolution by random mutation and natural selection.

      Don't get me wrong; I'm not an advocate of creationism or intelligent design. I'm just saying that the mechanism for evolution is much more complex (and much more interesting!) than the strict Darwinians believe.

      I'm tempted to agree with the ID advocates on one thing: that the theory of evolution has some big holes, and these should be discussed in science classrooms. Maybe not in high school, though, for the same reason we don't confuse high school students learning introductory physics with discussions about how classical mechanics isn't actually correct.

    66. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me just stick to evolution here. We as a species have been unable to cause evolution to happen.

      Except that it is still an observable process. Whether its microevolution gradually changing the colors of moths living on soot-stained trees, or (semi-)macroevolution leading to creation of new (similar) species (see Ring Species, where geographical separation has caused populations to diverge to the point where they will no longer interbreed on their own), the processes that make up evolution can be seen all the time.

      The issue people have with evolution is that nobody can stand around and watch a population of fish eventually decide to climb out of the water for dinner and become amphibians, before deciding the water sucked anyway and becoming reptiles, before deciding that the cold sucks and becoming mammals, before deciding getting eaten sucked and becoming predators, before deciding chasing animals sucked and fashioning weapons, growing crops, kenneling animals, developing speech, writing, and civilization.

    67. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We haven't been able test evolution to determine if it's correct

      The concept of evolution has been shown to work quite well. Scientists have used genetic algorithms to design electrical circuits*. In some cases, they created the circuit in ways that much different and sometimes better than human designed circuits. Although this is not life, it does show that the concept of evolution works, and it works very, very well. Evolution is a very powerful problem solver.

      The correctness of evolution doesn't prove or disprove the existance of God, only certain people's interpretation of a book. The incorrectness of evolution would not disprove or prove the existance of God either.

      *I originally saw this in a scientific american article a few years ago. Search google for evolution electrical circuits "genetic algorithm" to get various studies, etc.

    68. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

      There are whole fields devoted to the study of the neat progressions.

      I know -- I work in one (mathematical analysis of phylogenetic trees, to be precise). And what seems neat on the surface becomes more and more complex the more you look. In fact, just about the last thing anyone who has studied the field would say is that it's full of neat progressions :). Just to take the first of your arrows: DNA->Cells. *No one* properly understands exactly how this works, although we're getting closer all the time. Even something supposedly simple like being able to tell how a particular protein will fold is right on the forefront of our current knowledge. It's a beautiful field, but it's not a neat one.

      But I'm sure you mean something besides "easily quantifiable changes" when you say neat progressions

      Actually, yes, I did. I wanted to give some impression of the pure randomness of the process. If we could wind the clock back a few million years, and start the process again, there's very little reason to think that we'd end up with the same species as we have now. Our evolutionary history is full of accidents, misfortunes, and calamaties. The further back in time you wind the clock, the more divergent the alternate-reality would look -- particularly if you go past one of the mass-extinction events (there are several periods in the history of the Earth where it seems that a significant proportion of the extant species have been wiped out -- those that remain rapidly move out and claim the spaces which less fortunate species once ruled). There is *no* reason why humans should have evolved, and that's one of the things that makes it so wonderful that we *have*.

    69. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know it's Monday but come on. That was funny.

    70. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by menace3society · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Evolution doesn't explain how life started. It doesn't even address that. It explains how more life changes over time.

      That's pretty much religion hating science in a nutshell.

      It goes back to the idea of the Great Chain of Being, a philosophical concept developed in the Middle Ages to explain why a supremely powerful and good God could create a universe with error and sin in it. The idea is that evil is simply a *lack* of God's grace, the "privation" of God's goodness.

      Here's where we get into trouble. The Great Chain of being relies on the notion that greater cannot come from lesser, and that thing like the world, people, and even ideas like infinity cannot come from things of lesser stature--the world can't come from dust, people can't come from animals, and infinity cannot be conceived of from finite numbers alone. Hence, all of these things must come from something greater than they are, and that ne plus ultra of greatness is God.

      Evolution more or less rejects that claim, and consequently raises the possibility that *all* complex things evolved from simpler things. Suddenly, there's no need for a God to explain anything: if people can evolve from animals, then the world can evolve from cosmic gas and infinity can be invented/discovered through the negation of finitude. Where would God fit in now?

    71. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      "Do large mass bodies bend space-time? Is gravity between two large objects simply one getting caught in the bend in space-time caused by another?"

      I didn't realize there was still debate about this. Until very recently the only way we could identify a planet going around a distant star was to look at they way the light bent coming from the star. Are there other explanations for why the light bends as it passes a massive object?

    72. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...isn't even allowed to talk about Him."
      God is a Her. Disprove it isn't, I dare you.

    73. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Dread_ed · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "It doesn't belong in a science class."

      Christian here and I couldn't agree more.

      It has a place in academia, however, and that place is PHILOSOPHY class where things like this are discussed and deconstructed as rational ideas that need evaluation in a rational manner, as they are not testable in a laboratory.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    74. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Culture · · Score: 1
      Definitely to flame. Why? Because ID cannot do what it claims to do; explain the origin of the universe. Let us assume for discussions sake that we are willing to accept the creation of the universe is the result of some intelligent agent. Where the hell did the intelligent agent come from? ID just bumps up the same problem to another level, but the problem still exist. If mankind cannot evolve, how did the creator come into being? Actually, it even makes is worse. If totally flawed human cannot come into creation on their own, what hope do we have that a perfect, flawless being came into existence on their own?

      Yeah, I know, God always was and always will be, but I though we were discussing ID, which claims all complex systems must have a creator? ID supporters are, in my extensive (an on-going) experience as a good Southern Baptist, always religious whack-jobs with no understanding of science.

      --
      ----- There are two kinds of people in this world, my friend; those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
    75. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      The religious aren't asking for ID to be taught as a theory that isn't teneble anymore, like all of the examples you gave are taught. So your analogies are not appropriate.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    76. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by torndorff · · Score: 1

      The debate isnt over whether it exists or not: it is whether it should exist in a SCIENCE CLASSROOM due to it being science. And your own statement answered that question: no, it isn't science.

      But feel free to believe it exists. Maybe teach it in a university Mythology course and debate it's pros and cons.

    77. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Communomancer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But I don't dare take the close minded approach that if something isn't "testable" via the scientific method, that it doesn't or can't exist. Neither do I. But I do say that "it" doesn't belong in science class.

      --
      "UNIX" is never having to say you're sorry.
    78. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      This is indistinguishable from "you can't disprove it because it was carefully designed that way by human beings."

      And. no, it's not a scientific theory.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    79. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by EllisDees · · Score: 2, Informative

      >I have not seen any evidence that shows new traits having been added to a genome

      Well then, you haven't looked hard enough!

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    80. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      when your own president believes that atheists should not be considered as citizens

      The quote you're thinking of came from Bush the Older, not Bush the Younger.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    81. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by ttfkam · · Score: 2, Informative

      How to prove or falsify the theory of evolution:

      1. Genetics

      If traits are not inherited, evolution cannot occur

      2. Mutation

      If no trait of children can differ from both parents, evolution cannot occur

      3. Random mutation

      If changes cannot occur without clear design or intention, evolution cannot occur

      4. Speciation

      If two isolated groups cannot become distinct from one another (no more interbreeding even if brought back together geographically), evolution cannot occur

      -----

      *ALL* of the above have been tested, observed, documented, reproduced, etc. If by "proof" you mean that we haven't yet built time machines, then yes, evolution is not proved. By all other measurements, even though scientists haggle about the details, evolution is an accepted fact.

      For fun, run a Google search on Lysenkoism. It's evolution in action; repeated, published, and proved.

      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    82. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

      Natural selection. The ability to become immune was already in their makeup. Evolution is more than this, yes?

      They're still the same species. It wouldn't be too hard for them to become vulnerable to the pesticides again if they weren't exposed to it for a bunch of generations.

      Natural selection != Evolution

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    83. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

      Yes, you're right. They have changed. So have many, many other species. Obviously natural selection is part of nature. Not as obvious is if this is evolution at work, or merely a shift in what attributes are dominant in a species' gene pool. This distinction is still untested; we have yet to cause speciation.

      Don't use semantics. You do know what I mean by it. Advanced is not a problematic word when it is used in this context. Advanced means "more complex" in the same way that entropy means "making things less complex out of more complex components."

      The theory of evolution is used to explain how initially non-complex life became complex life. Otherwise, it's not a useful theory about the origins of life. Further, since there is so much complexity in life as it is, this is definitely one of the things we should see when experimenting to determine evolutionary properties.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    84. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      >Evolution predicts that you ought to find certain things in the
      >fossil record as we more completely fill out the fossil record.
      >Those predictions in the past have been borne out.

      Not really.
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/14418 79.stm

      What happens is, when a fossil is found that doesn't fit the theory, the theory is changed. There is nothing wrong with this, but it helps to be honest that such is what is actually going on and not claiming that evolution has been "borne out repeatedly."

      >ID doesn't predict anything about the fossil record,

      Neither does Naturalism or the theory of evolution happening through Random Mutation + Natural Selection.

      Evolution is not and never was counter to ID.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    85. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by WinDoze · · Score: 1

      Why is it wrong to teach that some believe in opposing theories?

      Creationism and.or intelligent design are not scientific theories.

    86. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by shawnseat · · Score: 1

      You can always dig somewhere else. Really. There are no rabbit fossils in Precambrian rock. Evolution would predict that the next one uncovered will not have any either. And the next one after that. You won't find primate fossils there either. In fact, you won't find any mammal at all there. Any one of those would immediately cause a serious crisis for the theory of evolution -- there certainly would be skepticism to begin with (there are crackpots aplenty, after all), but if this were definitively demonstrated, evolution would be disproven.

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    87. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by shawnseat · · Score: 1
      As I mentioned above, get a pickaxe and head to an outcrop! Find a fossil that is far outside its position on the family tree of life and you have disproven evolution.

      I also cannot prove the absence of invisible, ethereal, weightless pink unicorns in my backyard. But explicitly saying "we can't know for sure!" is silliness.

      So how does the "creation theory" explain the CMB? Did God hiccup when he said "Let there be light" so it wasn't uniform?

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    88. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by shawnseat · · Score: 1

      Yep. Late last year the first species of bacteria was found to have "gained" the ability (albeit rather inefficient) to eat nylon. There is no natural source for it, and the progression of the genome was entirely stochastic.

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    89. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when have there been good academic discussions in state-sponsored high schools? The only real discussion in 45-minute math and science (and english and history) classes is whether or not the material covered is going to be on the test. *THAT* is why a lot of even moderately religious folks get annoyed with the preaching of evolution and it's because the scientific proofs for students to question and investigate aren't relevant to the class and have been removed from the teaching.

      All life on earth evolved from the "C" bubble on a scan-tron sheet.

      So, when scientific process gets neutered down to unquestionable (state school, remember) truth, the parents who are being told "Be more responsible for your kids! Protect them from the evil world better! Homocidal teenagers are Your Fault!" are trying to do exactly that. And the first thing /. does is flame the lot of them.

      For all the difference my high school's teaching of evolution has made in my life, I might as well have been put together by any kind of creator. I might have higher self-esteem as a result of being special instead of bemoaning the fact that I wasn't as big as the other primates wandering the halls...

      Honestly, the disclaimer isn't "We think God might exist" but rather "We think this probably won't be relevant to your life."

      AC (only leared interesting things from dissection in biology and playing pool and air hockey in physics. Physics was substantially more educational.)

    90. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

      But I don't dare take the close minded approach that if something isn't "testable" via the scientific method, that it doesn't or can't exist.

      Yeah, maybe, but it's not science. And it has therefore no place in a science class.

      And then ... even fine cuisine can be investigated through science. Organic chemistry and physics helps. Psychologists are studying our perception of beauty. Linguists apply the scientific method to study our use of language. Mathematics help in signal processing and apply to music, and we can try to find patterns in this.

      But you feel you don't need that hard work and can spew all that bullshit without sane people complaining ... tough.

    91. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "One of the key factors (or, according to some people, the only key factor) which distinguishes a scientific theory from a superstition is the notion of testability and falsifiability."

      I think this thread has proven that most evolutionists do not consider evolution to be a falsifiable theory either.

    92. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      I don't think Lysenkoism means what you think it means. The quick google search yeilds several articles, including a wikipedia article, in which lysenko is said to be a russian biologist? who favored a theory in which aquired traits are passed on to succeeding generations. This theory is easily disproved in the practice of cropping the tails or ears of showdogs. Succeeding generations must also have their tails cropped to conform to the standard, therefore the trait of a cropped tail is not passed on. This 'theory' is as related to evolution as astrology is to astronomy.

      Are there any other convenient web sources documenting the testing of 3 and 4? I'd rather not spend months sifting through biology abstracts if a quick source is avail. I may be a little rusty since HS bio. I was posting on general knowledge and tried to stay as general as possible

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    93. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They also teach creation and ID.. In the religion class, where they belong.

    94. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by superflippy · · Score: 1

      If I may say so, Amen.

      In a religion class you can discuss who or what created the world: God, nothing, the Great Green Arkleseizure.

      In science class, it doesn't matter who did it, what matters is how it works, because whoever created this world did so in such a way that the critters on it evolve over time.

      --
      Your fantasies contain the seeds of important concepts.
    95. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 0

      Newton never actually had a theory of gravity. He had a few laws, like f = m*a, and F = G * m1 * m2 / r^2. But those are just formulas he extrapolated from the data at hand. In fact, that's all a law is: you take a bunch of data, and fit a formula to it.

      For example, if you got a thousand random adults and lined them up according to height, you might come up with a formula that matched their heights to some bell curve. You would call it "the Law of Height Distribution in Adults" or something.

      Laws can be disproven. Laws can be the product of shoddy research. Laws may not hold in all instances (Newton's didn't). A theory is the "why" that explains laws. Newton never had that, and to the end of his days, it confused him to think that "action at a distance" could really exist.

      Evolution isn't a "fact", it's a theory. Not "merely a theory" as the creation^H^H^H^H^H^H^HID'ists would say, because that's misapplying the term. Evolution is a theory, and it is backed by so much evidence that nobody actually doing science believes there is a chance of it being overturned.

      I think the best word for "Intelligent Design" is "speculation". Anyone who disagrees should propose some piece of evidence that would conclusively disprove the main thrust of ID: That the variety of life we see is the result of the action of an Intelligent Designer.

      Precambrian rabbits would disprove evolution nicely.

      --

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

    96. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      I propose that those experiments cannot yet be designed. The proof of evolution is therefore in the future. Unfortunately, the possibility of Creation cannot be excluded by experiment. At least not by any experiment I can imagine.

      I propose that experiments proving ID cannot ever be designed because it all comes down to one question: Who is the designer? There is never going to be a scientific experiment that can prove the existence of God, therefore ID is excluded as a valid theory because it can never be proven.

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    97. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by tshak · · Score: 1

      But I do say that "it" doesn't belong in science class.


      This is a valid point. I think the beauty of learning though is the ability to learn not just specific disciplines, but the ability to take an interdiciplinary approach as well. For example, math, psychology, and physics apply to the study of music. ID can be treated as both theological and philosophical, and some of the ideas behind it are extremely applicable in a science class that's discussing origin.

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    98. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      What did you get bored halfway through and forget to read the rest?

      In this circumstance, the best solution would seem to be to present as many theories and explanations as is possible in the time alloted for cosmology. This means that creation should be discussed (although the non-falsifiability should of course also be mentioned) as it is a leading non-evolution...

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    99. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "You can't test its predictions, since it dosen't predict anything"

      It does predict things,however to learn the answer as to whether or not it is right...I have to KILL YOU!

      Definitely repeatable, however, up to now the results are a bit hard to gauge. Gotta keep trying!

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    100. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      One of the predictions of evolution was that there must be a common carrier of genetic material. Mendel already used the existence of it implicitly. After a long search Watson and Crick found it: DNA. The discovery of DNA is one of the great predictions of evolution theory that came through.

    101. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Experiment. Falsify that man descends from ape. Take a man, take an ape. If they are related there must be some common information that helps in building the creatures. Find this common, let's call it 'genetic', information. If it differs by enormous amounts, it is not possible that they have evolved from the same ancestor. This is done, by simple counting of common base-pairs, men is closer to ape than both are to a chicken. If it were not, or if there was no carrier of genetic information (which could have been the case until the 1950's when it was found), evolution would have been dead. It's alive and kicking though.

    102. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Well, given that we're talking about the natural sciences here, anything supernatural is by definition out. Go build your school of supernatural sciences and see if you can intelligently design a microwave based on such principles.

    103. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by MBraynard · · Score: 1
      Does DNA not equally support the idea of a common designer?

      DNA means that evolution unequivically cannot be true as it is far to complex a process for random mutations to affect a positive result over so short a time.

    104. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      If ID would have been developed in the late 19th century and would have predicted the existence of a common carrier of genetic information, you might have a point. As it is, ID is fitting the theory to the data. A common carrier of information, between species, is not a prerequisite for ID. It is one for evolution.

      A blanket statement about how DNA is too complex to evolve is not credible without proving hard limits (mathematically) on the bounds of evolutionary innovation. Considering that mutations and other changes themselves can be evolved through natural selection, this is hard.

    105. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      Evolution is just natural selection. So what?

    106. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by MBraynard · · Score: 1
      DNA supports ID because it points to a common designer. And if you trace ID back to a somewhat similar creationary theory, it was developed far before the 19th century and inherently predicts similarities among the creations of a single designer.

      Both a Ford Taurus and a Mercury Sable are similar - but do you conclude that one evolved out of the other or that they were manufactured by the same company?

      Re: DNA's complexity and natural selection. I actually did read a book on it a while ago that went deeply into the math. I don't recall the numbers precisely but even just thinking about it, it seems impossible over so few generations. The book was by a guy who has made some errors in his reasoning, perhaps, but not in that argument. It is "No Free Lunch" by Dembsky.

    107. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > No, it isn't. One of the key factors (or, according to some people, the only key factor) which distinguishes a scientific theory from a superstition is the notion of testability and falsifiability.

      While I certainly agree that both of those factors are empirically useful, even as I accept evolution, I strenuously object to them being held up as if they were the sum total of all that is knowable. Now I realize you didn't quite say any such thing, but so many here have said all but that.

      After all, the supposition that all we can know must either be testable or falsifiable* makes us either beg the question, or admit that the proposition itself is neither testable or falsifiable... Otherwise we are left wondering, how is the notion that science is useful scientific?

      * One wonders, for example, how a statement like "cogito ergo sum" could rightfully be considered falsifiable...

    108. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      I read it. Creation should not even be discussed because of the "non-falsifiability".

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    109. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by DeputySpade · · Score: 1

      There's a good chunk of the world is below average intelligence...

      Roughly half, I'd say. And if you did get rid of that half, there would still be roughly half that were below average intelligence. And if you got rid of them, there would still be.... yada yada...

      --


      This space intentionally left blank
    110. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by farbles · · Score: 1
      Whoops, I stand corrected. I'd seen the quote attributed to "George Bush" with no "H.W." in the middle but a quick check shows that you're right. It's funny, I'd figured Bush the Elder to be the more sensible one and not one to get quoted saying something like that while it sounds like exactly the sort of thing the current Bush would say. Just goes to show about making assumptions.

      In reply to God Almighty, you make some good points but what is being missed isn't the validity or not of beliefs by people but the notion that truth is something independently verifiable by everyone who is presented with the evidence.

      For example, a discouragingly large number of Americans apparently are unaware that the Earth revolves around the sun, if polls can be believed. The fix for this is not to make authoritative statements that it does, but to demonstrate proofs to show it does, to show how anyone can duplicate these proofs for themselves. In other words, to show that the best way to find the truth is the Scientific Method.

      One of the baffling contradictions about current America is the wide popularity of shows like C.S.I., which show scientific rationalism in action while on the other hand there is the belief, expressed by several of the replies to this article even, that belief trumps evidence.

      Imagine an episode of C.S.I. where Grissom is presented with a murder victim stabbed with a knife, covered in DNA from the attacker. The attacker is found, the DNA confirmed, fingerprints found on the weapon belonging to the attacker and Grissom suddenly states that the perp is really Santa Claus who came down the chimney, faked all the evidence without leaving a trace and buggered off to the North Pole. The proof? Grissom's unquestioning belief that this is what happened.

    111. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by MBraynard · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, it's not. It's NS + mutation. Where did you come from?

    112. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by mindesign · · Score: 1

      "Hmm. Two questions. Would you view Newton's theory of gravitation a theory, or a fact? Now, would you view gravity itself as a theory or a fact?"

      a theory's a theory, and gravity is neither fact nor theory - it is what it is (phenomena, field, whatever). facts are truth or data purported to be true, not a thing itself.

      i know it sounds like a quibble, but defining fact as such would be a semantic bobble with unknown but certainly dire repurcussions....

      --
      everything is closer than you think.
    113. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1
      Everything supports ID because every possible way a being is put together can be construed to point to a designer. The designer would have just designed it that way.

      That's the problem with ID. It's empty. In the case of DNA: if for instance it was found that every species has a completely different way of passing genetic information trough the generations, with completely different means of reproduction, this would have meant the death of evolution as a theory, as there is no way to reconcile this. People would have tried of course, but probably a new theory would have to be construed. As it is, the discovery of DNA is a great point for evolution. It was predicted, it was searched for, it was found, and finally DNA gives quantative ways of describing the distance between men, ape, chicken and whatever other species there are.

      The hypothetical non-existance of common DNA would have been no problem whatsoever for ID, as it would simply been construed as pointing to a common designer that tried some different things in different species. If 'scientists' would have followed the ID way of reasoning, DNA would never have been found, as no one would have searched for it. I doubt your 19th century IDists predicted a common genetic carrier as a requisite for ID. Didn't happen. ID has no predictions and is intellectually empty.

    114. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by swillden · · Score: 1

      You either believe that in the scientific principles (all theories must be falsifiable to be valid, and occam's razor.. roughly ;) ), or you don't believe in that

      So, what you're saying is: Either you have faith in science, or you don't.

      Right?

      ;-)

      In all seriousness, there actually is something to this notion of "faith in science". It's pretty silly for someone to choose to disbelieve science, unless they intend to go all the way and simply disbelieve all of the evidence of their own senses -- which has got to be a damned hard way to live. However, even someone who agrees wholeheartedly that the scientific method is an excellent way to discover truths about the universe may still not have faith in science.

      Science, by its very nature, is limited to describing things that are repeatedly, reliably observable. "Faith" in science, then, constitutes the firm, unshakable believe that:

      • Everything that matters (or simply "everything") can be observed, given the right observation tool; and/or
      • There is no way to understand anything that cannot be repeatedly, reliably observed.

      I believe strongly in the utility of science, and don't have any interest in non-predictive non-science like ID, but I don't believe either of the two points above.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    115. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 1

      So the 'invisible pink unicorn' meme is still alive? That was being used back in talk.origins when I was active on it in 1994/5...

    116. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      "So, what you're saying is: Either you have faith in science, or you don't."

      Yes. There are other beliefs like solipism (we are brain's in a vat, or in Matrix thing) or you could believe that a non-falsifiable theory is equally valid as a falsifiable one, or believe the opposite of occam's razor is better, and so on.

      Of course I'm using the word 'belief' liberally. Probably a bad idea since some can use my words against me and just say 'what makes your belief better than mine?'.

      Btw you wrong about 'faith' in science is that everything can be obvserved and repeatedly observed.
      'faith' in science is pretty much just that falsifable beliefs are better and occam's razor is a good principle. There's really not too much more to it. (There's a few finer details, but going into requires pages of scientific philosophy which are already written in wikipedia).

      And science has predicted various things that are extremely difficult to observe.

      Btw, if we cannot observe something, directly or through any of its effects, with any tools, then why would it matter since it cannot affect us? If it did affect us, we'd be able to observe it surely,

    117. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      "Intelligent Design is based upon faith"
      I wouldn't say that. Many of the scientist in the ID movement do not believe in the Christian God, they recognise the need for a higher inteligence but do not place any restrictions on the nature of it.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    118. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by tez_h · · Score: 1
      gravity is neither fact nor theory - it is what it is (phenomena, field, whatever).
      There seems to be some catagorical confusion here. What you have parenthesized are not both the same thing. A field is not a natural phenomenon. It is an abstraction about the nature of that phenomenon. And saying that gravity is not a fact, just some phenomenon, is really semantic evasion, as I could easily convert "gravity is a fact" to "the existence of gravitational phenomena is a fact".

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    119. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by tez_h · · Score: 1
      I agree with most of what you say regarding laws. I merely designated "Newton's Theory of Gravitation" those parts of Classical Mechanics that deal with modelling massive bodies. I do not think it is unsuitable.

      I also agree completely that those IDist's that put forward the argument of "merely a theory" are both shooting themselves in the foot (as you say, 'I think the best word for "Intelligent Design" is "speculation"'), and confounding a more informal usage of the word 'theory'.

      What I do still contend is that saying that "evolution is just a theory" denies is that there are parts (inheritance, for example) that are true, whereas much of the framework (applying metrics to natural pressures on specific allele frequencies) can certainly be designated theory. Again, no one will deny that things fall on earth when released at a height above 'the ground', but that is simply not the theory part, it is fact. Note, also, that (as I have tried to expound in another part of this subthread) the distinction between theory and fact is not one of quality, but of degree.

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    120. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you want evidence of mutation?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo_floresiensis

    121. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      That's actually not strictly correct. You (or I) can have a satisfying and intellectually rigorous academic discussion about what a bunch of dickheads the creationists are.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    122. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So then what you're saying is that string theory, multiple universe theory, the theory of evolution and a good deal many others are superstitions because they can't be tested?


      I just wanted to mention that the concept of a scientific theory being "falsifiable" does not necessarily mean there has to be an actual experiment to veryfiy or test that theory.

      It rather refers to the fact that there has be be a conceivable event that does not "fit into that theory" (i.e., that conflicts with the predictions of the theory) - even if it is highly unlikely that this event will ever occur.

      For example, if we found a human body in the oldest sediments of the earth, this - though highly unlikely - would invalidate the theory of evolution in its current form. Thus, this theory is falsifiable.

      ID, on the other hand, does not have this property. Current evidence supporting the theory of evolution (fossils, e.g.) work for ID just as well as the 4 billion year old human fossil - the "intelligent designer" could have designed it that way. Since the "intelligent designer" is a supernatural entity we can not make ANY predictions based on this "theory".
    123. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      > We as a species have been unable to cause evolution to happen.

      I have one word for you - poodles.

      I don't think that poofter dogs with funny haircuts occur in nature, pal.

      Although I suppose a poodle isn't exactly evolved - devolved, perhaps.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    124. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      For fucks sake.

      You predict something that you haven't yet found in the fossil record. Then you find it.

      What is the matter with you people?

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    125. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      > Are there other explanations for why the light bends as it passes a massive object?

      Maybe a massive object has a higher concentration of aether around it, or something ... maybe some phlogiston too.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    126. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      The beauty of something so simple, is that it appeals to simple people ...

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    127. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by swillden · · Score: 1

      Btw you wrong about 'faith' in science is that everything can be obvserved and repeatedly observed. 'faith' in science is pretty much just that falsifable beliefs are better and occam's razor is a good principle.

      Yes and no. Some people take their belief in science much further than this, essentially to the point that scientific knowledge is the only knowledge worth having.

      Btw, if we cannot observe something, directly or through any of its effects, with any tools, then why would it matter since it cannot affect us?

      You're leaving out some important adjectives. Something that we cannot observe reliably and repeatedly, as required by the scientific approach, could nevertheless affect us. For example, consider a god that is real, but to whom it is important that there be no solid proof of his existence.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    128. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      "Something that we cannot observe reliably and repeatedly, as required by the scientific approach, could nevertheless affect us."

      But I've already pointed out counter examples in science. Take the birth of the universe - we use science to predict what it looked like and yet it cannot be observed at all.

      Scientific approach does not require that we observe reliably and repeatedly, but it sure does help!

      Also for a god that is real. Either he affects our lives, and hence can be measured, or he doesn't so it doesn't matter if he exists or not (for future events).

      Also I'm not sure what you mean by 'some people take their belief in science much further than this'. What I gave is what science is. Can you give any examples of what such a person would not believe in, other than some religous/spiritual idea?

    129. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      a discouragingly large number of Americans apparently are unaware that the Earth revolves around the sun, if polls can be believed.

      I see that more as proof that polls can be rigged by careful wording and dishonest summarizing of the results, rather than proof that people are actually dumb enough to believe that.

      Consider if I did the classic joke poll of asking people if "dihydrogen monoxide" should be banned - or better yet, that we need to demand that our fine city's sewage treatment plant begin filtering it out of the sewage instead of letting it pass right through like it does today. Then I report on it afterward as "15% of people in this city are so dumb they want the sewage treatment plants to capture all the water and not pass it through." That's dishonest reporting - the truth being more that 15% of respondants didn't realize what dihydrogen monoxide meant.

      I suspect this poll was something like that. I'd like to see what the actual question was.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    130. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by swillden · · Score: 1

      Take the birth of the universe - we use science to predict what it looked like and yet it cannot be observed at all.

      No, but its results can. Reliably and repeatedly. The purview of science is not limited to what we can observe directly, as you already noted, but it is definitely limited to phenomena we can measure in some way, even if very indirectly.

      Scientific approach does not require that we observe reliably and repeatedly, but it sure does help!

      It absolutely requires it. Observations that are not repeatable are -- quite properly -- not considered valid.

      Also for a god that is real. Either he affects our lives, and hence can be measured, or he doesn't so it doesn't matter if he exists or not (for future events).

      Or he affects our lives, yet refuses to be measured reliably and repeatedly.

      Also I'm not sure what you mean by 'some people take their belief in science much further than this'.

      What I mean is that rather than considering scientific knowledge to be better, as you put it, they consider it to be the only knowledge. They choose to instantly discard personal evidence of anything that does not fit that mold.

      Can you give any examples of what such a person would not believe in, other than some religous/spiritual idea?

      No. Though I'm open to the idea that there may be other areas of knowledge which science cannot examine.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    131. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      "It absolutely requires it. Observations that are not repeatable are -- quite properly -- not considered valid."

      Okay, I think we are arguing the same thing. I was saying we can predict things that we can't repeat, but that is scientific, and you say yes but that is based on what we can repeat. So I agree. :)

      Btw, if God does affect our lives, then surely that theory makes the prediction that we could observe this statistically (statistically more good things than bad things happen to us) or even chemically (show that praying to one diety makes us happier than praying to another, to find out which deity exists and to try to reduce plaecbo effects etc).

      I would say I'm one of those people then. I look very cynically at personal evidence because a single event is not statistically significant.

      For example, many people cancel airplane flights - pretty much every flight has cancellations. Yet when the plane crashes you always get someone who should have been on the flight, but cancelled instead. Then you get people saying "see! Explain that! God did it!" without understanding statistics and the antromorphic principle (if he died, he wouldn't be there to say he survived, and someone else would be instead).

    132. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by swillden · · Score: 1

      Btw, if God does affect our lives, then surely that theory makes the prediction that we could observe this statistically (statistically more good things than bad things happen to us)

      Only if you assume that God's goal is to make our lives better, rather than our afterlives.

      or even chemically (show that praying to one diety makes us happier than praying to another, to find out which deity exists and to try to reduce plaecbo effects etc).

      Again, only if you assume that being happier now is the goal.

      And there are measurable effects of this sort, but they're difficult to separate from the positive effects of the lifestyle decisions that are recommended by religions and the positive

      At bottom my point is that if you assume God is omniscient (or even just knows a whole lot more than we do and is a lot smarter), and that he doesn't want to be measured, he can arrange that no conclusive measurements will be possible.

      That is, of course, precisely the nature of the Christian god. Powerful, and feels that faith is very important. Of course, one could argue that that's exactly the sort of myth that would develop in order to avoid falsifiability. Round and round it goes -- which is just the way God likes it :-)

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    133. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by MBraynard · · Score: 1

      Evidence of mutation in the fossil record would be nice, sure. That would prove evolution and it would no longer be a theory (although the academic support for the theory is a dogmatic religion).

    134. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      You can, though, agree that none of those systems of assertions (ID, Allah's desire for jihad, any religous statement) are of scientific nature by the very fact that they are not testable. This is really tautological, and not an arguable point, since this is indeed just using the 'standard' definition of science.

      On the other hand, an argument can be made by which anything which is not testable, that is, anything which has no observable consequence, can safely be said to not exist: any true statement that can be made regarding an universe which contains some thing which is not observable is equivalent to the conjunction of a true statement regarding an alternate universe in which this non-observable thing does not exist and (possibly) the statement that this non-observable thing exists.

      Therefore a consistent theory of the universe-with-this-non-observable-thing provides an essentially equivalent consistent theory of the universe-in-which-everything-which-exists-is-obser vable.

      Reciprocally, one can adjoint to any consistent theory of the universe the existence of an arbitrary number of non-observable things as axioms without disturbing consistency, and without enlarging the class of true statements regarding the universe except by those statements stating that the adjoined things exist.

      In this precise sense, anything which is not observable can safely be assumed no to exist.

    135. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      When one speaks of 'testing' or 'predicting' with respect to a scientific theory one is not referring to actually predicting a result, before it happens. Of course, that is not excluded, and it is a most spectacular event when that happens (the prediction of the existence of Neptune is a remarkable example of this---you can read about it here---but there are of course many others, among which one should also name the fact that the theory of selection and heredity suggested the plausibility of mechanisms like those that we now know DNA is involved in in the transmition of hereditary characteristics)

      That a theory 'predicts' something in this context means that the something happens can be derived from other statements in the theory but that the theory itself, in its formulation, does not contain the statement that the something happens. For example, Newtonian mechanics predict the time needed by a stone to fall from my table to the floor. It is irrelevant with respect to the usual criteria for scientificity of theories that I may or may not already know how long that will take, the only important thing is that I can somehow derive from more 'basic' statements in the theory the time.

      This may seem like a bad criterion, but it is not. It is essentially the best thing we've come up with in millenia of thinking about this.

      Also, it is interesting that, for example, no theory that we know of predicts gravitation (except maybe some forms of string theory, I think...) despite the fact that we are all well aware of it. We have theories that include gravitation in their formulation: for example, the Newtonian theory of gravitation essentially axiomatically says that there is a force between massive bodies of such and such magnitude. This is a rather economical way of introducing gravitation, but it is nonetheless a deux-ex-machina introduction.

  5. Degenerate, mind warping scum. by grub · · Score: 2, Interesting


    "Intelligent Design" is nothing more than an effort by christian mythologists to keep their invisible man relevant. I'd like to ask these ID kooks just what god it is that developed all that they propose? Certainly they aren't speaking of Hindu gods or Egyption gods, they're pushing their own brand of myth on hungry minds. Any teacher that propagates that rubbish should have their teaching credentials revoked as they aren't putting the best interests of the students first.

    The "christian taliban" will stop at nothing to keep the money flowing to the coffers, perpetuating the ignorance for another generation is the only way to guarantee it.

    Hee, my "Friends/Foes" mail should be entertaining tonight. :)

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by haluness · · Score: 1

      I'd like to ask these ID kooks just what god it is that developed all that they propose?

      This is a very good point. Would ID'ists accept Hindu versions of creation? Buddhist versions? Muslim versions?

      Or is ID only valid for Christian gods?

    2. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by mmkkbb · · Score: 1

      The "christian taliban" will stop at nothing to keep the money flowing to the coffers, perpetuating the ignorance for another generation is the only way to guarantee it.

      Oh come now, there hasn't been a militant Christian theocracy created by young fundamentalist students in a few centuries.

      --
      -mkb
    3. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by PooR_IndiaN · · Score: 1


      "christian taliban"

      Think, atleast for a moment, before you use two words so fundamentally different in the same sentence. Media stories of the taliban are rather soft, and, trust me, you would not want to know what it's like under the taliban

    4. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by jasondlee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There are ID scientists who are not Christians, so, yes, the Designer in ID can, in theory, be $DIETY. However, *Christian* ID supporters, by nature of our Christian faith (note: I'm not a scientist) believe this Designer is the God of the Bible and no other. You can't reasonably claim to be a Christian and believe otherwise.

      However, this whole line of question dodges and clouds the issues. The vast majority of /.ers, it seems, are not people of faith. So, rather than having an intelligent design about the merits of the *idea* ID (whether you believe it or not), the discussion turns into an attack on the *people* who believe it. "Those darn fundies!" "When are those crazy Christians going to give up?" *Rarely* is the *scientific* idea of some sort of designer (note the case) ever discussed rationally. And I think ID is a rational idea (faith aside). Our own scientific laws shows that everything comes from something. Where did this point of singularity come from? What created all that mass? Has it always existed? That would would violate one scientific "law" after another. But, if something, *has* always existed, is it matter, or an eternal god. *Either* choice requires a good deal of faith, and, I think, the idea of an eternally existent deity to make much more sense.

      --
      jason
      Have a good day?! Impossible! I'm at work!
    5. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by danheskett · · Score: 1

      I'd like to ask these ID kooks just what god it is that developed all that they propose?
      I think a lot of people who look at ID and consider to be interesting will you they have no idea!

      I'd like to ask these ID kooks just what god it is that developed all that they propose?
      Intelligent Design is not limited to just Christianity! I have friends of various non-Christian beliefs who subscribe to a very similiar idea of how the world got started. IE, a non-visible force started a chain reaction.

      The "christian taliban" will stop at nothing to keep the money flowing to the coffers
      Equating intelligent design propoents with the taliban is amazingly crass and bigoted. Find me a case of a evolutionist beheaded in public for showing an extra few inches of skin, and we can talk! It's really, really crass. Especailly for someone who lost a personal friend to the brutality of the Taliban.

      will stop at nothing to keep the money flowing to the coffers
      Whether you believe it or not there exists a huge number of very spirtually active people who are deeply committed to science and pursuit of objective truth.

      perpetuating the ignorance for another generation is the only way to guarantee it.
      It seems like you are the one constantly perpetuating the ignorance - of Christian faith, of people with dissenting views and standards, and your fellow man.

      Is it really necessary to present things in such harsh terms? It is possible for adults to discuss matters without being blantly and purposefully hurtful!

    6. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "attack on the *people* who believe it"

      The people are the ones trying to get other theories taught as flawed.

      "*scientific* idea"

      Scientific ideas are testable and based upon evidence. There is no evidence to support this hypothesis.

    7. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by jjr1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I am utterly amazed every time I read a story about {insert random southern US town} removing teaching about evolution for teaching something that is entirely based on religion. If you don't believe evolution is perfect, raise other issues and addendums to the argument like punctatated equilibrium and hopefully a bright student will sit down with the evidence and figure out what they believe in. God is an imaginary friend for adults - Elmore Leonard

      --
      Best Trivia answer ever... Name the largest aquatic man eater... Contestant: Tsunami
    8. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, rather than having an intelligent design about the merits of the *idea* ID

      Please present any scientifically verifiable merits of ID here.

      I'll go get a coffee while waiting.

    9. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by torndorff · · Score: 1

      As a side note, not all folks are bashing the people who believe in ID. Keep reading the posts. But the parent of your post does have a valid point -- which version of ID would be taught in a classroom? And who certifies the curriculum? Where would the church and state fall and how would the students be protected from biased material?

      There are serious questions that deserve serious answers within the context of this debate. I don't have the answers, I'm willing to admit, but I do have a good number of reasons why ID isn't science. For one: it doesn't ascribe to the fundamental notions of science; that is it doesn't allow for "through science we can fully understand all aspect of nature, either now or in the future." Instead it uses our lack of total explanation as basis for a Higher Power.

      But this debate shall always fall to a question of ones morals or basic beliefs. I'm Christian but I whole-heartedly disbelieve ID, but you said yourself all Christians must believe in ID. Why is that? And why do you have the higher position to decide if I qualify as a Christian?

      Good Monday to ya.

    10. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by jasondlee · · Score: 1

      The people are the ones trying to get other theories taught as flawed.

      That's the nature of disagreement and discourse. "Hey, I think that theory/idea/design/whatever, here's my alternative."

      Scientific ideas are testable and based upon evidence. There is no evidence to support this hypothesis.

      There are plenty of scientists who think otherwise. As my original port tried to convey, though, that sort of discussion doesn't happen on /. It's straw man central here...

      --
      jason
      Have a good day?! Impossible! I'm at work!
    11. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll go get a coffee while waiting.

      You might as well get married, have kids, and retire - you will be waiting that long.

    12. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "There are plenty of scientists who think otherwise. As my original port tried to convey, though, that sort of discussion doesn't happen on /. It's straw man central here..."

      Really? I've never heard of any. I have heard of scientists that argue that creation can not be discounted. Evolution is not incompatible with creation.

      There is an important distinction here, ID is not creation. Creation is a theory of how the Universe was initially formed, this question is up in the air. Even if the Big Bang is proven true, it does not discount the possibility of an Intelligence setting it into motion. Evolution on the other hand is a theory that takes place later in the timeline.

    13. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by AsciiNaut · · Score: 1
      Dealing with parent's point about the origin of the universe first, that is clearly nothing to do with the evolution of life on one small planet. The fundamental silliness of the "First Cause" problem (basically if it is claimed that the universe needs a First Cause, i.e., God, and that nothing caused God because he always existed, why not cut out the middle god and simply argue that space/time always existed?) has been exposed convincingly by philosophers. See Why I Am Not A Christian by Bertrand Russell for a comprehensive and accessible (though admittedly flawed in places) rebuttal of many of the pro-theistic arguments.

      As for ideas about evolution, Darwin convincingly countered most of the so-called intelligent design arguments over a century ago in "Origin of Species". Essentially the answer is that given huge stretches of geological time, an excess of fecundity over resources, and natural selection, even complex structures such as eyes, livers and Slashdot editors will emerge. ID arguments that rely on calculations of probability have totally (if not wilfully) missed the point. For a more up-to-date and /.-oriented argument arguing the case for evolution by natural selection, I recommend Darwin's Dangerous Idea by Daniel Dennett. Consequently today, the vast majority of biologists subscribe to the following tenets:

      • The Earth is over four billion years old and life has existed here for most of that time
      • Evolution has demonstrably occurred: fact, not theory, proved a million times over
      • There is strong evidence favouring natural selection as the main driver of evolution
      • Ditto sexual selection in the case of peacocks etc

      Adherence to these tenets is extremely unlikely ever to change because the observable facts are so overwhelmingly in favour of them. Faith? Of course, but hugely evidence-based and no more a stretch than (for example) belief in gravity, the prior existence of dinosaurs and the inevitability of death. If ID gains sway in the US, well, the country may suffer in the same way as the USSR did when it adopted the politically-motivated but provably wrong doctrine of Lysenkoism. Incidentally, Darwin also -- completely ignorant of genes and DNA -- suggested the inheritance of acquired characteristics. Mendel and his successors showed that random mutation was the fundamental process creating diversity. But the central core of the theory of natural selection remains scientifically unchallenged.

    14. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by caffeineHacker · · Score: 1

      OT I know...but exactly how would you know things about the Taliban not in the media? I doubt you've been to Afghanistan(Although it's possible). If your talking about how the US funded and supplied them in order to kill anyone caught growing opium, that's pretty bad but alot of the blame is on the US drug war. If you're talking about one of the several video's that float around the web of people's hands, tongues, etc. being cut off then I say you're oversensitive. What the christians did during the crusades and puritinism was much worse. Also, more recent, is the conflicts in Ireland. While maybe not as bad, abuse and murder still occur from christianity.

    15. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      I read a story about {insert random southern US town}

      Man, you must either be from outside the US or you really need to study your geography more. Pennsylvania is a NORTHERN State, voted for Kerry. They are NORTH of the Mason Dixon line, fought for the NORTH in the civil war and are in no way a Southern or Red state. They are Blue Democrats.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    16. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by m50d · · Score: 1
      Read again. You'll find 3/4 of the posts above you are pointing out that I.D. is not scientific because it's not falsifiable, so how the hell are we supposed to discuss it? There is no evidence for it, nor is there any way to find evidence against it.

      I *think* (not having done enough physics yet) the whole matter could be a fluctuation in the quantum electrodynamic field (all you need is a pea-sized ball that's very dense, then inflation and ordinary classical physics handle the rest), which you already have to assume exists. In which case this is preferable to other explanations because of Occam's Razor.

      --
      I am trolling
    17. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I agree, we shouldn't be calling the US religious right "christian taliban".

      We should be reffering to the taliban as "Evangelical Muslims".

      Snicker.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    18. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by mbbac · · Score: 1

      This particular instance takes place in Pennsylvania. The last time I checked that wasn't in the South. It's either spreading or your stereotype isn't bearing out.

      --

      mbbac

    19. Re:Degenerate, mind warping scum. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  6. Next by Hemos: Man Travels by Train! by archeopterix · · Score: 5, Funny
    C'mon, first "Load List Values for Improved Efficiency", now "Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design" (strikes again, yawn)?

    What next? "Serious Doubts About Pyramid Schemes"? "Scientist Uses Paper to Wipe Ass"?

    1. Re:Next by Hemos: Man Travels by Train! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "Scientist Uses Paper to Wipe Ass"

      Paper? What the hell am I doing with these three seashells then?

    2. Re:Next by Hemos: Man Travels by Train! by radja · · Score: 1

      ofcourse, no self-respecting scientist would use paper. the preferred solution is a live budgerigar. more absorbant than paper, selfcleaning and 100% organic.

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
    3. Re:Next by Hemos: Man Travels by Train! by Minwee · · Score: 2, Funny

      It could be worse. We could be reading "Slashdot: Postmodernism for Derridaists. Neotextual desitutationalism that subcontextualizes"

    4. Re:Next by Hemos: Man Travels by Train! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it ironic (in the true definition of the word) that this gets moded down to 0 for being "Offtopic". If you know/lookup the terms used in the joke it certainly describes to some threads I've read on Slashdot.

    5. Re:Next by Hemos: Man Travels by Train! by Minwee · · Score: 2, Funny
      It's probably because the content of this forum is contextualised into a capitalist paradigm of context that includes language as a reality.

      I mean really, what can you do?

    6. Re:Next by Hemos: Man Travels by Train! by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      I wish they would publish "Serious Doubts About Pyramid Schemes" (see my sig). I'm astonished at the level of credulity here.

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  7. Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Ckwop · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Intelligent design essentially reduces to this:

    Fact 1. The universe is extremely intricate and complicated

    Fact 2. We design things such as automobiles or aircraft that are intricate and complicated.

    Which leads to the conclusion:

    Conclusion 1: Everything that is intricate and complicated must have a designer.

    Conclusion 2: Conclusion 1 indicates that the universe requires a designer.

    Conclusion 3: God is that designer.

    (Western) Conclusion 4: This designer is the God as described in the Holy Bible.

    The real failure of the argument is in Conclusion 1. It amounts to saying "I have absolutely no idea why the universe is complicated, therefore God did it." When a person studies physics, Conclusion 1 becomes even more untenable. There are many very simple systems that give rise to very complex behaviour. Consider the Newton-raphson method for finding roots of a polynomial. The method goes "pick somewhere close to the root and then start iterating and the iteration will take you to a root". If you're brighter than I was at school, you might have asked: "Okay, but how can I guess where the root is mathematically so I can start the process." The answer is far more http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/newton / ">complex than you think.

    And besides, if Conclusion 1 is true then surely God is intricate and complicated and thus needed a designer. To which the theist replies: "God doesn't need a designer, It's God". To which I respond: "If God doesn't need a designer, why does the universe? Why not just cut out God and proclaim that the universe is undesigned? And there in is the true failing of intelligent design.

    Another argument comes from the fact that the universe seems fine tuned to life. This a bit premature. First of all, we can't even show life is possible in our universe from first principles; that is, taking the complete set of the laws of physics and using it to simulate life at the atomic level on a super-computer. How can we be so sure life couldn't exist in some form with different laws of physics? My second objection is that we should expect life to depend heavily on physics. As an example, the proteins that deal with the replication of DNA are quantum optimised, the speed at which they move down the DNA is the minimum allowed by quantum mechanics. There is also evidence that the machinary uses quantum mechanical tunnelling to halve the error rate during copying. I'd argue that the fact that life depends so heavily the laws of physics being exactly right is a product of selection - there is a distinct advantage in exploiting the physics of the universe. In the begining of life, the instruments of life were probably a lot cruder.

    As an atheist, I am alarmed when people try to mark religious belief as science. I don't mind you having religious belief, but if the US wants to remain a technological super-power you've got to make sure your children are taught cold, hard science. By letting the cherrished beliefs of a few cloud the judgement of the youth on an entire nation, everbody loses out. As a scientist, I enjoy having the key theories questioned but it becomes annoying when such a throughly discredited theory as Intelligent Design is peddled again and again without the proponents bringing any new ideas to the table.

    Simon

    1. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by rknop · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "I have absolutely no idea why the universe is complicated, therefore God did it."

      Exactly. It's an argument through ignorance. It's just like many other things in the past which weren't explained by science, and have since been been explained by science. Well, not really, becasue we already do understand how complexity can arise from evolution, so it's even worse than that.

      As an atheist, I am alarmed when people try to mark religious belief as science.

      As a Christian, I am too.

      -Rob

    2. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by grasshoppa · · Score: 1, Funny

      Conclusion 1: Everything that is intricate and complicated must have a designer.

      Conclusion 2: Conclusion 1 indicates that the universe requires a designer.

      Conclusion 3: God is that designer.

      (Western) Conclusion 4: This designer is the God as described in the Holy Bible.


      Psst...you forgot one:

      Conclusion 5: Profit!!!!

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    3. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by mostlyalmighty · · Score: 1

      It is also a logical fallacy to say that facts one and two imply conclusion one.

    4. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by FlyByPC · · Score: 1

      I agree on your thinking on so-called "Intelligent Design," but I believe that atheism (while possibly correct) is itself a faith. How could one account for an omniscient, omnipotent god who does not wish to be found? Consider a fiction story that you write. Having created that "universe," you are its "god." If you didn't want the characters to be able to prove your existence, they would never be able to. One major benchmark for how much I respect someone's beliefs is how readily they admit "...but I might be wrong."

      --
      Paleotechnologist and connoisseur of pretty shiny things.
    5. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Without flaming you....

      As a Christian, do you agree that ID should be taught in schools, or that (at the risk of making it a loaded question) church and schools should be separate?

    6. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by swiggidy · · Score: 1

      For anyone who's taken first order logic

      U - Universe
      W - We
      I(x) - x is intricate
      C(x) - x is complicated
      D(x,y) - x is designed by y

      Fact 1:
      I(U) ^ C(U)

      Fact 2:
      There Exists x
      D(x,W) ^ I(x) ^ C(x)

      Conclusion 1:
      For All x there exists a y
      (I(x) ^ C(x)) -> D(x,y)

      This does not follow because you can't universally introduce an idea when given something. This would be like saying "I can drive a car" "A car has wheels" so "Everything with wheels can be driven" (you might as well now say "Everything with wheels can be driven by god" but's that's too much)

      If C#1 was true, C#2 would also be. But then #3 takes "There exists a designer" and replaces it with "god". Wait, I just discovered the loop hole. Just replace x in all "there exists an x" with "god". Your logic becomes infallible.

    7. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are using a common but incorrect definition of atheism. Atheism is the lack of belief in gods, not necessarily the active disbelief in them. It is therefore the default state of anyone who has yet to form a conclusion on the subject.

      (Don't bother cracking open a general-purpose dictionary trying to contradict me, by the way; such dictionaries include any and all definitions which have become commonly used, but in technical discussions of philosophy, greater precision of terminology is required.)

    8. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is obvious what the proper response is, in the long term. Leave the religious to die on this planet when the sun dims. It may only provide a few hundred or a few thousand years of removal of those regressive ideologies, but the time without the religious actively attempting to abate progress will see the absolute golden age of humanity as it spreads across the stars on species survival and individual and organisation imperatives.

    9. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by FlyByPC · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that a lack of opinion on the existence of a god or gods was agnosticism. If Atheism is not direct belief that no god exists, then what is, after all?

      --
      Paleotechnologist and connoisseur of pretty shiny things.
    10. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Ckwop · · Score: 1

      I agree on your thinking on so-called "Intelligent Design," but I believe that atheism (while possibly correct) is itself a faith. How could one account for an omniscient, omnipotent god who does not wish to be found? Consider a fiction story that you write. Having created that "universe," you are its "god." If you didn't want the characters to be able to prove your existence, they would never be able to. One major benchmark for how much I respect someone's beliefs is how readily they admit "...but I might be wrong."

      It's not about absolutely as such, with me, but probabilities. I am 99% sure in my own mind that a God does not exist, using the evidence I have available to me.

      Like any rational person, I can't rule out the posibility that a God might exist in some form, but the chance of this God being the God as described in the Holy Bible (or the Quoran, the Torah, etc) is non-zero but vanishingly small. It seems typically arrogant of our race to assume that the creator of the universe would visit this spec of dust that earth is in such a huge universe.

      As an aside, God can't be omnipotent or omniscient. Why? If God is omnipotent can he create a rock so heavy even it can't lift it? If he can, he's not omnipotent because he can't lift the rock. If he can't, he isn't omnipotent because he can't create such a rock.

      God can't be omniscient for a much more technical reason. If x is the set of all knowledge ask God to consider the consequences of doing the actions in every subset of x. Since the result of this consideration must be a member of x this creates a one-to-one mapping between a set and its power-set. Something that we know is impossible. There's a lot of finer detail in this argument but that's the jist of it.

      It's silly to dislike people for having religious belief. Most religious people are every bit as decent as their atheistic counterpart. The real problem is the institutions of faith. The Catholic church, for example, condeming condoms and spreading mis-information in Africa when proper use of condoms could literally save millions of lives.

      When I hear of actions such as these, I often think the Church needs a quite period of reflection on whether it's actions are bringing it closer to God or closer to hell.

      Simon.

    11. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by mwvdlee · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How I wish that were a joke.
      Problem is, it's probably the truth!

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    12. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by TGK · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm a Christian - raised Catholic in fact.

      That said, evolution is a science. You can test it. You can attemp to prove it wrong. Because of this it belongs in a SCIENCE class room.

      Intelegent Design and Creationism aren't sciences. You can't test them or prove them wrong because you're dealing with a "creator" that is omnipitant. As such, no test can be concocted that could ever prove the "theory" false.

      Thus Intelegent Design and Creationism are NOT sciences are thus do NOT belong in a science class room.

      If parents want to teach their kids about these ideas then they can do so outside of the public schools. I'll teach my children that the creation of the Universe is poorly understood if anything and that, ultimately, every event has a cause. At some point we come back to the fist event and God is the only logical cause of that event.

      But I realize that what I'm saying then is a question of faith, not science, and that no science can ever justify my faith. As such, I would not want that belife tought in the schools because not everyone belives what I do. I no more want them forcing their belifes on me and my family then they want mine on them and theirs.

      Fair enough?

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    13. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by mrgreen4242 · · Score: 1
      Fact 1. The universe is extremely intricate and complicated

      Fact 2. We design things such as automobiles or aircraft that are intricate and complicated.

      Which leads to the conclusion:

      Conclusion 1: Everything that is intricate and complicated must have a designer.

      Ok, this is where your whole thing breaks down. There are amazingly complex things that clearly aren't designed by anyone. Snowflakes come to mind immediately, along with any other crystaline structure. We can watch them form from blobs of fluid into intricate patterns of iterconnected solids without any sort of predesigned plan. It just happens.

      A theory supported purely by logic can be completely disproven by deconstrcuting that logic and finding a fallacy, and this one just doesn't hold up.

    14. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by voltron829 · · Score: 1
      As an atheist, I am alarmed when people try to mark religious belief as science.

      As an engineer, I am alarmed when people try to mark scientific believe as science. People should stop and think about how science isn't really that scientific. Almost every physics formula I know is at best a gross approximate of what scientists *think* is correct. When you figure in special relativity, charge interactions, etc. we see how F=ma is not actually correct. It is most likely that Einstein's theories of relativity are not 100% correct either. Someone will certainly come up with new and more accurate ways of describing our physical world, but those methods will have holes as well. It bothers me when people complain how 'wrong' religion is when science is 'wrong' for the same reason. As a side note, Darwin's theory is still a theory. Please don't pass it off as a scientific law. If you all still cannot prove the theory of evolution after 150 years, something is wrong.

      ... Intelligent Design is peddled again and again without the proponents bringing any new ideas to the table.

      This is for a good reason: Christian belief is centered around the Bible and is therefore unchanging. Don't get upset when people decide to keep their own beliefs intact instead of simply going with whatever the media and the ACLU thinks.

    15. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The Catholic church, for example, condeming condoms and spreading mis-information in Africa when proper use of condoms could literally save millions of lives.

      The spreading of mis-information is indefensible. However, condeming condoms is a different matter. The Catholic Church has its teaching, and they have never been intended to be taken as anything other than whole. The situations where condom use is an issue within the context of sex only within marriage are fairly rare, and making a tiny contribution towards the "millions of lives" mentioned. If someone is going to break the no sex outside marriage rule, why would they be bothered with keeping the one about condoms?

    16. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question isn't whether ID is without flaws, the question is is it without merit. The theory that incredibly-complex things do not just happen by accident, is not without merrit.

      " As an atheist, I am alarmed when people try to mark religious belief as science."

      I respectfully argue that science is a religion. (It is a system of belief), true it has no God, save of course for man himself.

      "By letting the cherrished beliefs of a few cloud the judgement of the youth on an entire nation, everbody loses out."
      That attitude completely is against what the founding of the U.S. was about, giving the minority a voice.

      Also, as taxpayer I have the right to argue over paying for stuff I belive is wrong. That can be saying that i do not want to pay for a war (both in human and economic costs),and not wanting to pay for science as the religion of the state etc.

    17. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by rknop · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As a Christian, do you agree that ID should be taught in schools, or that (at the risk of making it a loaded question) church and schools should be separate?

      ID should not be taught in science clases, any more than should any other religion's creations story.

      However, the whole creationism/intelligent design movement in the USA is certainly a valid and fascinating and even important topic for a sociology class. I don't know whether it belongs in high school or not (now that we've got all those annoying standardized tests that limit the freedom of teachers to discuss other interesting and important topics).

      Indeed, the Bible ought to be taught in schools-- as literature and (with caution) history. So much of the literature of western civilization makes allusions to the Bible that if you aren't at least passingly familiar with it as an extremely influential work of literature, it's hard to say that you've got a good liberal-arts education.

      What should not be taught in schools is religion as religion. The sort of stuff you get in Sunday School does not belong in our public schools. That's where church and schools should be kept separate.

      -Rob

    18. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, most people I know that believe in intelligent design would have it:

      Fact 1: The Holy Bible is true, because it feels true

      Conclusion 1: The Holy Bible is literally true, because it says it is literally true
      Conclusion 2: The Holy Bible says the world was created in seven days, therefore it was

      And then the rest follow. As to why it "feels true", it just does, in a similar way as to how ice feels cold or fire feels hot. That is also why they believe in it so strongly - to claim intelligent design didn't occur would be like someone trying to say ice was actually hot. And getting someone that believes in intelligent design to change positions would be as difficult as convincing someone that knows ice is cold to agree that it is hot.

    19. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by moonty · · Score: 1

      This theory isn't even supported by logic. That is to say that the "logic" presented is invalid, in that the logical form presented a > b / b // a is logically invalid. This is not to mention the semantic error that you bring up.

    20. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's just that durn liberal media and them pro-queers at the ACLU hating people of faith again, ain't it?

    21. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is also one of the oldest logical fallacies:
      If A then B,
      Therefore, if B then A.

      This whole argument turns on fun-duh-mentalist denial, though. "I don't understand how it works, there it was God... or Satan... or magic fairies... but WHATEVER it was, it wasn't your precious heathen science!"

    22. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My biggest problem with that logic, is that it would require god to have a creator also. If something as amazing as God can exist without a creator, why can't the universe exist without one?

    23. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are not accurate discerning the divisions between those categories. Agnosticism is refusal to decide on any level whether though should be done in consideration of a god or not, Atheism is simply the choice that it should not. Both of these are defaults, not encompassing the entirety of the spectrum of philosophical positions held by either people described with either category. It is often made the mistake that from religious point of view the lack of belief in a god is considered a religious as all thought in that area for the religious is religion generally, however the basis of religion of philosophy is not religion but may still be held by either, and it is this trait that further confuses the distinction. It is no less, however, whether it is recognised or not, that Atheism and Agnosticism are not religions, and are distinct from each other also separate from the delusions that are inferred from understanding either as religion.

    24. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Conclusion 1: Everything that is intricate and complicated must have a designer."

      Haahahahahah. Here's where it turns into pseudoscience.

    25. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by jtpalinmajere · · Score: 1

      I'd agree that your logic process described is flawed. However, I disagree that this is the formula that many people like me (I = christian) come to believe in Intelligent Design.

      Many christians simply believe that the words in the bible were inspired by God (don't start me on how some texts were included or not... gets particularly complicated at places and I'd rather not get off topic). As such, anything written in the texts could be thought of as 'by God' even if they were written by David, some prophet, or some Joe Schmoe that happenned to be "in the know" at the right time. Therefore, the statement "In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth" is taken by faith that it is true.

      Describing laws of nature only stand as a testament to the power and intelligence of God, and theory's / pseudoproofs to disprove the existence of God are moot because it makes the baseline assumption that God is imposed by the very same laws of nature that he did/did not create. If he DID create them, then using these laws can't really disprove him because his creation of 'the ways of nature' implies that he is not bound by the limitations of that nature.

      To adress another misconception about the bible, not mentioned in your post, but in many others, is that the bible should never be used literally for the purpose of history. It is telling a story, largely based on fact to be sure, but the dates and times given here and there are mereley to give a frame of reference for telling X story. On a specific example, the 'days' that God created everything can't have possibly actually been days as we know them to be. To start, the original words there imply not a single day, but a single 'span of time'... and not necesarily a periodic span of time. 'Days' is just a *translation* of the text to essentially make the storytelling process easier. If you wanted to be more precise in the terminology used there, I'd go with "stage of development".

      Can creation be proven? Not likely. However, neither can the theory of big bang + evolution be proven or disproven. For all we know, they're both right and we're all just getting hung up by terminology used to describe how things went. You say 'product of selection', I say 'product of God's selection'. Semantics really. This leads me to a oft quoted exceprt out of Hitchhiker's concerning the argument between God and man concerning God's existence. While, I disagree with the statement that God does not exist without faith, I do believe it is in his best interest to keep his existence non-provable. As his argument goes, proof would deny faith.

      Faith is the cornerstone of his godhood, ie. he created us with free will so that we could believe and follow him of our free will rather than be mindless slaves to do his bidding. Having faith also implies having love, therefore we can postulate (though not prove) that our existence is based on God's wanting to be loved... i mean... it must be lonely being the only one 'up there' (statement based upon christianity's monotheistic worldview). Proving God's existence would mean whether we decide to worship God or not, very few would actually do so out of love... just think of the mindless and brutal inquisitions that would ensue based upon a God proof in the hands of stupid men.

      Returning back to the article, the attempts of the state to identify intelligent design (mind you, not necessarily christian creationism) as a legitimate option for the roots of life is merely an acknowledgement that although there is evidence of evloution having occured and still occuring (ie. micro-evolution) the teaching of evolution eliciting the roots of life cannot be proven and therefore should not be taught as fact... but theory. Us grownups, and quite a few bright highschoolers, can easily discern the difference between fact and theory, however would propose that a great many more highschool students are taught the principles of evolution with imprecise terminology and in an uncomprehensive fashion so as to gi

    26. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you any understanding of Africa at all? Civil wars were frequent, are still frequent. Gangs assault women forcibly on a massive scale, that is the primary means of initial distribution. Afterwards it is the same behavior as has been common throughout human history of common activity that spreads it at a slower but then still more consuming rate. Condom use could reduce that rate even further such that stability can be more quickly established and the virus then limited if not exterminated from appreciable numbers in the populations of those nations.

    27. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by guisar · · Score: 1

      I would give your reply more respect if it were grammatically correct or even logically consistent. How can something (science) not be itself (scientific)? That which is not scientific, is by definition not science- but pseudo science (i.e. ID) or simply "belief". I don't think anyone here has said religion is "wrong"- just that it's beliefs should not be passed off as established fact. Your clumsy association of scientists with "the media and the ACLU" falls flatly on it's face. Just as there is no single religion, and no consolidated doctrine, there is no single "Bible" but instead, translations and interpretations of original documents. Christian belief is centered around cultural norms and the interpretation of the Bible adopted by a particular church- simple as that. Even within that framework there has always existed dissent- where it not for that dissent there might not be a Roman Catholic church, the Mormons or the many Protestent denominations.

    28. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Mentorix · · Score: 1

      My thoughts on Intelligent Design then:

      - As a European, I feel I must inform those in the US that the ID theory does *not* have any following to speak of outside the
      United States. Even in the United States I believe it's only the fundamentalist christians that seem to think it has any merit, could be wrong, I don't take polls there.

      - I feel this theory and it's arguments were specially fabricated for religious purposes which I find worse then appalling.

      - There are many examples of people thinking outside the box and being right in the end, I must regret to inform the proponents of
      the ID theory that it is neither thinking out of the box (it was inspired by organized religion) nor does it serve any
      purpose after looking at Darwins theories and applying Occam's razor.

      - I'm sorry to see so much time wasted in the US by retorting this theory time and again while media keep digging it up again.

      - I'm sorry to see so many children being fed bullshit during science classes in the US.

      I call on everyone to googlebomb the phrase "Intelligent design" to the parent of this post by Ckwop who imo gave the perfect explanation on the
      situation which is perfectly clear.

      http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=148046 &cid=12406089

    29. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cold hard science is simply knowledge gained by observation. That's it. The religious belief in evolution fails this criteruim. The belief (yes, it's a belief) in evolution isn't science. Look carefully at the wording of textbooks that teach evolution. It always says "evolutionists BELIEVE..." or "It is BELIEVED that (insert belief for evolution here". Ok, if we're going to teach BELIEFS in the school, then the belief in intelligent design is also fair game. Why is it the teaching of evolution in schools is exclusive, and if someone dare talk about other theories or IDEAS, they are immediately stereotyped as a backwoods hick and the motives used to defeat their arguments solely consists on personal attacks, rather than a fair discussion of what they bring to the table? This whole message board is a prime example.

      The fact is the thought of intelligent design can't be dismissed. There is design in living things. Period. I have yet to get an answer of what are the "facts" of evolution (even some staunch believers in evolution will try to tell me that facts don't even exist! Ok, is that a factual statement? That is like saying my brother is an only child, or I can't speak a word of English. Once you say it, it is immediately untrue). I have yet to get someone to tell me why something like the fibonacci sequence that is observed in every living thing, also shows up in outer space. If that isn't design, what is it? It's a signature of God.

    30. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      I've heard this called the "God of the Gaps" approach - every time you have something which science hasn't adequately explained (Big Bang), or for which the evidence could in any way be construed as hazy (evolution), you claim that God did it and declare all the scientists to be heretics for trying to disprove the self-evident truth of God's greatness manifest.

      Problem is that, as the new theories emerge or the evidence gets stronger, God is pushed further and further back. This is therefore not a good basis for any religious beliefs you may have - Christianity is absolute but science is ever-changing and is very good at debunking unsupportable theories...

      Also, have an amusing and relevant animated gif (mirrored from my webspace cos I can't find it online anymore).

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    31. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by DJCF · · Score: 1

      Although I don't fully understand the nature of the second arguement regarding omniscience, the first arguement is flawed.

      Imagine, if you will, a large rock. Imagine, if you will, God. God attempts to move the large rock, which we shall say is as big as an elephant, and suceeds (obviously). Now let's make some bigger rocks (this is a hypothetical example, after all) and put them to God to see if he can lift them. An object the size of a large building? The size of a country? The size of a continent? The size of the Earth? God quickly runs out of places to "stand" -- where would God "stand" if he wanted to "lift" the Earth?

      The flaw in your arguement, then, if your choice of language. Allow me to restate your paradox like this: "God can't be omnipotent because he cannot create an object with more mass than God has energy apply to move that mass. If he can, he's not omnipotent because he cannot supply a force large enough to move the mass. If he can't create such a mass, he's not omnipotent."

      Now, I believe one of the laws of energy (as we understand them) is that energy cannot be created or removed, am I right? We can now imagine an object with a mass, such that it requires, in order to be moved, a force stronger than all the energy in the universe combined. God, supposedly, can create such an object because he, supposedly, created all other objects. But God can't supply a force strong enough to move it, which means he's not omnipotent.

      BUT -- Remember God created these laws as well. God could abscend, just for a short while, the law that energy cannot be created and could then supply a force large enough to move the mass. Alternativley, he could abscend the law that for each action there is an opposite reaction and move the mass while expending no energy. How is it possible for him to do this? He's god, even in our hypothetical example. If the universe has a creator, then that, I suppose, would be the very deffintion of the creator -- being able to absend and create laws at will.

      For me, the possibility that god exists is about 50/50. Like most condundrums in the world with factions of polar opposites, I expect the truth lies somewhere in the middle. For me, the possibility that the force that created us is the same as that described in the bible is also none-zero, but vanishingly small.

      Daniel

    32. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a student, I am alarmed by how people think others don't realise that science has limitations. Almost everything we are taught is presented as a model, including basic assumptions which for most purposes are negligible- but hold for a theoretical example. Someone will probably come with more accurate models, taking into account real-world conditions, but for a given set of conditions we know something to be true. It bothers me when people put "science" and "religion" in the same group and say that they are wrong, especially since that science is a model for the universe explaining processes, whereas religion is a belief structure. As a side note, intelligent design is still a belief. Please don't pass it off as a scientific law. If you still cannot prove intelligent design after 2000 years (Cicero), something is wrong.

      I am alarmed when people try to mark scientific believe as science.

      This is for a good reason: Scientific ideas are based around reasoning and the best current explanation and is therefore continually under review. Don't get upset when people decide that evolution is scientific instead of simply going with whatever the media and fundamentalists think.

      Flamebait/insightful?
      -- a former Christian

    33. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by jlehtira · · Score: 1

      I am alarmed by you and others not understanding science. Newton's law is completely valid given that speeds are slow. It's a subset of Einstein's theory which itself is true in all cases as far as we know. Surely, these theories are incomplete - that's why the scientists have been trying to find the grand theory of everything, you know. The science is not the whole truth, but that doesn't make it false.

      Sure, schools are dumb because they don't teach anything about the scope or validity of different theories and equations like E = mgh. That's a shortcoming of the school, not of the science (which is a tool for modelling the reality!).

    34. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by eumaeus · · Score: 1

      To the excellent parent post, I would add this, for the benefit of the "Bible is Literally True" crowd: "Don't call your literal reading of the Bible 'Faith', because it isn't."

      Paul Tillich's Dynamics of Faith should be required reading, bound into the front of every translation of the Bible. He notes that faith in an infinite and transcendent God must be expressed in the language of symbol. And any effort to interpret the symbolic as literal amounts to an assertion that the infinite and transcendent can be contained in the finite and temporal.

      Any insistence that the symbolic must be literal is an assertion that the transcendent is contingent upon something finite.

      So those who insist that their "faith" depends on the literal, factual accuracy of the Bible are mistaking a symbol that points to the infinite for the infinite itself.

      There's a word for that mistake: idolatry.

    35. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And besides, if Conclusion 1 is true then surely God is intricate and complicated and thus needed a designer. To which the theist replies: "God doesn't need a designer, It's God". To which I respond: "If God doesn't need a designer, why does the universe? Why not just cut out God and proclaim that the universe is undesigned? And there in is the true failing of intelligent design.
      Ah, but don't you know what GOD stands for? God's Own Designer.
      (Or, if you read Hofstadter's Goedel, Escher, Bach: God Over Djinni.)

    36. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Gangs assault women forcibly on a massive scale, that is the primary means of initial distribution.

      Do you really think that the stance of the Catholic Church with regard to condom use has any influence on the decision in the case of these gangs?

      Afterwards it is the same behavior as has been common throughout human history of common activity that spreads it at a slower but then still more consuming rate.

      The consuming rate is caused by the combination of sex outside of marriage without the use of condoms. Catholic teaching does not support or condone this.

      Look, there's a major problem, I'm aware of that. And I can't claim in any way to have any detailed understanding of Africa. But it's a simple fact that following Catholic teaching does not encourage the spread of AIDS. Mis-information from sections of the Church does not help, but as I've said, that isn't defensible.

      If you're Catholic, follow the rules. If you're not, or are going to have sex outside of marriage anyway, use a condom for heaven's sake.

    37. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Mentorix · · Score: 1

      "I have yet to get someone to tell me why something like the fibonacci sequence that is observed in every living thing, also shows up in outer space. If that isn't design, what is it? It's a signature of God."

      Thats just sounds ignorant, you're claiming that because a certain pattern is observed both in nature, biology and even in art it must be the signature of God.

      I'd advise you to go and read up on what the fibonacci sequence is. It certainly doesn't have anything to do with signatures of your favorite deity.

    38. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1

      Both beliefs can be called atheism, sometimes they are referred to as "strong" and "weak" atheism. If you parse the word as a-theism, then it's just the absence of a belief in god, wheras athe-ism means belief in the absence of god. It's unclear.

      --
      I am trolling
    39. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by i2878 · · Score: 1
      (Disclaimer position: Christian, conservative (Bible=innerrant word of God), reformed (I'm protestant for a reason)...not likely 'fundemantalist' (I'll have a beer on occasion)).

      Boy, that should set me up for a flaim.

      The biggest frustration I have with these arguments is the assumptions made. Most on ./ (Christian or not) come at this from a humanist or even atheist point of view. You look at the universe and try and understand God or ID from there. I, however, look at the Bible, and attempt to understand the universe. Our starting points are completely different.

      Everyone begins this discussion with assumptions. If you start with 'billions' of years, a big bang, or evolution, you try and understand why God would try and trick you about all this stuff...

      If you start with 6 days and God rested, you try and understand purpose and then the science (yes, real science) in light of what is observable and testable.

      I cannot expect you to result in the same conclusions, nor can you expect me to - but explain why your solution is better, since neither one of us can *prove* our assumptions. Most of the technology and science (yes, real science) that we use every day was based upon the assumption that there was a creator. ID certainly has a longer track record.

      --
      legal. fun. profitable. pick two.
    40. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1

      It's impossible to prove a universal negative. You can't prove there isn't a god who doesn't want to be found, just as you can't prove there aren't fairies at the bottom of the garden who disappear when anyone looks at them, or there isn't an invisible pink unicorn controlling everything. That's what occam's razor is for. If there are two explanations which account for the observed phenomena, you favour the simpler. Since we have yet to observe under controlled conditions in a peer-reviewed experiment a phenomenon which cannot be explained without reference to god, and believing in god does not allow us to dispense with any other theories, it makes more sense not to believe in god.

      --
      I am trolling
    41. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1

      Scientific belief is scientific for the very reason it does change. We believe the theory which gives the best explanation of the observed evidence. When that changes, what we believe changes. The reason to prefer this to religious belief is simply its practical success. By believing in F=ma and other results from the scientific method, we have invented the light bulb, gone into space, and made the computer you wrote that on. I have yet to see one good invention come out of simply believing the literal truth of some particular manuscript.

      --
      I am trolling
    42. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not mean from aspects of deciding gang usage of condoms or not, but in advocating use of condoms regularly in a populace with a ruler who is catholic, and may-as is the case still with Swaziland is still a monarchy-force the ruler beliefs into policy that prevents the choice. There is no choice to use a condom for a villager when there are no condoms in the nation, in an extreme case. As to the consuming rate, no. It is caused by the increased numbers of children born each year in isolated villages with HIV who are unaware of it, and the 30+ years of their sexual activity in areas where condom use-which though it is not a guarantee in any form could prevent some transmissions-is prohibited by ruler/monarch. The Catholic church still has immense power in Africa in deciding the course of policies of the varied nations as it still influences what can be publicly said and by that what is possible even for non-Catholics. There are may other problems, Mbeki the President of South Africa did not even acknowledge the transmission method of AIDS as HIV.

    43. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by p2sam · · Score: 1

      religion is an interesting subject and should be offered in public schools. I'm from Canada, and in social studies class, we studied creation myths from dozens of cultures. (there were a lot of similarities). Religion as an academy subject should not be kept out of schools.

      Valid scientific theories (generally accepted ones) should be taught in science class. Creation myths should be taught in social studies (or a religion class).

    44. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by KaMiKa-Z77 · · Score: 1

      As another Catholic I totally agree.

      The way I see it's useless to pit science vs. religion because they simply answer different questions. Science is preocuppied with the HOW ("how stuff works"), where as religion, theology, philosophy, et. al. address the WHY ("as in why am I here?", "why is there suffering?", etc.)

      I guess the problem is that even science has roots in metaphysics. It makes assumptions about the universe, not the least of which is that it is goverened (sp?) by a set of *laws*, which are for the most part immutable.

      But still, one should not confuse one with the other.

      I would not want other children to be taught what I believe any more than I would want my own children to be taught other people's beliefs. Let's leave ID out of the science classrooms.

      --
      Why waste time learning, when ignorance is instantaneous? - Calvin
    45. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Indeed, the Bible ought to be taught in schools-- as literature

      In theory I have no problem with that.

      In practice there is already a big movent supposedly doing exactly that in many schools. And it's a crock of shit - pardon the french.

      There are plenty of teachers who could do a perfectly good job of using the Bible as literature and in relation to historical issues. Such a teacher wouldn't have any particularly strong desire to do so, and such a teacher would probably pass on doing so because they know exactly what unique complexities and considerations would be involved in doing so. It would generally be simpler and more productive to select different and equally valuable materials.

      Any teacher with a particular desire to use the Bible in class is exactly the sort of teacher who needs to be most strictly prohibited from doing so.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    46. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by jafac · · Score: 1

      There *IS* a science component of Intelligent Design. As such, I think it's very appropriate to teach parts of Intelligent Design in the science classroom, insofar as to illustrate the probing nature of the Scientific Method. There are many competing theories to explain many phenomena. Some are just demonstrably wrong outright. Some are not demonstrably wrong, but perhaps fail the test of Occam's Razor, against another, more consistent theory. All have some value in teaching Scientific Method, and Science History. Philosophically speaking, NO theory or law should be taught as indisputible fact. But some are more "valid", and more proveable than others.

      I think that Creationism also is VERY IMPORTANT to be taught in a science classroom. Particularly the geological components. If for no other reason, than to discredit it as a science. There's a science component to Creationism, though the logic is wrong and the evidence is fudged. It's EXTREMELY important to teach kids about how bad theories gain ground.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    47. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Is humanity any better as a result of those inventions? Is humanity any better since the theory of evolution was presented?

      And since when was the point of believing "some particular manuscript" about improvement of the physical world?

    48. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Schroedinger · · Score: 1
      In response to edge.org's question "What do you believe is true even though you cannot prove it?" Jordon Pollock gave this response which I think is particulary relevant:
      JORDAN POLLACK
      Computer Scientist, Brandeis University

      I believe that that systems of self-interested agents can make progress on their own without centralized supervision.

      There is an isomorphism between evolution, economics, and education. In economics, the supervisor is a central government or super rich investor, in evolution, it is the "intelligent designer", and in education, its the teacher or outside examiners. In economic systems, despite an almost religious belief in Laissez-Faire and incentive-based behavior, economic systems are prone to winner-take-all phenomena and boom-bust cycles. They seem to require benevolent regulation, or "managed competition" to prevent the "rich get richer" dynamic leading to monopoly, which leads inevitably to corruption and kleptocracy. In evolution, scientists reject the intelligent designer as a creationist ruse, but so far our working models for open-ended evolution haven't worked, and prematurely convergence to mediocrity. In education, evidence of auto-didactic learning in video-games and sports is suppressed in academics by top-down curriculum frameworks and centralized high-stakes testing.

      If we did have a working mechanism design which could achieve continuous progress by decentralized self-interested agents, it would settle the creationist objection as well as apply to the other fields, leading to a new renaissance.

    49. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Indeed, the Bible ought to be taught in schools-- as literature and (with caution) history. So much of the literature of western civilization makes allusions to the Bible that if you aren't at least passingly familiar with it as an extremely influential work of literature, it's hard to say that you've got a good liberal-arts education.
      That's a nice excuse. Somehow I doubt you would feel the same way about the Koran, or Taoist/Buddhist/Hindu/Mormon/Satanic/[insert any other religion] scripture.
    50. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      No one's teaching science as the religion of the US.

      They're teaching science as the 'method of figuring things out' of the US.

      Which is basically is, because no one's come up with another means to produce anything interesting. Sure, figuring things out via belief produces a lot of information, but, oddly enough, it never seems to end up in anything concrete.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    51. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1
      Yes. Try living without them and you'll quickly find that we are actually much better off thanks to them. For a start, the abolition of slavery would have been impossible without industrialisation.

      I don't mind if you believe any manuscript you like, but don't try and claim it's just as scientific as science. It isn't.

      --
      I am trolling
    52. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Another argument comes from the fact that the universe seems fine tuned to life.

      and of course this leads to the the counterpoint that any life that exists in an arbitrary universe will be fine tuned for the universe that it is in.

      If the universe was entirely made of plasma and it was possible for some kind of life to exist in a plasma, then that life would notice that a wide variety of universes would not be made of plasma and conclude they were very lucky the universe was made of plasma.
      If the planet was 100% covered with water, we'd be some kind of intelligent aquatic life. If the planet was dry and arid, we would be adapted like desert mice so that would be the perfect environment and conclude how lucky we were that the planet was not coated with that nasty liquid stuff.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    53. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by eaolson · · Score: 1
      Fact 1. The universe is extremely intricate and complicated

      The biggest problem I have with your Fact 1 is that complexity is entirely subjective. What defines "complex?" How do we determine if one system is more or less complex than another? How do we quantify that difference?

      The fact is that the universe isn't complex. It's quite simple. There's only a handful of different forces involved. An electron understands (if you'll pardon the anthropomorphism) exactly what it's supposed to do when it experiences an electric field, and it always does it.

      The problem is that we monkey-brained humans have difficulty understanding the universe and these forces, so we have to come up with linguistic and cognitive structures like math and calculus and quantum mechanics to describe the fundamental underpinnings of the universe.

      We're well-adapted to hunting, gathering, fighting, and reproducing. We're not well-adapted to predicting the motions of stars and modeling radioactive decay. Therefore, we have difficulty understanding these things, and they become "complex."

    54. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      We're only better off due to physical comfort or convenience. I thought science was about discovery. not improvement.

      Application of discovery, in in your example: inventions, may mean comfort and convenience. But it doesn't equal improvement. In fact, comfort most often leads to apathy. And convenience to laziness.

      Take the average first-world diet. Are we really better with millions of extended lifespans when what we're really looking at is millions of fat asses living forever?

      Oh well, it's is a matter of perspective.

      And I think many plantation owners in the 1800s would disagree with you. The abolition of slavery was rather sucked for them. Would you say their life was improved? Isn't parasitic behavior natural? Can't it be good under certain circumstances? Not all slaves were treated poorly.

      There's a fine line between the slaves of the 1800s and a modern worker. And that fine line is thanks to those wonderful iventions of yours.

      And don't bring anything moral into the discussion since what basis would we have?

      And since when was the abolition of slavery thanks to industrialisation. Plenty of people WEREN'T slaves prior to industrialization.

    55. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      I too agree - teach creationism *AS* a science and it goes away. But you can bet your ass that if any teacher did it that way, the very same people who forced ID into the science classroom would also have a thing to say about that and it would get that teacher in trouble.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    56. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by pla · · Score: 1

      Imagine, if you will, a large rock.

      Although your line of reasoning works fairly well, you don't need to go nearly that in-depth with the explanation... The entire paradox reduces to a simple contradiction - rock and not-rock (or move and not-move, if you prefer).

      Since anything follows from a contradiction, a simple and 100% correct answer exists to the question - "Yes". You could qualify that with "but It could move the rock anyway", but don't really need to.

      Of course, since anything follows from a contradiction, you could also correctly answer "Purple flaming ducks chew on power tools", but then you'd need to spend FAR longer than you probably would like, trying to explain the answer to someone who presumeably has a rather poor grasp of formal logic in the first place, with a side trip into the aesthetic appeal of dabbling with surrealism vs nonsense.

    57. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My history book in high school made reference to religious groups and their importance to the geopolitics of the time.

      Mormons and their history described with the settling of Utah, the holy wars described for the history of Spain and the middle east, the great schisms of Catholicisms, the expansion and contraction of the Muslim empire(s).

    58. Re: Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > There *IS* a science component of Intelligent Design.

      That's a surprising claim. I don't see anything any more scientific than the $TECHNOBABBLE in a Star Trek script.

      > As such, I think it's very appropriate to teach parts of Intelligent Design in the science classroom, insofar as to illustrate the probing nature of the Scientific Method.

      I think it would be better to deconstruct it in a rhetorics class, since all it is is an obfuscated way of saying "I don't see how that X have evolved, therefore goddidit".

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    59. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      Darwin's theory is still a theory. Please don't pass it off as a scientific law.

      There is no such thing as a scientific law. The theory of gravity still uses the vocabulary word "theory" to describe it. Does that mean you should doubt gravity?

      "Theory" doesn't mean "unproven supposition" in science. It means "an explanation for something that has been observed." Whether a theory is a true one or a false one doesn't change the fact that the vocbulary word "theory" is still applied to describe it.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    60. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      but explain why your solution is better, since neither one of us can *prove* our assumptions.

      By your own admission, you start from an explanation (bible) and try to make what you observe fit into it. We start from what we observe and then try to make an explanation fit it. If you don't believe that's a better approach, then we are at an impasse and I have no choice but to accept that there is a flaw in your ability to reason. (Yes, it's a flaw. I don't subscribe to that wishy-washy "all opinions are equally valid" camp.)

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    61. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by hungsolo · · Score: 1
      Good comment, there. My wife is a High School English teacher. Every year she teaches both the Inferno and Paradise Lost.

      She finds teaching these extremely difficult under current laws because The Bible is such an influencial text for these works, as literary reference.

      She has no interest in teaching religion, but would love to use passages, etc. in The Bible as part of her literature curriculum.

    62. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1
      Well, I hold that I'm better off because I have a far better working model of the world I live in. I know to a much greater extent what the universe is like. But that's much harder to claim it makes one better, wheras I can't believe anyone would seriously argue against the facts of the improvements to life.

      There's no question of perspective, unless your "perspective" is so screwed up you think living is a bad thing. Do you really think it's better for people to die young, that someone looking to improve the world should go out and kill people?

      A minute ago you were saying to look at the betterment of humanity rather than the comfort of individuals. I hold it to be self-evident that humanity is better without slavery. It might be natural, but that doesn't make it good. No, not all slaves were treated poorly, but on the whole slaves were.

      WTF? I can't believe you're even trying to make this claim. You seem to have some romantic view that it wasn't that bad to be a slave. And tell me how any invention has made workers more slavelike. Go on, even one.

      Why do you say we have no basis for morality? Religion and morality are completely orthogonal. It's hard to try and claim something's better or worse for humanity on anything other than moral grounds.

      No, but there were slaves in almost every nation prior to industrialisation, and you can trace a pretty close relationship between when a machine became available to do the largest job in a country and when it abolished slavery.

      --
      I am trolling
    63. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      I'm stating that objects do not make people better. The topic was Intelligent Design is Psuedoscience and you seemed to be claiming (though perhaps not) that inventions make "life" better, possibly implying that humans have evolved due to applied science.

      I say that people have not and will not change for milennia. Likewise the abolition of slavery had no universal effect on humanity either. It was a benefit for slaves and would-be slaves. No one else. As glad as you and I may be about it, that doesn't make us better.

      Not once did I suggest or imply that murdering is acceptable. But wre we better if we exist indefinitely?

      As for dying young, what's "young"?

      The common thread of these is that not mine, not yours, not anyone's emotional state has any effect on humanity as a species. Emotional state can be modified. What if murdering people at a young age made me happy?

      By what standard can we claim that slavery was bad? What is our basis for morality?

    64. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      You can also view atheism as the view that the 'theory of God' is utterly unfalsifiable, and unless the guy/girl shows him/herself (verifies his/herself), it is a matter of general principle to not believe in God's existence. Similar reasoning holds for the tooth fairy: atheists are generally atoothfairyists as well.

    65. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At some point we come back to the fist event and God is the only logical cause of that event.

      So that's why she was yelling "GOD IT HURTS!!" ?

    66. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by duffahtolla · · Score: 1

      Do not be too surprised. Left to religion, slavery would still be here today. The bible is inherently pro-slavery because it was written during a time were slavery was as integral to the economy as breathing is to life.

      To me, the endoresment of slavery and the debasement of women is the bibles greatest achilies heel. Because according to the the Good Book, slavery is a "good thing" (tm).

      Jesus didn't have a problem with slavery. Pretty much his only advice on the matter was "Don't beat on them too hard".

      But God is very hip when it comes to slavery. He even gives a loop hole so that you can murder a slave. (#20-21) and gives extra rules for you to follow when you sell your daughters into slavery. #7

      A good treatise which gives a greater coverage of the bibles/Gods endorsement of slavery is here:
      http://home.inu.net/skeptic/slavery.html

      Here's Exodus 21:

      1
      1 "These are the rules you shall lay before them.
      2
      When you purchase a Hebrew slave, he is to serve you for six years, but in the seventh year he shall be given his freedom without cost.
      3
      If he comes into service alone, he shall leave alone; if he comes with a wife, his wife shall leave with him.
      4
      But if his master gives him a wife and she bears him sons or daughters, the woman and her children shall remain the master's property and the man shall leave alone.
      5
      If, however, the slave declares, 'I am devoted to my master and my wife and children; I will not go free,'
      6
      2 his master shall bring him to God and there, at the door or doorpost, he shall pierce his ear with an awl, thus keeping him as his slave forever.
      7
      "When a man sells his daughter as a slave, she shall not go free as male slaves do.
      8
      3 But if her master, who had destined her for himself, dislikes her, he shall let her be redeemed. He has no right to sell her to a foreigner, since he has broken faith with her.
      9
      If he destines her for his son, he shall treat her like a daughter.
      10
      If he takes another wife, he shall not withhold her food, her clothing, or her conjugal rights.
      11
      If he does not grant her these three things, she shall be given her freedom absolutely, without cost to her.
      12
      "Whoever strikes a man a mortal blow must be put to death.
      13
      He, however, who did not hunt a man down, but caused his death by an act of God, may flee to a place which I will set apart for this purpose.
      14
      But when a man kills another after maliciously scheming to do so, you must take him even from my altar and put him to death.
      15
      Whoever strikes his father or mother shall be put to death.
      16
      "A kidnaper, whether he sells his victim or still has him when caught, shall be put to death.
      17
      "Whoever curses his father or mother shall be put to death.
      18
      "When men quarrel and one strikes the other with a stone or with his fist, not mortally, but enough to put him in bed,
      19
      the one who struck the blow shall be acquitted, provided the other can get up and walk around with the help of his staff. Still, he must compensate him for his enforced idleness and provide for his complete cure.
      20
      "When a man strikes his male or female slave with a rod so hard that the slave dies under his hand, he shall be punished.
      21
      If, however, the slave survives for a day or two, he is not to be punished, since the slave is his own property.
      22
      "When men have a fight and hurt a pregnant woman, so that she suffers a miscarriage, but no further injury, the guilty one shall be fined as much as the woman's husband demands of him, and he shall pay in the presence of the judges.
      23
      4 But if injury ensues, you shall give life for life,
      24
      eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot,
      25
      burn for burn, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.
      26
      "When a

    67. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      Douglas Adams had a wonderful rant about this, which goes something like this:

      Imagine there's this self-aware puddle (ok, huge leap, but bear with me) in a rut in the road. It thinks, "Hey, this world fits me really well, it must have been designed just for me." (Probably by some puddle-in-the-sky with a white beard and booming voice.) As the warming day dries the puddle up, it's still thinking that, because the world it perceives was clearly designed for it by a creature much like itself, only bigger, more powerful, and kind of steamy, things are going to be just dandy.

      If you want to know how this story ends, get hold of a copy of "The Salmon of Doubt". As a spoiler, it doesn't end well for the self-aware puddle.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    68. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      The King James version is certainly worth teaching as literature. More recent translations should be avoided, because they are poorly written. (Disclaimer: I'm an atheist.)

      However, it should definitely _not_ be offered as an explanation of how the world works. Unfortunately, this is exactly where the fundamentalists insist on putting it.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    69. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      Nor do we believe in Santa Claus.

      Although we think it's cute if our younger children do (relying on their older siblings to alert them to the truth).

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    70. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by alan_dershowitz · · Score: 1

      Except that step one is a mischaracterization. Only uneducated creationists believe that one, not any reasonably sophisticated ID proponent. It should be:

      1. The universe has complexity that could not happen as a result of chance in the estimated time the universe has existed.

      These terms rely firmly in the realm of science! It's the conclusion that may not be scientific, someone created the universe.

      What is ignored is, if you have a set of contradictory facts, at least one of your facts must be wrong. The flaw here is either the universe does not have impossible complexity, or the universe is older than normally estimated. You don't get to say "someone created it", because there is not even indirect evidence of that. If I see a junk car by the side of the road, I can assume it was built in a factory and didn't spring forth out of the earth as a junk car, because I have seen the creators (people) and I have seen cars manufactured.

      These facts don't preclude a creator of the universe, but don't help it either. I've known ID proponents who believe essentially this. Their satisfaction is in knowing that science cannot disprove God, and being perfectly happy with their personal, acknowledged unscientific belief that God exists.

    71. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by SeattleGameboy · · Score: 1

      Do you READ? How could you read this entire thread and speak gibberish like this? Scientific Method, which you seem to have NO CLUE about, demands tests for falisibility and repeatability. If it is not falsifiable or repeatable, then it is not even a conjecture let alone a THEORY!!! Theory is a scientific reasoning that has been test for both and has passed, thus accepted as general truth. You CANNOT have "multiple theories" to explain the same phenomena. You can have THE theory and several conjectures, but you cannot have a multiple theories because that means that theory has not been tested. ID is not even a FREAKIN scientific conjecture because it has NO TESTS!!! It is at best an amusing, at worst just a subversive straw man devised by the religious wingnuts. HOW THE HELL (yes, I said it), is CREATIONISM A SCIENTIFIC THEORY??????? Did you even go to a school (other than the Sunday school)??? Did you have ANY scientific training??? Are you really that stupid??? I am amaze that you can even connect to the Internet considering all the "bogieman" and "voodoo" that is required to make PC's work...

    72. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1
      I'm stating that objects do not make people better. The topic was Intelligent Design is Psuedoscience and you seemed to be claiming (though perhaps not) that inventions make "life" better, possibly implying that humans have evolved due to applied science.

      I'm claiming that humanity is better as a result of science and inventions. We have easier lives, yes, but I also think we are better as a race - more civilised if you will, able to achieve more.

      I say that people have not and will not change for milennia. Likewise the abolition of slavery had no universal effect on humanity either. It was a benefit for slaves and would-be slaves. No one else. As glad as you and I may be about it, that doesn't make us better.

      I disagree. I think that no longer having slaves makes humanity better as a species. It may not make you or me better off ourselves, but it makes humanity as a whole better.

      Not once did I suggest or imply that murdering is acceptable. But wre we better if we exist indefinitely?

      You implied that it is better not to live. I hold that human life is fundamentally good and increasing it is generally good. I don't think there can be any reasonable moral system which doesn't believe this.

      The common thread of these is that not mine, not yours, not anyone's emotional state has any effect on humanity as a species. Emotional state can be modified. What if murdering people at a young age made me happy?

      Then it would be good, apart from the fact that by killing people you would cause more suffering for others. I can accept the view that making people happier doesn't make humanity any better, but I think things like the abolition of slavery go beyond merely making people happy, and do make us better.

      By what standard can we claim that slavery was bad? What is our basis for morality?

      That's a different debate. I can't think of any moral viewpoint that would imply slavery was good. Yes that's an appeal to the majority, but I doubt we have the same basis for morality anyway, and I can't defend mine as any better than yours.

      --
      I am trolling
    73. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      On the contrary, humanity has become more comfortably self-serving.

      If I painted a fence an off-white and you said it wasn't white enough, by what standard could you argue? Popular opinion? Then whose to say Hitler was not perfectly sane?

      And exactly why is simply the length of life better? Doesn't survival of the fittest demand only the strong survive?

      The moral debate is inextricable from the evolution discussion. For if we are as the theory of evolution suggests, then I may act on my every whim, as what empirical truth would anyone have to deny me?

      To beat the slavery thing to death, let me challenge you with this: What if, instead using white-skinned people, we instituted slavery today? Could we not just alter the slaves' emotional states such that they quite enjoy their lot in life?

      It's not ludicrous. I've simply suggest taking your ideas to their full and logical end. The result of which is an empty and meaningless existence. Is that an improvement for humanity at large?

    74. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1
      What else is there to serve? You would have us spend our lives building practically useless monuments to some deity?

      For a fence I can shine a certain amount of light on it and measure how much it scatters. But there is no way to use an instrument and do the same with moral standards. Yes, there is no strong standard for morality, but at the same time people "know it when they see it". It's pretty hard to convince people of the morality of something immoral.

      Longer life is better because human life is good. I know I can't justify that objectively, but it's still true.

      No, they are completely separate issues. You are the way you are. Whether or not you have evolved to be how you are has no bearing on how you should behave.

      We could do that, but I think slavery is intrinsically wrong. Again, I can't justify this objectively - but neither can you. Why does believing in evolution mean I have to have an objective standard for everything?

      Humanity's existence is empty and meaningless anyway - it's better to be empty and meaningless and happy than empty and meaningless and unhappy.

      --
      I am trolling
    75. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Let me just start by saying this was a great discussion that has come to a natural end. With that said, I conclude my thoughts with this:

      No, I would not have any monuments built, for they would be inadequate and only serve to boost our own ego.

      As for the fence, it was a metaphor. Literally it's too vague since I didn't specify visble light or not. So that's neither here nor there.

      If you can say, "Longer life is better because human life is good. I know I can't justify that objectively, but it's still true.", can't I say, "God is real. I know I can't justify that objectively, but it's still true."?

      Obviously I can say it though it seems you would disagree.

      Why, between the two, would you choose to believe that humanity's existence is meaningless and not that there is a God that cares for you personally? Wouldn't that be the most fundamental question of our existence?

    76. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Evolution does not deny morality.

      What it does deny is that we derive our morality from some all-powerful God who created us "molded from dust" style in the relatively recent past.

      I believe in the truth of evolution, and also believe we should strive to act morally. But I also believe those morals are constructed by societies, ideally on a rationally agreed basis.

      We can agree as a society not to kill each other, and when we make an exception for warfare, we can still make agreements such as the Geneva conventions, because we believe it is noble to do so. Or, like the Quakers, we can choose to be conscientious objectors and make no exception for warfare.

      God doesn't need to come down from Heaven and say "These Geneva conventions are my will", humans can agree all on their own.

    77. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Doesn't morality allow for the propagation of weak characteristics?

      Doesn't that contradict evolution?

    78. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1
      OK, I'm glad to have discussed it, it's good that this can happen without turning into a flamewar.

      I agree with you on saying that God is real. But that's only because the existence of God, like morality, is not subject to empirical testing. We can't point a meter at the world and see how much God there is, just as we can't have a measuring device to tell us what is moral. I find that, according to my beliefs, what has been done using scientific methods has resulted in more good than nonscientific. So it still ultimately comes down to belief, but the beliefs which I rely on are generally accepted ones (UN declarations support the unacceptability of slavery, for example), wheras no religion enjoys majority acceptance (I think. Certainly not in my country, though Christianity comes very close). I can see even as I write it that this is a pretty weak argument, but I don't think there are any strong ones when it comes to trying to claim one set of beliefs is better than another.

      --
      I am trolling
    79. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by m50d · · Score: 1

      Evolution acts on genes rather than individuals. Behaviour which is beneficial to those around - even at a cost to the individual doing it - can be selected for if the overall benefit is significantly greater than the cost, because those around an individual, especially in early societies, are likely to be family and so have a high chance of carrying the same gene. Since it seems to require moral people to form a civilised society, and such societies can reproduce a lot more effectively than others, it makes sense that a level of morality would be selected for. Remember people are far from perfectly moral.

      --
      I am trolling
    80. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Not surprisingly, I don't understand your position at all.

      My belief in evolution by natural selection is a scientific one. Evolution does not have moral force. It is not "moral" or "immoral," simply "true."

      I am opposed, on moral grounds, to any kind of crude "survival of the fittest" as a rule for society. As a matter of fact, I work with a couple former Marines everyday who could pretty easily smash my head in, so I am opposed for reasons of personal bias as well. Luckily, as a society we have agreed that, if they were to do so (except in self-defense), the cops would arrest them, and the state would try them, although I would not be alive to appreciate it. So I can be reasonably comfortable that I don't have to survive everyday by my fists alone.

      Just because I believe in gravity doesn't mean I have to allow myself to fall off a cliff.

    81. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Falling off a cliff is not proof of gravity. But I'm guilty of bad examples myself so I digress.

      If you have decided that evolution is the way to go and/or God (in any form) is non-existent, then no amount of discussion will change your mind.

      Evolution is, by definition, change. How can a system of change be subject to any absolute? What is the source of an absolute?

    82. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      What the hell is so confusing to you?

      Evolution is not "the way to go" in any sort of ethical sense. I also haven't said God is non-existent; what I mean is that from the evidence and explanations I have seen, in rather great detail, the explanation of modern-day biology by evolutionary theory, and the explanation of the stars in the sky and the rocks on the Earth by a mechanistic, gigayear chronology, is far more *convincing* than the evidence and explanations offered by its opponents.

      I read *lots* of the creationist websites; I also read the evolutionist rebuttals, where the creationist claims are revealed to be hokey, ultra-selective, out-of-date, misquotings of scientific statements. That these people wrap themselves in credentials from diploma mills. That they clearly don't understand the basics of what evolutionists *actually* claim.

      Also, these facts set *limits* on the kind of God that is consistent with observed reality. In particular, they show that "Scripture" is "free of error" only in the most apologetic sense. God may have created the universe, but for about the past several billion years, the physical universe seems to have evolved pretty much according to uniform physical laws. And not at all like the Genesis description, except in the most poetic of senses.

    83. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify the gravity example, which I thought was *completely* obvious, but apparently isn't to you,

      The argument you made:

      I believe in evolution -> society should only allow evolutionary mechanism to operate, without moral considerations.

      The analogy I made

      I believe gravity makes things fall to the earth -> I should allow the mechanism of gravity to completely determine my actions at the top of a cliff.

      Which is obviously false, and I believe your argument was false in pretty much the same way.

    84. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      I'm not interested in a yelling match so take a deep breath and relax. The internet is a highly restrictive communication medium, so let's take it slow.

      Lest your gross generalizations take hold, have you read these:

      http://www.icr.org/faqs/Biology_Evolution/

      I'm far from capable of explaining every last minutiae in this discussion, but I am having trouble understanding what exactly you are suggesting. It's entirely likely you are far more intelligent than I and I can't hold a satisfying conversation for you.

      Perhaps you could take it one step at a time.

    85. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I can summarize it for you

      "Institute for Creation Research = icr.org" = "Not a credible source for scientific information."

      The fact that you persist in making leaps of illogic based on my very clear statements means that you aren't particularly careful about logical arguments.

    86. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      And, just to be as clear as possible

      You will not convince me of the truth of your views because it is clear you are a blithering idiot with only the most limited ability for logical deduction and argument.

      This is NOT equivalent to some sort of religious attachment to evolution. It is evidence of my bias against especially stupid people.

      Which is why my Slashdot id is "sickofthisshit"

      "shit" = "arguments like settsu's"

    87. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Just to be even CLEARER:

      when I talked about seeing lots of evidence, I INCLUDED having seen the weak shit the ICR puts up on its web site.

      I've seen it already because idiots repeatedly link to it from their shitty posts. The information at ICR is crap.

    88. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Did you say you had seen it? No.

      I'm sorry you spent so much time on someone as unworthy as me. But who's choice was that?

      And what did I ever say to you to deserve your foul-mouthed retorts? Nothing, of course.

      I mistakenly believed you were in search of intelligent conversation.

      If you were just looking to spit vitriol at me, you could have been honest from the start.

    89. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      If I were in search of intelligent conversation, this is the last forum I would visit, and you are one of the last posters I would look for.

    90. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Then while I don't understand why, pray tell, you would you come here, admittedly, I should have perused your other posts to learn you had no interest in dialog whatsoever, what with the obvious chip on your shoulder the size of Detroit... too bad you use your zeal for such hateful name-calling.

      You're placing an awful lot of faith in other men that are just as prone to imperfection as you and I. Are you really willing to do that without question?

      Who has more misplaced faith in that case?

    91. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You still fail to understand. I will avoid all profanity in this post because it seems to distract you from what I am saying.

      You have demonstrated repeatedly that you are incapable of following a simple logical argument, particularly because you persist in bringing in all sorts of irrelevant issues.

      For example, when I was discussing the scientific validity of evolution, and why I believe it to be an accurate description of the world, you went off on some wild tangent about supposed moral implications of that belief.

      Then, you brought up some meaningless objection about a lack of an "absolute" in the theory, without stopping to think whether such a thing is needed at all.

      I don't ask that people be perfect before I believe in them. I expect them to be CREDIBLE. Part of being CREDIBLE to me is to be able to follow a logical discussion from beginning to end.

      Also, I don't put an "awful lot of faith" in these scientists, or do it "without question." What I do is try to view, equally skeptically, the views of both evolutionists, and their opponents.

      When I do this, the opponents FAIL TO BE CREDIBLE in comparison. They appear either intellectually incapable or intellecutally dishonest, or both. That is why I put more faith in the evolutionists. They seem to be honestly trying to find the truth through rational inquiry.

      That does not mean I believe it with total faith and without question. In fact, it is CRITICAL to their credibility that I be able to ask questions, and have them resolved to my satisfaction by further investigation.

      See, no name calling, no profanity, but a careful description of my approach to the question of evolution, and my basis for making my decision. Let's see what response you will make.

    92. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      What would you have me say?

      Re-read your post(s); you don't want me to respond, you want me to fuel your fire so that you can justify further insults and mockery.

      I've resisted the urge to sink to your level of shit-hurling, which reminds me of another creature you seem OK with decending from, but anyway...

      Listen, you've chosen to agree with other very intelligent people with very good arguments.

      People who postulate our entire planet of interconnected complex systems is the result of a cosmic "OOPS!" and, despite the overwhelming tendendency of said systems to decay in short spans, have managed to sustain and persist in the absence of any evidence of how.

      Sure, why not?

      That is SO much easier to accept than the idea of a Designer and Creator.

      I can't possibly have a fighting chance of convincing you if you've forgotten Common Sense.

      Shouldn't we be chest deep in transition species? Why isn't my neighbor a lower or higher level of creature? Have we hit a evolutionary plateau? Why is there such a diverse selection of species anyhow? Ad naseum...

      Lastly, Occam's Razor seems to reinforce the case for a living God given that evolution requires dozens of leaps of logic while God requires just one.

    93. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      You completely misunderstand the theory of evolution.

      The most important error you make is in believing "said systems decay in short spans." There is no support for your belief.

      Also, your concept of "transition species" is totally bogus. EVERY SPECIES is equally "transitional". You only have "transitions" when you draw artificial boxes around groups and say "these are reptiles, these are birds, and I am looking for other species to fall exactly on the line I drew."

      And the "leap of logic" of believing God is the ABANDONMENT OF LOGIC.

      Believe what you want to believe, but every one of these indicates even further you are incapable of logical thought.

    94. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      What natural system ISN'T decaying?

      Why, after billions of years, do all these transitional species exist concurrently? Think of the number of insects alone, not to mention vertebrate and invertebrate creatures.

      How about instead of your tired insults on my capabilities for logical thought (for which you have relatively no basis anyhow), you pose some demonstrative examples to back your suppositions.

    95. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      They exist concurrently because they are species that exist at a particular point in time. You are the one who is artificially calling some species "transitional" and presumably other species "non-transitional." The distinction has NO MEANING.

      The point is that there is no *destination* that species are traveling toward, or making a "transition" to. It's not like some bell rings and says "We have now arrived at the Homo sapiens evolution stop. We will be standing by for 10,000,000 years until the next scheduled transition. Mind the gap."

      There is no way to come up with an example to explain something to someone who does not understand the basic terms of discussion.

      It's like asking me to show you an example of calculus when you get confused over basic algebra.

    96. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      And to address your "decaying" argument, perhaps you can clearly define what you mean by "decay."

      If you want an example, look at the weather. It's not like the weather just "decays" until it is sunny all the time, it keeps on changing, rain, sun, snow, wind, keeps on happening, without "decaying" at all.

      That's because there is a continuous input of thermal energy (from the sun), and enough degrees of freedom in the system to keep things chaotic. And it isn't particular to Earth: Jupiter's Red Spot is a storm that has been going on for hundreds of years without "decaying."

    97. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      More insulting metaphors and still no data?

      No transitional species? That's convenient.

      How did Homo Sapiens originate? Where did any creature (with no species?) originate?

      Which scientific organizations back your viewpoint?

    98. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      You keep using the term "transitional" in a way which has no meaning. Your question "Where did any creature (with no species?) originate?" has no meaning that I can comprehend.

      You are very confused.

    99. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Where did any creature come from? Where did all the different creatures start? Who else subscribes to your transition-less, species-less theories?

    100. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where did your brain go? How many nonsense questions can you ask? Why don't you read an accurate book on modern evolutionary theory and learn something for yourself, instead of demanding some slashdot poster teach you by answering increasingly bizarre questions?

      The world may never know the answers to these questions.

    101. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Jupiter? Let's not bring in something we know relatively nothing about. But for kicks.. if I keep adding logs to a fire it would keep burning. Remove the fuel and the fire "decays". Jupiter's Red Spot (from what we guess) and a storm on Earth can be "fed" and thus persist.

      I suggest instead of assumptions anout my cognitive abilities, you state your position(s). From your standpoint, how could I possibly "learn" if you refuse to "educate" me?

    102. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Honestly, becuase fundamentally I don't believe the whole topic merits anything more than stimulating conversation and brain exercise. I have willingly chosen to put my faith in God and His truth and precepts.

      All the variables and dependency on other peoples observations yields a conclusion that evolution requires a mass delusion into the idea of the superiority of human observation and distraction from far more important questions of life.

      If not, then that returns us to my inital presumption that if our existence is entirely inconsequential, why carry on?

      Your opinion of me, though unfortunate, seems to reinforce your belief of this. I have no way of convincing you otherwise, if you think faith in God is pathetic or unscientific or whatever.

      That's the beauty of Free Will. Which, from your viewpoint, I'd guess is an impossible delusion on my part.

    103. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are these places called "libraries" where you can get "books" which can be "read." There are places called "colleges" and "universities" where you can "enroll" and take "classes" with learned "professors" who give "lectures."

      I suggest you avoid the internet unless you are careful to consider the biases of the maintainers of each site. http://www.talkorigins.org/origins/faqs-qa.html is possibly a reasonable starting point to address your questions.

      However, slashdot is not some personal tutorial for settsu. And unless you want to pay me to be your individual tutor, I have neither the time nor the patience to remedy your lack of learning.

      My positions largely agree with the currently accepted modern synthesis of evolutionary theory and scientific cosmology. I believe the big bang happened roughly 15 billion years ago, with an rapid inflationary phase needed to explain such things as the distribution of galaxies in large-scale structures, as well as details of nucleosynthesis in the early universe. These beliefs have been informed by my studies, and I have earned a Ph.D. in experimental physics from a major research university.

    104. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the help there, Professor Higgins.

      There are these places called "libraries" where you can get "books" which can be "read."

      Did they teach Superiority Complex at a "major research university" or were you born with that?

      However, slashdot is not some personal tutorial for settsu. And unless you want to pay me to be your individual tutor, I have neither the time nor the patience to remedy your lack of learning.

      Actually you've been an excellent subject for my informal studies on highly intelligent people who are too smart for their own good. I'm sorry, it's not a paid study...

      I do appreciate the link, unfortunately as there is no unbiased information available from humans, I'll stick to the one source that's proven the most reliable for centuries.

      My positions

      entirely agree with the Biblical account. A reliable source of historical data.

      I believe

      ditto the above, although I don't care how since neither of our sides can be proven or refuted to any level of scientific satisfaction.

      These beliefs have been informed by my studies

      of the exceptionally well-designed world around me

      , and I

      as a graphic artist will wish my far less complex designs could evolve without my help.

      Wouldn't it be divine if a tree exploded in Oregon and, a few weeks later, a 4-color 2-sided postcard that is exactly what a client needs arrives in 25,000 mailboxes? I suppose I won't hold by breath, since how likely is that, eh?

    105. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Listen, that computer you are typing on?

      It was the same kind of human observation and thinking that led to that computer technology being possible as led to the modern synthesis of evolution.

      Quantum mechanics is true, whether you want to believe it or not. Even if you don't believe it, every time you use a CD player or a transistor in your computer's CPU, you are testing it, and quantum mechanics is passing the test EVERY TIME.

      Evolution by natural selection is similarly true.

    106. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Your judgement on "reliability" of sources is quite revealing.

      You are happy to accept any source that agrees with what you read in the Bible. And reject anything else as "human" bias.

      That is exactly the opposite of the scientific approach, which is to close the books written thousands of years ago, and look at the world with careful observations, and without faith-based preconceptions. Those who choose to do so find compelling support for the theory of evolution. Those who choose to remain comfortable in their fairy tales can believe whatever they want, but will be holding back human progress, especially if they insist others get educated to agree with them.

    107. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      I never said I was "happy to accept any source that agrees with what you read in the Bible". I said I believe the Bible.

      And what has age of a book got to do with accuracy?

      Fairy tales, eh? Look at the unsubstantiated claims of evolutionary theory and tell me who's "faith" is misplaced.
      And as I said, if you've made up your mind, I shant waste another breath...

    108. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      My computer? Quantum mechanics? How 'bout we keep the bull out of the crystal shop.

      Your god = Big Bang. My God = God.

    109. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      "unsubstantiated claims of evolutionary theory"???

      It is a pretty weak science library that doesn't have a good hundred volumes containing the substantiation for evolutionary theory that you seek. Look through the past year of articles in the journal Science, for instance, and find how much substance is being added to the claims of evolutionary theory every week.

      It was substantial even a long time ago, which is why practicing biologists stopped talking about Genesis a hundred years ago, when the evidence made such talking look positively silly.

    110. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      Which is why cold hard "science" will be the end of us.

      Pity.

    111. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      If the "end of us" is "a better and more complete understanding of the world we live in," I'm all for it, especially when it leads to tremendous advances in improving the health, well-being, and satisfaction of humanity. That's what science has done, and hopefully, will continue to do, for humanity.

    112. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      I'll admit it was a facetious statement made out of context but... whoa whoa whoa "well-being"? "satisfaction"?

      As you yourself said, science is not concerned with such matters. Though "Health" I will half-give you arguably, but we've been there already.

      I've RTFM and science confirms it, while you've decided it's some "fairy tale" and choose to believe observations made by fallible humans billions of years after the alleged fact. Who's really dreaming here?

      If evolution were true, then who cares if science "leads to tremendous advances in improving the health, well-being, and satisfaction of humanity"? So what? Our existence is entirely meaningless.

      There's the cold hard scientific reality for you.

      So if I am correct and you are not, then there are deeper implications. While if indeed you are correct and I, the sad sack that you believe me to be, am wrong, then who cares?

      On a platform of evolution you have no basis for higher ideals, no basis for improvement, no basis for existence.

      You have nothing.

      Evolution does allow for much more in the realm of imagination: Why didn't we just evolve to clay-based beings like Gumby? It would make the medical fields all but nonexistent. Or what the heck is taking so long?! When do we get to be a bodyless consciousness that is unbound by linear space-time! Or maybe we are just sentient cells, part of some infinitely large creature? I suppose the Bible doesn't allow for those possibilities. Though it doesn't prevent us from imagining it...

    113. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Well, we seem to have come full circle.

      Your metaphysics is extraordinarily sloppy and facile; you assume a logical chain

      1a. morality is important
      1b. evolution excludes morality
      1c. therefore, evolution is false.

      which is completely backwards. Both premises are likely false, anyway.

      Also, you've made absolutely absurd extrapolations of evolution; natural selection is limited by the raw material of genetic variation. DNA codes for proteins, and it exceedingly unlikely to naturally evolve into something else. "Clay-based beings" and "bodiless consciousness" are both almost certainly beyond the bounds of chemistry and physics; however, they are certainly not beyond the powers of an omnipotent creator. In any case, evolution is not teleological; it cannot know where an "optimum" is, it can only work through selecting among what is already present in the population.

      The question for *you* is to explain why God doesn't allow for these, if they indeed are optimal examples of intelligent design, not for evolution to explain why they don't happen.

      Science and even metaphysics is not some realm where imagination gets full rein; it is stringently determined by an apparently objective physical reality. And independent of confirmation by some "manual" you might have read.

    114. Re:Don't call it pseudoscience because it isn't by settsu · · Score: 1

      It could be said we've come full-circle, though I think I've made it unabashedly clear that I feel the whole topic is intertwined with inseparable questions of life and existence. Clearly that is open to debate from various sides. Perhaps more than 6 billion sides.

      And, as I said early on, I find it stimulating to interject various viewpoints for the sake of having a more complete picture, though not all will like the picture that is painted. Nor will all be accurate.

      What I had been trying to do is make logical assumptions from your statements. That became tedious since the validity of evolution crumbles quite easily for me, especially to to the level of credence it has been given. So I made some off-handed and lighthearted jabs. They weren't intended as optimal examples of intelligent design. I apologize if they clouded the issue.

      As for my metaphysics being "extraordinarily sloppy and facile", let's beat the dead horse: Evolution is true in whatever cold hard scientific form you please. Now what?

      God desired to share love in it's purest sense: love that is chosen. It is in our capacity to choose, unique among all other creatures, that that ultimate fulfillment lies. The physical form of that creature,us, wasn't the point. Indeed is of so little consequnce that, upon our mistake of not choosing to fully rely on God, He decided that we will, at some point, no longer inhabit our bodies.

      Where do any theories come from, if not the imagination of the originator?

  8. Er by Leperous · · Score: 1

    Huh? Where's it flawed, except for the part where we haven't seen anything macroscopic in front of our eyes? (which we haven't expected to see in the ~150 years since this theory was first postulated). Why can't it happen, and why the hell do these stupid creationists keep eschewing very grounded scientific theories just because they think the Bible is literal truth, even though it doesn't claim itself to be?!

  9. That's sweet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It just means there will be fewer well educated people from the state of PA. if the community feels they need to go back to the dark ages, they have every right to do so. when their children can't compete for jobs and are a laughing stock of the nation, they'll know who to blame.

  10. Proof by Apreche · · Score: 4, Funny

    No intelligent designer or engineer would put a waste pipe across a recreation area.

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    1. Re:Proof by mysticwhiskey · · Score: 1

      Imagine then, as an engineer, the logical place to put the anus would be as far as possible from the mouth and recreational zones - methinks taking a dump from the middle back (or front) whilst uncomfortable, would at least give the creator a chuckle or two.

      --

      Stuck down a hole! In the middle of the night! With an owl!

    2. Re:Proof by redwards · · Score: 1, Funny

      Unless the pipe doubled as a recreation area! Brilliant. I can't wait to tell my girlfriend.

    3. Re:Proof by Minwee · · Score: 5, Funny

      A programmer, on the other hand, would leave the waste pipe out since nobody checks return values anyway. This proves that not only was humanity designed by coders, but that your butt is a hack that was stuck in after a rather unpleasant code review.

    4. Re:Proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the contrary, for some people (myself not included, sorry) the waste pipe serves a dual purpose. Now that's what you would call an efficient design by a Clever Engineer. More bang for the buck, so to speak.

    5. Re:Proof by CdXiminez · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And that, funny as it may be, is exactly the reason why evolution explains what we see and intelligent design does not!
      So many things have multiple purposes or half-purposes shared with other organs, and changed purposes but the same origin in other species.

      Design starts with the goal and then defines the necessary parts to achieve it.
      Evolution throws anything at an environment and then keeps what works.
      The traces of the latter approach are clearly visible within all living things.

    6. Re:Proof by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 0

      we're all just beta-tests here.

      the real version is coming soon. total re-write. ..or so I'm told.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    7. Re:Proof by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      can't see the sarcasm there?

      too bad. should have put a smiley in for the monday sourpuss mods, sigh..

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    8. Re:Proof by autophile · · Score: 1
      No intelligent designer or engineer would put a waste pipe across a recreation area.

      There was an SF book about an alien race visiting Earth. They had some kind of religion, and one of them murders one of the scientists studying them, and removes several pieces of the body: the throat, the appendix, and the eyes (but not the urethra).

      In the end it is revealed that one "sect" of the aliens did it because they liked humans so much -- and if the other "sect" ever found out that humans had such flawed design such as a throat that allows choking, a useless appendix, and eyes with blood vessels in the way of the retina, that the human race would be exterminated for alien colonization because humans weren't perfect enough to be Godly.

      I guess the author didn't bother with the urethra, but he probably should have included that as well!

      --Rob

      --
      Towards the Singularity.
    9. Re:Proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >No intelligent designer or engineer would
      >put a waste pipe across a recreation area.

      Or an oil pipeline across a wildlife refuge area.

      Area... Dumbya... that rhymes!

    10. Re:Proof by dondelelcaro · · Score: 1
      This proves that not only was humanity designed by coders, but that your butt is a hack that was stuck in after a rather unpleasant code review.
      See a planaria or cnidarian if you need an example of an organism that managed to escape the unpleasant code review... having no anus, it gets to spend its time eating through its pharynx or oral opening, processing its food, and then pucking it and the wastes back out.
      --
      http://www.donarmstrong.com
    11. Re:Proof by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      And no intelligent designer would wire up its specially chosen people with a photosensitive surface (retina) with the connective signal-carrying wires on the light-facing side of the receptor, especially when doing so then means you have to poke a hole in the receptor to thread the wires through to the processing unit. The intelligent design is to attach them from the back. He wouldn't have just done it with the octopus and that's all.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    12. Re:Proof by Minwee · · Score: 1

      Some of those guys just explode after a year or so. We're attributing it to user error.

    13. Re:Proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      humans had such flawed design such as ... and eyes with blood vessels in the way of the retina

      That isn't really a design flaw; just more evidence that God was a geek. Show the two alternatives to any decent overclocking enthusiast and see which one he would pick. The improved performance of the capillary forward design more than makes up for the minor blind spot.

    14. Re:Proof by flok · · Score: 1

      I've heard some people treat the waste pipe as recreation area as well.

      --

      www.vanheusden.com - home of Multitail, HTTPing, CoffeeSaint, EntropyBroker, rsstail, bsod, listener, nagcon, nagi
    15. Re:Proof by yet+another+coward · · Score: 1

      Are you telling us that octopuses are God's specially chosen people?

    16. Re:Proof by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      Octopuses being te chosen people? It sounds absurd, doesn't it?
      Which makes it just as believable as most of the rest of the garbage spewed out by the religious.
      The human eye shows evidence of being a system slowly built on top of and altered again and again and again - NOT of being something designed to work the way it does from the get-go. If there is an intelligent designer behind it, then that designer was working with the biological equivilent of duct tape, chewing gum, bailing wire, and one Macguyver to help put it together.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  11. That's just silly by October_30th · · Score: 5, Insightful
    requiring that high school science teachers teaching evolution tell their students that evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again, is flawed

    I teach physics. Every theory in physics is most likely flawed. In fact, every theory in natural science is flawed. Should I have to point it out again and again?

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
    1. Re:That's just silly by Gaewyn+L+Knight · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes!

      If for no other reason than to make sure that your students have an understanding that not everything that is spoonfed to them should be 100% believed.

      God or no God... science or creationism... the biggest gift you can give a person is that of a flexible and inquisitive mind.

      Who knows... maybe someday one of your students will fix one of those flaws.

      --
      Telcos have alot of dark fibre in the States. Most people assume that's optical fibre...but it's actually moral fibre.
    2. Re:That's just silly by FlyByPC · · Score: 1

      YES, you should point this out! But also point out that these theories explain observed phenomena much better than any others we have, which is why they're the currently accepted theories. You could explain, for instance, how the Greeks thought that a force was needed to sustain motion; then Newton derived his three laws of motion, then Einsteinian mechanics modified these laws in "extreme" cases...

      --
      Paleotechnologist and connoisseur of pretty shiny things.
    3. Re:That's just silly by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      ...and you defined what scientists mean on a scientific theory. You can prove it wrong

      That is what separates it from being faith. ID is faith, and if scientists were to be politically correct all the time, we would throw back scientific advancement to "progress" observed in middle ages.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    4. Re:That's just silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, actually, I think you should. Maybe not for every theory, but enough so that your students get the picture. The most important idea in science is the knowledge that you could be wrong.

    5. Re:That's just silly by October_30th · · Score: 1
      I love the history of science and usually include historic examples of faulty theories and wrongly interpreted experiments in my lectures. So, the warning is implicitly included in them.

      My point was, of course, that it would be rather pointless for me to lecture about a physical theory and then every time point out that it is just a theory.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    6. Re:That's just silly by Idarubicin · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I teach physics. Every theory in physics is most likely flawed. In fact, every theory in natural science is flawed. Should I have to point it out again and again?

      Indeed. I dare say that everything that is taught in science below...oh, about the advanced undergraduate level, at least...is flawed. To use a less loaded term, I might suggest it's a useful approximation.

      In elementary school, you get your first taste of Newtonian mechanics. High school adds on some calculus to make it more useful, and maybe mentions this thing called special relativity. If you study physics at university, then you'll start getting hit with general relativity around what, third year? Quantum gravity shows up if you're lucky just before you graduate.

      In elementary school, you find out that acids and bases react, and that everything is made of atoms. You might get to make a little vinegar-and-baking-soda volcano. High school you get hit by perhaps a couple of different models of chemical bonding--all approximations. You probably won't solve the Schrodinger equation until you study university chemistry. The Dirac equation you might not run into at all.

      Now that we're starting to have access to genomic information for many different species, the stuff that computational biologists have been doing with evolutionary theory is just stunning. There are some really elegant and subtle results that have been generated. Do we try to explain all of this to a high school class? Nope--there isn't the time or necessity for a graduate-level dissertation on evolutionary theory. A useful approximation is provided, as it is in the rest of the sciences.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    7. Re:That's just silly by khchung · · Score: 1

      You would have to if any of those theory threatens the world view of any powerful/rich group of people, religious or otherwise.

      --
      Oliver.
    8. Re:That's just silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes! Question EVERYTHING!*





      *Except Religion

    9. Re:That's just silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then show them how Newtonian science gave way to Einstein's expansions, how Mendel and Darwin changed the way we thought about biology. Show how good science was usurped by good science when new facts demanded a rethink. ID doesn't present new evidence, doesn't meet either criteria. Hence it doesn't belong in a science course any more than do ghosts, demonic possession or Bigfoot.

    10. Re:That's just silly by shannara256 · · Score: 1

      There are two related quotes that I've found to be insightful and have refined how I look at things.

      The first is by Kelvin Throop III:

      Celestial navigation is based on the premise that the Earth is the center of the universe. The premise is wrong, but the navigation works. An incorrect model can be a useful tool.

      The second, more succinct quote is by George Box:

      All models are wrong. Some are useful.
  12. said it before and I'll say it again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We'll say that in our classrooms when your ministers say "God is a theory, not a fact" on their pulpits.

    And fundies, just to pre-emptively shoot down your argument that taxes pays for these schoolbooks and so you shouldn't be forced to read that stuff, consider it a fair exchange for all of the tax exemptions that the church gets. Dollar for dollar, you guys are getting off EASY.

    1. Re:said it before and I'll say it again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree with your sentiment, it would be wrong to call the contents of the paulist religion/god a theory. It's more like a "weak hypothesis with no basis in fact". So if the idiots wants need schools to underline that evolution is a theory and agree to start each sermon with "What you're about to hear is just a weak hypothesis with no basis in fact, and might have sprung from dope smoking illiterals" then I say it's a fair trade.

      Just have to spend time educating people on the real meaning of what "theory" means (as in "not wild assed guess")

    2. Re:said it before and I'll say it again by ajs · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We'll say that in our classrooms when your ministers say "God is a theory, not a fact" on their pulpits.

      I've been to a number of sermons of differnt christian sects which have included something along the line of, "you cannot prove the existence of God, only faith can demonstrate His existence to you."

      Please feel free to credit me in the new I.D. textbook ;-)

      Seriously, that's about the weakest attack on I.D. that I've heared, and the K5 article was pretty weak to start.

    3. Re:said it before and I'll say it again by caitsith01 · · Score: 0

      that's about the weakest attack on I.D. that I've heared

      Why, it's Vice-President Cletus I do believe.

      Your grammar and spelling are possible explained by this: I've been to a number of sermons of differnt christian sects

      I think it's a very good argument. Why should the church intrude into science by arguing that the tenets of science demand equal attention for religious theories, but science may not intrude into the church by demanding that faith can support many things, including rationality, deduction and provable theories?

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    4. Re:said it before and I'll say it again by ajs · · Score: 1

      "Your grammar and spelling are possible explained by"

      When you saw that you had typed that, you must have turned green... heh. I know how you feel. I post between debugging sessions, so I can't take the time to proof-read as much as I'd like either.

      "this: I've been to a number of sermons of differnt christian sects"

      And this establishes WHAT exactly?

      Go ahead, use that rope... and while you're running it around your neck, please explain to me how the fact that I'm an atheist ties in here.

      Ad hominem attacks are rarely useful tools. Try again.

    5. Re:said it before and I'll say it again by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Just a stray comment...

      Ad hominem attacks are rarely useful tools.

      That depends on the audience. Sadly it is all to often a very useful and very effective tool.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    6. Re:said it before and I'll say it again by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      How about this sticker:

      Evolution is a theory, not a fact; Creationism (or ID) isn't even a theory.

  13. OKAY! by u-238 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    why the fuck?

    here's a revelation:

    DON'T GIVE THEM ATTENTION

    http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/klee/misc/sla shdot.html

  14. Not Enough Philosophy in Science by FhnuZoag · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, that's what the problem is. With most schools teaching science only as 'a body of facts', why should we be surprised how faith-based things like ID gain ground?

    We need to be teaching kids about the scientific method, the scientific process. Popper etc. The importance of skepticism and falsifiability.

    If they still have the impression that the fact that Evolution is a theory represent a weakness, not a decisive strength, then how can we win?

    1. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by Potor · · Score: 1

      As a philosopher, I could not agree more. Of course, I would prefer more courses on metaphysics, but what is the philosophy of science, more than applied metaphysics?

    2. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by Ubergrendle · · Score: 1

      And this is the value of a classical education. Social sciences, history, english literature, philosphy...these studies help develop an ability to cope with vagarities and non-absolutes, the ability to rationalise and reason qualitative information not just quantitiative. Too often I see a scientist being forced to debate with these religious fundamentalists and LOSE because they cannot handle themselves in a debate.

      When your challenged with a logical fallacy you have to aggressively thwart it, and explain why it is irrelevant. When presented with rhetorical questions you have to respond in kind, question the basis of the religion belief and why it can't be interpreted as an absolute.

      When given a choice, the vast majority of people will choose the uncertainties of science vs the uncertainties of religion as a basis upon which to lead their lives, since at least science allows for consistency and an ability to gain greater understanding. Hence the desire of the religious groups to avoid a direct confrontation, attack the opponent rather than present the strength of their own position (e.g. it has none).

      --
      John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
    3. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The day that Popper and Bartley are assigned reading in schools is the day I've died and gone to heaven.

      I would love to see these ID folks up against a bunch of kids who've read The Postscript to the Logic of Scientific Discovery and The Retreat to Commitment. That would probably be enough fun to sell tickets to.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    4. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by gladmac · · Score: 2, Informative

      GF attended the IB program - International Baccalaureate. There is a mandatory class, "Theory of knowledge". It deals with stuff like this and should, as you suggest, be given to each and every kid.

    5. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by kypper · · Score: 1

      Evolution itself should be upgraded to LAW. There is no doubt that it exists... evidence has been concurred so many times we have lost track.

      The theory is in how it is carried out primarily. Kimura's random selection? Natural selection? Genetic drift? We're not quite sure what is the primary driver here (and much evidence points to each).

      The actual evolution is not in dispute except among the fundies.

    6. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by Evil+Adrian · · Score: 1

      "The actual evolution is not in dispute except among the fundies."

      I don't think anyone disputes that evolution occurs.

      The dispute is whether or not life came into being from primordial soup and evolved, or if life was intelligently designed...

      --
      evil adrian
    7. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by xilmaril · · Score: 1
      I don't think anyone disputes that evolution occurs. The dispute is whether or not life came into being from primordial soup and evolved, or if life was intelligently designed..
      This is a bit of a contradiction. Evolution doesn't speak of where exactly life began, only that it EVOLVED from something simpler.

      ID, on the other hand, says that all life was created in its current form, as is, and doesn't evolve.

      If ID allowed for evolution, than the two ideas wouldn't conflict in any way.

      Although for that matter, I've never really understood why they are supposed to. If ID-fans believe life was initially created by god, and Science-fans believe that they don't know how to was created, and they both believe that life has evolved since then, where is the conflict? Sadly, I don't think this is the case. I think ID specifically excludes evolution.
    8. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by learn+fast · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The thing is we should be teaching reasoning skills and critical thinking.

      We spend too much time in school learning things that are not of optimal importance.

      Advanced abstract mathematics -- sorry guys, I and 99% of the people who took trig and calc will never need it in life. Accounting and statistics I could actually use in my life.

      Literary analysis -- No one has ever needed this is in real life. Decent writing skills and rhetoric and maybe even public speaking are important, but it seems like at least 85% of the English classes I took were spent discussing metaphors in classic literature. Needless to say I have never needed to do this outside of an English class.

      Civics -- we needed more of this. What little I had to study in my one government class I have probably used almost every day in understanding national events. Also I wish I had learned about the interesting properties of governments other than my own like a parliamentary system, which I still find baffling but am convinced cannot by definition be any worse than our current system.

      Science -- should be almost entirely on the methodology of science and scientific reasoning, rather than any specific facts that it reveals. What is science and what isn't? Being able to answer this question is more important than knowing how electron valency works or how alleles are passed on. I learned those things at one point and quickly forgot them, but how to use science generally everybody needs daily.

    9. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by sploxx · · Score: 1

      Although I can't say that I have taken classes in philosophy and although my knowledge in these matters is only marginal, I have to say that you're absolutely right!

    10. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by Jerf · · Score: 1

      The thing is we should be teaching reasoning skills and critical thinking.... Advanced abstract mathematics -- sorry guys, I and 99% of the people who took trig and calc will never need it in life. Accounting and statistics I could actually use in my life.

      "Advanced abstract meathematics" is the best place to learn abstract reasoning skills and critical thinking; that is the best reason to learn it. (Link goes to elaboration and explanation, but the one-sentence summary is fairly accurate.)

    11. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by Evil+Adrian · · Score: 1

      There have got to be reasonable people that accept intelligent design in tandem with evolution.

      I myself have difficulty believing that complex life forms evolved from primordial soup, so I can see where Intelligent Design comes into play. But I also think it's painfully obvious that birds and lizards evolved from dinosaurs... and viruses and bacteria evolve to resist treatment... so it's not like evolution doesn't happen.

      Why is everything so fucking polarized? I think my viewpoint makes way more sense -- from any standpoint, scientific or theological -- than an entirely ID or entirely evolutionary one.

      --
      evil adrian
    12. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in Science by Darth_Burrito · · Score: 1

      There is a valid complaint here, but you've got to understand that some of the subjects you mention like Math and Literary Analysis are some of the only places where critical thinking is actually taught in high schools. In Math, you have to understand a collection of rules or methods and follow them to reach various conclusions. This teaches you critical thinking skills for the concrete world. In literary analysis you have to form an opinion about something and then either support or defend it. This gives you critical thinking skills in a more abstract world. Both sides of the equation don't have to balance out in the real world, but you have to convince a reader that they do or at least that they could.

      The problem with subjects like Civics or Science is that they are almost always taught as a collection of facts. This is wrong, but it's what happens. It is more difficult to screw up literary analysis and higher mathematics because both subjects are much more about the process of derriving conclusions than about the actual conclusions themselves. Memorization versus Critical Thinking.

  15. I just don't get it. by FlyByPC · · Score: 1

    How can anyone who's looked at the evidence believe this stuff? It doesn't require giving up faith in the deity of your choice, either. (After all, atheism is unprovable.) What next, equal time in schools for the geocentric hypothesis, since that's alluded to in the "Bible," too? Really, people. Use some sense...

    --
    Paleotechnologist and connoisseur of pretty shiny things.
  16. Give it a rest by Potor · · Score: 3, Insightful
    As retarded as ID is, I see no point in discussing it here on /.

    ID has nothing to do with science, and /. is obsessed with science.

    The extent of any intelligent conversation with ID must be limited to the above. Anything else is not only superfluous, but also in danger of ennobling those quacks.

    1. Re:Give it a rest by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      It's not about ID directly, but about the school board forcing teachers to teach it.
      Seems like a typical slashdot Your Rights or a political post, no?

    2. Re:Give it a rest by BetaJim · · Score: 1

      I think it is important to see articles like this posted. If for no other reason than to keep up on current events. As a person who likes science, I want to know what the science haters are up to; hince I'm glad this article was posted.

      If a high school in my area started teaching or giving credence to homeopathy in biology classes I'd want to know. I would then be at the next school board meeting! You see, science isn't easy, but it's the best way we have to understand the world. Some people though want warm and fuzzy platitudes to replace that bit of certainty that science gives (witness psychics and faith healing).

      It takes work not to lose the things science has given us. That is the danger of not knowing that ID (or other pseudoscience) is being pushed on the public. Thus, it is necessary to shout down the quackes as begin quackes; and I would use that word, to their faces. Anyone trying to destroy society deserves no respect.

      --

      "Drug related crime" is a misnomer, "prohibition related crime" is the more accurate and correct phrase.

    3. Re:Give it a rest by Potor · · Score: 1
      Indeed, and I certainly agree with your more nuanced reading. But the big damage was already done in Florida a month or so back, when a bill was introduced to grant students the right to sue their professors. That bill is aimed squarely at the teaching of evolution AT UNIVERSITY, and is only two readings away from becoming legislation.

      Clearly, this is a bigger threat, even if the bill dies. The very fact that a legislature could try to silence science in this manner is frightening.

    4. Re:Give it a rest by Potor · · Score: 1
      Science is falsifiable. ID is not falsifiable. Ergo, ID is not science.

      Let me put this differently: anything phenomenon must have a phenomenal cause. ID ignores this. But, science deals only with phenomena.

      Or yet another way: how can a 'science' know what is in the mind of God, when God is noumenal, and thus beyond the realm of the phenomenal? If your answer involves Thomas Aquinas, then we may have something to talk about. But otherwise, no chance.

    5. Re:Give it a rest by Potor · · Score: 1
      I would hope in your wisdom you might realise that some arguments do not need facts, but can be decided on an a priori ground.

      This in mind, if you deny that the phenomenal requires a phenomenal cause, then you have proven my argument. You want to extend causality beyond its proper realm.

      This is why any proof of God from his affects, strictly understood, is doomed to failure. All an ID argument could prove is an Intelligent Designer. It could not equate this with God, because God escapes the phenomenal. And having proved an Intelligent Designer, there is no way it could disguish this from nature itself.

      Now, if your point is that ID simply shows the providence of Nature, then we have nothing to argue about. But, if you want ID to say anything about God, then we have issues.

    6. Re:Give it a rest by Demerara · · Score: 1

      ID has nothing to do with science

      It has absolutely everything to do with science. It seeks to replace science, to diminish science, to silence science.

      Don't worry about ennobling the quacks, worry about how to rebut their quackery. But ignore them at your peril.

      Oh shucks - Napoleon Bonaparte said it so much better than me - (todays /. QOTD) - "Put a rogue in the limelight and he will act like an honest man."

      Thanks Boney!

      --
      Backward%20compatibility%20is%20over-rated
    7. Re:Give it a rest by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      ID has nothing to do with science...

      That's kind of like saying, "That tiger in the room has nothing to do with my humanity."

      Sure it does. The tiger could end your humanity.

      ID could end science.

    8. Re:Give it a rest by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Prove that ID doesn't have anything to do with science

      The previous poster already did. ID is not falsifiable. What test can you perform to show whether something was designed or not? What predictions does ID make?

    9. Re:Give it a rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The previous poster already did. ID is not falsifiable. What test can you perform to show whether something was designed or not? What predictions does ID make?

      Hello? Do you know what science is? Making predictions? Not falsifiable?

      The previous poster proved nothing. He *said* that ID is not falsifiable. Big woop! Anyone can say that. Anyone can say anything. Who cares. Prove that ID is not falsifiable.

      What part of ID are you hung up on? The "Intelligent" part, or the "Design" part? I think there's 3 thresholds that someone has the cross to prove that ID is not scientific. 1) You have to define ID. 2) You have to prove that your definition is accepted by ID proponents. 3) You have to prove that the definition is not scientific at all.

      I think everyone here might think they have covered 1. So I think that they might be breaking down at 2. So, go back and try to figure out how ID proponents define their studies. Then come back and prove to me that it is not science.

      You're never coming back, I know already. But if for some reason you actually do, my email address is bmetzler@gmail.com. I'll be looking forward to hearing from anyone proving that ID is not scientific.

      -Brent
  17. Fair enough... by Moth7 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just so long as I'm equally entitled to conjecture that the Bible was placed here by Satan to test our faith in him (the true Lord).Don't think they should have a problem with that, do you?

    1. Re:Fair enough... by acebone · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Parent is not a Troll - it's a logical question

      Of course applying logics to test religion will often be considered trolling by those who believe

      I for one cannot believe that God would... eh... hang on - I do not even believe in God (or any other sentient omnipotent being)

      --
      Check out my PHP Url Validator
    2. Re:Fair enough... by MathFox · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yet another theory is that the Universe was created as term work, for which God got a barely passing grade. (What else would you expect for a six-day hack.) Next semester He went on with different courses and forgot about us.

      --
      extern warranty;
      main()
      {
      (void)warranty;
      }
    3. Re:Fair enough... by joshmccormack · · Score: 1

      Just so long as I'm equally entitled to conjecture that the Bible was placed here by Satan to test our faith in him (the true Lord).Don't think they should have a problem with that, do you?

      Some people find the beliefs and values that are taught in public schools to be just as bad as what you think some would think of teaching about Satan being the true Lord. For this reason, and so you can educate your children with your tax money as you see fit (including teaching them to worship Satan, if you want), some people want a voucher system.

    4. Re:Fair enough... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people are dumb.

    5. Re:Fair enough... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MUAHAHAHAA!
      Man you're awesome!
      I reached the same conclusion;
      Specifically, that blind obedience to a subset of moral guidelines leading to perfection while claiming morality under the guise of "well, no one could reach that level of perfection" tends to create people who's moral guidelines are abitrarily chosen, and with respect to time, arbitrarily enforced.

      Such a blind adherence lends itself to the theory that Satan must have planted such rulebooks, because in their race for power and glory (or in this case, "morality"), most people (for whom the system was theoretically constructed to teach) will reach for a couple of comfortable rules, while ass-raping each other.

      However, those who think analytically, are often more likely to approach the system holistically (disregarding archaic rulebooks), and from the point of view of a highly nuanced understanding of the SPIRIT behind the system, and as such are likely to fulfill that spirit...

      Hence, the rulebooks distract from achieving a reasonable approximation of the spirit of the proposed system, HENCE, they must be plants by an agency designed to confound our achievement of said spiritual goals...

      You should have seen the religious people run in horror when I suggested that :)
      HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    6. Re:Fair enough... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Job - A Comedy of Justice" by Robert A. Heinlein

  18. It'll never end. by purduephotog · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have a coworker, a man I deeply respect, who has told me he has lived his life by listening to an inner voice that guides him.

    That, in itself isn't bothering. He's a story about how he was living semi-nomadic, moving from job to job, and when it came time to move south he went to take a position doing radio towers (he'd done it every year). This year, however, his 'voice' told him to skip it.

    The crew that ran the towers was killed when a freak gust of wind knocked them off. The owners brother, who was filling in because they were short handed, was killed as well.

    Which makes you not wonder why a repeated event like that would lead someone to believe there is a higher power granting directions to you.

    He also went on to tell me he believed in the great flood and that the bible talks about life on other planets, and how those aliens came to earth and impregnated our women to form the scourage that was wiped clean with said flood.... but like I said, I respect the man deeply.

    I just don't agree with him.

    1. Re:It'll never end. by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 1

      There are many deluded people. The fact is that a person's delusions are tolerable if they cause no hurt nor harm.

      Your acquaintance is of course not a harmful person. (Although, it is interesting to consider, that he with his experience might have been able to save those lives if he had been there to warn them.)

      On the other hand, an unstable human who listens to his "inner voice" and bombs an abortion clinic is unfit for society.

      A bunch of deluded people making educational policy is very bad.

      Whatever you do, don't let them get into positions where they make foreign policy... oh wait.

      --
      Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
    2. Re:It'll never end. by cstacy · · Score: 1
      He also went on to tell me he believed in the great flood and that the bible talks about life on other planets, and how those aliens came to earth and impregnated our women to form the scourage that was wiped clean with said flood.... but like I said, I respect the man deeply.
      The bible does talk about those alien beings, but it doesn't quite say "planets" (they're fallen angels or something). The resulting mutant offspring were the giants; see for example Genesis 6:4.
    3. Re:It'll never end. by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      I'd sooner believe he hears an inner voice, than that any such voice is God or an angel. I'm an atheist, mind you, but I tend to refrain from all the psychobabble that would label the guy a schizo that needs to be medicated.

      Maybe this inner voice is simply his own intuition... it tells him "You're getting too old for this, something bad will happen if you continue." It draws that conclusion on a premise that is reasonable, and later shows to be true. And if it really is just an expression of his intuition, then hey, that's a pretty amazing thing. It's somewhat understandable how a person might mistake that as something supernatural.

      The inner voice also apparently tells some stories that are a little more difficult to swallow, though. Just goes to show, keep your inner voices on a short leash, eh?

    4. Re:It'll never end. by jjr1 · · Score: 1

      No matter what happened the fundamentalist has an explanation of why God chose that particular outcome. If he'd been working on towers for 10 years the odds are not incredible that the one year he didn't do it something bad would happen. If he had done it and someone had been seriously hurt he probably would have just chalked it up to luck and not figured any of that into his thinking.

      --
      Best Trivia answer ever... Name the largest aquatic man eater... Contestant: Tsunami
  19. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    oy. Evolution is NOT a theory - natural selection is. And that has been fine tuned with neo-darwinism anyway, to give a more complete explanation for the mechanisms behind evolution.

  20. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one welcome intelligent design as an alternate theory. Evolution has never sat right with me.

    So because it makes you feel good it's better?

    It doesn't necessarily propose a God figure, but SOME intelligence behind our design.
    Next question : how did that intelligence get to be?

  21. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, as a biologist, I can tell you, they're tiny, technical holes, not giant unexplainable ones.

  22. Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? I'm guessing the insanely biased headline is a sign for all the slashdotters out there that this is simply a topic for attacking Christians? If I wanted to read threads about rabid antichristian seniment, I'd visit Fark.

    Bravo, Hemos.

    1. Re:Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? by jonathan_ingram · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nope, no Christian-bashing is implied. If you move outside the USA, you'll find that the majority of Christians are quite happy to accept that modern science is not antithetical to religion. There are many Christian biologists -- and working in biology without accepting that evolution is an inescapable *fact* is like working as an architect without believing in gravity.

    2. Re:Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? by shaitand · · Score: 2, Informative

      ID is a hypothesis with no evidence to support it. Evolution has a great deal of evidence to support it, that is why we call it a 'theory'.

      Teaching a random hypothesis with no scientific basis is as pseudoscientific as you can get.

    3. Re:Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? by m50d · · Score: 1

      The artical is an op-ed piece and was classified as such when it appeared on kuro5hin about 3 years ago (yes I'm exaggerating, but seriously, slashdot shouldn't be this far behind). However, the author goes through straightforward reasoning and explains logically why intelligent design is a pseudoscience, thus justifying his(?) title.

      --
      I am trolling
    4. Re:Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? by BigGar' · · Score: 1

      Actually ID doesn't even rise to the level of Hypothesis as it is neither testable or falsifiable. It might, perhpas, be a conjecture.

      --


      Shop smart, Shop S-Mart.
    5. Re: Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Insightful


      > Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design?

      Any reason we shouldn't call a spade a spade?

      > I'm guessing the insanely biased headline is a sign for all the slashdotters out there that this is simply a topic for attacking Christians?

      So much for the Christian pretense that ID is science rather than religion...

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    6. Re:Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? by intnsred · · Score: 1

      Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? I'm guessing the insanely biased headline is a sign for all the slashdotters out there that this is simply a topic for attacking Christians?

      You miss the point. I'm a Christian. I do not see an attack on "intelligent design" or the public funding of intelligent design as an attack on Christianity nor on Christians.

      Intelligent design is simply a refined version of what used to be called "creationism". Many people were repulsed by creationism trying to push itself into public secular schools and voila! -- now we have a new label and ideas that are not quite as strident and obvious. But the goal remains the same.

      Intelligent design is simply a method to push a narrow, militant faction of the Christian spectrum into the our public educational system. Intelligent design is a political movement to do away with the traditional US separation of church and state and to get the state to teach someone's "version" of Christianity in public schools.

      Rejecting intelligent design is no different than rejecting that, for example, the Mormon's version of Christianity be taught in some Methodist's Sunday school. Even worse, the difference here is that the proponents of intelligent design are trying to pass it off as "science" and use tax dollars to indoctrinate people into their beliefs.

    7. Re:Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design? I'm guessing the insanely biased headline is a sign for all the slashdotters out there that this is simply a topic for attacking Christians? If I wanted to read threads about rabid antichristian seniment, I'd visit Fark.

      They are mostly attacking creationists not christians. The title is proper. There is no science in ID, there is no logic in creationism, there is no christianity in either.

      The line is thick. Christian => creationist. Creationist => idiot.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  23. European school by Councilor+Hart · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I spend my high school time (12-18) at a catholic school in Europe.
    In biology we spent a lot of time learning about evolution. When those classes where over, the teacher said he was obligated (well, don't know by who actually. School or govn.) to mention intelligent design. It took him no more than two minutes, and the entire class had a good laugh.
    At the time I was surprised that he had to mention it, though.

    1. Re:European school by Therlin · · Score: 1

      I spent 7 years at a catholic school in Europe as well (followed by 4 at a non-catholic school) and it was not until I got to the US that I had even heard of "Intelligent Design"

    2. Re:European school by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably a local school dictate in that case, not something that was required by law.

    3. Re:European school by papik · · Score: 5, Informative
      Actually the Vatican is starting to acknowledge Evolution. "La civiltà cattolica", a jesuitic journal, "censored"/"approved" by the Vatican, recently (april 2nd) issued an article pro evolution. Here is the summary:

      L'ORIGINE DELL'UOMO. Evoluzione e creazione - Giuseppe De Rosa S.I.

      L'articolo rileva che l'apparizione dell'uomo sulla Terra è avvenuta lentamente e per successive modificazioni. Quindi l'ominizzazione è avvenuta per evoluzione, che può considerarsi oggi non più una semplice ipotesi, ma una vera e propria teoria, anche se taluni aspetti di essa restano ancora oscuri. Di questo processo evolutivo, l'articolo presenta le linee essenziali, mostrando che con l'Homo sapiens sapiens si è certamente raggiunta la soglia umana: egli, infatti, pensa, progetta il futuro, parla, ha senso artistico e religioso. Ma il raggiungimento della soglia umana è stato reso possibile dall'infusione, da parte di Dio creatore, dell'anima umana in una materia disposta a riceverla. L'azione di Dio però non sopprime la contingenza, il fortuito e il caso, ma nella sua provvidenza li dirige al fine.

      It is more or less saying that evolution is a fact, but it's God that drove evolution to man and gave him the soul.
    4. Re:European school by oliderid · · Score: 1

      I'm an European (Belgian) and it's the first time I see "intelligent design". I would be quite interested to know the European country where you used to live in. Even the vatican doesn't defend creationism anymore... I knew that the USA is facing some problems with fundamentalists christians concerning the evolution. but never "never" any of my Biologist teachers talked about "Intelligent design". For me, It looks more like a marketing trick to put religious dogmas in the scientific classroom.

    5. Re:European school by Councilor+Hart · · Score: 1

      lol
      I am in Belgium. Went to high school near Antwerp. Now attending university in Ghent.
      The teacher just mentioned it. And he was quite annoyed he had to do it. The whole handeling of it and the fact that it was mentioned at all was so funny, because with one exception (not me) the entire class was made out of atheists, studying a scientific curriculum (Wetenschappen-wiskunde 6 en 8 uur)

    6. Re:European school by Monkey-Man2000 · · Score: 1

      It is more or less saying that evolution is a fact, but it's God that drove evolution to man and gave him the soul.

      This is an excellent point because I think this is what many people mean when they refer to Intelligent Design. It is not the same thing as the thinking of creationists, which is rather easily rebutted. How can you prove or disprove that God drove the progress of evolution? It just comes down to one's faith. Why is this even an issue?

      --
      This post was generated by a Cadre of Uber Monkeys for Monkey-Man2000 (603495).
    7. Re:European school by sketerpot · · Score: 1
      You can look at the design of creatures and think, "would this be the sort of thing that an intelligent designer would make? Or does it look more like the result of random alteration and natural selection?"

      Additionally, you can notice that Intelligent Design is unfalsifiable and therefore not a scientific theory and not worthy of mention in science classes.

    8. Re:European school by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      You can look at the design of creatures and think, "would this be the sort of thing that an intelligent designer would make?

      Certainly not if I were looking at a platypus!

    9. Re:European school by bbtom · · Score: 1

      I did write up the current Pope's view of the evolution/creation situation in a blog entry recently. I found it, quite by accident, in a creationist book I picked up. Ratzinger is quite a bit more hardline than JP II on this issue, though not too explicit about it.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
  24. Oh puhhleese! by Golobarti · · Score: 1, Funny

    Everyone knows that the world was created ~4000 years ago in 6 days, complete with dinosaur fossils thrown in to mix up the heathens advocating the theory of evolution. Anyone claiming otherwise is jeopardising his/her immortal soul and will be chained to a computer running Windows(TM) with no friendly Microsoft tech support to explain the shortcomings of the hardware that causes the BSOD's...

    --
    Do not look into the laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:Oh puhhleese! by isotpist · · Score: 1

      4000 years ago != 4000 BC, October 29th (or is it November?) at 9 AM.
      See we can have a /. style debate about intelligent design.

  25. Just ridiculous... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go and read Inherit the Wind. All the arguments against evolution were thoroughly debunked decades ago.

    Yes, there are things in this world that are not (yet) explained by science. That doesn't mean that a supernatural force was involved, just that we have more to learn and discover.

    Most people, if asked, could not tell you how a TV, car or computer works. That doesn't indicate a supernatural influence, just that these people are ignorant.

  26. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps you should change your nick to:

    IAmTehDumb

  27. It's all a wind-up. by The+Dodger · · Score: 2, Funny

    One, if a literal interpretation of the Bible is correct, what about all these fossils?
    God put them there for a laugh. He's sittin' up in Heaven laughin' his ass off at us all getting all wound up about it. Kinda like when I tell socialists that poor people shouldn't be allowed to vote.

    I for one refuse to believe that God would give us brains capable of rational, abstract thought, and then plant fake clues to punish those of us who had the gall to use those brains to attempt to understand the world we live in.
    Yeah, but he's also the same God who put Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden and said "Right, here's the deal. You can eat anything you like, anything at all in the whoooooole Garden. Except from this tree here. Every other tree - fine. This tree - no."

    He knew the gullible bint was going to eat the apple. He never had any intention of letting mankind stay in the Garden of Eden. He just wanted to be able to say "Gotcha!".


    D.

    1. Re:It's all a wind-up. by wheany · · Score: 1, Funny

      Let me give you a little inside information about God. God likes to watch. He's a prankster. Think about it. He gives man instincts. He gives you this extraordinary gift, and then what does He do, I swear for His own amusement, his own private, cosmic gag reel, He sets the rules in opposition. It's the goof of all time. Look but don't touch. Touch, but don't taste. Taste, don't swallow. Ahaha. And while you're jumpin' from one foot to the next, what is he doing? He's laughin' His sick, fuckin' ass off. He's a tight-ass. He's a sadist. He's an absentee landlord. Worship that? Never.

    2. Re:It's all a wind-up. by 0x461FAB0BD7D2 · · Score: 0

      I love that movie. Definitely one of Al's monologues that made me stand up and clap.

    3. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Psion · · Score: 1

      Lawyers!

    4. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He knew the gullible bint was going to eat the apple.

      Um... no.
      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them. After all, he did love them enough to give them life. That *one* tree that they were not to eat from was the *only* law that they had. They were perfect, and as such they would make no mistakes. They *chose* to disobey God. They decided they did not want to submit to Gods authority. That one tree was the only way that they had to prove that they were faithful to God. Without it, there would have been no opportunity to do so. They failed.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    5. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that God is really "Q"?

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    6. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Retric · · Score: 1

      Umm, re read that one there where 2 trees one of immortality the other of knowledge.

      Not saying I believe or anything but if you want to *believe* in a book read the thing. Including such parts as God sending bears to kill little kids for picking on his priest.

    7. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him

      Doesn't sound like He thought the concept through all that well.

    8. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      He just wanted to be able to say "Gotcha!".

      Nah, he wanted to able to say "You got punked!"
    9. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Way to anthropomorphize the deity, dude. And, what happened to omniscience?

    10. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Free will with an omnicient and omnipotent creator can't work. He made Adam and Eve and if he is omnicient then he knew everything that would happen, correct? He knew when he made Eve that she WOULD eat the forbidden apple, and he WOULD kick them out of Eden. It would be like me making a bomb, putting it somewhere, setting it to go off knowing that it WILL go off, but when it does go off saying 'Oh, the bomb had free will. It is to blame, not me'.

      Or maybe God is not omnicient?

    11. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hold on a moment there. I've been thinking about this for a bit, and....

      1. We don't know how much time elapsed between God's command to Adam not to eat the fruit and its actual consumption.

      2. Adam and Eve were immortal until the fruit was eaten.

      Immortal means: infinite length of life. There could have been thousands of millions of billions of years between the command and the act. But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen. It was *inevitable* that they eat the fruit, it was only a matter of time.

      Now, that doesn't sound like a test of free will to me. And in fact, it seems that free will is not actually mentioned in the Bible. That's just something that arose during the centuries of obsessive meditation and re-meditation over the Bible there's been in the Western world. Think about anything that much, and you'll end up seeing all kinds of things implied by it as well, which is why some of the English papers I've been reading lately strike me as the products of a sprained mind.

    12. Re:It's all a wind-up. by quigonn · · Score: 1

      Including such parts as God sending bears to kill little kids for picking on his priest.

      I actually prefer the part of the two sisters that fuck with everyone, and then are tortured with horrible pain for doing that.

      The bible, especially the Old Testament, is full of sex and crime, that's why I enjoy reading it, and I say that as an atheist (of course, I don't believe in it).

      --
      A monkey is doing the real work for me.
    13. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Excen · · Score: 1

      The Parent's quote is from the movie The Devil's Advocate. It was also one of Al Pacino's better soliloquies.

      That being said, it is a good argument.

      --
      "No beer until you finish your tequila!" -Leela's Dad
    14. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 1

      That logic is quite flawed. I could live forever and vow never to visit China, for instance. One can conceive of a world where I go on living but never visit China. So long as nothing forces me to go there, I could quite easily make the choice not to ad infinitum.

      Human beings aren't random number sequences and don't follow their rules.

    15. Re:It's all a wind-up. by jejones · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If God didn't know that Eve was going to eat the apple, then he's not omniscient. It makes no sense to talk about someone having free will in the context of an omniscient being.

    16. Re:It's all a wind-up. by AvitarX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Without knowledge of good and evil there is no free will.

      They had no reason to listen to God over the Serpant even.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    17. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Harbinjer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Free will does work with an omnipotent and omnicient creator works just fine.

      You're forgetting time. You think time occurs for God, just like us. WRONG! We experience time, and can only go one way, forward. But God can see everything that has, is, and will happen. You made the choice, God just knew which one you chose.

      Eve had the choice, she chose poorly, and God knew she would, but that doesn't mean she didn't chose.

      Saying we don't have free will because God is omicient, is like saying Abe Lincoln was pre-determined to make the Gettysburg address just as it is, BECAUSE its in our textbooks like that.

      If you lived at the end of time, and could see the whole past, you'd see what choices we all made, but does that mean that we didn't have free will to do so? NO, we did choose

    18. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Lifewish · · Score: 2, Funny

      Regards free will: God is omniscient. God is omnipotent. Hence God both knew what was going to happen and was able to avert it if necessary. Hence God is responsible for what happened (if you have a non-handwavey counterargument please tell). He certainly doesn't have any grounds for blaming the human race unto the umpteenth generation.

      From this follows a lot of stuff: God causes war and suffering, God is partially sinful, God isn't worth following. In particular, God is ultimately responsible for Slashdot. Given this last, I feel that being incarnated then nailed to a cross was possibly getting off too lightly.

      Yes, that was a joke. Yes, I blame God for my lousy sense of humour.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    19. Re:It's all a wind-up. by stomv · · Score: 1

      For the record, it wasn't an apple. It was merely fruit from The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.

      Methinks Disney has more to do with pop culture believing it was an apple than any other person*.

      Nonetheless, it wasn't an apple, as it didn't come from an apple tree.

      * A silly joke about corporate personhood.

    20. Re:It's all a wind-up. by rgoldste · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Bible says that forbidden fruit came from the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Until they ate that fruit, Adam and Eve did not know good and evil, hence they did not know that eating the fruit was wrong. Talking of them has having failed a moral test is nonsensical.

      And if they were perfect, and chose to disobey God, that means that perfection is found in disobeying God.

    21. Re:It's all a wind-up. by number101010 · · Score: 1

      Nope the Bible clearly states that Adam lived 800 years and then died in Genesis 5:1.
      Genesis 5

    22. Re:It's all a wind-up. by lysergic.acid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's one take on it. Another way to look at it is that since God is omniscient, he knows exactly what's going to happen in the future before the events even transpire. Therefore, he put the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil in the Garden of Eden knowing full well that Adam would eventually be tricked into eating it.

      I mean, think about it: if Adam and Even didn't know the difference between Good and Evil, then how could they be guilty of wrong-doing since they had no way of determining right from wrong--yes, God told them not to do it, but would they have known that disobeying God is wrong? Secondly, if one is incapable of making moral judgements for themselves, and had to always rely on the instincts and judgment of God, then does one really have Free Will?

      So an alternative interpretation for this Biblical allegory is that God put the Tree of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden, not to test man, but to see man realize their Free Will through disobeying him and attaining the knowledge to make moral judgements themselves. The way we prove that we truly are faithful to God is then to exercise our own best judgement to arrive at the same decisions that God would have wanted us to make, without God actually commanding us to do so.

      But i'm just a Godless heathen who's going to Hell so what to I know?

    23. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Denyer · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You're saying God is neither omniscient nor omnipotent; ie, that He does not know what His creations will do.

      Which is a convenient failing for a supreme being to have if you're trying to prop up a belief system using the concept of free will.

      I've never understood why people would make the arrogant assumption that, if there is a supreme being, everything isn't going according to its plan.

      --
      Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Gates M'dna wgah'nagl fhtagn.
    24. Re:It's all a wind-up. by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      What's even worse is that Adam and Eve couldn't have known that disobeying god was wrong *before* they ate from the tree. They had no knowledge of good or evil. It's like handing a toddler a loaded gun and telling it not to shoot anything.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    25. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Danuvius · · Score: 1
      Immortal means: infinite length of life. There could have been thousands of millions of billions of years between the command and the act. But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen. It was *inevitable* that they eat the fruit, it was only a matter of time.


      Errr... I think that's with random number generators, not necessarily with people or other real world entities.

      Your point is a thought-provoking one though. ;)
      --
      Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
    26. Re:It's all a wind-up. by untouchable · · Score: 1
      (Christian, so just warning.)

      I'm sorry, but I'm going to have to disagree.
      Infinity just means 'forever', not that anything is possible just because you have a long time to complete any task possible.

      Free will isn't mentioned explicity because otherwise the Bible (thus humans' experiences everywhere) doesn't become life as we know it, but rather a hugely staged play for God to do his directoring debue.

      And for my example (and a silly one it is, too): Assuming your (straight/male), God gave you everything you desired; new computer, free beer, hordes of naked ladies. The one rule God gave you was 'Don't sleep with that guy just laying there.' Do you still think that because anything is possible that you'd sleep with that guy?

      --
      As Seen On TV's? Come back!!!
    27. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe for the sake of humanity and its free will, God chose to ignore His omnicience. That is to say, if He wanted to make humanity with a will that is truly free, in certain instances, He would have to not predetermine everything.

      C.S. Lewis in _The Problem of Pain_ suggests that God can do everything that is possible to do, but can't do what is a logical contradiction. So, God couldn't create a hot dog so big even God couldn't eat it. Nor could He make free will in a situation where everything was predetermined in such a way that people were prevented from making mistakes, because that wouldn't truly be free will. _The Problem of Pain_, btw, makes some great logical arguments and is worth a read by even non-Christians.

      Imagine it this way: I have sysadmin powers in my house, so I can know what's going on on every computer if I so choose. However for the sake of the freedom of my wife to make her own decisions, and for our trust relationship, I choose to not monitor things as such. It doesn't mean I couldn't, it just means I don't, and our relationship is healthier because of it.

    28. Re:It's all a wind-up. by m50d · · Score: 0, Troll

      Nope. If you live forever, you will go to china. It's inevitable. It can take until that bird wears away the mountain, but it will happen.

      --
      I am trolling
    29. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That *one* tree that they were not to eat from was the *only* law that they had.

      If you take this as a metaphor, it has profound and useful meaning. The whole story tells us something interesting about the birth of a human mind, and also the mindset of the culture that produced the story.

      When you take it as literal history, as you clearly have, you find yourself having to oversimplify important points in order to make it seem reasonable.

      Like the fact that it was the "tree of knowledge," and that it brings an understanding of morality (which is precisely what separates us from animals). The upshot of this is that god was ordering a free-agent to remain ignorant. Sorry, but under the same circumstances I would have eaten the apple too, and flipped god the bird while doing it.

      There are also odd quirks like...if god loved us so much why did he send a tempter? Is it because beings NEED a tempter in order to be free? That doesn't seem logical, since Lucifer was quite free without any tempter...

      Will we still be free in heaven? If so, does that mean we will still have the (apparently required) tempter while in heaven? If so, does that mean that once in heaven we may fall, as adam did from his paradise? Or...if not....if we really aren't free in heaven...then doesn't that destroy the point of having freedom in the first place?

      I will stop now, but the list of irrationalities goes on and on, as does the list of rationalizations, obscurations, and excuses that theologians make to try to make this story believable.

    30. Re:It's all a wind-up. by KevinKnSC · · Score: 1

      We have an upper bound on that time, though, and it's 130 years (see Genesis 5:1). That's how long Adam had been around when Seth was born, and that was after they got kicked out of Eden. I'm pretty sure xFurthermore, your logic would be flawed even if we didn't know how long Adam and Eve were in the garden. We know there was a moment in time when he was put there, and we know there was a moment in time when he was kicked out. That's not infinite. "Very long time" is not the same as "infinite", and therefore you can't use the anything that might possibly happen will happen argument.

    31. Re:It's all a wind-up. by roastedMnM · · Score: 1

      5:4 And the days of Adam after he had begotten Seth were eight hundred years: and he begat sons and daughters:

      I see we have reading comprehension issues.

      (oh and I just clicked on the link you so nicely provided)

      Now if you make the argument that no animal could die before the fall of creation and that the length of time before animals started dying has no bearing on the fossils debate, THEN you have a point.

      On the other hand, most (young earth) creationist (because there are 'old earth' creationist) will argue that the Flood of Noah brought about fossils so the entire point is moot.

      (I just realized that I don't care what I am modded so forget that AC)

    32. Re:It's all a wind-up. by KevinKnSC · · Score: 1

      Here's how that would look if I bothered to preview my posts:

      We have an upper bound on that time, though, and it's 130 years (see Genesis 5:1). That's how long Adam had been around when Seth was born, and that was after they got kicked out of Eden. I'm pretty sure x less than 130 years is not quite long enough that all probabilities approach certainty.

      Furthermore, your logic would be flawed even if we didn't know how long Adam and Eve were in the garden. We know there was a moment in time when he was put there, and we know there was a moment in time when he was kicked out. That's not infinite. "Very long time" is not the same as "infinite", and therefore you can't use the anything that might possibly happen will happen argument.

    33. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      And for my example (and a silly one it is, too): Assuming your (straight/male), God gave you everything you desired; new computer, free beer, hordes of naked ladies. The one rule God gave you was 'Don't sleep with that guy just laying there.' Do you still think that because anything is possible that you'd sleep with that guy?


      Yes. Assuming humans (in their period of grace) have our sense of curiosity and exploration, it's something we'd eventually be driven to test. Heck, after 800 years of living, I'd be willing to try sucking dick on cable TV, wearing hot-pants held up by red suspenders and topped with a polka-dot bow-tie.
    34. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Insightful
      He knew the gullible bint was going to eat the apple.
      Um... no.
      Chief Wiggum: What IS your fascination with my forbidden closet of mysteries?

      So God created Man, man and woman he created them.
      And then he created Adam, and from one of Adam's ribs, he created Eve, and he had NO UNDERSTANDING OF HUMAN NATURE at ALL and expected these ignorant children to have enough self controll not to eat the apple? AND in his omnipresence and omniscience he didn't know that the Morning Star was undermining his commandments, and he didn't put the blame only on him, in his endless love he kicked the kids out and let them fend for themselves.

      No contradictions anywhere in there, huh?
      --

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

    35. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they forgot that they weren't supposed to eat the apple?

    36. Re:It's all a wind-up. by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Of course the word in the Hebrew there is Youth... which refers to anyone under the age of 30... So the image should be that of a rowdy street gang. not a bunch of 5 year olds.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    37. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      If God wished to see into the future, he could have. However, that does not mean that he always does. Thats like saying that becouse I am the best opera singer in the world that every word that comes out of my mouth is sung as an opera.

      The original design of mankind is laid out in the bible. God does not give up on his plans so easily. In time, when all the issues have been settled, his original plan will be realised and this situation can never happen again, since his name will be vindicated and anyone else who rebels against him can be dealt with on the spot. The person responsible for all the suffering we have is Satan. He, like mankind, was created with free will. He was created as a perfect angel, and one of high rank in Gods organization. He let his greed and desire for humans to worship him get the better of him. The entire time from then has been working to straghten out the mess Satan made. Satan brought up issues that could not be dealt with instantly. He chalanged God's right to rule, and claimed that humans, even in their perfect condition, were a flawed design. In order to prove Satan a liar, time was needed. God's son, Jesus, was sent to earth as a perfect Human to prove that mankind was not a flawed design, and to give his perfect human life in exchange for what Adam lost.
      No, God is not responsible for evil, or Slashdot.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    38. Re:It's all a wind-up. by djmcmath · · Score: 1

      Now that's about the silliest thing I've ever heard. If I have a computer program, and I tell it to loop infinitely doing exactly the same thing, that's exactly what it will do. It has no free will. It does what I tell it to, and nothing more. It will not "inevitably over vast millenia" decide to do something else.

      The only way that any un-ordered event would ever happen is if I allowed my program to make up its own mind to do random things. That, by definition, is free will.

    39. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      Does that mean you will do just like God, and inflict horrible pain and suffering on her and all her decendents, as well as drastically reduce her lifespan if she does the one thing you told her not to do? You know open a man page?

      Ok, Ok, I'm just teasing, I wouldn't really suggest that you are evil.

    40. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      That logic is quite flawed. I could live forever and vow never to visit China, for instance. One can conceive of a world where I go on living but never visit China. So long as nothing forces me to go there, I could quite easily make the choice not to ad infinitum.

      False. This shows a misunderstanding of the nature of infinity. Eventually, something will happen to cause you to go to China. If it doesn't happen after the first fifty billion years, then maybe it'll happen after the next fifty billion. If not then, then the fifty billion after that. There will never be an end to the number of fifty billion year periods.

      Further, since we're talking about infinity here, you will go to China an infinite number of times. Hope you like kung pao!

    41. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Distinguished+Hero · · Score: 1

      Maybe if you think God should be some sort of socialist big brother.

      The way I see it, God as you defined it is a libertarian. If you are over the age of maturity, and you tell me that you are going to shoot yourself in the face, and you then proceed to shoot yourself in the face, it isn't my fault that you shot yourself in the face; it is yours. Similarly, you still had the choice of whether your were going to shoot yourself in the face whether I knew about it or not.

      --
      Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
    42. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. If you live forever, you will go to china. It's inevitable.

      This assumes that China exists forever, too, and that for some reason the grand parent someday chooses to go there.

    43. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Colonel+Angus · · Score: 1

      Perhaps He knew exactly what would happen. Perhaps He loved the idea of creating a free soul more than he loved the need to control everything.

      I think of it as parenting. While our parents aren't omnicient, they chose to create a life knowing full well that they can guide us and set out rules but for certain those rules/guidelines would be broken from time to time.

      Perhaps we were already all souls before man was created and God wanted to give us the chance to experience life on Earth and He loved us so much that he gave us the ability. He gave us a vehicle to do it with knowing full well we would sin against Him, and perhaps that we will also see the light and reunite with Him in our future.

      That doesn't seem such a far stretch from the typical role of parents/children today. Parents have rules. Kids think the rules are bogus and disobey. The parents saw it coming. Yet later in life you realize just how wise your parents were and that they continued to love you no matter what you did.

      I'm just spitballing here. I'm not an absolute believer in God. I don't say there isn't one, nor will I say there is. I've got my own ideas and they work for me. I think that someone's 'vision' of what God is is much like a fingerprint. Subtlely different for each and every person.

    44. Re:It's all a wind-up. by operagost · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just because only two trees are mentioned doesn't mean that there were only two in the entire world. What is your point, anyway? They weren't penalized from eating from the "tree of life," that was theirs to use. It was the "tree of knowledge of good and evil" that was denied.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    45. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I have a computer program, and I tell it to loop infinitely doing exactly the same thing, that's exactly what it will do.

      Until it fails due to some electromagnetic perturabtion changing some bits at random, and begin doint something else.

    46. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Errr... I think that's with random number generators, not necessarily with people or other real world entities.

      Looked at from a certain way, everything is a random number generator (admittedly, some are better than others), but that's beside the point. Over an infinite period of time, *ALL* possible things happen. Random number generators are just one of the easier ways to explain this, but it applies to all things with a non-zero probability, and practically nothing that isn't forbidden by an actual law of physics has zero probability. Any non-zero number times infinity is infinity, so, anything that can happen will, granted an infinite time-frame.

    47. Re:It's all a wind-up. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Um, he asked for a non-handwavey rebuttal.

      The Christians I've discussed this with claim that omniscience is an integral attribute of the Creator. It's not a parlor trick God only whips out when he needs to entertain and amuse. God--it is said--exists in all times and in all places, and sees the beginning from the end as a matter of course. To Christians who accept that view, saying that God wasn't using his omniscience when he came up with the Garden of Eden is tantamount to saying that God decided to stop being God for the duration.

      You only claim God wasn't using his omniscience because you can't think of any other way out of the apparent logical contradiction this brings up.

      The second paragraph of your post strikes me as utterly incoherent. God needs to vindicate himself? To who? If Satan was a perfect angel, how could greed have gotten the better of him? If God knows his plan was perfect, why does he have to justify himself to anyone? How could God know his plan was perfect if he wasn't using his omniscience when he came up with it? What will all this Jesus-sacrificing sturm and drang change? Is God like Emperor Palpatine, consolidating his power until "anyone else who rebels against him can be dealt with on the spot?" If so, does that mean Eve is Padme? Is Adam Obi-Wan?

      It's times like these that I'm glad I chose atheism. So very very very much simpler this way.

      --

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

    48. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      "If God wished to see into the future, he could have. However, that does not mean that he always does. Thats like saying that becouse I am the best opera singer in the world that every word that comes out of my mouth is sung as an opera."

      I believe that the courts of law refer to that as wilful negligence. If you can be expected to know that, for example, chucking a brick off a motorway bridge can be dangerous to those below then failing to look is not an excuse.

      In time, when all the issues have been settled
      I'm interested by your explanation for the current sinful nature of humanity, and congratulate you on finding one that hangs together so well. I still don't accept it, but it's at least more internally consistent than the standard version. A couple of points:

      The person responsible for all the suffering we have is Satan
      And who created Satan? If your pet dog worries sheep, you get fined; what punishment is God willing to take upon Himself for one of his angels running amok?

      In order to prove Satan a liar, time was needed.
      Why was time needed? God is all-powerful, couldn't He just have said "Make It So"? Also, I'd note that this is more effort than I would have credited God with applying to prove his case. In general, He would seem to be fairly willing to let people come to the conclusion that He's a superstition without going out of His way to correct them.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    49. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But God is omniscient, and therefore certainly knew the outcome. Before they were even created, therefore, HE chose the time, place, and nature ofthe fall of man. it was never man's choice at all. If god had truly wanted to create a creature that would not fall, he would have done so.

    50. Re:It's all a wind-up. by keraneuology · · Score: 1
      ~sigh~

      Go back and re-read Genesis. They were given -two- mandates, not one.

      --
      If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
    51. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      according to your website you are taking Lexapro. I think it is time you move up to Zoloft or whatever is higher up in the chain.

      BTW, did God want you to take Lexapro?

    52. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but then you assume that god does ot have free will (which may have been your point all along). God created man. If he knew the choice that they would make and still created the man that he knew would make that choice, then the descision was still gods. In fact, given that you claim that god lves outside time he is constantly making that choice. Guess he must be happy with it.

      Let's use the gettysburg address. In our model, lincoln is god. he knows the content of the address that he will give/is giving/has given. Knowing this, he leaves teh address unchanges as he makes it. he is therefore happy with the result and chooses it.

      the alternative is that god has no free will and is predestined to adhere to the descisions of humanity. And if that is the cse, then we also ave no free will, since our choices have already been made. The counterpoint is academic at best.

    53. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Infinity just means 'forever', not that anything is possible just because you have a long time to complete any task possible.

      But infinity is more than just a long time.

      It's more than just a long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long long time.

      No matter how many longs I add to the above sentence, it's longer than that. Of course, the laws of thermodynamics say all energy will have converted into unusable forms before infinite time has passed, but I doubt the writers of the Bible had that in mind.

      Do you still think that because anything is possible that you'd sleep with that guy?

      Given an infinite time frame, yes. An infinite number of times. In fact, in an infinite time frame, I'd rape him an infinite number of times, he'd rape me an infinite number of times, and we'd each look at each other and say "Elvis -- live and on stage!" an infinite number of times while spinning counter-clockwise on our heads while painted in green and purple stripes.

      On a terraformed Mars.

    54. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what about rm -rf /pr0n?

    55. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ROFL LMAO! mod++

    56. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mmmmmmm . . . infinite chicken . . .

    57. Re:It's all a wind-up. by NardofDoom · · Score: 1
      If God is omniscient, then he knew they were going to eat the apple. If he didn't, then he's not omniscient.

      Besides, it's like me putting a chocolate cake on the table and telling my niece not to eat it. I'm better off not putting the cake there.

      --
      You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
    58. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      Those children were being extremely disrespectful to someone who was sent by God, by extention to God himself, and they did not do it ignorantly. Their parrents did nothing to control them. Remember, they "came out from the city". Do you think their parents didn't know? The death of their own children lies on their heads. Besides that, the entire event is only recorded in 2 verses. More then likely there is much more to the story. However, thats irrelevant. The point was made. You can not be disrespectful to God or those sent in his name without repercussions. If God sees fit to, he will reserect those children when the time comes.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    59. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      Firstly I would argue whether it's possible to be libertarian when you're omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent. It makes it kinda hard to not actually be in control of events, or at least of the chain of causality leading up to those events, when you're equipped both with an ability to choose the initial conditions of the universe and a knowledge of where said conditions will take you.

      Also, your gun scenario doesn't extend to the situation where I hand a child the gun and tell him/her it's a lollipop. This would appear to be what Creationists claim God does vis-a-vis fossils.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    60. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I'm not familar with what you are refering to. Can you please tell me where that story is located so I can look it up and refresh my memory? I must have fogotten about it.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    61. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Distinguished+Hero · · Score: 1

      Consider this hypothetical scenario:

      I have an ant farm. I could choose to micromanage every ant in that farm; however, I don't because I just don't care enough. If the ants erect a monument in my favour, I might reward them with more food. If not, they don't interest me enough to care about them, and they can do whatever they want, however they want. They just aren't going to get any help from me.

      --
      Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
    62. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 2, Informative

      We have an upper bound on that time, though, and it's 130 years (see Genesis 5:1). That's how long Adam had been around when Seth was born, and that was after they got kicked out of Eden. I'm pretty sure x less than 130 years is not quite long enough that all probabilities approach certainty.

      Well, if the *possible* frame of time was truly infinite, then it would have happened eventually. Then, the amount of time that passed could be considered a measure of how probable it was. So, the measure of time before Adam succumbed to the pleasures of Granny Delicious could just be quite short. (I'd imagine there's not all that much to *do* in a perfect garden, anyway, especially if you don't know about S-E-X.)

      If I'm in an infinite time frame, then all the possible-things-that-can-happen-and-do have a different, finite amount of time that passes before they occur. The number of zeroes might overflow the universe before it occurs, but it'll still happen after a finite time.

      Oh, and re: quantified pin-dancing angels -- twelve.

    63. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      I wish I could mod you up. You are correct. Also note that the "tree of knowlege of good and bad" did not mean that it held that knowlege. it meant that if they ate from it, they were deciding for themselves what was good and bad, which was not their place. That was God's right alone. Thats another fold in the account that shows the depth of Adams original sin.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    64. Re:It's all a wind-up. by qkslvrwolf · · Score: 1

      What if the country we know as china ceases to exist before he gets there?

      I mean, for instance, I can't visit the USSR anymore.

      --
      Or have you only comfort...that stealthy thing that enters the house and guest then becomes host, then master - KG
    65. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 1

      You are assuming I am governed entirely by the laws of probability. Having free will, I am not. So long as nothing *forces* me to go to China, I can say "no" forever.

      All Adam and Eve had to do was say "no" forever. Nothing forced them to eat the fruit.

      Let's put it this way: assuming my probability of succumbing to a particular temptation is 0, what is the probability that after an infinite amount of time, I will have succumbed to that temptation?

    66. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2. Adam and Eve were immortal until the fruit was eaten.

      Immortal means: infinite length of life. There could have been thousands of millions of billions of years between the command and the act. But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen. It was *inevitable* that they eat the fruit, it was only a matter of time.


      Ah, but sometime during their infinite life they must (since they MUST do ALL things) seal their mouths shut so it becomes impossible to eat anything. If they haven't eaten fruit from that tree before then, success! Certainly your infinity theory can't state what order things are first done in, can it?

      Of course you're also assuming that the tree was immortal and that the command to not eat from it would never be lifted.

    67. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I could live forever and vow never to visit China, for instance. One can conceive of a world where I go on living but never visit China. So long as nothing forces me to go there, I could quite easily make the choice not to ad infinitum.

      False. This shows a misunderstanding of the nature of infinity. Eventually, something will happen to cause you to go to China.


      Ah. Not nessasarily. The decimal representation of one third is infinite. By your logic, somewhere in there should be a '5' digit.
      0.333333333333333333333333333333333......

      I'll get back to you later.

    68. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      Nowhere did I say that there was only one tree, but the only one they were not to eat of was the tree of "knowlege" which represented the right to know, or decide, whats good and bad. By eating of it, Adam demonstrated that *he* wanted to be the one to make that decision instead of God.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    69. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 1

      If I flatly refuse to go to China. If the probability of me going to China outside of directly being forced to do so (we are talking about temptation here, not coersion) is 0, what's the probability that something with 0 chance of happening will happen after an infinite number of trials?

    70. Re:It's all a wind-up. by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 5, Insightful

      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them. After all, he did love them enough to give them life. That *one* tree that they were not to eat from was the *only* law that they had. They were perfect, and as such they would make no mistakes. They *chose* to disobey God. They decided they did not want to submit to Gods authority. That one tree was the only way that they had to prove that they were faithful to God. Without it, there would have been no opportunity to do so. They failed.

      Er...not quite.

      Simply, you're forgetting which tree it was that they were told not to eat.

      That's right, it was the tree of knowledge of good and evil. (Genesis 2:9)

      That Adam and Eve were forbidden to eat of the fruit of that tree, one can only conclude that Adam and Eve knew nothing of good and evil. Hardly perfect, wouldn't you say?

      But, wait, there's more!

      If Adam and Eve didn't know about good and evil, they were incapable--by God's own design--of knowing that it was an evil act to eat of the fruit of that tree. Incapable of knowing that disobeying God's direct order was evil.

      God then punished Adam, Eve, and all the rest of humanity for a crime that God had deliberately made them incapable of knowing was a crime.

      This, gentle readers, is the ultimate Catch-22.

      Cheers,

      b&

      P.S. This incident is hardly unique. Read any of the so-called ``hard passages'' of the bible and substitute ``Joshua Gord of Topeka, Kansas'' for ``God'' and decide if those actions could, by any stretch of the imagination, still be considered moral or even tolerable. Especially read about the Flood, the Plagues, and the Crucifixion. b&

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    71. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen.

      Here is the crux of your fallacy. Infinity does not ensure all things will happen. There are some events that simply cannot be no matter how many times they might seem to have possibility.

    72. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The eating of the tree of wisdom most accurately represents the agricultural revolution, when mankind began to play God with the world around them, but then what to anthropologists know, they just study ancient culture...

    73. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who is to say that they failed.

      If they "pass" the test, then nothing changes for all time. You just have the two of them living pointlessly in the garden for all time.

      On the other hand, if they "fail", they get to have sex and create life becoming more like god. And their children who -know- the difference between good and evil make real choices between them.

      The point of religion is to explore ethical and moral truths. Everything else are "just so" stories that fail miserably when confronted with any logic or hard data.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    74. Re:It's all a wind-up. by John+Courtland · · Score: 1

      The AC that replied to you is right. Eventually, some type of anomaly will occur and your program will not execute the way you intended.

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    75. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      They most certionly did know what was right and wrong. In Genisis 3:2,3 Eve told the serpent, which Satan was using as a puppet: "Of the fruit of the trees of the garden we may eat, but as for eating of the fruit of the tree that is in the middle of the gardem, God has said, 'You must not eat from it, no you must not touch it, that you do not die.'"
      Eve would have heard that from her husband, Adam since she did not exist when the command was given. That is probbly why the 'you must not touch it' part is in there.
      The point is that Adam and Eve *knew* what was right and wrong. By eating of that tree, they were in effect saying, 'We are going to decied for ourselves what is right and wrong becouse we think we know better'. That is why the tree is called "The tree of the knowledge of good and bad".

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    76. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they'll permanently lose a point of constitution.

    77. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Retric · · Score: 1

      With unlimited time every situation that could show up will so for example every person on the world would be living in china except for you. Every person in the world is going to die unless you go there ect ect. It's not a question of temptation is infinate temtation. Hell you get lost wandering around tibet and you end up in China.

    78. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Now that's about the silliest thing I've ever heard.

      I didn't say it had a non-zero silly value. It's still true, though.

      If I have a computer program, and I tell it to loop infinitely doing exactly the same thing, that's exactly what it will do. It has no free will. It does what I tell it to, and nothing more. It will not "inevitably over vast millenia" decide to do something else.

      If it's impossible for it to do something else, then the chance of that occuring is zero. In that case, the chance of it happening is zero over infinity, which is undefined, I seem to remember.

      But if it's even slightly possible, like if freak cosmic rays struck an instruction bit in the computer's memory to cause it to flip, then eventually that would happen enough times to change the program's output.

      The only way that any un-ordered event would ever happen is if I allowed my program to make up its own mind to do random things. That, by definition, is free will.

      I think we've just proven that the universe has free well. Good job, us!

      Wait a moment -- are you saying Adam *had* free will in the garden, and thus he *must* have eventually eaten the apple? Are you arguing on my side?

    79. Re:It's all a wind-up. by servognome · · Score: 1

      Imagine it this way: I have sysadmin powers in my house, so I can know what's going on on every computer if I so choose. However for the sake of the freedom of my wife to make her own decisions, and for our trust relationship, I choose to not monitor things as such. It doesn't mean I couldn't, it just means I don't, and our relationship is healthier because of it.
      God cannot choose ignorance, because ignorance is lack of knowledge, and this conflicts with him being omniscient.
      Your analogy is flawed because you are limited by time. Let's say you are a super admin, and you know everything about the past, present, and future of your system. Even if you choose to ignore what your wife is doing, you will know that spyware will be installed at some point in the future. Ignoring the cause doesn't mean you don't know the effect, but therefore her choice has already been predetermined.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    80. Re:It's all a wind-up. by kilodelta · · Score: 1

      Um... no. God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them.

      Ummm - why would you create creatures with free will if all you wanted was their submission to yours?

    81. Re:It's all a wind-up. by m50d · · Score: 1

      Nope. In an infinite amount of time, everything happens. Everything. China might get destroyed and recreated or something, but it will exist for an infinite time. And the grandparent will at some stage decide to go there, since him deciding that is not impossible.

      --
      I am trolling
    82. Re:It's all a wind-up. by gid-goo · · Score: 1

      Actually you mean Milton and Paradise Lost. More people are familiar with Milton's version of the old testament than the actual old testament (two stories of the creation? Couldn't be!)

    83. Re:It's all a wind-up. by anicca · · Score: 1

      What is it that makes people believe that barbarians who barely mastered fire could know better than us? What is it that causes people to ascribe divinity to ancient writings that were penned by men? It is a parable, not a literal story.

      --
      A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both. Dwight D. Eisenhower
    84. Re:It's all a wind-up. by m50d · · Score: 1

      At some stage you will be directly forced to do so. And though you may claim the probability is 0, in reality there will always be a small probability of you doing anything.

      --
      I am trolling
    85. Re:It's all a wind-up. by kingj02 · · Score: 1
      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them. After all, he did love them enough to give them life. That *one* tree that they were not to eat from was the *only* law that they had. They were perfect, and as such they would make no mistakes. They *chose* to disobey God. They decided they did not want to submit to Gods authority. That one tree was the only way that they had to prove that they were faithful to God. Without it, there would have been no opportunity to do so. They failed.
      But god is omniscient. He knew Adam and Eve were going to break the rule before he made it. Likewise, god knew I would think he was BS, but nevertheless, created me. It seems I was damned even before my existence. Some free will.
      --
      Ardente veritate incendite tenebras mundi
    86. Re:It's all a wind-up. by runderwo · · Score: 1
      But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen.
      That's a faulty argument in the general case. Take the example of a computer program. If you allow it to run infinitely, does that imply that every instruction contained within it will have executed at least once? Obviously, the answer is no, because it could have entered an infinite loop.
    87. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Someone doesn't understand what it means to be omniscient. Definition:

      1 : having infinite awareness, understanding, and insight
      2 : possessed of universal or complete knowledge

      IOW, God knows everything. Period. End of story. He is aware of *everything* that has happened, is happening, and will happen. There is no choice in this. He knows. Therefore, when he placed Adam and Eve in the garden with the tree, he knew full well what would happen. Assuming, that is, you believe in an omniscient god, which most Christians do.

    88. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      expected these ignorant children to have enough self controll not to eat the apple?

      Self control had nothing to do with it. There were many, many trees in the garden, all with edible fruit on them. The *only* reason they had to eat of that tree was *choice*.

      he didn't know that the Morning Star was undermining his commandments, and he didn't put the blame only on him,

      You assume that he didn't. Read the account of Cain and Abel. God saw the flaws that Cain had. He warned him that they would lead to trouble. What was he supposed to do? Punish Cain for something he didn't do yet? What about Satan? Do you think he should have done the same? You don't punish someone for something they might choose to do. Thats not Justice.

      in his endless love he kicked the kids out and let them fend for themselves.

      So now you think that he should have just forgave them and let all the issues (and there were a few) float? Thats not Justice either.
      Right after it happened, in the first prophacy ever recorded in the bible, God said "And I shall put emnity between you (Satan) and the woman (God's Kingdom/Government) and between your seed (members of Satans Orginization) and her seed (Members of Gods Kingdom). He will bruse you in the head (Satans Distruction) and you will bruse him in the heal (Jesus' death w/ reserection)"
      This is how God would set things right.
      At the time, they probbly had very little idea what he meant, although Abel knew that blood would have to be splilled since his first sacrifice was the "best of his flock".
      God did *not* kick mankind out to "fend for themselves".

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    89. Re:It's all a wind-up. by deviantphil · · Score: 1

      Now, that doesn't sound like a test of free will to me. And in fact, it seems that free will is not actually mentioned in the Bible.

      Sorry....do you actually read the Bible? If you had you surely would have come accross this verse.

      John 8:36 (New International Version)

      36So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.

      Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society NIV at IBS International Bible Society NIV at Zondervan Zondervan

      The idea being here being of free will to NOT be in sin and to turn back to God, to be the prodigal son.

    90. Re:It's all a wind-up. by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      That's what I love about God.. he's so deliciously evil!

    91. Re:It's all a wind-up. by johnmig · · Score: 1

      This is essentially what Richard Feynman states "It is a great adventure to contemplate the universe beyond man, to think of what it means without man - as it was for the great part of its long history, and as it is in the great majority of places. When this objective view is finally obtained, and the mystery and majesty of matter are appreciated, then to turn the objective eye back on man viewed as matter, to see life as part of the universal mystery of greatest depth, is to sense an experience which is rarely described.....These scientific views end in awe and mystery, lost at the edge of uncertainty, but they appear to be so deep and so impressive that the theory that it is all arranged simple as a stage for God to watch man's struggle for good and evil seems inadequate." "The Meaning of it All", by Richard P. Feynman, Addison-Wesley, 1998, pg. 39.

    92. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, we're getting close here.

      Given that God is omniscient, it is logical to assume that he understood what he was doing when he created man. It is inconceivable that his reason for creating the world (i.e. man) would have been undertaken without knowledge of the events that would take place. As a matter of fact, I would propose that the universe that we live in has been specifically created to achieve His ultimate goals.

      Obviously, God did not create man and the universe to learn anything for himself (given above mentioned omniscience) so he must have created us to learn something for ourselves. The idea of original sin was a concept created by God himself. He did not sin himself, but he set up the situation in his creation (the Earth) such that the created (man) would make a sinful choice.

      Why did he do this? Because the knowledge of good and evil, and the freedom to choose and be redeemed for the bad choices, is what makes humanity different from the rest of creation. Read the book, the only other entities that we read about sinning are the angels. They knew God face to face and made the choice to disobey (well Satan and the crew did anyway), but they KNEW God, there was no provision in their existence for faith, they had knowledge.

      Man, on the other hand, had to take God at his word. Naturally, it is harder to believe something that we have never physically experienced, so God introduced the idea of Grace to fill in the gaps.

      Why did he do all of this? Because it is the best way for us to get to know him. Can we think of other ideas that we would prefer? Of course, but since we are going by the premise that God is omniscient, then we obviously don't have all the facts. God's goal for us is not to watch us die in wars, live rich lives or even (gasp) post regularly on Slashdot. His goal for us in this life is to recognize his affection for us and, in our own limited way, return it to him.

    93. Re:It's all a wind-up. by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      If I have a computer program, and I tell it to loop infinitely doing exactly the same thing, that's exactly what it will do.

      Spoken like someone who I would not trust to program a fault-tolerant or hardened-for-space system. What a lousy example.

      At some point, a cosmic ray will come through & jolt your computer out of its loop - or just cause it to hang. Or someone will run into a telephone pole & kill your power, and your generators eventually run out of gas. Or your O.S. will decide to crash for no apparent reason & interrupt your loop. Or a meteor/volcano/tornado will destroy your computer.

      Given enough time, no one can guarantee the existence of _anything_.

    94. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only infinte thing we'll have is the discussion between believers and non-belivers...
      To infinity, and beyond!

    95. Re:It's all a wind-up. by intnsred · · Score: 1

      God put them there for a laugh. He's sittin' up in Heaven laughin' his ass off at us all getting all wound up about it.

      That's not biblically sound theology! After all, the Bible doesn't say anything about fossils or that God has a sense of humor.

      Well, unless you call the Bible's story of Job to be an illustration of His sense of humor. After all, He and the Devil must've had a good laugh as they were tormenting the poor Job just to watch him run about like a worm... :-/

      So scratch my humor point -- but the Bible still doesn't say anything about fossils.

    96. Re:It's all a wind-up. by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      Those children were being extremely disrespectful to someone who was sent by God, by extention to God himself, and they did not do it ignorantly.

      So it was alright for the All-Merciful & All-Loving God to send the bears to eat them. Excellent, I'll be sure to tell the next little kid I beat into the afterlife to tell God I was using his example of being All-Merciful & All-Loving.

    97. Re:It's all a wind-up. by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      I do like the "be fruitful and multiply" mandate :-)

    98. Re:It's all a wind-up. by grammar+fascist · · Score: 1

      Heck, after 800 years of living, I'd be willing to try sucking dick on cable TV, wearing hot-pants held up by red suspenders and topped with a polka-dot bow-tie.

      That's probably the best argument against human immortality that I've ever seen.

      Bravo.

      --
      I got my Linux laptop at System76.
    99. Re:It's all a wind-up. by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      Of course the word in the Hebrew there is Youth... which refers to anyone under the age of 30... So the image should be that of a rowdy street gang. not a bunch of 5 year olds.

      So how many "Christians"(1) read the bible in the original Latin->Greek->[old testament]Hebrew?

      The result seems to be distortion in the meaning of the sacred text, then. Which looks like yet another "Gotcha".


      (1) I use quotes here to convey the discrepancy between those who call themselves Christians and those that accurately follow Christ's teachings.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    100. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The odds of all your atoms simultaneously jumping three feet to the left aren't very good. The odds of you spontaneously manifesting in China are even worse. Given an infinite length of time, however, both of these events WILL happen, and they will happen an infinite number of times. Sucks, eh?

    101. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      You made the choice, God just knew which one you chose.

      Yup, you're exactly right. But you're missing a corollary of this. See, when God created the universe, he knew of all the consequences of his actions. Every single one. He knew you would exist, he knew I would exist. He knew all the choices you and I would make. He knew all this because he's omniscient, just like you said. Thus, when he set the universe in motion at the very outset, he knew what you and I would do, and he *CHOSE* to do it that way. IOW, you may think you have free will, because you made certain choices, but God created the universe the way he/she did *specifically* so you would make those choices. Doesn't sound much like free will to me...

    102. Re:It's all a wind-up. by intnsred · · Score: 1

      For the record, it wasn't an apple.

      You get an A for not falling for the populist rhetoric that is swallowed up by most people (I bet you could also confirm that Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer was invented by a Chicago department store as a way to generate more Christmas sales, can't you?!)

      FWIW, many biblical scholars identify the The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil to be cannabis/marijuana (yes, I'm serious). The biblical term is "fragrant cane". Similarly, if we examine Christ (christ = the annointed one), he was probably annointed with a cannabis-based oil, the "recipe" for which still exists in some holy texts.

      The view of cannabis' role in the Bible is not universally accepted, but it does has a great number of scholars -- both inside and outside of various churches -- who subscribe to that translation of the oldest texts we have.

    103. Re:It's all a wind-up. by ccady · · Score: 1

      Nope. You're wrong. Wrong wrong wrong.

      Take the infinite decimal number specified by 1/9. That's .1111111111...

      You arent't going to find any 2's in that.

      Just because something is infinite doesn't mean that anything can occur in it.

      --
      J'aime mieux les méchants que les imbéciles, parce qu'ils se reposent. -- Alexandre Dumas
    104. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 1

      But the Garden of Eden was not about being forced to do anything, it was about succumbing to temptation.

    105. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Scrameustache · · Score: 0, Troll
      he didn't know that the Morning Star was undermining his commandments, and he didn't put the blame only on him,
      You assume that he didn't.

      I assume nothing:
      Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the LORD God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and they hid from the LORD God among the trees of the garden. 9 But the LORD God called to the man, "Where are you?"

      10 He answered, "I heard you in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked; so I hid."

      11 And he said, "Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten from the tree that I commanded you not to eat from?"

      12 The man said, "The woman you put here with me--she gave me some fruit from the tree, and I ate it."

      13 Then the LORD God said to the woman, "What is this you have done?"


      God. Didn't. Know!
      Omniscient? Not according to the bible.
      --

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

    106. Re:It's all a wind-up. by mizhi · · Score: 1

      You must have been absent the day they handed out senses of humor.

      --
      Humorless sig goes here.
    107. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 1

      I would call that being forced to go to China. We're talking about acts of free will here.

    108. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1
      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    109. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1
      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them.

      Hmm. They chose to do evil, right? So why didn't God make humans that both had free will and yet would never choose to do evil? Oh, that's impossible, you say? A logical contradiction? Then I just have one more question...

      Does God have free will?

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    110. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      Go right ahead. He'll be happy to tell you that it was not your place to judge anyone, since that belongs to him. The child will be reserected, and you might not be. *You* do not have the ability to see every angle, or read the heart conditon of anyone. God does. Thats why you should follow the example of Michael (who is Jesus in his Heavenly existance) that he set as recored at Jude verse 9.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    111. Re:It's all a wind-up. by ashayh · · Score: 1

      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them.

      Where does it say that ? No where. That is simply your or your sunday school interpretation.

      They were perfect, and as such they would make no mistakes.
      Where does it say that ? How do you KNOW? Were you there ? Or is this someones interpretation?

      They *chose* to disobey God. They decided they did not want to submit to Gods authority. That one tree was the only way that they had to prove that they were faithful to God.

      You mean to say that before they ate from the tree, they had no knowledge of good and evil. So HOW could they have known that eating from the tree is evil ? More importantly, how could they know obeying god is good?? Do we punish little toddlers the FIRST time they hit someone with a bat? Do we punish our children and their countless generations FOR THE REST OF THEIR LIVES for ONE mistake ?

      Dosent that sound like megalo-psycho-mania? So how exactly did people figure out that god is forgiving ?

    112. Re:It's all a wind-up. by purple_cobra · · Score: 1

      This is why I don't like Christians: no bloody sense of humour. Not that any other religious adherents are notably more able to have a laugh.
      There's probably a thesis in there somewhere but I really can't be fagged.

    113. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Nope. In an infinite amount of time, everything happens. Everything."

      Everything?

      Including a scenario where he never goes to China?

      That would fall under "everything" wouldn't it?

    114. Re:It's all a wind-up. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      In other words, when God created the universe, he was aware of everything to happen in it. Then why set up the whole 'loyalty test' (the tree), if the answer is already known?

    115. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Sneakabout · · Score: 0

      Actually, even if God chose not to see the future, the fact he could still screws free will. As C.S. Lewis says, it *has* to be impossible for God to see the future.

      --
      Sneakabout is a mysterious figure, having done too much mathematics.
    116. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      the freedom to choose

      But if your hypothesis is accurate, we don't have the freedom to choose, only to live as God predestined us to. This pretty much kills any concept of sin. Even if my computer crashes from a bug, I blame the programmer not the machine. In my case that doesn't stop me hitting the damn thing upside the monitor, but I'd expect a perfect God to be more restrained than that. So why Hell?

      Also, if I follow your hypothesis, why should I bother to try to believe? Whether I end up being redeemed or not is entirely up to God, so why make an effort, or try to convince other people (ref. intelligent design) that God exists? Your hypothesis suggests that life has no more meaning than a carpet's pattern has to the threads.

      Naturally, it is harder to believe something that we have never physically experienced, so God introduced the idea of Grace to fill in the gaps.

      I confess I'm not 100% sure what you mean by this. Any chance you could elaborate? Cheers.

      or even (gasp) post regularly on Slashdot.

      HERESY! Shame on you :)

      the knowledge of good and evil, and the freedom to choose and be redeemed for the bad choices, is what makes humanity different from the rest of creation... His goal for us in this life is to recognize his affection for us and, in our own limited way, return it to him.

      So variety is the spice of Godliness? That makes some sort of sense (would I be correct in comparing this to the themes of C.S. Lewis: Mere Christianity?) and is a fairly internally consistent theory. However it still has major conflicts with religious practices. For example, apart from fear of Hell and desire for Heaven, what reason is there for us to accept God as our saviour? Certainly not love; what love does the pot have for the potter? What love does an ant farm have for the kid who keeps it, especially if he's a little too handy with the magnifying glass on sunny days?

      Additionally, your argument still has the same issue of evidence as Lewis' book. For example, what evidence is there that any one faith is true (and incidentally, how does one decide between them)? If there's all this supernatural gunk floating about in the background, you'd expect some of it to show up in, for example, subatomic experiments. Why should it only show up on the large scale when, in our experience, large-scale actions ultimately have their roots in small-scale actions? If God is keeping away to avoid tainting the experiment, why send us one manual on how to live? And why make it internally inconsistent? (examples available on request or at the Skeptic's Annotated Bible)

      As a side note, we're getting rather sidetracked... this has turned into a discussion of Christianity, not of Intelligent Design. Not that I have a problem with that.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    117. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      0 / x is defined as 0.

      x / 0 is not defined.

    118. Re:It's all a wind-up. by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      God clearly doesn't believe in free speech.

      Although if I claim to be a servant of god I can pretty much get away with anything I like, as it would be a sin to question my qualifications or to express skepticism about my mission. All hail Koresh and Jones!

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    119. Re:It's all a wind-up. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that God turned out to be the liar ("but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, you shall not eat of it: for in the day that you eat of it you will surely die."), and Serpent told the truth ("You won't surely die, for God knows that in the day you eat it, your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil."). We know the outcome. Based on this, who's to be trusted more, and who's 'the deceiver'?

    120. Re:It's all a wind-up. by kingj02 · · Score: 1
      So an alternative interpretation for this Biblical allegory is that God put the Tree of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden, not to test man, but to see man realize their Free Will through disobeying him and attaining the knowledge to make moral judgements themselves. The way we prove that we truly are faithful to God is then to exercise our own best judgement to arrive at the same decisions that God would have wanted us to make, without God actually commanding us to do so.
      Beautiful! Couldn't agree more.

      Of course, there's still the problem of God being omniscient. God defined sin, stated the punishment, and then created me knowing full well that I would not repent and thus, would have to suffer. This contradicts His being omnibenevolent.

      I think God's next step would be to remove his presence from our lives entirely. There is no sin, there is no punishment, just an unknown ends through an unknown means and we all have to find the path on our own.
      --
      Ardente veritate incendite tenebras mundi
    121. Re:It's all a wind-up. by quigonn · · Score: 1

      It's Ezekiel 23:1. Actually, the story is a little bit different (my mind isn't perfect...), but there's definitely sex and violence involved.

      --
      A monkey is doing the real work for me.
    122. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Ever asked a question to which you already knew the answer?

      Ever heard of a rhetorical question?

    123. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Danuvius · · Score: 1
      Looked at from a certain way, everything is a random number generator (admittedly, some are better than others), but that's beside the point. Over an infinite period of time, *ALL* possible things happen. Random number generators are just one of the easier ways to explain this, but it applies to all things with a non-zero probability, and practically nothing that isn't forbidden by an actual law of physics has zero probability. Any non-zero number times infinity is infinity, so, anything that can happen will, granted an infinite time-frame.


      What is the source of your immense conviction in this?

      It is a pleasing and satisfying theory... but is it based on anything other than pleasing and satisfying armchair ruminations? Can you elaborate on what "all possible things" actually means?

      By the broadest definition (where time is considered a factor), one can quite conclusively say that you are wrong. (Though under "many worlds" theory, in a somewhat different way, you would be right.)
      --
      Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
    124. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Um, he asked for a non-handwavey rebuttal.

      Feel free to call anything I say as "handwavy". It's just an excuse to ignore what you don't want to hear.

      God needs to vindicate himself? To who?

      Humans are not the only creation. But even if they were, he would not have done anything diffrent. What he did was the right thing to do, and God cannot do anything unjust.

      If Satan was a perfect angel, how could greed have gotten the better of him?

      The same way it got ahold of perfect humans. They have free will. They entertained the idea of being independant from God, and it led them to make the choice to do just that.

      If God knows his plan was perfect, why does he have to justify himself to anyone?

      See point #1. Also, Gods *right to rule* was brought into question. Lets use an illustration.
      Lets say that you had children, maybe you do.
      Now lets say that someone who hates you calls the police and says that you are abusing them, and offers some very poor proof of it. The police, having the duty to protect children, might take them away from you. How do you prove that you are a fit parrent and that the accusation is false? Would you break into the foster home, take them, and run away to somewhere where they cant get to you? No. You would allow the whole mess to pan out until your innocence was proved.
      Sure, God could have wiped out Satan, and the first Humans and started over. But that would not have proven anything. As a God of Justice (God's four primary attirbutes are Power, Wisdom, Justice and Love) he could not do that.

      What will all this Jesus-sacrificing sturm and drang change?

      In order to balance the scales of justice, sometihng would need to be given that was equal to the value of what was lost. A perfect human life was lost (Adam), hence a perfect human life (Jesus) would have to be given to attone for that loss. That is the basis of the randsom sacrifice. We were all in captivity to sin until that ransom was paid. Hence we know again that God loves us, and his son Jesus does too.

      It's times like these that I'm glad I chose atheism. So very very very much simpler this way.

      Yes, it is simpler. You're born, you suffer for about 80 years, you die, your gone. Yep, very simple.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    125. Re:It's all a wind-up. by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1
      Eve told the serpent, which Satan was using as a puppet: "Of the fruit of the trees of the garden we may eat, but as for eating of the fruit of the tree that is in the middle of the gardem, God has said, 'You must not eat from it, no you must not touch it, that you do not die.'"...The point is that Adam and Eve *knew* what was right and wrong.

      Actually, all your quote says is that Eve knew that God told her something. God told consequences of eating the fruit but, according to Eve, she had no concept other than that. The whole point of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil was that once you ate of it, you had "Knowledge of Good and Evil". Before that A&E were floating in a nebulous space of no good, no evil neutrality.

      --
      That is all.
    126. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Danuvius · · Score: 1
      I'd imagine there's not all that much to *do* in a perfect garden, anyway, especially if you don't know about S-E-X.
      It's ok. You can type it properly--they don't have internet.
      --
      Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
    127. Re:It's all a wind-up. by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Quality dictionaries, Concordances, and inter-linear(multi-language with concordance included) are available inexpensively. And anyone who is truly interested in a clearer analysis and study will have one available... And many who aren't have one on the shelf ... just because. And yes, some distortion of detail... Youth translated children can happen... But there are good translations and dictionaries available for those who want more accuracy. And of course Arguments abound even then because we are dealing with "dead" languages.... ie Koine Greek, Ancient Hebrew, Ancient Aramaic, and ancient Chaldean.

      And Blueletterbible.org can be used in a pinch.

      And just out of curiousity which discrepancies are you refering to.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    128. Re:It's all a wind-up. by keraneuology · · Score: 2, Funny
      I do like the "be fruitful and multiply" mandate

      After the ark came to rest the snakes approached Noah with a problem. When questioned regarding their point of concern they replied "we can't go forth and multiply - we're adders."

      So Noah set out and chopped down several large trees, stripped them of bark and fastened them together to make some crude furniture. Noah proudly declared the issue resolved: "even adders can multiply using log tables".

      --
      If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
    129. Re:It's all a wind-up. by m50d · · Score: 1

      Yes. That just wouldn't happen until after he had been to China.

      --
      I am trolling
    130. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Nope. If you live forever, you will go to china. It's inevitable.

      by that logic, you'd also do the following:
      -get a sex change.
      -bomb a starbucks.
      -be elected president.
      -become pope (may require becoming catholic first).
      -marry a goat.
      -write a novel and translate it into atleast 50 different languages yourself.
      -get aids.
      -have sexual relations with every living US secretary of state.
      -spent 2 years motionless inorder to better understand "being a door"
      -kill one of your own children for the fun of it.
      -spend at least 10 years in prison.
      -Worship a kielbasa as the one true edible god.
      -truthfully state that PBR is your favorite beer.
      -work at the microsoft linux division.
      -Watch a new version of "The Wall" with GWB as Pink.

    131. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      whose fault is it when somebody gets hurt?

      I'll blame some video game publisher with deep pockets.

    132. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      ahh... yes. I could type this all myself but...
      this seems accurate to my understanding.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    133. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 1

      I covered this here.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    134. Re:It's all a wind-up. by synchronize · · Score: 1
      Everybody is essentially missing the point on this one.

      God knew that His creation would disobey His command. He's omniscient. But God and His creation both have the same ultimate purpose: to glorify God. If you understand the Bible, you'll realize that humanity exists to glorify God, and God exists to glorify Himself.

      Likewise, the fall of Adam, which God knew would happen, also serves to glorify God, specifically the Son (1/3 of the triune Godhead). The redemptive act of the Son (crucifixion, resurrection)--necessitated by the fall of Adam--glorifies the Son, while providing grace and salvation to His creation.

      The Bible is clear about this: All creation will glorify God whether they "want to" or not, since that is creation's purpose. They will glorify Him by accepting His grace which they could not earn, or they will glorify Him by evidencing His wrath, through judgment. (Yes, God is loving, but He is also just.)

      /sync

    135. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Culture · · Score: 1
      Um, no ... God is all-knowing, correct? And God knew the apple would be eaten, correct? So that makes him a child abuser, correct? I mean, would you put a syringe of heroin out for your child, and tell them not to inject it, in order the "test" them? Even I know better than that.

      OTOH, I know some religious whacks who probably would.

      --
      ----- There are two kinds of people in this world, my friend; those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
    136. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Likewise, the fall of Adam, which God knew would happen, also serves to glorify God

      It's called "entrapment".
      He created man, and placed him in a situation where he knew that he would be given a reason to punish him. It's sadistic, to say the least.

      --

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

    137. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but what I can't figure out is... where did Cain and Able's wives come from?

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    138. Re:It's all a wind-up. by pla · · Score: 1

      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him

      Can you seriously say that with a straight face?

      "Gee, having these angels grovel and worship me gets a tad tiring... Sure, they'd give their left nut for me (if I hadn't made them androgynous), but they don't really have any choice".
      "Okay, hmm, you there, and you - I've given you the ability to say no to me. Now you can choose to act like obsessed fans."
      "WHAAAATTTT?? You DON'T want to fawn all over me for eternity? Well, screw you, then! I'll just take my trees and go home!"

      Okay... Moral of the story? God acts like a selfish, egotistical little brat who had to create an entirely new way to stroke his ego?

      Not the most flattering interpretation. In fact, the entire ante- (and meso- ) diluvian portion of the bible of the Jews/Christians just has so many flaws, unless we consider it nothing more than an allegory for the dawn of consciousness in a particular pack of humans living in the fertile crescent, and who eventually had to migrate away during a particularly nasty annual flooding of the same.


      As an aside / full-disclosure, I do believe in a Creator, but suspect that humans have the whole thing so completely screwed up as to make "religion" and "fiction" effectively interchangeable.

    139. Re:It's all a wind-up. by jjr1 · · Score: 1

      Analyzing mathematically a 2000 year old book translated through various languages and authors is an inherently flawed process especially when bringing infinite time arguments into the picture. Seems to me as ridiculous as worshipping a 2000 year old carpenter.

      --
      Best Trivia answer ever... Name the largest aquatic man eater... Contestant: Tsunami
    140. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Pete · · Score: 1

      In the beginning, not _the_ beginning but _A_ beginning, the One True God did create the "caps lock" key and place it on the Keyboard of Life in the Garden.

      And the Creator saw that it was good. And He smiled down on his creation and said, "FUCKIN' A!"

      The story of the garden of capslock Eden

    141. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Let's put it this way: assuming my probability of succumbing to a particular temptation is 0, what is the probability that after an infinite amount of time, I will have succumbed to that temptation?

      That's a big assumption. You simply don't know what your mind will be like even a short period of time into the future. Even if there's the slightest chance you'll change your mind, before infinity is done (which will never happen), then it will happen.

      If the chance of succumbing is zero, then the chances than it will happen are undefined, if memory serves. That is, we don't know. But in this case the chance is obviously greater than zero, even if it is very, very small.

    142. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make a good argument but I believe it could be said that by eating of the tree of knowledge of good and evil Adam and Eve would become aware about evil in the general sense. The command to not eat of the tree could be considered a granting of knowledge of a specific evil. This avoids the Catch-22.

    143. Re:It's all a wind-up. by eggnet · · Score: 1

      Regarding free will.

      You assert that God has omniscience and we have free will. I'll assert that God has communicated with people according to The Bible.

      So, God already knows everything that's going to happen. Let's say God knows (and truthfully and faithfully conveys that to me) that I will say "Hi person X, how are you doing?" the next time I call person X. I decide not to do it, and instead, I say "Hi, screw you" to person X.

      Now, God's vision of the future isn't the correct vision.

      If the future is pre-determined, then free will is just an illusion.

    144. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Ah, but sometime during their infinite life they must (since they MUST do ALL things) seal their mouths shut so it becomes impossible to eat anything.

      Only if the seal is permanent. If they're immortal, I can only assume that their flesh is exempt from physics, so one could argue that their bodies are privilaged beyond concepts like mouth-sealing. Also it depends on how we define "eating," they could have opened a hole in their throat and put the food in directly, or mashed up the apple and snorted it.

      On providing you with the mental image of naked people snorting mashed apple: you're welcome.

      Of course you're also assuming that the tree was immortal and that the command to not eat from it would never be lifted.

      "Okay, I, your infallible creator, admit that I was wrong, though I really can't be, and that you don't have free will after all. I'll be taking back my tree now, I have some more angels I want to tempt. Here's some gift certificates for Denny's, have lunch on me!"

      We are given no reason to believe that the situation in the early bits of Genesis is temporary. In fact, since Adam is specifically told he won't die, you could say it was implied that it was eternal, until something happened to stop it. There's only one thing in the story that could, isn't there?

    145. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but what I can't figure out is... where did Cain and Able's wives come from?

      Oh, they married some of the hermaphrodites God created before Adam and Eve:

      So God created man in his own image,
      in the image of God he created him;
      male and female he created them.

      Mind you, this is on day 5... he creates Adam after he took a breather on day 7.

      --

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

    146. Re:It's all a wind-up. by number101010 · · Score: 1

      Yes, 5:4, I missed by a couple verses. The point was that the parent's idea of literally intepreting the Bible and still fitting with modern evolutionary theory doesn't work. My other point would be using the Bible as a scientific document is worthless.

    147. Re:It's all a wind-up. by bflong · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd imagine there's not all that much to *do* in a perfect garden, anyway, especially if you don't know about S-E-X.)

      Genisis 1:28

      It wasn't just the garden, they had work to do.
      They were told to fill the earth. That means sex.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    148. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Obviously, the answer is no, because it could have entered an infinite loop.

      Then, spunky, it's not possible! (Though it is too possible, if anything could change the program, or if the hardware could be changed, or something happens to affect the current in the circuits, or the power is cut, or something else happens.)

      Adam is not a computer program. If he has free will, then chances are not zero. If he doesn't have free will, even then, the chances are not zero unless there's something supernatural about him, something probably related to his also-supernatural immortality, to make the chance zero.

      Also, if Adam doesn't have free will, then what's the point of God's little experiment?

      (It's not an experiment? Looks like one to me.)

    149. Re:It's all a wind-up. by synchronize · · Score: 1
      It's called "entrapment"... It's sadistic, to say the least.

      Not necessarily. It's simply proof that there is only one perfect God, and that man cannot achieve the perfection of God on his own.

      Frankly, it doesn't matter what you call it, entrapment or otherwise. Sometimes God does things that man has difficulty understanding, but the reason man doesn't understand is he forgets that God's motivations are not his own. God's purpose is to glorify God. Nothing else matters. Understand that, and you'll finally get it.

    150. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And where in Genesis, pray tell, does the Bible say that this is the ``tree of knowelege about good and evil in a general sense''? Without knowing about good and evil generally, how were tehy supposed to understand the meaning of the specific evil?

      And how does any of that justify punishing Adam and Eve's *children* for their misstake? And their children, and all the billions upon billions of their descendents? Do you think it'd be fair to punish you for the horse that your great granfather stole? They hanged horse theives in those days. You wanna be hanged, too?

      Won't somebody think of the children (us)?

    151. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Sorry....do you actually read the Bible? If you had you surely would have come accross this verse.

      (John 8:)36 So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed. (NIV)

      The idea being here being of free will to NOT be in sin and to turn back to God, to be the prodigal son.

      I honestly can't believe that you're making that argument! In that passage Jesus is talking about freedom from sin.

      The Bible has been thought over, mulled over, meditated upon, wrassled, wrangled, and rhetorically twisted more than any other work in human history. People have used the Bible to justify all kinds of things that seem unlikely to have been intended by the original authors. (Jesus, who is one of the greater voices in western literature regardless of whether you think he was 50% God, has been especially mutiliated in this manner.)

      I'm athiest. There, I said it. But I used to be Christian. "Used to be," mainly, because of things like this.

    152. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Please see the dozen other messages I've posted already responding to arguments like this. What's necessary isn't just infinity, what's necessary is infinity + non-zero probability. That sounds like a zero probability to me.

    153. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      (thinking carefully here)

      I think you're right. Still, we're talking about non-zero probabilities, so it doesn't matter.

    154. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1
      It's simply proof that there is only one perfect God

      How is that? How is a story about a god creating simpletons and then getting angry at them for being easilly decieved by another one of his creations proof of ANYTHING?

      Main Entry: 1proof
      Pronunciation: 'prüf
      Function: noun
      Etymology: Middle English, alteration of preove, from Old French preuve, from Late Latin proba, from Latin probare to prove -- more at PROVE
      1 a : the cogency of evidence that compels acceptance by the mind of a truth or a fact b : the process or an instance of establishing the validity of a statement especially by derivation from other statements in accordance with principles of reasoning

      God's purpose is to glorify God. Nothing else matters. Understand that, and you'll finally get it.

      God is narcissistic and couldn't care less about the suffering of men, check.
      --

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

    155. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      What is the source of your immense conviction in this?

      My source of immense conviction is that it's mathematically, and hence logically, true!

      It is a pleasing and satisfying theory...

      Really? I wish I was at all pleased or satisfied by it. Thinking about infinity frankly scares the hell out of me, as it would most people who did it honestly.

      Can you elaborate on what "all possible things" actually means?

      Do not say such things to a gag writer! Let's just say that, over an infinite time, all possible things happen... including President Bush admitting that he was wrong to invade Iraq!

      If that doesn't shock you speechless you're either obtuse or profound.

    156. Re:It's all a wind-up. by shaved_weasel · · Score: 1

      So your saying that God gave us free will... but not really.

      Ummm yes ... no....oh I'm confused.

      If my local mob boss tells me that I should pay him extortion money because I love him and then I don't, does his blowing my brains out mean that I don't love him or that I have no free will or... Please explain this whole confusing mess to me oh great religious sage.

    157. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Aaah. But they were innocent, which meant they couldn't enjoy it.

      Wow, it really must have been work.

    158. Re:It's all a wind-up. by snarkh · · Score: 1
      but God created the universe the way he/she did *specifically* so you would make those choices. Doesn't sound much like free will to me...

      That is not clear at all. Presumably God created universe and saw all consequences of creation, but that does not imply that he created the universe so that those consequences would happen.

    159. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MrPoopyPants · · Score: 1
      Do you still think that because anything is possible that you'd sleep with that guy?

      Absolutely. Read up on the 60s and 70s ... especially rock stars.

    160. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Transcendent · · Score: 1

      But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen.

      No, no, no, no... no.

      That is logically flawed.

      If you have time, events occur.
      If you have an infinite amount of time, an infinite number of events occur.

      That is true, but the problem is that infinity does not mean ALL things (continual infinity v discrete). If you take a number system, and count all EVEN numbers, you can count on for infinity, but NEVER count an ODD number.

      Though not phrased very well, I say that calls for a Q.E.D. You can spend infinity looking at an apple and never eat it... there's nothing to say that you have to.

    161. Re:It's all a wind-up. by ashayh · · Score: 1

      and anyone else who rebels against him can be dealt with on the spot.

      I was under the impression he forgives sinners.

      He chalanged God's right to rule,...
      Earler you said: they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them.

      So which is it? Does god want to rule you or to love you? And in the recent thousands of years, where and how has god shown/is showing that he loves humans ? Since love is supposed to be a 2 way street... And where does he submit to your authority?

      If he wants love so badly why wont he get a wife or a harem like those pagan gods? ;)
      Btw how do you know the pagan gods do not exist? After all, the ancients believed in them equally fervently as you believe in your god. The hindus today believe equally fervently in their gods. Do they go to hell for being born hindu through no fault of theirs ?
      Why didnt your god give birth to Osamas 18th century grandparent in America? Would osama have been muslim if that had happened?

      If I go back in time when osama is just born and plant him in an American christian orphanage, will he turn out to be a killer again ? What will he believe? Take a wild guess.Instead of Osama if its an average muslim or a hindu, what would he turn out to be?

      What would happen if I planted your child in a Afghani family ? Would he be posting on slashdot in 20 yrs or beating up his four wives and growing poppy ?
      If you answer "Osama wont be a killer ", then what can you say about the thousands of terrorists or pagans etc, anybody that christians say will go to hell?(Maybe you dont say that, but others do)

      So much for your free will.

    162. Re:It's all a wind-up. by synchronize · · Score: 1
      How is a story about a god creating simpletons and then getting angry at them for being easilly decieved by another one of his creations proof of ANYTHING?

      You have to understand that God doesn't have to conform to your definitions; He becomes the definition. That's why He's God; He sets the standard. That which is good, which is right, which is pure, which is loving, etc.: All those standards are God's to define. You're looking at it from the wrong perspective.

      So God is perfect, because that's part of the definition of who God is. And you're not perfect, because that's part of the definition of who you are. You're a fallen, imperfect creature, just like all of us who are not God.

      God is narcissistic and couldn't care less about the suffering of men

      Again, you're using the wrong perspective for your definition. By man's perspective, is God narcissistic? In other words, does He subscribe to the belief that His own self-interest is the valid end for all of His actions? YES! Because He's God. For you, that behavior should rightly be called narcissistic, because your focus is on yourself and away from God, and your purpose is to glorify Him. For God, it's part of who He is.

    163. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Lester_Wallace · · Score: 1

      Immortal means: infinite length of life. There could have been thousands of millions of billions of years between the command and the act. But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen. It was *inevitable* that they eat the fruit, it was only a matter of time.

      Whoa there... You're trying to use "scientific" number-theory type arguments to assert that imaginary characters would inevitably commit an act. It should read this way: "It was *inevitable* that they eat the fruit, because Stanley Ancientguy, the writer of that portion of the Bible, would have inevitably written that part had he gone on writing indefinitely."

    164. Re:It's all a wind-up. by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them.

      And they were supposed to know that obeying was a good thing to do exactly how?

      Remember that by the same myth's claims, God also kept the knowlege of good and evil away from them. They didn't have that until they ate from the tree. So anything they do before that, God should take the blame for because he deliberately kept them ignorant of any concept of morality, by his own plan.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    165. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      You have to understand that God doesn't have to conform to your definitions; He becomes the definition.

      You will change the definition of any word that stands in the way of your mindless conviction. Got it.

      Man, you're screwed up.

      --

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

    166. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Presumably God created universe and saw all consequences of creation, but that does not imply that he created the universe so that those consequences would happen.

      He had to've. That's what being omniscient *means*. It's not like God can pick and choose what he knows. He just *knows* everything. Therefore, God had to know every choice you have and will ever make, and he had to construct the universe with the intent of producing that outcome (otherwise he would have made different choices).

      The only other alternative is that God doesn't give a wit what decisions you make in your life, and thus constructed the universe with a particular goal in mind, and you as a simple artifact. Either way, you have no free will, and in the latter case, you aren't even on God's radar, something which comes in pretty strong conflict with Christian values, as far as I know.

    167. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Incidently there is a great book called Damian by Hermann Hesse. I read this book when I was way to young, but, as I remember there is a god that appears in this book called Abraxas.

      In essence Abraxas is the god of good and evil. The point that was made was in order for good there has to be evil in order to have evil there has to been good (at least in a world of western binary oppositions ;) ), therefore in order to enjoy the goodness of the world we should thank the world for the evil (or respect it or something ;) ), since it permits us to appreciate the good. While I'm sure someone will have something to say about the following tung in cheek comment, consider: how boring would a news paper be in Heaven?? I'm sure there is a theological explanation for it, but, as heaven is defined by many institutions heaven would be a rather boring place (i'm reminded of a friend's comment a while back of "goto heaven for the weather and hell for the people" ;) ). Errr.. anyway, if i'm not mistaken this was also Liebnitz point in the 19th century -> that the world we live in must be the best of all worlds (due to the point about Abraxas more or less).

      Further more to carry on this inter-religious ramble / musing. The character Prometheus is said to represent a similar mechanism to the satan. In that he stole the fire of knowledge (of good and evil) from the greek gods (Prometheus was punished for eternity for this one.. :) ), as far as i know the Greeks respected Prometheus for this one!

      Some theologians also consider the snake (Satan) to be equally receiving of some praise), for the simple reason that we would not be the creatures we are without Satan and that (to repeat myself) our appreciation of the good and bad in life is directly related to this loss of innocence (who wants to make a joke of this sentence?? :) ), that life has a greater deal of meaning (rather than blissful something ;) ).

      The final point i suppose is that there are some who don't consider Satan to be the source of true evil as such, but, rather that Satan is representative of the chaos figure (kinda like Loki in Viking religion), or agent of change. Rather there is term to represent true evil (a term that I can't remember off hand) which is not daemons, fire and brime stone as such but, rather total nothingness or an absence of anything or rather anti existence or something (this is just a side note).

      My own inclination is that while (I'm not really a christian but.. ) that even though it says in the bible that god made man in his own image, that this is a bit of an over simplification. It seems to anthrocentric and this doesn't do the idea of god justice. It seems more like these writings should be a example of symbolic represtations of ideas (really in a sence that would partially justify intelligent creationist ideas) as another writer commented these ideas are exactly mutually exclusive if you read 7 days to be "six billion+" years (and read the other symbols in a similar manner), i see much of creation (i.e the world around us), genetics, evolution and quantum mechanics to be pretty miracoulously organized if one considers it (IMHO not a white dude with a beard guaranteed).

      Errr.. forgive the spelling and gratuitous use of smileys (couldn't help thinking what responses i might receive)

      Mike

    168. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Danuvius · · Score: 1

      What is the source of your immense conviction in this?

      My source of immense conviction is that it's mathematically, and hence logically, true!


      Hmmmm... I was quite right in assuming that you are drifting far from reality. Your response is big on defensiveness and offensiveness (in the non-rudeness sense); but quite short on arguments and answers.


      It is a pleasing and satisfying theory...

      Really? I wish I was at all pleased or satisfied by it. Thinking about infinity frankly scares the hell out of me, as it would most people who did it honestly.


      Ah! So I am intellectually dishonest (or just too simple-minded to get what you understand). Thanks for letting me know. ;) Can you focus on *your* argument a little also?


      Can you elaborate on what "all possible things" actually means?

      Do not say such things to a gag writer! Let's just say that, over an infinite time, all possible things happen... including President Bush admitting that he was wrong to invade Iraq!

      If that doesn't shock you speechless you're either obtuse or profound.


      Assuredly a more precise definition exists... unless you're pedalling to keep your theory unfalsifiable.

      If President Bush dies, whenever he dies, without having admitted that he was wrong to invade Iraq, then "resident Bush admitting that he was wrong to invade Iraq" will never happen, regardless of all the infinity babbling you do.

      Kindly explain how it could, if you disagree?
      --
      Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
    169. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer: I'm not a Christian.

      Not to mention that God turned out to be the liar ("but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, you shall not eat of it: for in the day that you eat of it you will surely die.")

      Actually, all God said in that passage was "you will surely die". Of course, the consequence of eating from that tree was more complicated than that: their expulsion from Eden and the switch to a mortal existence. But, of course, this also means they would age and, like you and I, "surely die". So, no, God didn't lie. He just didn't explain the full picture.

      What's rather intriguing about the Eden tale, IMHO, is that both God and the Serpent told the truth. Thus, the bible seems to imply that truth (and thus knowledge) can be more dangerous than a lie.

    170. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      Free will is a gift that implies that the reciever can commit actions against the giver. In the case of humans as described in the Bible it also means that the being with free will can make decisions that affect themselves negatively, regardless of the repercussions and their knowledge of them. That is the problem of free will, nothing prevents people from making colossally stupid decisions.

      (The following is going to be from the perspective of taking the Bible at its own word about the things it describes.)

      Consider that the series of events in Genesis is not the ultimate beginning of history, but only a signpost on the continum extending out to eternity on both sides. Now try to realize that the creation of humans has very little to do with humans themselves and alot to do with a conflict with angelic beings that have existed for countless billions of years before mankind was introduced and God himself who is eternal.

      The reason for the conflict? A group of angels postulated that God who is loving could not assign a portion of them to eternal torment regardless of their actions. Humankind was created as a rebuttal to this argument, an object lesson if you will, to teach the errant and faithful angels alike about who and what God is.

      God is faithful to mankind in that he made provision for them in all things, regardless of the circumstances that man put himself in. This is an example of how god treats people. He gives them the power to make all sorts of decisions, is a gentleman and dosent stop them from doing what they want, and then provides for them even when they screw up royally.

      Another way to think of this is this question...What makes you think that humans deserve perfection? Your contradiction exists because you believe that there is inherently something unfair about the situation you (incompletely) described. However, if we applied the same situation to the microcosm it would be like a homegrown tomato complaining about being eaten. In other words, if something acts in a manner consisten with the purpose for which it was created, how is that a contradiction?

      As for the bit about Satan and his undermining, it was not him who excercised bad judgement and worse action by dispbeying God, it was the man and woman. Free will carrys with it the burden of responsibility. If you do something it is yours, you own it, regardless of the cajoling, misguidance, or intervention of another. That people can think otherwise is fascinating to me. IT is almost unimaginable that people can lead themselves to the conclusion that opther people are responsible for their decisions and actions, but...well there it is.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    171. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't. Maybe I am less gay than you, but no amount of curiousity would incline me to try something I really don't want to do. Would you pour gasoline on yourself, strike a match, and burn yourself to 3rd degree burns all over out of curiousity? I wouldn't do that either, ever, even if I would survive and recover. Curiousity might lead one to do simulations or representative testing, but activities that have a certain (or even near certain) likelihood of useless and significant discomfort would be avoided indefinitely by an intelligent and self-interested free-willed human.

    172. Re:It's all a wind-up. by synchronize · · Score: 1
      You will change the definition of any word that stands in the way of your mindless conviction.

      I'm not changing any definitions here. They're not mine to change. I'm the one arguing for a standard of absolute truth. You're the one arguing for relativism. In point of fact, you're the one who wants to change the definitions to meet your own ends. I'm saying they can't be changed; they're set by an eternal God whose character is, was, and always will be unchanging.

      And as for the "mindless conviction" part... Do I really appear mindless to you? My arguments are logical and well-articulated, and you know it. You may not agree with me, but it's hard to make a case that I'm an idiot.

    173. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where did you get this idea? How do you know they did not or could not enjoy it. Nothing in Genesis supports that claim. In fact, when Adam first saw Eve, she was naked and he seemed pretty happy to see her. In fact there was no shame in anything they did together until after they ate of the tree. Only then were they ashamed. According to God's design, a husband and wife are supposed to sex and enjoy it. Adam and Eve could have done that forever if they just obeyed.

    174. Re:It's all a wind-up. by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      well if right and wrong is the same as good and evil then the tree meant nothing.

      If it isn't then there is not true free will.

      Will isn't truly free if you cannot do evil.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    175. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MooseBoy · · Score: 1

      Your god may have a hammer, and mine nailed to a tree, but my God was resurrected and has already defeated yours.

    176. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Poingggg · · Score: 1

      ...represented the right to know, or decide, whats good and bad. By eating of it, Adam demonstrated that *he* wanted to be the one to make that decision....

      But since he had no way of knowing this would be bad (he hadn't eaten the apple yet, remember?), he just did it. In my eyes you are innocent if you don't know that what you are doing is bad. God may have told him, but even then...

      But who can seriously believe these fairytales, jeez!

      --
      What person will donate an airborne act of love?
    177. Re:It's all a wind-up. by m50d · · Score: 1

      Yep. And that's also true.

      --
      I am trolling
    178. Re:It's all a wind-up. by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      No, I think it's a bit different than that. I think free will as being defined as the ability to make choices is a bit flawed. In reality, I'd suggest that free will is closer to programmed behavior. In that context, God could give us free will and as a result program us to fail. That, in itself, would just make God a mean spirited God. But, God also has on several occasions interfered with man. This is analogous to mid-experiment killing off half your specimens because you don't like how the results are turning out. This is where I'd say God is no longer allowing man to have free will. So long as it's a closed system, man can make "choices" and are effectively programmed to do good/evil, but God interfering changes the results to however God pleases, and there's no way that can be explained as covered under free will.

      On a side note, because God is supposedly omniscient, he could have just created man and the universe in such a way that it would not be necessary for himself to interfere. So, either God isn't omniscient as you suggest, or maybe God is a really big asshole who likes to show up and save the day from time to time, all of the misery being a product of his design.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    179. Re:It's all a wind-up. by arevos · · Score: 1
      You're forgetting time. You think time occurs for God, just like us. WRONG! We experience time, and can only go one way, forward. But God can see everything that has, is, and will happen. You made the choice, God just knew which one you chose.
      But this is clearly incorrect. If God is a four-dimensional being, then He sees humans differently to the way we see each other. To Him, people appear as static worms in space, spanning about 2m in height, 0.5m in width, 0.25m in depth, and about 2.4 billion seconds in the dimension of time.

      If we accept this classical picture of the Universe, then we are four-dimensional sculptures suspended in space. Claiming that we have free will is like claiming a painting has free will.

      That all said, this becomes somewhat pointless if one believes in the quantum view of the Universe. If a particle has a choice of going to A or going to B, then it will go to A and B at exactly the same time.

      So if I went up to God and asked him "heads or tails", he would truthfully answer, "both".
    180. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      My arguments are logical and well-articulated

      No, your arguments are irrational and well articulated.

      --

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

    181. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Man, you need to quit whatever you are smoking...

      Existence to glorify one's existence? Now that's plain silly... and to believe in such a joke... well, that approaches the usual quality of potheaded humor, which in the end does make sense I guess.

      Anyway, of all the "meanings of life" this is probably the dullest I have ever heard. And I have heard plenty.

    182. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He knew the gullible bint was going to eat the apple.

      Please oh wise biblical scholar, pray tell me where in the bible that it says that Adam and Eve ate an "apple"? You cannot? Ah, I thought not.

    183. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      That is true, but the problem is that infinity does not mean ALL things (continual infinity v discrete). If you take a number system, and count all EVEN numbers, you can count on for infinity, but NEVER count an ODD number.

      Well there you're begging the question, you're counting even numbers, so by definition you're not counting odd ones, which are mutually exclusive. Since there are no even numbers that are odd, it's impossible, that is there's a probability of zero, that you can read even numbers (and nothing else) for infinity and encounter an odd one.

      But that's besides the point. If your thought experiment involved a counting machine it makes sense, but not if you're talking about a human being, with the free will human beings have (which may or may not be the point of the scene, though many theologians say it is), who can do anything and doesn't have to count even numbers if he is seized by the urge not to.

      As for the apple, you will eat it eventually, given an infinite time frame, unless there's something that specifically gives the act a zero probability over infinity. Merely urging yourself not to do it won't work -- before infinity passes you'll forget what an apple is, and what eating is.

      I'm afraid you haven't convinced me, sorry. But if you're so sure then don't just give up, I'm not just saying these things just because, I really think I'm right on this but I'll admit that I'm wrong if you prove it to me.

    184. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In essence Abraxas is the god of good and evil. The point that was made was in order for good there has to be evil in order to have evil there has to been good (at least in a world of western binary oppositions ;) ),

      You sir are apparently unaware of the world of eastern dualities. Or do you think the Yin and Yang are from indo-european languages.;)

    185. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      (sigh) Okay, let me simplify it a little.

      * If math isn't a reason to be certain of something then I don't know what is.

      * I have a personal fear of infinity, and I can't see how anyone can avoid it if they thought on it enough.

      * And "a joke."

    186. Re:It's all a wind-up. by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

      My favorite is when He told Abraham to sacrifice his son, and Abraham was gonna do it. And we're supposed to praise Abraham for this.

      And then of course, there's the book of Job.

      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    187. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you only new how farkin' stupid this really sounds to anyone with a brain.

      Throw off the robes and leave the cult. If free will is such a gift then USE YOURS.

    188. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's also not that God said "haha, you ate it, so I'm going to kill you." That was a warning that if man decided to fail to follow God's rules, man would cut himself off from God and as a result would no longer have immortaility. It was man's decision. God was just nice enough to warn Adam before it happened.

    189. Re:It's all a wind-up. by clickster · · Score: 1

      God gave mankind the gift of free will so that they could use that free will to obey him and thus show that they loved him as much as he loved them.

      Free will so that they could obey him? Seems to contradict itese

      After all, he did love them enough to give them life. That *one* tree that they were not to eat from was the *only* law that they had. They were perfect, and as such they would make no mistakes.

      If they were perfect, they wouldn't have chosen to make a mistake - again contradictory.

      They *chose* to disobey God. They decided they did not want to submit to Gods authority. That one tree was the only way that they had to prove that they were faithful to God. Without it, there would have been no opportunity to do so. They failed.

      --
      If you mod me down, I shall become less powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    190. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen.

      In statistical mechanics there's something called the ergodic theorem which basically says that given infinite time a system will eventually try all states that it can possibly have. This theorem doesn't apply to all systems.

      Check your math.

    191. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, now there's something I haven't seen before on slashdot, someone so enamored with the superiority of their own intellect that they can't see beyond themselves and their ability to reason. Oh but only to the extent that it makes them feel comfortable and smug with that intellect, not to the inevitable conclusion.

      If you've read the Bible, what Synchronize is saying is absolutely correct. God's in the business of glorifying himself. Like it or not, understand it or not, it matters not.

      I'm not going to argue the point, you won't get it anyway. You're too proud of your big brain to be reasoned with.

    192. Re:It's all a wind-up. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Me: How did [logical impossibility X] happen?

      You: The same way [logical impossibility Y] happened.

      Me: Why would God have to justify himself to anyone?

      You: If your parenting skills were called into question, wouldn't you have to justify yourself?

      You, sir, strike me as being very full of your own crap. I don't know you well enough to make a definitive statement on the matter, but the balance of evidence strongly suggests it.

      --

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

    193. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Danuvius · · Score: 1

      No, no... don't simplify it. Take off your "I'm oh so smart" hat and give a sensible example of how your theoretical ramblings apply to the actual world in which we live. The one example you gave--which you are now retroactively claiming to be a joke--was clearly wrong. Most things that are possible will in fact never happen, unless you narrow down "things that are possible" by quite a bit (which I gave you a chance to do, only to be insulted in return).

      --
      Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
    194. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      To Him, people appear as static worms in space, spanning about 2m in height, 0.5m in width, 0.25m in depth, and about 2.4 billion seconds in the dimension of time.

      Somebody's been watching Donnie Darko... :)

    195. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Free will" does not require the possibility of "evil", as you define these. Consider these questions:

      Do you believe in heaven? [yes?] Do you believe that people will have "free will" in heaven? [yes?] Do you believe that people may commit "evil" in heaven? [no?]

      Your "free will" answer to the origin of "evil" is bogus. You'd better look for another solution to the problems of your religion. If you can't find one then how about trying this instead.

    196. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer: I'm a Christian.

      That is a good explanation of the use of the meaning of the use of death in Gen 1. It is also used in a spiritual sense.

      Re Knowledge: I think you may be taking something different away from the story. I think what you should be taking away is the corrosive nature of sin. Don't forget that the tree was the tree of the knowedge of good and evil. They already knew good. I think that you are assuming that we can be objective and judge whether something is good or evil. The answer in Gen 1 is that Evil is, well, evil. There is nothing good in it. Even knowledge of it is wrong.

      I was thinking about this a while ago and wondering how evil continues to survive, if there is nothing good in it at all. That is, even things like courage, organisation, intelligence are not available, how does it continue to survive? How can it not collapse under its own flaws?

      The answer I arrived at was twofold.
      1. It perverts good attributes (like courage) to use for evil purposes.
      2. It destroys people.

      I might have explained myself poorly.

      --
      meh
    197. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      The bible holds both that God is sovereign and that man has free will. You have grasped one and not the other.

      God being sovereign means that nothing happens with God knowing that it was going to happen or standing behind it. This includes things that go wrong in this world.

      Man having free will means that he chooses what he wants to do.

      The bible holds both of these as true and as not being in tension or opposition.

      I do not understand how this works, and indeed we cannot understand how this works, at least not now. But we can see this in operation. See Romans 9 for some details. In fact Paul asks the very same question you ask: Is God unjust?

      --
      meh
    198. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      Read my comment history for this article, I have made a couple of comments relating to this.

      If Adam and Eve didn't know about good and evil, they were incapable--by God's own design--of knowing that it was an evil act to eat of the fruit of that tree. Incapable of knowing that disobeying God's direct order was evil.

      I think that is a concept that we might struggle with. Largely because we do know both good and evil. Anyway, God had told them not to eat from the tree. They knew it was something they should not do. Effectively this

      P.S. This incident is hardly unique. Read any of the so-called ``hard passages'' of the bible and substitute ``Joshua Gord of Topeka, Kansas'' for ``God'' and decide if those actions could, by any stretch of the imagination, still be considered moral or even tolerable. Especially read about the Flood, the Plagues, and the Crucifixion. b&

      This is a foolish argument. God is God and we are not. Did you create the world? No? Have you always existed? No? We are made in God's image. That does not mean we are God.

      --
      meh
    199. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      Okay... Moral of the story? God acts like a selfish, egotistical little brat who had to create an entirely new way to stroke his ego?

      If God was a human, but God is the creator. Saying you are the most important thing in the world is ego ... unless it happens to be true.

      --
      meh
    200. Re:It's all a wind-up. by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 1

      Anyway, God had told them not to eat from the tree. They knew it was something they should not do.

      They may have known that God didn't want them to do it, but they were incapable of knowing that it was evil to do so. By God's design. (This is, of course, ignoring the whole question of why God should think it a sin for Adam and Eve to know about good and evil in the first place.)

      I wouldn't hound this point if it weren't for the fact that Christians have long favored similar tactics. For example, Conquistadors would read the Gospel to newly discovered natives. The readings would, of course, be in Latin--a language the natives had never even heard before in their lives. Upon concluding, the Conquistadors would demand that all the natives immediately accept Jesus. When none did...the Conquistadors took it upon themselves to conquer them by the sword.

      God is God and we are not. Did you create the world? No? Have you always existed? No?

      You would justify even the most horrifyingly depraved evil corruption--such as the slaughter of the Egyptian first-born after God hardened Pharaoh's heart to prevent Pharaoh from doing what he knew was right--simply because God is...well...God. And who are we to question God?

      If your God were as harmless as the Easter Bunny, I would smile and nod and say, ``That's nice.'' But you choose to instead worship supreme vileness and to convince others to join you. For that I condemn you, along with your God.

      I hope you (eventually) realize the error of your ways. The sooner Christians dump this worship of evil, the sooner the rest of us can stop wondering when the next Crusades or Inquisition or Witch Trials or Slavery or Holocaust or Trail of Tears or whatever is coming.

      Cheers,

      b&

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    201. Re:It's all a wind-up. by drawfour · · Score: 1

      That is such a lame joke, I wish I had mod points. I'd mod it up. So lame it's hilarious. Well done.

    202. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      They may have known that God didn't want them to do it, but they were incapable of knowing that it was evil to do so. By God's design.

      You haven't read my comment history.

      [quote]
      I think what you should be taking away is the corrosive nature of sin. Don't forget that the tree was the tree of the knowedge of good and evil. They already knew good. I think that you are assuming that we can be objective and judge whether something is good or evil. The answer in Gen 1 is that Evil is, well, evil. There is nothing good in it. Even knowledge of it is wrong.
      [/quote]

      Re Conquistadors: Do you really think this is the kind of behavour that Christian even condone? Do you even think that these people were Christians?

      You would justify even the most horrifyingly depraved evil corruption...And who are we to question God?

      What you fail to understand is that everything is defined by God, not from our perspective. He created this world. He is also the source of all jsutice and love. Not that you are particulary interested in these it seems, you are more interested in calling love hate and justice injustice.

      I hope you (eventually) realize the error of your ways. The sooner Christians dump this worship of evil, the sooner the rest of us can stop wondering when the next Crusades or Inquisition or Witch Trials or Slavery or Holocaust or Trail of Tears or whatever is coming.

      Whoa, that is a bit too moderate. Can't you get a little more extreme that that?

      If your God were as harmless as the Easter Bunny...

      What you fail to understand is that nothing you or I do can change God. You seem to believe that God is evil (which is a rather perverse perspective), and that by not believing in him he suddenly becomes good? Or that his power disappears?

      God is God. God is good, just and loving. Deal with it.

      I can understand someone who says there is no God and that Christians are deluded. I don't agree, but I do understand. I can't understand someone who sticks their head in the sand.

      I hope you realise the errors of your ways.

      --
      meh
    203. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      I'd unsimplify it, but then I'd just end up pasting my previous message into the message box.

      The "joke" part of the message in question was the bit about President Bush. It was intended to merely be a conversation leavener, to try to clear up what I percieved to be a steadily more intense conversation. I don't *like* intense conversations, and I try to break them up whenever I notice that I'm in one. But anyway.

      Take off your "I'm oh so smart" hat and give a sensible example of how your theoretical ramblings apply to the actual world in which we live.

      They don't, or at least, not directly to the world in which we ourselves live right now. That's part of the problem. Infinite time scales are not part of every day experience, and it's a mistake to think you can apply your experience to them unless you've had at least a bit of math under your belt. (That's exactly how math I have under my personal belt: "a bit.")

      But Adam was supposed to have lived in a situation in which none of us have direct experience; it was supernatural. But it was still similar enough to our world that ordinary rules of logic applied (else the creation story is meaningless*), and that's the environment in which my little infinity thingy matters.

      (* Oh, now I'm probably going to have to explain *this* bit.)

      The one example you gave--which you are now retroactively claiming to be a joke--was clearly wrong.

      (sigh) I didn't retroactively claim anything. I said something, there, that I thought was obviously a joke. Explaining that you've made a joke wrecks the humor, so it's best to avoid doing it if at all possible.

      Most things that are possible will in fact never happen...

      UNLESS you have an infinite time frame.

      Let me try to spell it out. Say, for argument's sake, the chances that a human beings' brain will spontaneously explode in a given second are one in 50,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.

      Then, the chance of you experiencing a spontaneous brain explosion are uncertain in your lifetime. The chance of there having even been one spontaneous brain explosion so far would be highly unlikely throughout the length of human existance.

      But, there's still that one exceedingly slim chance. And if you live forever, then that chance becomes an inevitability, no matter how many zeros you pile on, because there will never be a lack of chances, because fate will forever be rolling dice.

      Now. Free will seems like a big and absolute thing, but it is really exceptionally variable and fickle. You have no idea what the inside of your mind will look like even fifty years from now, assuming you live that long.

      But even if it were NOT variable and fickle, if there were even the slightest chance that you would do something, then in infinity it would happen. This is not the same thing as "counting only even numbers and happening upon an odd one," because that's impossible by way of the rules of logic. But even then, someone has to be doing the counting, and if they're a machine it could break, or if it's a human they could decide to stop doing it.

      My point is, if it's not *impossible*, I mean rigorously, logically impossible and not just someone saying they won't do something, then during an infinite time-frame it must happen. Lots of things that seem impossible, especially where human beings are concerned, are certainly not.

      Good enough an explanation yet?

    204. Re:It's all a wind-up. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      You can't know good without knowing evil. It's by definition - if you know a good thing (e.g. 'obeying God'), then doing the opposite ('disobeying God') is an evil thing. So either Adam and Eve knew neither before they ate the fruit, or they knew both.

      As for 'spiritual death' - I've heard the argument. However, it's just tricks with words - what we really need is someone who read the original version (in Hebrew, that is) to come forth and say if the Hebrew word for 'death' which is used there can be interpreted as 'spiritual death', or not. That it can in English doesn't mean it could in Hebrew. Anyone?

    205. Re:It's all a wind-up. by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      but my God was resurrected and has already defeated yours.

      Yeah, that book in your bible where God whipped Thor's ass just keeps you on the edge of your seat! And afterwards, when he goes to take out the Fenris Wolf single-handedly - what a stud!

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    206. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      You can't know good without knowing evil.

      I think examining the use of the word know might be in order. Knowledge can be used as a way of describing experiencing something, not just knowing about it. From Gen 1 it is clear that after eating the fruit they had not just known what sin was, but also experienced it. On the other hand, they also clearly knew what sin was before they ate the fruit: it was disobeying God.

      As for 'spiritual death' - I've heard the argument. However, it's just tricks with words - what we really need is someone who read the original version (in Hebrew, that is) to come forth and say if the Hebrew word for 'death' which is used there can be interpreted as 'spiritual death', or not. That it can in English doesn't mean it could in Hebrew. Anyone?

      My mother reads Hebrew and koine Greek, I can ask her the precise definition of the relevant word. I also have some friends who can read Hebrew. If you wait til I get a chance to talk to one of them I'll post what I find. Alternatively I also have access to some good commentries on Genesis at home, I might have a look at them.

      Anyway, your point assumes that the bible translaters are incompetant. And what is more, they are incompetant in what is a pretty key passage in the bible.

      All that is rather beside the point for 2 reasons:
      1. They still die a physical death. It is not an immediate death, but they die. Until that point death has not made an appearance. Adam and Eve would never have died.
      2. The bible uses death to refer to both physical and spiritual death, occasionally at the same time. See Romans 6:1-14 for an example of multiple uses of death and life. What is more, spiritual state is given more weight than physical state.

      Expanding on point 2, the key point of the bible is relationship with God. This is not a physical relationship, but a spiritual one. The severing of that relationship is spiritual death. The spiritual element of Life and death is more important than the physical life and death. In another sense, the effects original sin on this world (Physical death for people, harder work, pain in childbirth etc), and physical signs of a deeper spiritual malaise.

      --
      meh
    207. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know if there is a point in replying, since this thread is stale, but the hebrew says two things in parallel in that passage, translated "You may freely eat" and "you will surely die". However, the Hebrew states eating in the infinitive and present forms (eat forever from any tree...), and die is in the infinitive and present forms (die forever, aka hell). The "surely die" is used in other parts of the Bible to state a death sentence, as in being put on death row. In this sense, God is giving Adam and Eve a parallel, but opposite choice: live forever with an infinite number of things to do, or get a death sentence.

      Also, "knowledge" in the Hebrew tradition is similar to authority. So the tree didn't represent any form of abstract knowledge, but of moral authority. The tree essentially lets you decide right and wrong for yourself, but before there was universal agreement.

    208. Re:It's all a wind-up. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      My mother reads Hebrew and koine Greek, I can ask her the precise definition of the relevant word. I also have some friends who can read Hebrew. If you wait til I get a chance to talk to one of them I'll post what I find.
      Excellent, I'll keep an eye on this thread.
      Anyway, your point assumes that the bible translaters are incompetant. And what is more, they are incompetant in what is a pretty key passage in the bible.
      That's precisely what I assume, because such incompetence shows again and again. For a simple example of that, see the discussion on the exact translation (and meaning) of the word 'murder' in 'You shall not murder'.
      They still die a physical death. It is not an immediate death, but they die. Until that point death has not made an appearance. Adam and Eve would never have died.
      '... for in the day that you eat of it you will surely die'
      The bible uses death to refer to both physical and spiritual death, occasionally at the same time. See Romans 6:1-14 for an example of multiple uses of death and life.
      Let's not mix together the Old Testament and Gospels. For one, they're even written in different languages. More importantly, they carry a very different message.
    209. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Transcendent · · Score: 1

      Yea, my main argument wasn't that great... that just pointed out that the main problem with arguing "if it is possible, it will happen" is an assumption that an event actually is possible. But besides that... In saying that eve had free will, it does not follow that eve will eventually take the apple, because her own free will isn't random (if it were, then it wouldn't be free will, but simply a collection of random or determined events, depending on who you talk to).

      As for the apple, you will eat it eventually, given an infinite time frame, unless there's something that specifically gives the act a zero probability over infinity.

      Ah ha... but unless the probability that act is 1, then there is also the possibility that it will *not* happen. Both have a probability, but saying that one has to happen over the other is illogical because that would go to say that X event has the probability of 1, which begs the question.

      According to what you are saying, an event will occur over an infinite amount of time if the probability of that event is not zero, but that would also mean the probability of the negation of that event is also non zero (if the original event is not 1), and therefore both outcomes are possible and both must occur over the infinite amount of time, which is impossible since you can only have one outcome. But if the original event's probability is 1, then it is in the essence of that event to occur, and there is no way around it, and therefore no free will.

      Hence, if eve had free will, she didn't have to take the apple, even over an infinite amount of time.

    210. Re:It's all a wind-up. by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      Ever read what the Church of Lucifer says about this bit? Basically goes that God created Adam and Eve to be chattels and toys. Lucifer (aka the Lightbringer), who was then still God's major domo, decided that this wasn't really fair and helped out poor old Adam and Eve by giving them the gift of knowledge. For that, Adam and Eve got kicked out, and Lucifer got cast out.

      Not that I'm any more a believer in the Church of Lucifer than I am about the more popularly accepted aspects of Christianity, but it's another interpretation of the same exact sequence of events: just with a different spin.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    211. Re:It's all a wind-up. by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 1

      First, I think it's fascinating--and quite informative--that you chose to completely ignore my charges that your God murdered all the Egyptian first-born sons (a crime of which he boasts). If you care to reply to this note, I'd really appreciate a justification for that one. Be sure to address God's mind control game with Pharaoh--you know, where Pharaoh was all set, not once but all ten times, to let the Israelites go? And then ``God hardened Pharaoh's heart'' (Exodus 11:10 amongst several others).

      You toss around terms like ``free will'' and ``God's love.'' If the Plagues don't demonstrate what God really thinks of them, I don't know what does.

      Re Conquistadors: Do you really think this is the kind of behavour that Christian even condone? Do you even think that these people were Christians?

      From all I know of them, they honestly believed themselves to be followers of Christ and his teachings. They claimed that their actions were in his name, and in accord with his teachings and his will. That, in my book, makes them Christians.

      Further, we can plainly see that what they did was no different from what their (and your) God did himself (in the Plagues and elsewhere) and what their (and your) God caused, ordered, praised, or condoned far too many times to list in the Bible. That is, war, murder, torture, rape, pillage, and just basically be the scourge of the planet. Try 1 Samuel 15:3 and 7-8 for just one random example...of which there are scores.

      When we then consider all the great crimes of the past two millennia, we discover that many of them have been done by Christians for Christ.

      Finally, we see even today, with the Christian president of a once-atheist-but-now-Christian nation, how a Christian will lie and deceive for the sole purpose of launching an unprovoked and illegal war that has--surprise!--resulted in thousands of unnecessary civilian deaths and numerous acts of torture and various other atrocities.

      So, yes, I think those people are Christians, and I think it's exactly the kind of behavior that Christians not only condone, but revel in and have perpetuated for thousands of years.

      What you fail to understand is that everything is defined by God, not from our perspective. He created this world. He is also the source of all jsutice and love. Not that you are particulary interested in these it seems, you are more interested in calling love hate and justice injustice.

      No. You define everything by God. If God created the world, who created God, and why can't I have a word with him about how God and his followers have run amok? Is it justice to murder a woman for looking over her shoulder (Genesis 19:26)? Is it love to force fathers and sons to eat each other (Ezekiel 5:10)?

      It is not I that am perverting the words of the Bible by calling love hate and justice injustice. It is you, who insists that the greatest mass murderer in all of recorded fiction (Genesis 6:17) is loving and merciful.

      Heck, your Bible even tells you so:

      GE 4:15, DT 32:19-27, IS 34:8 God is a vengeful god.
      EX 15:3, IS 42:13, HE 12:29 God is a warrior. God is a consuming fire.
      EX 20:5,

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    212. Re:It's all a wind-up. by clickster · · Score: 1

      Wait a minute, the concept of "temptation" in the story implies that Eve "knew" that eating the apple was bad and "chose" to try and get Adam to eat the apple. So, was Adam created as a nit-wit and Eve was born with knowledge?

      --
      If you mod me down, I shall become less powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    213. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      But besides that... In saying that eve had free will, it does not follow that eve will eventually take the apple, because her own free will isn't random (if it were, then it wouldn't be free will, but simply a collection of random or determined events, depending on who you talk to).

      Except that free will is dependent on chance.

      Over long periods of time, people's wills are influenced by factors that are not entirely outside their control. Perspectives change in response to outside events. If that can happen even slightly, and only rarely, then over infinity it fails, and it's not even necessary to know how it could happen.

      Further, free will itself has a chance component at least from a statistical perspective (and I suspect, from an actual one, too). This is something that is not obvious to most people, but it's something I've noticed multiple times. People cannot behave rationally all the time (or even much of the time depending on how cynical you are). In fact, completely rational behavior is not free; it can be predicted.

      The thing it's important to keep in mind is that when I say "all possible things happen during an infinite time-frame," the word "possible" means anything that is not explictly impossible, and I mean "hard" impossible. That means things like laws of physics (taking into account even extreme conditions), logic or math being overturned, not "choosing not to do something," which is not "hard impossible" at all but afflicted with the tremendously fickle human whim. (And that's speaking, personally, as a great fan of whimsy.) Thus, if they had free will, then eventually they had to have eaten the apple.

      Ah ha... but unless the probability that act is 1, then there is also the possibility that it will *not* happen.

      Except that it only takes one "failed check" to lose, while to succeed requires repeated, frequent checks, forever. Over infinite time-frames, it's bound to fail eventually.

      In other words:
      * The chance the event will occur "now" is a number very close to zero.
      * Thus, the negation of the event is some number very close to one.
      * Start checking. Just like if you roll dice forever eventually you'll get a six, here you'll eventually fail too.

      People have complained that free will isn't like a random number generator, but if it isn't random on some level then there's no way it can be free. And the human consciousness isn't perfect anyway, eventually someone could slip up and *accidently* eat the apple.

      But even if it's not random like a roulette wheel is random, it'll happen eventually, simply because it's possible. Even if you change the question to "Will Adam and Eve ever knowingly, purposefully eat the apple," the probability it'll happen over an infinite time-frame is one. If people were forever unchanging then there might be a possibility it could not happen, but if people were unchanging then they wouldn't have free will.

    214. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Transcendent · · Score: 1

      Over long periods of time, people's wills are influenced by factors that are not entirely outside their control. Perspectives change in response to outside events. If that can happen even slightly, and only rarely, then over infinity it fails, and it's not even necessary to know how it could happen.

      If there are laws of physics (and therefore a level of hard determinism), people's wills are also influenced by outside events. There is also a possibility that all outside events effect one's will in such a way that it forces said person to not do a specific action. It is also possible that these events are caused by some outside, hard deterministic course of action that forever repeats itself. And furthermore, perhaps that deterministic coures of outside events prevents (on a hard level) a specific patterm of "random" events to happen within a given environment. That outside force will then always prevent eve from eating the apple.

      The only way to get around it is to say that such free will or random events are not influenced by any deterministic force. So the real argument gets down to if the universe is purely random or determined, in which cannot be sucessfully argued either way for many reasons other than just good arguments. So then my own conclusion is that if the universe is determined, then it's possible that eve never eats the apple. If it's all random, then eventually she will.

    215. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Suidae · · Score: 1

      Eh, you're just trying to pull a causality violation into it. The truth is that people give their god all the maximal 'good' qualities, and say that that is simply the only way we, with our limited intellects, can even get close to understanding what god truely is. God's true nature is so far beyond us that we cannot understand his reasons or make conjectures about why he would do something.

      Now, I'm an athiest, so I think thats all a crock of shite, but I understand what they're saying. They are saying that they haven't a clue either, and they want to believe in a cosmic Daddy Warbucks so they they feel safe and loved, even though they are really just nekkid animals scratching out a precarious life in a cold, uncaring world.

      Me, I'm happy in a cold uncaring world, long as I know I'm not lying to myself.

    216. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Suidae · · Score: 1

      The cool part is that people can make untestable conjectures about an unknowable being and other people take them seriously.

    217. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Suidae · · Score: 1

      The answer in Gen 1 is that Evil is, well, evil. There is nothing good in it. Even knowledge of it is wrong.

      Hmm, that sounds like something a Jehovahs Witness might say. Such a person would protect themselves by reading only those things published by an 'approved' source, such as the Watchtower Society.

      I don't think I've heard a Christian say that knowledge of evil/wrong is in itself wrong/sinful.

    218. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      If there are laws of physics (and therefore a level of hard determinism), people's wills are also influenced by outside events. There is also a possibility that all outside events effect one's will in such a way that it forces said person to not do a specific action. It is also possible that these events are caused by some outside, hard deterministic course of action that forever repeats itself.

      It is a novel tactic to pose the occurance of "permanent" things within infinity. If acceptable, it turns the argument into a race condition: a question of which thing happens first. I tend to view those things as necessarily impermanent, but of course Adam and Eve themselves are permanent in this state (except in how the apple could provide them with an expiration date).

      This assumes that there are "irrevocable" occurances that may happen during the infinite time-frame (which is the same thing as an action that makes the occurance impossible). But God's commandment carries no meaning if it becomes impossible to do the action, doesn't it? Does that not imply that things which prevent the consumption, in the long run, of the apple cannot occur? I think it would simplify your argument, without losing anything essential, if you simply had something destroy the apple and the means of making more, and yet that would also make God's specific command irrelevant, voiding the capacity for decision in the situation.

      In any case, all the things that can occur that make it impossible to consume the apple could also be undone by other, similar types of things, unless you resort to saying things like "but this thing is impossible to be undone," which I do not think is possible by the laws of physics other than entropy, which seems to be on holiday in Eden (which causes its own special problems).

      So then my own conclusion is that if the universe is determined, then it's possible that eve never eats the apple. If it's all random, then eventually she will.

      But doesn't free will destroy that determination? In that case, then there's only one way things could have turned out, that is eating the apple, which they did.

      I'd say, looking out at the world, that things are random, but the randomness influences each other and thus causes "clumbs" on our scale, so it's not *perfectly* random. But any randomness at all would make it inevitable that the apple be eaten.

      P.S. What a fun conversation! I don't know how lucid my arguments are at the moment however.

    219. Re:It's all a wind-up. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, the South Andean Punbeast was denied space on the ark, and died out with the unicorns and dinosaurs.

      Thank god.

    220. Re:It's all a wind-up. by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      Finally, someone who gets it...

      Man was given a test, and passed, ergo, none of you would fscking be here. Without the snake tempting Eve into getting Adam to eat of the tree, no babies.
      It would have been a failed experiment.

      The snake, obviously was sent by God as a catalyst to make Adam move his lazy ass.

    221. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      I am afraid that I am a little short of time at the moment, so I cannot type out as full a reply as I would like to.

      Re Egyptians and Pharaoh: This was an illustration of a point you were making. The point was the God is unjust. I was addressing the point not the illustration. So to address this. God was punishing Pharaoh and the Egyptian people for enslaving the Israelites. In this comment I say something about this. People are still responsible for their actions, as they chose to do them, even while God is in charge. There are other example of this throughout the bible if you are really interested. God uses the Babylonians to destroy Judah as a judgment on Judah and then judges the Babylonians for destroying Judah. This is not something I will deny because it is clear in the bible that this is the case.

      From all I know of them, they honestly believed themselves to be followers of Christ and his teachings. They claimed that their actions were in his name, and in accord with his teachings and his will. That, in my book, makes them Christians.

      I can claim to be superman but that doesn't make me superman.

      When we then consider all the great crimes of the past two millennia, we discover that many of them have been done by Christians for Christ.

      Really? I discover than many of them have been done by people, regardless of their beliefs. Christianity has had little to do with the conflicts for centuries. Even conflicts between say Catholics and Protestants have had more to do with conflicts between people groups that happen to have different beliefs. The beliefs are not generally the reason for the conflict.

      Finally, we see even today, with the Christian president of a once-atheist-but-now-Christian nation, how a Christian will lie and deceive for the sole purpose of launching an unprovoked and illegal war that has--surprise!--resulted in thousands of unnecessary civilian deaths and numerous acts of torture and various other atrocities.

      Do you think I supported that war? I went to the first protest of my life to protest against that war. The protest I attended drew some 300,000 people. My opposition to the war comes from my Christian beliefs. I find it difficult (to say the least) to understand how GWB can reconcile being a Christian with his actions.

      ... snip lots of passages ...

      On a general not, can I suggest that you use something other than the KJV? The KJV is not a great translation for 2 reasons:
      1. IIRC it is largely a translation from the translation to the Latin. In other words it is a 2 stage translation. If you want a translation that is aimed at being as close to the Greek & Hebrew as possible, look at the NASB or ESV. For something that is easier to read aloud, use the NIV. All 3 are better translations than the KJV.
      2. It is not written in the English of today. This just makes it less accessible.

      Anyway, you are highlighting passages of judgment. Fair enough. But let me ask you this, is there justice without judgment? Is it right for someone to commit a crime and not to be punished? Answer that and we can then get down to discussing the particular passages.

      If somebody came to you and said that he worshipped Emperor Palatine and believed him to be the source and inspiration of all moral authority, questions of sanity aside, what would your reaction be? Wouldn't you be at least a little bit concerned that he might try to turn himself into a real-life Darth Vader?

      Palpatine did not send his son to die in this world. There is no documentation of Palpatine. The historicity of the bible is not questioned by any competant scholars. Its claims must be addressed.

      God is a myth. The (fictional) God you worship is as evil, cruel, and hateful as it gets. Get over it.

      Clearly that is what you want to believe.

      No, really. Please ge

      --
      meh
    222. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      I think I may have overstated the case a little there.

      I am also talking about very particular circumstances, ie pre-fall. This does change the dynamics rather a lot. So comparisons to JWs/Watchtower are not accurate since as a result of original sin, we all have a knowledge of evil.

      I think on reflection I would retract that comment that knowledge of evil is evil, pending further thought. The nature of evil (and for that matter the nature of good) is an complex question. For example, is it possible to know evil without expereincing it?

      --
      meh
    223. Re:It's all a wind-up. by Transcendent · · Score: 1

      But doesn't free will destroy that determination? ... I'd say, looking out at the world, that things are random, but the randomness influences each other and thus causes "clumbs" on our scale, so it's not *perfectly* random. But any randomness at all would make it inevitable that the apple be eaten.

      But I persist that any non-randomness (not perfectly random) could give way to an act being impossible by way of the pseudo-deterministic events as I stated in the previous post. As for destroying free will, that would only happen if everything were deterministic. This gives question as to what is and is not deterministic, which I can currently think that all physical matter interaction is determinstic, yet the underlying cause (such as thought... in which this would protect free will) is caused by some outside force that isn't bound by determinism.

      But God's commandment carries no meaning if it becomes impossible to do the action, doesn't it? Does that not imply that things which prevent the consumption, in the long run, of the apple cannot occur? I think it would simplify your argument, without losing anything essential, if you simply had something destroy the apple and the means of making more, and yet that would also make God's specific command irrelevant, voiding the capacity for decision in the situation.

      It could if there was a persistent outside force that made it impossible, but say the "deterministic" course of action was triggered by an event from Eve's free will. Then her will was the cause for the impossibility. This way, God's commands still have meaning, yet the choice can infact be permanent.

    224. Re:It's all a wind-up. by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 1

      God was punishing Pharaoh and the Egyptian people for enslaving the Israelites. In this comment [slashdot.org] I say something about this. People are still responsible for their actions, as they chose to do them, even while God is in charge. There are other example of this throughout the bible if you are really interested. God uses the Babylonians to destroy Judah as a judgment on Judah and then judges the Babylonians for destroying Judah. This is not something I will deny because it is clear in the bible that this is the case.

      See, this just makes it clear that you haven't actually read the Bible. Or, if you have, you had on such blinders that anything that doesn't fit with your ``God is justice and love'' mantra gets ignored.

      The Bible, in quite clear language, quotes God on his reasons for the Plagues. Justice, at best, is an afterthought.

      You prefer the NIV? Fine. We'll get to that later, but I'll quote from it for now.

      Exodus 7

      1 Then the LORD said to Moses, "See, I have made you like God to Pharaoh, and your brother Aaron will be your prophet. 2 You are to say everything I command you, and your brother Aaron is to tell Pharaoh to let the Israelites go out of his country. 3 But I will harden Pharaoh's heart, and though I multiply my miraculous signs and wonders in Egypt, 4 he will not listen to you. Then I will lay my hand on Egypt and with mighty acts of judgment I will bring out my divisions, my people the Israelites. 5 And the Egyptians will know that I am the LORD when I stretch out my hand against Egypt and bring the Israelites out of it."

      Here is the true reason for the Plagues.

      God has an inferiority complex.

      (In case it's not perfectly clear, I mean that the same way I mean ``Hamlet is suicidal.'' If you prefer, ``The God character in the Christian Bible has an inferiority complex.'')

      See, God wants the Egyptians to know that he's this big and mighty LORD dude that you don't want to mess with. (The NIV softens that a lot, pulling many of the punches.) A simple booming voice from the heavens or some such isn't enough for him. Sure, that might make them believe that he's the big cheese, but it won't get them to fear him. To do that, he's got to unleash Hell on Earth.

      But God's got a problem. For all that Pharaoh has done in the past, including enslaving the Israelites, he's now become reasonable. Perhaps his conscience is getting the better of him and he's hoping for a way out. God knows this, and further knows that, when he sends Moses and Aaron to demand freedom for their people, Pharaoh is quite ready to grant it to them.

      But...if they do, then God won't have an excuse to try out all these shiny new Plague toys. So, what does he do?

      God hardens Pharaoh's heart.

      (It's worth noting, again, that the NIV once again chickens out. The original uses the rhetorical technique of repetition to emphasize the point that God is hardening Pharaoh's heart. The NIV only includes the line once; after that, Pharaoh does his own hardening. The KJV ends up in the same place--but that's no different from the Stockholm syndrome or Patti Hearst. Point is, Pharaoh's heart wasn't hard until God hardened it.)

      So, here we have Pharaoh, all set to do the right thing. He's ready to do exactly what God wants him to do, and what God (through his proxies) tells him to do.

      And then God steps in and uses mind control to change Pharaoh. God not only removes Pharaoh's free will, turning him into an unwilling puppet in God's sick game, but he changes Pharaoh from a flawed person trying to mend his ways into an evil, cruel, hard-hearted tyrant.

      I can't think of any greater evil that has ever been perpetuated upon a human being.

      Now that God's twisted Pharaoh into his fall guy, what does he do?

      He unleashes the Plagues.

      And what are those Plagues? Quite simply, some of the worst possible imaginable biological an

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    225. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      You prefer the NIV? Fine. We'll get to that later, but I'll quote from it for now.

      To the KJV, but the I think that the ESV and NASB are better for this kind of discussion.

      See, this just makes it clear that you haven't actually read the Bible. Or, if you have, you had on such blinders that anything that doesn't fit with your ``God is justice and love'' mantra gets ignored.

      You make it clear that you haven't read it either. I suggest that you read the reaction of Pharaoah to each of the plagues. Picking just one Exodus 8:15 (NASB):
      "15But when Pharaoh saw that there was relief, he hardened his heart and did not listen to them, as the LORD had said."

      Note the keyword "he", clearly referring to Pharoah. This demonstrates my point. God chose to harden Pharoahs heart, but Pharaoh chose to harden his heart. God remained sovereign, Pharoah remained responsible. ... snip ....
      God did, deliberately and with malice aforethought, murder thousands of innocent children.


      Where do you get this idea of innocence from? Every single person who has ever walked the face of the earth is guilty of rejecting God.

      See, that's a problem with (many of) you Christians. You play word games that make Orwell blush. You're trying to re-define Christianity to the point that it no longer has any meaning.

      Not at all. James 2:17 (NASB) says:
      "Even so faith, if it has no works, is dead, being by itself."

      In that way can we can judge whether someone is a Christian (although our judegement in this is obviously flawed, as only God knows). This is how I struggle to reconcile GWBs actions with is claims to be a Christian.

      Oh, sure, God had to take the pain of sin upon himself, blah blah. But you're ignoring the method God chose to do so. God could just as easily let Jesus be nailed to that cross, but spared him from all the pain the Romans tried to inflict upon him. Let them get more and more cruel, yet all the time none of it even touches Jesus. All the while, have Jesus preach his message of love and forgiveness. When the Romans finally come to their senses, Jesus proclaims the end of suffering and death and rises to Heaven on a beam of light.

      Don't you think it is a rather hollow punishement for the sin of the world if he doesn't actually experience pain? You are also assuming the physical world does not matter. Jesus' death is what we deserved, and more. If you want to read up on the death of Jesus, John Stott has written an excellent book called "The Cross of Christ" which explores all apects of the death of Jesus.

      The Crusades were intended by their Christian perpetrators to force the inhabitants of the Middle East to convert to Christianity.

      I'll give you that one. However the bible certainly does not sanction that kind of thing.

      The sole purpose of the Inquisition was to convert non-Christians to Christianity.

      I rather thought they were about expanding the spanish empire as much as anything else, but there we go.

      In the witch hunts, non-Christians were tortured and murdered solely in an effort to convert them to Christianity.

      I don't know enough about these to comment.

      The American slave owners quoted extensively from the Bible to justify their slavery. This is not hard to do, considering how many times God instructed his followers to conquer people and take the survivors as slaves. Even Jesus healed a slave and sent him back to his owner with no more than a ``Y'all be good, now.''

      Isn't in strange than that the reformers who abolished slavery were Christians. Two other comments on slavery:
      1. I think it might also do you some good to have a look at how slavery should happen as laid out in the OT. If someone was unable to pay their debts, they could sell themselves as effectively an indentured labourer. Every 7 years (jubilee) all slaves would be freed.
      2. The NT was written in a wo

      --
      meh
    226. Re:It's all a wind-up. by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 1

      This discussion is gettin a little long for slashdot. Should we move it to email?

      There's no point. You're too drunk on the Kool-Aid.

      You turn a blind eye to God's robbing Pharaoh of his soul, instead pointing to the mindless automoton that God turned Pharaoh into.

      God boasts of his murder of thousands of innocent children, and you say the kids had it coming to them.

      God repeatedly says that he lies, and you shut your eyes and pretend that he never said any such thing.

      God tortures and murders the innocent, and you see it as love and beauty.

      What else is there to say, but this?

      You are evil.

      b&

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    227. Re:It's all a wind-up. by dcam · · Score: 1

      You turn a blind eye to God's robbing Pharaoh of his soul, instead pointing to the mindless automoton that God turned Pharaoh into.

      Hardly. It is a pity that you didn't read the verse and associated comment I posted relating to this.

      God repeatedly says that he lies, and you shut your eyes and pretend that he never said any such thing.

      Once again, you aren't reading my comments.

      God tortures and murders the innocent, and you see it as love and beauty.

      There are so many things wrong with this comment I find it hard to know where to start. How about with the words torture and murder. God never tortures, humans do, equally murder is a human action. Next comes the question of innocence. Everyone on the face of this earth is guilty. We all deserve what Jesus suffered.

      You are evil.

      This is an interesting conclusion to come to. You really throw around the extreme labels. Well I guess I can only disagree.

      I guess that concludes the discussion. I am sorry that it has ended on a sour note.

      --
      meh
    228. Re:It's all a wind-up. by benna · · Score: 1

      Good for them, god's a bastard anyway.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  28. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by haluness · · Score: 1

    It doesn't necessarily propose a God figure, but SOME intelligence behind our design.

    Having alternate theories is all very nice - but the the problem with ID as an alternate theory is it is recursive and infinitely so. If there is some 'intelligent design' behind our existence, there is a designer. So how does the designer come to be?

    The only way I can see out of this is to have an arbitrary stopping point, viz., a God figure.

    After that, the flames start :-/

  29. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Kim0 · · Score: 1

    Look at this:

    jnvÇ=ïÆT&ð;¥¾KÃü?xG/U4ÌJñ5î90o9B2ÁEiØÆØ

    Definitely complex.

    It was generated randomly.

    Random stuff is complex. Therefore, randomnes could have made complex stuff.

    Kim0

  30. intelegant design != God by millahtime · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I'll start by saying I am a christian so you know where I stand.

    Intellegent design does not mean it was God who did it. Does not say who did it just that some intellegance did it. This is a viable theory. Don't attack it based on how religious organizations use the theory but on it's merits

    In the same way evolution, based on the science, has many holes and flaws. I'm not saying it isn't true but as it is stated and follwed, there are many flaws. But, for all I know they could be flaws in our logic as people

    In the end, my point is, Integgegant Design != God. It could be God, it could be alians, it could be somethign we havn't thought of.

    1. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      It's like first day of a college course and the professor singles out someone to speak their mind about a subject and let them embarrass themselves in front of the class...

    2. Re:intelegant design != God by haluness · · Score: 5, Insightful

      my point is, Integgegant Design != God

      Good point. If we assume that the designer is not a God, how do we explain the evolution of the designers?

      The problem with ID as far as I can see is that it seems to violate Occams Razor. Now, theres no hard and fast rule, that the simplest theory is the correct one. But by including a designer I think ID is adding a whole lot of complexity based on assumnptions which don't seem to be very valid.

      The alternate approach is to admit that we don't know everything about how evolution works. Fine with me - it just means we have to do some more work to find out what its all about.

      Not pass the buck of onto some God figure

      (Thats always something that has bugged me a little about religion [I'm atheist]. People prefer to be able to blame/pass the buck of onto something/somebody else rather than just say 'I don't know'. But then again, thats their choice)

    3. Re:intelegant design != God by anandrajan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Intellegent design does not mean it was God who did it. Does not say who did it just that some intellegance did it. This is a viable theory. Don't attack it based on how religious organizations use the theory but on it's merits


      I don't think you get it. It is not about whether evolution or intelligent design are viable theories or not. Evolution is falsifiable, intelligent design (ID) is not (or at least I haven't seen anyone show how it is falsifiable). Consequently, ID at best is philosophy masquerading as science.

      --
      Anand Rangarajan anand@cise.ufl.edu
    4. Re:intelegant design != God by millahtime · · Score: 0

      Do we know enough to say who the designer is? To say it's ID, does one have to know the designer to say it's there?

      Isn't it kind of arrogant of us to think we know so much. Does a fly know how a car runs? Could it be that the who and the how is just beyond us?

      I would say we don't know much about evolution or ID. But, to presume one over the other and attack the other side is both wrong for anyone. And, I do believe both sides should be taught on their merits and their questions. I also believe that the real questions and issues should be brought out instead of covered up which happens all to often.

    5. Re:intelegant design != God by Golias · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem with Intelligent Design "theory" is that it's not really a theory.

      There's no description of the process, as there is with evolution. There's no observable current phenomena which can illustrate that process, as there is with evolution. There's no specific evidence that such a thing even happens, as there is with evolution.

      At best, you could call Intelligent Design a "conjecture" or perhaps a "hunch."

      Also, regarding evolutionary notions of the Descent of Man: It's not really enough to say "there are many flaws"... certainly not in this crowd. Kindly point a few of them out.

      Personally, I don't think either theory runs afoul of Hebrew/Christian concepts of God. After all, the scriptures don't say: "And The Lord made light." The say: "And The Lord said, 'let there be light.'" It almost makes it sound like the creation of the universe was pretty much the tacit act of allowing it to come into existance.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    6. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I'll start by saying I am a christian so you know where I stand.
      Um, no. There are plenty of "Christians" who believe in the literal truth of the Biblical creation story and plenty of others who are comfortable with letting theology deal with why while science tries to answer how.
    7. Re:intelegant design != God by rknop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'll start by saying I am a christian so you know where I stand.

      You lost me already.

      There are Christians and there are Christians. It's an extremely diverse religion.

      I am a Christian. However, I accept the evidence for evolution and believe (not in the faith sense, but in the same sense that I believe that a neutral Hydrogen atom has one electron) that all complex life evolved from simpler forms through a process of mutation and natural selection (which is well established, though not perfectly understood). I believe that the Universe is at least 13.7 billion years old, and that it was once extremely hot and dense. (Science right now can't really take us to the moment of the big bang, but it does take us back to a when the Universe was a soup of protons and neutrons and electrons that hadn't formed into elements yet.)

      All of that, yet I'm a Christian. So how can I know where you stand?

      I am also extremely angry when religions try to interfere with the progress of science, and when creationists (whether they call themselves that or intelligent design advocates) assert that science must be wrong when it disagrees with the Bible, or when ID advocates assert something like irreducable complexity simply because they don't have the imagination or intellectual capacity to imagine how something complex could have happened without the direct interference of a supreme being. I'm very angry when Christians assert that to be a Christian, you must believe the literal truth of the Bible, even though reading just the first few chapters of Genesis shows that the Bible contradicts itself and that any reasonable thinking person can't accept it all as literally true. I'm boggled that some Christians think that for something to contain wisdom and truth, it must be literally true-- is your view of God so amazingly simplistic? For heaven's sake, Jesus taught in parables! Make the connection, people! And meanwhile, stop trying to spread ignorance about science in our schools and set our children back into the dark ages by refusing to allow them to learn about the best understanding we have of modern biology!

      -Rob

    8. Re:intelegant design != God by rknop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I would say we don't know much about evolution or ID. But, to presume one over the other and attack the other side is both wrong for anyone.

      You don't know much about evolution.

      Humanity as a whole, however, does.

      You speak from ignorance. Your points are all well-taken, except that you assume that nobody else knows more about evolution than you. They do. Which means that your whole post is "wrong" by your own definition.

      -Rob

    9. Re:intelegant design != God by JWW · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Jesus taught in parables!

      Thank you. It never fails to amaze me how many Christians believe that the Bible must be taken literally while Christ taught many of his lessons by telling symbolic stories.

    10. Re:intelegant design != God by haluness · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Isn't it kind of arrogant of us to think we know so much. Does a fly know how a car runs? Could it be that the who and the how is just beyond us?

      It would indeed be arrogant to say we know everything about everything.

      My point is, that since we do not know everything about everything, there a lot of unanswered questions. Rather than solve the unknowns by placing a designer what is wrong with saying we don't know and leave it open till furtehr evidence comes in?

      The immediate objection to this is that ID is an alternate view, so why not consider it? The problem with that is that the merits are very few.

      I don't think ID really provides an explaination in the sense of how some thing works or has come to be. It's always seemed to me to be a placeholder or stop gap measure, filling in a void which people are uncomfartable with. The fact that it does'nt seem to follow the scientific technique very well is another line of argument entirely.

      You mention: I do believe both sides should be taught on their merits and their questions

      In a science class, I would assume that the teacher is duty bound to teach the scientific method and things that come about from the scientific method. Certainly, the fact that some people thought the sun went round the earth should be mentioned but I would'nt expect a teacher to spend 1 class on that.

      But then again, we all know evolution has not been fully 'proved' and there are flaws. But is that an excuse to spend class hours on a theory that has not really been developed according to the scientific method? Evolution has holes and we don't know the full story - certainly true - but there are scientific ways to test aspects of evolution.

      Can we apply the scientific method to aspects of ID?

      I have no objection to a science teacher mentioning ID in a classroom, if only ot make students aware of other views. But to spend time on a theory that has not been developed on the basis of the scientific method and is more based on faith, would be a real disservice to the teaching of science and the inculcation of scientific thinking in students.

      (Just as a side note, Carl Sagans, 'A Candle in the Dark' is an amazing book)

    11. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      all complex life evolved from simpler forms through a process of mutation and natural selection (which is well established
      Um...actually...no.
    12. Re:intelegant design != God by Total_Wimp · · Score: 2

      Intellegent design does not mean it was God who did it. Does not say who did it just that some intellegance did it. This is a viable theory. Don't attack it based on how religious organizations use the theory but on it's merits

      I'll attack it on it's own merits. It is not logically sound to say that humans are so complex that they must have been created by someone intelligent.

      Based on my experience with very complex systems, such as computer opperating systems, I've come to the conclusion that as intelligent beings design ever more complex systems it becomes increasingly more difficult to design systems that don't have large flaws (bugs) that will keep the systems from working.

      Based on the complexity of our ecosystems where individual organisms rely so heavily on each other and the exact composition of minerals and radiation available, I find it increasingly less likely that an intelligent designer would be able to create such systems without help from evolution.

      Evolution sorta assures "success"(survival) of organisms. Intelligent design does not (high likelihood of failure until much testing and re-design is complete). Therefor I find Itelligent desing flawed at the most basic level - it makes the opposite conclusion it's data points suggest.

      TW

    13. Re:intelegant design != God by cnelzie · · Score: 1

      Can you create more of a strawman argument?

      Does a Fly know how a car runs? Hell no. A Fly has no capability, nor business understanding how an automobile operates. Neither do most humans.

      It is a specialized knowledge that is becoming more and more specialized as time progresses. Each year we create more complicated and efficient automobiles as our understanding of physics, chemistry and electronics grows. In time, one may very well need a PhD in Autmobile Repair, just to fix a car.

      I am nowhere near being able to call myself a mechanic. I have virtually no knowledge about how an automobile functions, beyond the bare foundation that the engine has an internal combustion process. I simply don't know much beyond that. I don't suddenly decide that it functions via 'magic' because I don't know how it works.

      That's what proponents of Inteligent Design do. They decide that since they don't understand enough of the given topic, it must be all because of 'magic' and that is exactly all that Inteligent Design is. It is a metaphysical belief in a greater power that comes directly from the Judeo-Christian-Islamic faith. The faith in one God that 'inteligently designed' the entire world, all of its creatures and who sits back and laughs at how 'stupid' we humans are.

      If Inteligent Design was something other then the belief in the Judeo-Christian-Islamic God, then those proponents would be spouting out endless theories as to who that Inteligent Designer was/is. There would be groups solidly believing that Aliens did it. There would be groups solidly believing that Zeus did it. There would be groups solidly believing that the planet Earth is actually the Inteligent Designer. There would be groups that would be believing that a machine inteligence from another dimension broke into ours, or created our dimension and inteligently designed all of us.

      The only thing in that ID Camp is the Judeo-Christian-Islamic God. Nothing else is suggested, just one single supreme being. What else could that be? No ID proponent can answer that with a straight face. They desperately try to ignore the question or brush it off.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    14. Re:intelegant design != God by IAmTheDave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Based on my experience with very complex systems, such as computer opperating systems, I've come to the conclusion that as intelligent beings design ever more complex systems it becomes increasingly more difficult to design systems that don't have large flaws (bugs) that will keep the systems from working.

      I know I'll get troll-moderated for this, but:

      - Cancer - Aids

      Intelligent Design or millions upon millions of years of evolution and adaptation - either way, the design of life is far from flawless or without "bugs."

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    15. Re:intelegant design != God by millahtime · · Score: 1

      Actually there is a lot of science behind it. The problem is, that due to the school systems setup it's not taught. There really is a lot of science around it which I discovered in a college class and many talks with college profs.

    16. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A brilliant rebuttal, sir! Did you hone your rapier-like intelligence at Oxford, or mayhap Cambridge?

    17. Re:intelegant design != God by pbhj · · Score: 1

      >>> "If Inteligent Design was something other then the belief in the Judeo-Christian-Islamic God, then those proponents would be spouting out endless theories as to who that Inteligent Designer was/is. There would be groups solidly believing that Aliens did it. There would be groups solidly believing that Zeus did it. There would be groups solidly believing that the planet Earth is actually the Inteligent Designer. There would be groups that would be believing that a machine inteligence from another dimension broke into ours, or created our dimension and inteligently designed all of us."

      These seem like possible first hypotheses. Not my belief but I don't see how you can _prove_ that the universe wasn't designed by transdimensional alien beings (a là Men In Black (the movie) at the end). Current physic-al theories breakdown at a temporally distant singularity after all.

    18. Re:intelegant design != God by jimhill · · Score: 1

      No, it is not a viable theory. Viable theories have supporting evidence not in contradiction to direct observation. Viable theories require more than merely observing an "irreducible complexity" and saying "Well, hyuck, I can't figure it out so there must be a really smart intelligent designer out there."

      Here's my viable theory supported by direct observation and non-contradictory evidence: Every single proponent of intelligent design is either a devout Christian, an undereducated yokel, or more typically, both. That you profess to be a Christian is neither here nor there to me. I would prefer you walk on your own legs rather than preach the worth of crutches, but to each his own.

      The utter absence of evidence for an intelligent designer keeps ID from being a theory, much less a viable one.

      --
      Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
    19. Re:intelegant design != God by Orgazmus · · Score: 1

      Ok then, your turn.
      How WAS it actually made?
      Since you know for sure, and all.

      --
      The system had the verbosity of HTML combined with all the readability of compiled assembly viewed as bitmap images
    20. Re:intelegant design != God by Sique · · Score: 5, Informative

      ID has no merits other than being non-Darwinist. There is no evidence supporting a designer being active to generate creatures (interestingly though we still call individual lifeforms 'creatures' even when we claim that they don't have been created by a creator ;) ), there is no conclusion we can draw out of ID that helps us deal with a problem we have with a single or a group of lifeforms.

      We all know the problem with antibiotics: If you use them, and you are not reaching every single lifeform you want to wipe out with a deadly dose, some of the lifeforms might survive long enough to have offspring, which in turn might survive the antibiotics too. They even might be able to survive a low dose of antibiotics without any harm, so if you use the antibiotic again, they survive all competing lifeforms, which die due to the antibiotic, making the field free for a growing population of the slightly antibiotic resistant lifeforms.
      In the end your antibiotic is not able anymore to harm the resistant lifeform, and all that happens if you use it: You increase the growing of the species, because the antibiotic helps battling all those other lifeforms once competing.
      This is evolution at work, and there are enough antibiotics which are not effective anymore, because there are lifeforms resistant to them.

      It does not only work for bacterias and other single cell organisms: Exactly those evolutative mechanisms were at work when coca plants grew resistant to RoundUp: The spraying of RoundUp on Columbian coca plantages had a strange effect: Because spraying from an airplane is quite incorrect, and you can't make sure that all plants you want to hit are hit with a full dose, and the one's you don't want to hit aren't, the coca growing pawns in Columbia faced a strange problem after a spraying attack: Most of their crops, coca and other crops, died. Most tomatos, most corn, most vegetables and fruit, and most coca plants.
      But some survived, having only got a low dose and were able to survive.

      Coca plants are mostly multiplied by the pawns by cutting small twigs and planting them into the earth rather than sowing the coca seeds. After a spraying attack almost the complete plantage of a pawn is destroyed, and only the coca plants which have survived can be used to plant anew, just cut some twigs and regrow your crops. Most cultural plants need to be grown again from seeds, and you have to wait until the RoundUp is washed out of the earth. In the end the whole coca plantages once attacked were replanted with twigs from coca plants that survived a RoundUp attack. And they were growing faster than before because the weed normally growing with the coca plants was suppressed by the RoundUp remains in the soil.

      Within four years a coca plant was covering large areas which was completely immune against RoundUp. No genetic engineering (a.k.a. intelligent design) was necessary to outwith the DEA and Monsanto: Just having evolution go its way and taking the survivors of RoundUp attacks and replant the field with them.

      You might love or hate Darwinism. But evolution is all around you every day.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    21. Re:intelegant design != God by millahtime · · Score: 1

      There is a lot of science but it is not discussed. It is attacked but not discussed. That is one reason to bring it into schools. So, people can become knowledgeable on the science behind it that they can discuss it and vs other theories. Since it has been removed most people don't even know there is a lot of science behind it.

    22. Re:intelegant design != God by rknop · · Score: 1

      When did I say I know for sure? (Assuming by "it", you mean how was life made in the first place.)

      I don't.

      That's why we still do science. Because we don't know everything yet. But we *do* know something....

      -Rob

    23. Re:intelegant design != God by katpants · · Score: 1

      The problem with ID as far as I can see is that it seems to violate Occams Razor. When you get into discussions as complex as this, "Occam's Razor" can get pretty subjective. For example: Which is more feasible: that mankind evolved through a natural process that we don't yet fully understand; or that some infinite omnipotent being that we could never even begin to understand, for reasons beyond our comprehension, created the universe and everything in it without leaving a single shred of evidence that he had done so or for what purpose? Or conversely: Which is more feasible: that all life spontaneously and coincidentally emerged from a puddle of primordial ooze somewhere untold hundreds of trillions of years ago, and through an extraordinary series of further coincidences survived and evolved into billions of discrete species which cohabitated to form an intricate network of interdependency; or that the world was simply created by intelligent design to work the way it does? It's all in the wording, and as always people will arrive at the conclusions they set out to find. It is worth noting, however, that science has not yet witnessed evolution in action. Until it does, evolution will continue to be no less a theory than creation.

    24. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read "Lies, Damned Lies, Statistics, and Probability of Abiogenesis Calculations" at http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/abioprob/abioprob. html.

    25. Re:intelegant design != God by Fished · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The problem with ID as far as I can see is that it seems to violate Occams Razor. Now, theres no hard and fast rule, that the simplest theory is the correct one. But by including a designer I think ID is adding a whole lot of complexity based on assumnptions which don't seem to be very valid.
      Perhaps. However, I think that you are missing the point - an Intelligent Design theorist (and the only one I take particularly seriously is Behe) would say that a designer is necessary precisely because it is simpler to postulate a designer than to postulate the world we know coming about without one.

      Here we get into some deep juju, which I can't deny is speculative. However, it has always seemed to me that if anything had to simply exist - i.e. if something were to spontaneously come into being utterly ex nihilo - that matter, the laws of physics, the point that became the big bang, etc. were too complicated to be that something.

      To my way of thinking (and I have a fair background in academic theology although my specialty is New Testament) the best way to conceive of God is as pure, creative will. (I'm going to go ahead and say "God" here rather than trying to dance around it.) Out of that will - that ability to decide, if you will - everything else comes into being and is sustained in its being. God's will made the point that exploded in the primordial bang, and God's will made the laws of physics that made that explosion develop into our universe, and God's will made the peculiar set of circumstances that make it possible for other intelligentm, creative wills to exist.

      However, before all this, there had to be ONE thing to be "first". Occam's razor requires that that one infinitely improbable thing that was "first" be the thing most able to account for everything else. And I am convinced that the best account for this is a single, personal God.

      Seriously - you want me to believe that the simplest explanation is that sex, butterflies, and Picasso "just happened"???? I'm not there.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    26. Re:intelegant design != God by charlymon · · Score: 1

      Genesis 1:7 And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament: and it was so. Genesis 1:16 And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also. Genesis 1:25 And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was good. Genesis 1:31 And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good. And the evening and the morning were the sixth day. Genesis 2:2 And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had made; and he rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. Genesis 2:3 And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in it he had rested from all his work which God created and made. Genesis 2:4 These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created, in the day that the LORD God made the earth and the heavens, Genesis 2:9 And out of the ground made the LORD God to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Genesis 2:22 And the rib, which the LORD God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man. This is just in the first 2 chapters of the Bible. Seriously, have you ever even read the Bible?

    27. Re:intelegant design != God by drgonzo59 · · Score: 1

      Good point, I just think that Occam's Razor argument doesn't apply. The question of whether there is a designer or not, is more funtamental than what Mr. Occam said. But even if we apply Occam's Razor, someohow it still seems "easier" to me to believe in a creator than in the probability of us being here because we came out of "soup" of hydrocarbons. Also it would have been "easier" for us to just become extinct on so many occasions. I am just saying that someone can use the same principle for the opposite point of view with just about the same success.

    28. Re:intelegant design != God by cnelzie · · Score: 2, Insightful
      These seem like possible first hypotheses. Not my belief but I don't see how you can _prove_ that the universe wasn't designed by transdimensional alien beings (a là Men In Black (the movie) at the end). Current physic-al theories breakdown at a temporally distant singularity after all.

      Possible first hypothesis - yes; but since they are incapable of being tested at this point in our technological development, they are incapable of becoming theories and thus lay in the realm of the metaphysical and are little more then fodder for philosophy majors.

      If at some point in the future we are capable of actually testing those hypothesis, then they can be worked up into theories.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    29. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      great post ass! No links, explainations, nothing. Just a "no really!"

    30. Re:intelegant design != God by TufelKinder · · Score: 1

      That's like saying people only die in car accidents because the cars weren't designed well enough.

      Is there anything that is so well-designed that it can't be misused, or that damage can't be caused by its misuse?

      --
      If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. -- George Orwell
    31. Re:intelegant design != God by chrisnewbie · · Score: 1

      I think that the thinking beihind god or any gods as a matter of fact is based on the fact that almost any human being needs an explanation on everyhting.Some chose the easy way and put it all in the name of god, less headache,if i cant explain it must be from god. And it's also easier to blame god or the devil than ourselves for all the stupidities that we do.Look at all the leaders in the world, they all make war in the name of god! Now if gog acknowledge everyone of these crazy leaders, doesnt it make him the devil also since he is backing up everyone against themselves? I think if an intelligent godlike power exist, it's only there laughing at his antfarm that is earth! and he shakes it sometimes just to see what happens.

    32. Re:intelegant design != God by TheGavster · · Score: 1

      I'm not really seeing the writings of some shaman from a few thousand years back, translated and altered through a dozen languages, as relevant to this discussion.

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    33. Re:intelegant design != God by Alioth · · Score: 1

      ID is not a *theory*, it's a hypothesis (and barely so, I don't think ID is really 'testable').

      Those that say "Evolution is _just_ a theory" don't understand what a theory is in the scientific context.

    34. Re:intelegant design != God by pbhj · · Score: 1

      So shouldn't we at least mention such shortcomings of science?

    35. Re:intelegant design != God by ttfkam · · Score: 1

      Umm... actually... yes.

      Do a Google search for the term "Lysenkoism". You will see a real-world, tested, recent example of evolutionary biology in action.

      As an added bonus, you will see what happens when a group dismisses the evidence for the sake of dogma.

      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    36. Re:intelegant design != God by haluness · · Score: 2, Insightful

      However, I think that you are missing the point - an Intelligent Design theorist (and the only one I take particularly seriously is Behe) would say that a designer is necessary precisely because it is simpler to postulate a designer than to postulate the world we know coming about without one

      Hmm, I suppose that this would be digression, but it seems that bringing in a God (and all the associated questions) is more complex than what we have now - a process that explains things. How does a God simplify things? It seesm to me to lead to more questions (and recursive ones too!)

      And I am convinced that the best account for this is a single, personal God

      This is one of things that makes me think ID is more faith than application of the scientific technique. Since you have a background in theology maybe you could answer a question I had posted elsewhere in this story: You mention a single personal god, but Hinduism has multiple gods. Are you then referring to ID as a Christian/Muslim (since these religions have 1 God) theory? Or is it religion independent?

      Occam's razor requires that that one infinitely improbable thing that was "first" be the thing most able to account for everything else

      One common thing I have seen in the comments in this thread, is that ID appears to try and explain 'life, the universe and everything' (finally an apt usage of a great phrase!).

      But evolution talks about life on earth. Since you mention 'infinitely improbably', remember that on geological time scales, there is effectively infinite time for a avriety of molecular interactions. If life did arise from the development of self reproducing proteins (I'm surely using the wrong terminology here) it might be improbably, but given the time scales, not infinitely so.

      you want me to believe that the simplest explanation is that sex, butterflies, and Picasso "just happened

      I don't think any of these 'just happened'. There were reasons for these things happening and a process for them to happen by.

      Sex - still unanswered, but lots of good reasons for it to happen (efficiency, variety in the gene pool etc)

      Butterflies - just one branch of the evolutionary tree

      Picasso - lots of social factors leading to his paitnings.

      None of these require statements on the lines of 'God made them and thats why'

      But as I have said, the biggest drawback of ID is that, as far as I know, it does'nt follow the scientific method, but feel free to correct me with some examples.

    37. Re:intelegant design != God by famebait · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Intellegent design does not mean it was God who did it. Does not say who did it just that some intellegance did it.

      That's just because they're not being honest. They all actually believe God did it. There's simply no other reason to adopt such a hackneyed theory to the extent that you feel you have to prevent eveloution from being taught in schools.

      Don't attack it based on how religious organizations use the theory but on it's merits

      It has no merits as a scientific theory, and the religious thing is the only thing it's ever used for, and its sole reason for existence.

      I'm not saying [evolution] isn't true but as it is stated and follwed, there are many flaws.

      No there aren't. It doesn't claim to be the comlpete and final answer, it claims to be the furthest and most likely we can see so far from available evidence. ID does not even come close to fulfilling that criteria.

      --
      sudo ergo sum
    38. Re:intelegant design != God by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1
      The problem with Intelligent Design "theory" is that it's not really a theory....
      Exactly. A theory is a hypothesis that has survived experimental testing.
    39. Re:intelegant design != God by thebdj · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is this is being pushed as a religious idea and nothing more. There are a group of people who believe in ID AND believe that Aliens are responsible. The problem is they are not the ones pushing this idea, with no scientific backing, into schools. They are trying to teach ID as a THEORY. But it has FAILED the scientific process. These people PANIC because they feel the THEORY of EVOLUTION is being taught as FACT. So long as teachers are doing their job RIGHT (which is rare in public school), EVOLUTION is being taught as a TESTED THEORY, that has SCIENTIFIC backing.

      I am sure someone else would have mentioned this, but there is an episode of Penn and Teller's Bullshit on this that while obviously spending its time attacking ID'ers shows that most (if not all of them) are nothing more then religious fundamentalist. BTW, if you believe in creationism great. But I would recommend Index to Creationist Claims

      --
      "Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb."
    40. Re:intelegant design != God by haluness · · Score: 1

      I think the original point of the story was that ID is not presented as somehting that people have used to try and explain shortcomings of current evolutionary theories but is presented as a viable alternative.

      Certainly, I would agree with teachres presenting ID as an alternative theory - but then pointing out that its an example of a theory not developed by the scientific method.

      In the end a science teachers' job is to inculcate the scientific method, by useing science as examples of what can be achieved by following this method

    41. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For one, ID is NOT a scientific theory, it's a hypothesis at best. Second, the ONLY people supporting ID are fundies so don't go saying it ain't about God, it's just fundies trying to sneak in our schools and created doubt about Evolution. Evolution is a fact and these nuts need to get over it.

    42. Re:intelegant design != God by MilenCent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      - Cancer - Aids

      Intelligent Design or millions upon millions of years of evolution and adaptation - either way, the design of life is far from flawless or without "bugs."


      Cancer: The problem there is, evolution doesn't optimize for the effeciency of individuals, but of the species as a whole. It's very possible that the flaw that allows for cancer (which seems to be present throughout most mammalian life) has other benefits.

      Aids: Unfortunately, this is an example of evolution's success -- it's an epidemic that's been spead to a large number of people, is it no From the point of view of the Aids virus, it's a success.

      Of course it could also be argued that, by killing the host, Aids denies itself further opportunity to spread. But it's a relatively new disease after all, give it a few millennia -- assuming it hasn't killed us off by then. But then, viruses aren't particularly known for their foresight.

    43. Re:intelegant design != God by cnelzie · · Score: 1
      So shouldn't we at least mention such shortcomings of science?

      What exactly do you mean by this? Science acknowledges its shortcomings every single day. That's why there are the clear definitions behind what a hypothesis is, what a theory is, what a scientific law is and what a fact is and where facts are used in the supporting structure of science.

      Things that cannot be tested within the confines of our existing technology can never be anything other then a hypothesis. It has been that way as long as science as existed with the clear seperation between hypothesis, theory and scientific law.

      It has also been true that the use of 'Facts' are simply pieces of information that are discovered through the process of testing a hypothesis and are used to take that hypothesis and formulate a theory.

      After becoming a theory, those facts are tested, retested to confirm or deny the validity of that theory. If the theory is deemed entirely invalid and false, it is tossed aside. If that theory is deemed valid but weakly defined/worded, then it is restructured to support the existing facts, which only strengthens the theory.

      This is something that I learned when I was in elementary school in early science classes. This was further reinforced as I took additional mandatory science classes in Middle School.

      I have no idea how anyone, who claims to have a High School Diploma, could also claim to have no idea what the difference between a Hypothesis, Theory and Scientific Law is. I am not a scientist, I do not deal with hypothesis, theories or scientific laws in my regular daily activities and still I know this.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    44. Re:intelegant design != God by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There are flaws in a theory and then there are flaws, I'm afraid. Evolutionary theory isn't complete, but then again, neither is any scientific theory. ID, on the other hand, isn't a scientific theory at all. It's sole argument is "somehow something somewhere is wrong with evolution." In fact, many of the professional IDers like Behe don't even claim evolution didn't happen, they just try to insert Goddidit into claims that bacterial flagellum could not have evolved. Even after they are shown that there are precursors, they still insist upon making the claim.

      In areas of research that do deal with Intelligent Design (forensics and archaeology), determining design can actually be quite tricky. I could walk through a field strewn with Mousterian tools, and not know it. But these sciences ask questions about the designer, who were they, what was their intent, where did they manufacture the object or event, and most importantly how did they do it.

      ID, in fact, intentionally tries to shove these questions under the table. It is nothing but Creationism in disguise, an attempt to get God in the classroom. It's a dishonest legal fiction, and most importantly, it isn't science.

      Don't believe me, go ask all the great ID advocates why they have no theory or no lesson plan, and why ultimately they want to push for teaching the weakness. When the Dover school board announced they were going to teach ID, mark how the professional IDers in the Discovery Institute backpedalled like nuts. They know they've got a pile of nothing, but they sure don't want a court to stomp them down.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    45. Re:intelegant design != God by haluness · · Score: 1

      I note that you had posted elsewhere in this story about the scienc behind ID.

      Can you provide links to examples of the science behind ID? I'm curious. I have'nt read the ID literatures in detail, but the few websites I did read, did not seem to be very firm about the science.

      Maybe I've been reading the wrong sources. Pointers would be appreciated

    46. Re:intelegant design != God by DavidBartlett · · Score: 1

      For heaven's sake, Jesus taught in parables! Make the connection, people!

      Yes, and Jesus' parables were simplified examples of deeper truths of mankind. Thus, if the creation story is considered as a parable, we can see it as a simplification of something that the majority of its readers (most of history, and probably us as well) could not understand.

      Also, we have to remember that time is a dimension like all the rest, and therefore, if you believe God created height, width and depth, then he also created time. If he created time, he must be outside of time.

      For this reason, the Earth could have had a "history" at the moment it was created. By making measurements and hypotheses today, we can gain insight into this history, but we cannot gain insight into truth that is not part of (or within) time. That is what Bibles are for.

      --

      -DB-
      E-mail is like a prison: a prison with no walls... and no toilet. -Strong Bad
    47. Re:intelegant design != God by cnelzie · · Score: 1
      Intelligent Design is not a Theory. At best, it is a Hypothesis, with the framework of science.

      However, being completely untestable by any stretch of the scientific method, it is nothing more then a topic for philosophical discussion. It has no business being called a theory anymore then a paperclip has in being called the creator of all life.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    48. Re:intelegant design != God by Golias · · Score: 1

      I think the parent post was taking jabs at my suggestion that God's creation was mostly described as God passively permitting the world to exist. (i.e., "let there be $FOO", "let there be $BAR", etc.)

      The passages he quotes do contradict my conceit, but look at how much he had to cherry-pick to find such passages. Here are a few relevant moments he skipped*.

      Gen 1:3 And God said, "Let there be light," and there was light.

      Gen 1:11 Then God said, "Let the land produce vegetation: seed-bearing plants and trees on the land that bear fruit with seed in it, according to their various kinds." And it was so.

      Gen 1:20 And God said, "Let the water teem with living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth across the expanse of the sky."

      Gen 1:22 God blessed them and said, "Be fruitful and increase in number and fill the water in the seas, and let the birds increase on the earth."

      Gen 1:24 And God said, "Let the land produce living creatures according to their kinds: livestock, creatures that move along the ground, and wild animals, each according to its kind." And it was so.

      * The passages I include are taken from the New International Version, which is widely regarded as the most reliable translation available, assembled from the oldest available texts and translated directly to modern English from their original languages under the scrutiny of a massive world-wide council of Churches. I'm not sure which translation the parent post was using, but it was not the NIV.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    49. Re:intelegant design != God by Rirath.com · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm very angry when Christians assert that to be a Christian, you must believe the literal truth of the Bible, even though reading just the first few chapters of Genesis shows that the Bible contradicts itself and that any reasonable thinking person can't accept it all as literally true. I'm boggled that some Christians think that for something to contain wisdom and truth, it must be literally true-- is your view of God so amazingly simplistic?

      Excellent post, thank you. I'm a Christian, and I've been called a non-Christian by other Christians just because I don't believe the bible is literally true. It astounds me. If you ask me, it is a representation of our understanding of religion a few thousand years ago. Much like our understanding of science has greatly evolved, so should our understanding of religion.

      When it comes right down to it, Evangelicals will never deny a single word or give an inch because if one tiny bit is shown false, then the whole thing comes undone. They'll point to countless "proof" that they say "proves" the bible is true, whether they've actually read any of this for themselves or not. For that matter, it's usually surprising if they've actually read the Bible itself cover to cover... even though they claim it to be the factual word of God himself. A fewer percent still actually follow what is written.

      Personally, I believe we can't possibly know what religion is right. I honestly don't believe that any decent non-Christian human is any worse than any decent Christian human. Thankfully, this idea is starting to spread. There's so many diverse ways to be a good person and show faith and love, it should be appreciated, not scorned. I liken it to sports... No matter what team you root for, you're still there for the love of the game.

      What saddens me is when people get a theory in their head and they're convinced for life that it's the one and true choice. Evangelical Christians and Atheists alike. I've seen so many people look at religion, find a small issue, and suddenly become stone cold atheists for life. It's sad not because I think they're going to get some kind of ultimate punishment for making a judgment call, but because they're missing out on joy, love, and support just because they refuse to consider alternatives. They'll spend the rest of their lives trying to prove something they can't possibly prove, looking down on religions, and basically being no different than what they pointlessly despise.

      In short, a little bit of tolerance and understanding on both sides of the fence would go a long way. The Evangelicals need to open their hearts and minds to others, and Atheists need to consider the beliefs of others, and stop stereotyping everyone into the same groups.

    50. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Intellegent design does not mean it was God who did it.

      That's true. However, if we give the theory any credence, we'll be acknowledging that something or someone has more intelligence than we (humans) do. This could be God, in which case we'd have to submit our lives to Him and live by His Word. So, instead, we'll just throw out the whole theory of ID and call it "religion." Fair?
    51. Re:intelegant design != God by liam193 · · Score: 1
      Now, theres no hard and fast rule, that the simplest theory is the correct one.

      Agreed. The simplest theory is not always the correct one. Take the theory of gravity. We know that is not perfect. It's a whole lot simpler than curved space, but we know that curved space is closer to the correct explanation than the theory of gravity.

      The issue we have here is a question of thought. Basically we have a topic which does not completely answer all the questions. As a result, we have a group of people saying, add some other options. We discuss the fact that gravity isn't quite right, we discuss the fact that thermodynamics are not quite right, we discuss the idea of infinity/undefined in mathematics because there are holes in math where you divide by zero. So what is so sacred about the theory of evolution? The whole discussion has errupted into a firestorm where intelligent thought has been cast aside in the defense against Intelligent Design.

      The article and the whole discussion here has seemed to ignore the actual school board decision in Dover. I'm including a quotation from the school board which is from a local publication (name ommitted to avoid slashdotting the publication)

      During its regular meeting on Oct 18, the board voted 6-3 to allow changes to their biology curriculum that reads: "Students will be made aware of gaps/problems in Darwin's Theory and of other theories of evolution including, but not limited to intelligent design. Note: Origins of life will not be taught."

      As you can see here. We are not talking about Darwin's Theory vs. Intelligent Design. We are talking about Darwin's Theory vs. a whole slew of other ideas including intelligent design. Basically, the school board is saying, let's teach the students about Darwin's Theory and then let's explain to them that yes, as all theories, it has some issues that haven't been worked out and may or may not ever be worked out, so here's a few other theories.

    52. Re:intelegant design != God by drgonzo59 · · Score: 1
      I agree with Rob here and I am a Christian also (an Orthodox too,by the way!). The biggest problem is with the people taking the Bible out of context and taking it literaly. I will say it loud and clear "The Bible is not a science or history, text book" it never claimed to be it and it never was. If anyone uses it as one, don't listen to them. The Bible is a book about our relationship with God, it is a book about faith, about love, about examples of such, about God and about human nature. It sure has elements of history in it, but it is still not a history text book.

      I also don't think it is the Churches job to dictate science (like it happened in the West in the Middle Ages), but by the same token it is not scientists' job to say what faithful should believe in. If science discovers beyond a reasonable doubt that evolotion took place then a reasonable Christian would say that God made it that way and so on. As rabid and extreme as some Christians can be the liberal atheists are just as bad. Their determination and fanaticism to prove that soemone/something doesn't exist is somewhat admirable

      As far as I know science hasn't proven or disproven beyond any doubt any core Christian doctrine. So the scientists can go back to work and discover how the physical world works (even if they believe it is all just a probability) and the religious folk can move along too and worry about their relationship with God. If someone is both then more power to them.

    53. Re:intelegant design != God by m50d · · Score: 1

      It's not a theory. It was not brought up based on the available evidence. People who believe in it decide they believe it and then twist the facts to fit.

      --
      I am trolling
    54. Re:intelegant design != God by Sushi_K · · Score: 1

      This is completely off topic but I've got to say something. Your statement that you're a Christian has no meaning. Drop the religion if you're going to discard most of it as something not to be followed or believed. I can call myself a Nazi and say that I get in a huff when other so-called Nazis talk about the master race. I'm a Jew loving Nazi. The title has no meaning in that sense other than to give myself the negative association with Nazis. Just as your association with Christians gives you a negative connotation with the scientific community. Just something to think about...

    55. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >In the end, my point is, Integgegant
      >Design != God. It could be God, it could
      >be aliens, it could be somethign we havn't
      >thought of.

      Who created the aliens then? You are just postponing the problem, something that science does not do.

    56. Re:intelegant design != God by Rinikusu · · Score: 1

      /* At best, you could call Intelligent Design a "conjecture" or perhaps a "hunch." */

      I think the word/phrase you're looking for is 'fairy tale'.

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
    57. Re:intelegant design != God by Retric · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What flaws do you find in evolution?

      No really I have studied it for a while and it works fine. Single celled to multi celled takes 1 billion years... Think about that 1 BILLION YEARS for life forms that be born have kids and have there kids have kids in less than an hour X millions of life forms in a cubic foot a water X 5280 X 5280 per cubic mile of water times who knows how many cubic miles of ocean.

      Evolution is nothing more than life keeping as many mutations going at the same time and then combining them as needed when your environment changes. Poisonous creatures don't just make one poison they make hundreds so there prey will not evolve protection vs. 10 or 20 of them and get away they would have to come up hundreds of mutations at the same time to get away. That's also why snakes use super doses of venom why pump a mice full of enough venom to kill a human well that keeps mice form evolving a little protection to get them though the times when they got a small but survivable dose and building up ect ect. Now you say why would the snake make so many poisons well he only needed one to start with and then when protection evolved to that he made a 2nd ect until he is making so many that the pray start to select agents the forms of protection that are not needed and it ends up with a balance where snakes can make so many more toxins than are need and it's stable that way (For a while now having those extra toxins are nor really needed... But as long as there in the DNA somewhere there "free" to come out as needed.)

      People say that there are these "huge" leaps that occur in evolution with no explanation but they seem to ignore the fact that whales have toes. Now if you ask yourself why whales have toes you can realize that evolution works by recombining existing pieces of it's self so things keep junk around because over time it's better to be able to adapt to change than become super optimized and stuck.

      Some ID people say look at this there is nothing like it that's useful for what it does and then you find 1 or 2 things that are like it but used for something else and you can see how most of these great leaps are really just minor changes that are from the ~3+ mutations in every life form that has ever lifted for billions of years. Even then some say you can't win the lottery 5 times in a row I say with enough games you would expect streaks of 100,000 games in a row.

      Evolution does can start with people a single amino Acid that can replicate, and mutate. That's all it takes to get the ball going. You don't need cell walls, you don't need DNA you don't need mitochondria for the fist life form you just need replication, there's nothing out there to eat you and nothing is competing with you for space until you cover the earth and your descendents start to duke it out.

      PS: As to knowing what your talking about have your ever written a program that uses evolution to find solutions to problems well some people have so humanity does even if you have only heard about doing this.

    58. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      context: The circumstances in which an event occurs; a setting.

      With the above in mind, go back and reread the original post and the post it is a response to.

    59. Re:intelegant design != God by gentlemen_loser · · Score: 1

      "I'll start by saying I am a christian so you know where I stand."

      And where is that exactly? I am also a christian (catholic), and I do not buy into a literal interpretation of creation. Rather, evolution seems like a pretty good explanation. How do I reconcile this with my belief in God you ask? Simple: Rules for physics, genetics and biology (evolution) was God's will. The fossil evidence left behind is just proof of that. Why is the evolution of life on this planet any less miraculous than the story put forth in genesis?

      Evolution has been accepted by the Pope to not be in conflict with the chruch's teaching when taken in the context that I outlined above. Furthermore, several other christian churches agree with this view.

    60. Re:intelegant design != God by peruvianllama · · Score: 1
      But by including a designer I think ID is adding a whole lot of complexity based on assumnptions which don't seem to be very valid.

      True enough - but why is it that we are "including" a designer? Why is the default stance to assume that there is no designer? I understand this from a historical perspective; the backlash against institutionized Christianity, and people rebelling intellectually against anything that smacks of the church once again controlling every aspect lives. But especially among those who preach Logic as the be-all-and-end-all (and perhaps rightfully so), I find it frustrating that the philosophical/religious belief in a supreme designer is viewed as a lesser assumption than the belief in no designer.

      I think that the debate about ID/Creationism/etc. being included alongside evolutionary theory in schools is important, but irrelevant to me personally. My biggest beef is the lack of respect from both camps, whenever a "reasonable exchange of ideas" takes place. The evolutionists are all satan's spawn, out to steal our children's faith. And the ID/creationists are all fundy cultists, driven by their exclusivist faith to force their dated beliefs on the public. I'm tired of open discussions being soured by thinly veiled insults and outright, unjustified arrogance.
    61. Re:intelegant design != God by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      The gag is that, to get it taught in school, they desperately refrain from it being the Judeo-Christian-Islamic God. They will never say 'God', because their entire premise is that this is some non-theistic 'scientific theory', instead of what it is, an attempt to teach the existence of God in school.

      You can have fun with this. When they bring up ID, assert there's absolutely no evidence of aliens and thus their theory that benvolent aliens guided evolution is silly. They'll be startled, and then either claim that it was God, thus showing everyone what they're trying to do, or catch on, and not say anything, at which point you can keep talking about 'their aliens'.

      Or, like I suggested on K5, agree with them, that our children should be taught the truth that the world's development has been guided by Parusha, the spirit of the universe, and that life was created when it broke up. (Disclaimer: I don't actually know the Hindu creation story that well, so if someone knows it better and can correct me, feel free.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    62. Re:intelegant design != God by brandre · · Score: 1

      Follow this logic proof.

      Premise....
      intelegant design != God

      intelegant is correctly spelled intelligent.

      the original poster is intelegant.

      The meaning of intelegant is ambiguous...

    63. Re:intelegant design != God by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      It never fails to amaze me how many Christians believe that the Bible must be taken literally while Christ taught many of his lessons by telling symbolic stories.

      Wait, wait, wait...

      So you're saying the Kingdom of Heaven isn't literally the estate of a rich guy who is going to give us some form of ancient currency for us to invest while he's visiting in another land?

      Great. Now I've got to completely redo my Heavenly Investment Portfolio.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    64. Re:intelegant design != God by orim · · Score: 1

      I just love the way you religious people are willing to call anything "God" just to be able to say he exists. I believe he exists, let me find the most convoluted set of explanations to explain what god really is, though I really don't have the first clue about it.
      Ugh.
      So according to your theory, God is what made the big bang happen? Because there has to be a "first".
      Well, who says there has to be a first? I personally like the "Rama" theory, which I first read in the Asimov's Rama trilogy (or quadralogy, whatever). In it, universe is a constantly contracting and expanding thing... it's a perpetual loop, there's a big bang, universe expands, then contracts into one point, then big bang again, then expansion, contraction. Just like you can say there always was a god, always will be a god, why can't you just say there always was a universe, and always will be a universe, always with randomness involved?

      And call it a day. No supernatural explanations involved.

      --
      "If you could only see what I've seen with your eyes..." - Roy Batty
    65. Re:intelegant design != God by alienw · · Score: 1

      First, it can only be called a theory in the most colloquial sense. Unlike the theory of evolution, ID is not a theory in the scientific sense. Theories have to be supported by hard evidence. Don't put ID on an equal footing with scientific theories, because it isn't one of them.

      Second, the theory of evolution does not have "holes" or "flaws" as fundies might want you to think. We might not know everything as precisely as we would like, but there is no evidence which contradicts it.

    66. Re:intelegant design != God by nysus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You see, there's this theory that when you put your tooth under your pillow, you'll get money from the tooth fairy. It's a perfectly valid theory, right? After all, you aren't able to disprove this theory, are you? Can you find a way to disprove the existence of the tooth fairy?

      Well, The reason not to believe in ID is the same reason for not believing in the tooth fairy. There is absolutely no evidence for the tooth fairy's existence and there are much better explanations for how the money got under your pillow. Just because you can't disprove the tooth fairy theory, doesn't make it a viable option.

      --

      ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

    67. Re:intelegant design != God by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Much much simpler. Having a designer creates a whole universe of questions that we cannot even start asking. Energy + time creates its own questions but we can use logic to deduce how the thing went down. Having a god is way more difficult for understanding the universe than not having one.

    68. Re:intelegant design != God by roastedMnM · · Score: 1

      Thank you. It never fails to amaze me how many [Atheists/whatever] believe that the Bible must be taken [figuratively] while [the Bible] 'teaches' [in] many [different ways and that the]... lessons ... [using] symbolic stories [are not the only genre of literature used.]

    69. Re:intelegant design != God by Mindbridge · · Score: 1

      To quote the grandparent:

      > Evolution is falsifiable, intelligent design (ID) is not

      Are you saying this is not correct? Because if it is, then ID is clearly not science as we know it, but masquerades as one.

      If the statement is invalid and ID is science however, then you can surely write down tests that we could perform and they would tell us whether ID is correct or not?

    70. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really should read at a lower threshold. Your parent poster wasn't replying to you.

    71. Re:intelegant design != God by theguyfromsaturn · · Score: 1

      Exactly. By the way, most religions (Christian and none Christian alike) do seem to accept evolution. A number of Christian denominatios take the text of the Genesis as an allegory that should not be taken literally. They usually recognise that biblical texts must be interpreted.

      For a more detailed description of the official position of different religions on the topic of Evolution, I recommend reading the following page: http://academic.regis.edu/mghedott/evolut.htm

      --
      I like my dinosaurs feathery, and my pterosaurs hairy (or is it pycnofibery?)
    72. Re:intelegant design != God by roman_mir · · Score: 2, Informative

      As I already answered in another thread having a god that we cannot even start to comprehend is much much more difficult in terms of explanation how things work than not having a god and simply using logic and observation to deduce that energy+time will be enough to create what we see in the universe.

      It is worth noting, however, that science has not yet witnessed evolution in action. Until it does, evolution will continue to be no less a theory than creation. - that is just wrong. Scientists as well as non-scientists witness evolution every day. Every time a germ mutates to offset our attempts to destroy a germ we witness evolution. Every time a fetus is created from a couple of cells we can witness evolution of the fetus. We can even direct evolution in our science labs and create mutants by changing environment of their habitat or by playing directly with their genes. That for the first sentence that I quoted.

      The second sentence is completely without merit though. Evolution is about an infinite number of times more of a theory than creation will ever be. What I mean is that evolution is a scientific theory while creation is merely a philosophycal discussion without any merit of a real scientific theory. Look up what a scientific theory means one of these days.

    73. Re:intelegant design != God by Tassach · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Cancer: The problem there is, evolution doesn't optimize for the effeciency of individuals, but of the species as a whole. It's very possible that the flaw that allows for cancer (which seems to be present throughout most mammalian life) has other benefits.
      Not necessarily. Cancer is largely irrelevant to (and immune from) evoloutionary forces because it typically does not affect creatures until after they are past breeding age. From an evolutionary standpoint, once you have passed on your genes and ensured the survival of your progeny, you are effectively irrelevant.

      The only evolutionary argument I can see for cancer or other late-life diseases is that an early death after the breeding/childrearing years gives the species a survival advantage by reducing competition for scarce resources. A population that dies young might have an evoloutionary advantage over one with better longevity: because short life allows the environment to sustain a larger population of breeders and juveniles, the short-lived population would be able to out-breed the long-lived one.

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    74. Re:intelegant design != God by roastedMnM · · Score: 1

      Your points are well made though I may disagree with them; however, I wonder about this statement: "The Bible is not a ... history... book" What do you consider the books of Joshua through Esther? Do they just claim to tell history (and sometime boring history) just to be parable?

    75. Re:intelegant design != God by nickos · · Score: 1

      "it could be alians"

      Hmm, interesting idea... Now, if you don't mind, I've got to finish designing this fjord.

    76. Re:intelegant design != God by jcdenhartog · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hmmm... so how do you know that your whole salvation is not a parable?... and how are we going to determine what in the Bible is a parable and what is not?

      How about: When Jesus taught in parables, it was obvious that he was doing so, such as "And he spake this parable..." (Luke 18:9, 5:36, 6:39, 8:4; Mark 12:1, etc.)... and how about Mark 4:34: "But without a parable spake he not unto them: and when they were alone, he expounded all things to his disciples"... sounds to me like he often spoke to large crowds in parables, but explained what he meant by the parable later. Why? Matthew 11:25 and Luke 10:21 might give you some answer.

      If you make the decision about what to take literally (i.e., not Genesis 1), you might as well throw out the whole Bible as open to whatever interpretation you see fit (i.e., evolution)

      Besides, are you denying that God could create the world in 7 days... or do you prefer to 'reduce' your god to evolution?

      Don't give me that line about... what about the fossils, and the carbon-dating age, etc., etc. Do you know what a 'brand-new' world would look like? God could create the world in whatever state he desired.

      "Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men; and the weakness of God is stronger than men." - I Corinthians 1:25

      "But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty;" - I Corinthians 1:27

      --
      "The majority is always wrong; the minority is rarely right." - Henrik Ibsen
    77. Re:intelegant design != God by Fished · · Score: 4, Insightful
      This is one of things that makes me think ID is more faith than application of the scientific technique. Since you have a background in theology maybe you could answer a question I had posted elsewhere in this story: You mention a single personal god, but Hinduism has multiple gods. Are you then referring to ID as a Christian/Muslim (since these religions have 1 God) theory? Or is it religion independent?
      First of all, I wouldn't call my musings ID. While I've read a few books on ID, I'm by no means an advocate for it. As I've mentioned in another post, I'm comfortable enough with evolution that it simply doesn't matter to me.

      Having said that, I think that someone from a Hindu or Buddhist background would probably be more comfortable with Evolution than ID, since these faiths don't tend to emphasize the creative aspect of God. In Christian thought, the aspect of God that is most important is his role in the creation of the universe - if you will, the Christian God is a bit more transcendant than the Hindu gods individually. Hinduism (as I understand it) only approaches the Christian notion of "God" through pantheism, conglomerating all the "gods" into "God". (Qualification: I'm not particularly knowledgable of mainstream Hinduism, so would welcome correction on this point.)

      But as I have said, the biggest drawback of ID is that, as far as I know, it does'nt follow the scientific method, but feel free to correct me with some examples.
      Well, I'm not particularly qualified in science. However, the book I found most convincing from a scientific perspective was "Darwin's Black Box" by Michael Behe. Basically, his argument is that, at the micro level, many cellular functionas are irreducibly complex - that they require a host of different parts to work, none of which do anything independent of the rest. So, how would all these parts have evolved gradually when each of them was useless without the others?

      Here's the thing. Behe (and most other true ID types) are not attacking evolution per se. He is attacking the notion that natural selection alone is a sufficient explanation for Life As We Know It. And he is founding that argument in scientific fact, asking the very legitimate question of how certain structures at the micro level could happen naturally. What I find unhelpful is the ranting and raving that goes on in the scientific community that refuses to actually address the arguments in anything resembling a systematic way.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    78. Re:intelegant design != God by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      The problem with your answer to the grandparent post is that you missed his point.

      Creationists do anything to not say directly what they want to say - that their 'theory' is just a religion based on believe in a god. So they came up with an idea of creation without necessary involvement of god. They are saying: it could be anything - a bunch of aliens for example that brought life to this miserable planet.

      But the grandparent post just noticed that by saying that it could be a bunch of aliens and not necessarily a god that started life here makes the explanation more complicated than necessary. If it is a bunch of aliens and not a god, who then created those aliens assuming the aliens are not gods? Simply pushing creation to some race of aliens does not bring anything valuable to a discussion. So what if it were aliens that say brought life to this planet, who created the aliens? At some point the discussion will return to either evolution - ours or alien evolution or to admission that what creationists are really after is bringing back the notion of religion and saying that everything is made by a god, because if creationists deny evolution on this planet than they also have to deny evolution on other planets that created aliens. Because if they do not deny evolution for aliens there is no reason for them to complicate things so much (Occam's Razor) and just not admit that evolution created life on earth.

      So by the nature of the people who come up with these convoluted explanations to origins of life it is clear that at the end they are basically some religious folks who really believe in god or pretend to believe in god but for reasons of confusing the general public and trying to diminish the effect of science on that same general public (basically fear of losing control over population,) they pretend that they are not simply pushing a religion but something like a science.

      This of-course makes these people more dangerous and evil than a normal religion.

    79. Re:intelegant design != God by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      intelligent design (ID) is not (or at least I haven't seen anyone show how it is falsifiable)

      That doesn't prove anything. Think Simpson+stone+tigers.

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    80. Re:intelegant design != God by nickos · · Score: 1

      "the world's development has been guided by Parusha, the spirit of the universe, and that life was created when it broke up."

      or even better, talk about Audhumla from Norse mythology.

      Audumla was the primeval cow who came into existence at the beginning of time through shaping of the melted Ginnungagap ice. She lived off the Niflheim ice, licking pieces of salt and hoar frost as the ice melted upon contact with the hot air from Muspell. The frost giant Ymir lived off of her milk.

      While licking the ice, Audumla revealed the shape of a man underneath; she eventually licked him free. This was the god Buri, who later fathered Bor, father of Odin, Vili and Ve.


      Cool eh? - a creation theory involving a space cow. Not sure if it counts as "Intelligent" Design though :)

    81. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's accurate to describe oneself as a Christian if they believe in that one whole Christ part, you know....

    82. Re:intelegant design != God by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      No, you misread the grandparent. He said that Occam's Razor needs to be used to reduce the number of elements in this equation: life was created by god OR life was created in a process we call evolution. He says Occam's Razor needs to be applied to reduce the number of elements in this equation to the minimum possible. If aliens brought life to this planet the question still remains: were aliens produced by god or did evolution create the aliens? Creationists will say: some other aliens produced the aliens that brought life to earth, thus multiplying the elements in the original formula. The grandparent just said don't do it. Don't multiply the unnecessary elements in the formula, go to the bottom of the formula and ask the creationists this question: how was the original life produced in this universe? If they say: aliens brought it, then you will see what is wrong with their 'scientific' approach. At the end creationists are just another bunch of religious people who believe it was all a god's doing but they want to fight religion so they will not admit to this but will insist that they have a 'theory' worthy of being called a scientific theory without a shred of evidence or logical thinking.

    83. Re:intelegant design != God by Ledskof · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because there is nothing remotely close to proof for ID. The "evidence" is only assumed to be evident. ID does not help us build a larger model of understanding of the universe. It actually impedes the larger model. It also isn't this unspecific, religion unbiased ID that was mentioned. The ID talked about in schools is very specifically Christian.

      The idea of ID originated in a religious mind for the religious reasons of combating evolution founded work and to attempt to explain the origin conflicts in Christianity. On the other hand, the evolution founded work was done to further our understanding of the world around us. Of course it extends to our understanding of the entire universe.

      --
      This is my sig. The post is over.
    84. Re:intelegant design != God by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      These people PANIC because they feel the THEORY of EVOLUTION is being taught as FACT. So long as teachers are doing their job RIGHT (which is rare in public school), EVOLUTION is being taught as a TESTED THEORY, that has SCIENTIFIC backing.

      I am a Christian. What I always believed, and I still do, that while evolution theory and Darwin's works should be taught in schools (we could go into discussions about the school level though) for reasons like history, some undeniable proofs, etc., religion and religious believes should only be "taught" in schools as part of history lessons. Why ? Because I feel that while the evolution theory is part of our [i.e. this planet's] overall culture, hell even everyday life as bilogy, and general knowledge of different religions are also, specific religions and religious issues do not belong to schools. Our religion&faith and passing it over to our children is a matter of a smaller culture, family, community, sometimes nation. I firmly believe it's my job, and the church's job to introduce my children to our religion.

      I personally feel that all sides of the story should be told and heard. What would make me especially outrageous is when they didn't taught evolution theory in schools. Well, not that I wouldn't tell about it to my children, but there could be the possibility that others didn't.

      Well, enough of my blatter.

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    85. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      All I know is that when eternity comes around and God dies, he's gonna have a lot of explaining to do to his God. And if God's God is just, God is gonna rot in his God's hell. Which is gonna suck, because an eternity of eternities is a long time. I mean face it, your God is a psychopathic jokester who brings out the worst in people.

    86. Re:intelegant design != God by Fished · · Score: 1
      Well, who says there has to be a first? I personally like the "Rama" theory, which I first read in the Asimov's Rama trilogy (or quadralogy, whatever). In it, universe is a constantly contracting and expanding thing... it's a perpetual loop, there's a big bang, universe expands, then contracts into one point, then big bang again, then expansion, contraction. Just like you can say there always was a god, always will be a god, why can't you just say there always was a universe, and always will be a universe, always with randomness involved? And call it a day. No supernatural explanations involved.
      This reminds me of an old story from Hegels, when he was ranting on about his evolutionary theory of the origins of religion. A student confronted him, saying, "But, Herr Professor, the facts are otherwise!" Hegels famously responded, "So much the worse for the facts."

      In this case, I can only say, "the facts are otherwise":

      However, recent experimental evidence (namely the observation of distant supernovae as standard candles, and the well-resolved mapping of the cosmic microwave background) have - to most scientists' considerable surprise - shown that the expansion of the universe is not being slowed down by gravity, but instead, accelerating, suggesting that the universe will not end with a "Big Crunch", but will instead expand forever. (The evidence of an accelerating universe is considered conclusive by most cosmologists since 2002.)
      From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Crunch. Cheers!
      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    87. Re:intelegant design != God by drgonzo59 · · Score: 1

      You are right, there are historical references in it and many historical facts but it should not be viewed primarily as a history text book I think. For example a lot of lineages (so and so begot so an so) are important as they establish a link between a patriarch and a descendant or for example it establishes that legally Jesus was of the house of David. It doesn't give exact dates though and it doesn't give details and other additional support. For example many say that Job never existed. The claim there is that a man of such riches that would have so much happen to him would have probably be recorded some place by someone else. But nothing has been found to support his existence. That means that he might not have existed as an actual person (I don't know if I personally believe that but that's what I've heard), so the story might have been a parable. The story about Job might not have necessary historical support but has a lot to say about faith, adversity and in general about God's relation with humanity, and that is why it is a part of the Bible.

    88. Re:intelegant design != God by mrgrey · · Score: 0, Troll

      The plant did not change itself to become immune to the effects of round-up. The strong plants survived and the week plants died. The same thing happens with humans and disease. People with strong immune systems live and ones with weak immune systems die.

      Most ID people will argue this fact. Evolution (in the sense that organisms change/adapt) is as much a theory (or religeon) as ID. Niether has been observed.

      --
      -Tolerate my intolerance
    89. Re:intelegant design != God by bkruiser · · Score: 1

      "There's no observable current phenomena which can illustrate that process" I think you need to read the book in the article. It isn't about a religion, it isn't about a story. ID is about a beginning, was the beginning inert or active. That is the question. If the beginning was an active participant that set boundrys rules or what have you then, ID is your belief. If you believe the rules are themselves the beginning, you are evolutionist.

    90. Re:intelegant design != God by databyss · · Score: 1

      Genesis 1:16 And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also.

      I have to assume this book refers to the sun and the moon, yet the moon isn't a light. It's only a reflector of the suns light. I guess when god was telling his biographers the story he forgot about that.

      I also like how the stars seem like an after thought... god was chilling and thinking... "Man, this night thing is lame... I better make it a little cooler. BAM! Stars! Dude, I rock! I guess I better go make some people and give them free will so they can betray me. Oh sweet idea... I can act all suprised when they do too!"

      --
      Hmmm witty sig or funny sig? Maybe elitest techy sig!
    91. Re:intelegant design != God by geekwithsoul · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ah, a sufferer of the "every issue has two sides and each deserves to be heard" sickness. In a past life, you were probably one of the people saying "Well, the Earth could be flat. Let's not presume we know either way." Or perhaps "It is possible that she's a witch, so let us burn her at the stake just to be sure."

      Your analogy of the fly and the car is wonderfully inept. To make it apply, you'd have to have a fly that could reason, conduct experiments, and have higher order thought. In which case, yes, it could know how a car runs.

      Humans don't know everything, but we have developed theories that explain pretty much everything about the physics of day to day life, and have a good handle on such esoterica as the age of the universe, the composition and behavior of subatomic particles, and the speed of light.

      There is nothing to "teach" about intelligent design, unless you think belief and faith can (or should) be taught.

      Let me guess, you were home-schooled, weren't you?

    92. Re:intelegant design != God by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      ...which is widely regarded as the most reliable translation available, assembled from the oldest available texts and translated directly to modern English from their original languages under the scrutiny of a massive world-wide council of Churches.

      Fascinating. Simply fascinating. I never realized that something as simple as a bible can be marketed.


      Ther are infinte arguments of this right christian and religious affection in Your Majesty; but none is more forcible to declare it to others than the vehement and perpetuated desire of accomplishing and publishing of this work, which now with all humility we present unto Your Majesty. For when Your Highness had once out of deep judgement apprehended how convenient it was, that out of the Original Sacred Tongues, together with comparing of the labours, both in our own, and other foreign Languages, of many worthy men who went before us, there should be one more exact Translation of the holy Scriptures into the English Tongue; Your Majesty did never desist to urge and to excite those to whom it was commended, that the work might be hastened, and that the business might be expedited in so decent a manner, as a matter of such importance might justly require.


      Apparently, such blurbs have been standard practice in the industry since 1611, or so.

    93. Re:intelegant design != God by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      John Paul II, the late pope, explicitely said that he believes in evolution, it is in no way contradictory to the Bible, and that most likely the act of creation happened at the point of the Big Bang.

      So, if even their boss is against them, how can those "christians" spread their Lysenko-like propaganda?

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    94. Re:intelegant design != God by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      From an evolutionary standpoint, once you have passed on your genes and ensured the survival of your progeny, you are effectively irrelevant.

      I dispute this, you can always assist those who haven't passed their genes on yet, which explains motherhood.

      There's also a negative effect on those that have yet to breed: you're consuming resources that they need, which may be part of the reason cancer exists, to help shorten lifespans and leave more resources for breeders.

    95. Re:intelegant design != God by seweso · · Score: 0

      Let me tell you a joke:

      If you find randomly scattered leaves in a forrest you call it chance.

      If you find neatly stacked leaves in a forrest you know someone or something created it.

      Then how can people look at the world and not see it?

      I must say i do have trouble with the evolution theory, but it really is a theory. And when there is proof that contradicts that theory you all just joke over it.

    96. Re:intelegant design != God by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll start by saying I'm a Christian who thinks speciation is an observable fact and than evolutionary theory explains the observation quite well, just so you know where I'm coming from.

      Intellegent design does not mean it was God who did it.

      ID makes zero sense unless the Intelligent Designer is a supernatural entity, a god if not the Christian God. Pretending otherwise, particularly when the advocate is a Christian who wants ID to be taught in schools, strikes me as the kind of disengeniousness that goes against what I've been taught about our religion. I have yet to meet a Christian ID proponent who wasn't implicitly assuming that the Designer was the God of Abraham.

      It could be God, it could be alians,

      How do aliens make any sense at all as the "Designers"? How did the aliens arise and become intelligent? If aliens could develop, become intelligent and powerful enough to traverse the galaxy and create new life on a lifeless planet, wouldn't that be evidence that intelligent life like us could have also arisen without any help from a designer? Saying "aliens could have done it" contradicts the fundamental premise of ID, which is that intelligent life couldn't have risen on its own!

      No, ID makes no sense unless "Intelligent Designer" is a synonym for God. ID proponents use "Designer" as a synonym for God, but are hoping that the rational non-Christian listener won't notice and accept it as a valid theory. It is that duplicity which pisses me off about ID.

      Now if you'll come out and admit that ID = God, then I'll say that I believe completely in ID, I agree whole-heartedly that God is the Intelligent Designer, and that I believe God used the laws of physics (which He created) as His CAD program to design us.

      But at that point you've done nothing more than say "Christianity and evolutionary theory are compatible", which I agree with, but doesn't motivate any changes to school curriculum. Since changing school curriculum to stop the spread of non-religious scientific thought is what all this nonsese is about, fundie ID proponents will not admit that ID = GOD.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    97. Re:intelegant design != God by geekwithsoul · · Score: 1
      Don't attack it based on how religious organizations use the theory but on it's merits

      I love how you assume it has merits! An obsolutely unprovable belief being passed off as scientific theory is, by its very nature, unsuitable to discuss in the same breath as a scientific theory that has undergone rigourous testing and has been proven again and again with all the evidence we can find.

      Also, evolution isn't based on science, it IS science. And it doesn't matter that you say "my point is, Integgegant Design != God," because whether its God, aliens, or a super-intelligent shade of blue, it's unprovable, and thus not science but belief. You are of course free to believe whatever you want. In fact, if you give me your name and address, I'll send you some information on how you can believe all sorts of things for a nominal fee.

    98. Re:intelegant design != God by revery · · Score: 1

      I think what you have demonstrated here, is that the greatest societal power one can have is a control of language.

      --
      You have taken the sword of language and neatly divided the world. The only question that remains is: did the world notice at all?

    99. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The strong plants survived and the week plants died.

      Oh wow! Why did nobody ever think of that before... oh wait, Darwin did.

    100. Re:intelegant design != God by cynic+pi · · Score: 1

      However, before all this, there had to be ONE thing to be "first". Occam's razor requires that that one infinitely improbable thing that was "first" be the thing most able to account for everything else. And I am convinced that the best account for this is a single, personal God.



      Why does everyone seem to feel the need to have a first. Many people, myself included, have no problem seeing the universe exist forever, hell conservation of energy dictates this, but for some reason, this number drops significantly when it comes to always having existed, there doesn't have to be a first. If the universe can exist infinetly, then why can't it have existed for infinity.
      We seem bound to our concept of time as being 1-directional, and since most things we know have been created, mostly by us(humans not geeks), then we assume the universe had to have a beginning.
      Is there someone more enlightened then me who could expand on this, or am I just howling at the moon, in which case a rebuttal would be helpful.
    101. Re:intelegant design != God by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

      Intellegent design does not mean it was God who did it. Does not say who did it just that some intellegance did it. This is a viable theory. Don't attack it based on how religious organizations use the theory but on it's merits

      "Intelligent design" [ID] has been judged on its merits, and it fails as a scientific theory.

      ID does not qualify as a scientific theory: there is no possible way of proving it false. There are many ways that the theory of evolution could be proven false-- for instance, any reproducible example of spontaneous generation would invalidate evolution. However the nature of ID is such that there is no scientific method of testing whether it is correct; it cannot be submitted to science's empirical processes.

      Some expressions of ID are excellent examples of scholastic reasoning and are well worth looking at if you have an appreciation for the aesthetics of reasoning. But that should NOT be done in science curricula, where the scientific method is used exclusively, even when it results in unreasonable facts (there are a multitude to deal with right now in cosmology and quantum physics). I am not opposed to seeing ID presented in the schools in an appropriate way, but suggesting that scholastic reasoning is equivalent to the empiricism of the scientific method destroys the purpose of education. It would be like trying to teach high schoolers how to do good jazz by studying the painting techniques of the Dutch Masters.

    102. Re:intelegant design != God by NinjaFarmer · · Score: 1

      I hope you realize that you just argued that the theory of evolution is wrong by describing the theory exactly. Using a textbook example as a counter example is really counterproductive for an argument.

    103. Re:intelegant design != God by greenhide · · Score: 1

      In the end, my point is, Integgegant Design != God. It could be God, it could be alians, it could be somethign we havn't thought of.

      I think this is, perhaps, the biggest point. Most Americans are, I think, largely secular -- they might go to church once or twice a year but in their day to day living they have no problems with lying, cheating, coveting, killing, stealing, etc. -- all the things that the bible explicitly prohibits. Few of them tithe, almost none of them follow the rules set forth in the bible and with the possible exception of a fierce condemnation of homosexuality most of them couldn't care less about behaviors forbidden in the bible at all.

      However, they don't like evolution. I'm not sure why; in "The Language Instinct" Steven Pinker argues that many people still hold fast to the old medieval view of the "great chain of being", in which creatures have an ever increasing level of "greatness" or complexity which can be described in a simple line. From that standpoint, it's difficult to understand evolution at all.

      So people are more willing to entertain the idea that aliens (and where did they come from?) came down to earth and designed everything. The percentage of Americans who don't believe in "pure" evolution is very high -- something like 80% of Americans believe that humans were either created or nudged along somehow by an outside force. That's much higher than the percentage of Americans who actually are religious.

      Americans just don't like evolution. I can't speak for the rest of the world, though.

      --
      Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
    104. Re:intelegant design != God by rakjr · · Score: 1

      The problem with Intelligent Design "theory" is that it's not really a theory.

      There's no description of the process, as there is with evolution.


      The description of the process is - an outside force acted producing the ordered design. That may seem a bit brief, but it is the same theory regarding some underwater rock formations of the coast of an island. It looks like the carvings in the rock are ordered, so a theory is that at one point in time the rock formation was not under water and that people carved the rocks. This is only a theory because the rocks in question can also naturally break and arrive at the same state.

      A later individual stated: A theory is a hypothesis that has survived experimental testing.

      If there is a test of macro evolution that is successful, I would like to know about it. If there is a test of spot evolution that is successful, I would like to know about it. I do not see evidence that natural selection has removed people with vision problems from the gene pool. It has also done nothing about ugly or stupid people. In other words, the testing issue has been weak on both sides. Those in the side of ID will state that the testing, in part, is showing the consistency of design within related things, ie, dna within animals.

      If the ID was done by something that is external to our realm of existence (ie a 3-D entity acting upon a 2-D) what is to say that our concept of creation/design and existence has any relevance in the other realm of existance?

      Just because something is potentially beyond our scope of comprehension does not mean it does not exist. I would also be interesting in hearing which religion they think is being backed by the state? Based on my understanding there are people with many religions that believe in ID and others within those same religions who do not believe in ID (including the fundamentalist crowd).

      --
      In a place beyond time and space, in a land far better than this, look for me there...
    105. Re:intelegant design != God by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      We are talking about Darwin's Theory vs. a whole slew of other ideas including intelligent design.

      Only one of which is a testable scientific theory. The rest are, at best, wild-ass guesses with no evidence and no way to prove them true or false and have no place in a classroom. As far as science is concerned, evolution is it.

    106. Re:intelegant design != God by Politburo · · Score: 1

      However, before all this, there had to be ONE thing to be "first". Occam's razor requires that that one infinitely improbable thing that was "first" be the thing most able to account for everything else. And I am convinced that the best account for this is a single, personal God.

      Occam's razor doesn't "require" anything. It's not a law, or theory, or anything. It's just a guideline that states in the absence of any other data, the most simple explanation is likely the correct one. From the wiki article: "It is important to note that [Occam's] is a heuristic argument that does not necessarily give correct answers; it is a loose guide to choosing the scientific hypothesis which (currently) contains the least number of unproven assumptions. Often, several hypotheses are equally "simple" and Occam's Razor does not express any preference in such cases."

    107. Re:intelegant design != God by Autumnmist · · Score: 1
      However, the book I found most convincing from a scientific perspective was "Darwin's Black Box" by Michael Behe. Basically, his argument is that, at the micro level, many cellular functionas are irreducibly complex - that they require a host of different parts to work, none of which do anything independent of the rest.


      Only problem is that Behe's examples of "irreducibly complex" systems have been shown time and time again that they are not so. See here for a great scientific analysis of one of his favorite "examples" of IC systems.

      So, how would all these parts have evolved gradually when each of them was useless without the others?


      Because not all the parts evolved at the same time and many if not all of them evolved from already-existing proteins and were USEFUL in another system. E.g. humans have fairly complex eyes, but the light-sensing photoreceptors in some worms are quite useful to those organisms without being part of a human-like eye. Human have identical cells that compose part of the human eye. Proteins can be adapated for other uses, especially when a second copy results from gene duplication, allowing the second copy to mutate and change without destroying the system the first participates in.
      --
      --- "Many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view." ~ Ben Kenobi, 'Return of the Jedi'
    108. Re:intelegant design != God by Sique · · Score: 1

      First: If you read the article from Wired, you will notice, that resistance against RoundUp (glyphosate) is not normal within coca plants. There was a mutation somewhere, which made some coca plants immune. While this was no selection advantage in a normal jungle, it became one as soon as the DEA started with RoundUp attacks against coca crops. So a certain trait of coca plants will die out (those without mutation), and only those plants with glyphosate immunity will survive.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    109. Re:intelegant design != God by lambadomy · · Score: 1

      Real quick...

      Natural Selection is not the only mechanisim of evolution. Some other examples would be Mutation, diploidy, genetic drift, and genetic recombination during meiosis.

      Behe's entire argument can be reduced to "So far as I know, science cannot explain these structures, so I'm guessing someone must have designed it". It isn't hard to look for rebuttals to that argument and his whole book. Sure, it's well written, and has a lot of good information, but Behe's lack of imagination is not a rebuttal of evolution. Quick googles for information about what Behe cannot explain will show you that a) a lot of it can be explained, and b) people actually are trying to figure out answers to what cannot, instead of waving their hands and saying god did it. Part b) is really the most important one, because it gets to the crux of the problem with ID - it isn't science. It isn't falsifiable or testable in any way. It's hand waving and assumption making. It's fine if you don't really care to find the real answer, or if you came up with actual evidence of a creator, but the evidence is always "well, no one can answer X question to my personal satisfaction, so it was made". I'm sorry, but that doesn't fly. Even if God or something did make it all, until someone finds actual evidence of this, there is no reason to postulate it in a SCIENCE class because it is not science.

    110. Re:intelegant design != God by downwa · · Score: 1

      You sound very angry.

      Okay, I'll bite on the last one. Let's say we don't stop teaching evolution, but at least allow an alternate view, of the best of modern biology, to be presented. Here's a noted biologist, former atheist, who became a creationist based on the evidence he discovered:

      http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_main.h tm

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    111. Re:intelegant design != God by eth1 · · Score: 1

      "Personally, I don't think either theory runs afoul of Hebrew/Christian concepts of God. After all, the scriptures don't say: "And The Lord made light." The say: "And The Lord said, 'let there be light.'" It almost makes it sound like the creation of the universe was pretty much the tacit act of allowing it to come into existance."

      I think you're definately on the right track here. Take Genesis 1:20-21 (from KJV):

      20 And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven.
      21 And God created great whales, and every living creature that moveth, which the waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that it was good.

      God said, "Let the waters bring forth..." and then goes on to say "...God created [stuff]...which the waters brought forth..."

      To me, that's very open to interperetation, and could easily mesh with evolution. Also, if you take it as given that God is omniscient, is it too much of a stretch to say that he could set up the entire universe to proceed acording to plan before He 'pushed the button' on the Big Bang?

      There is still one problem, though... Genesis says that plants came before the sun and moon, which is kind of hard to reconcile with any kind of logic...

    112. Re:intelegant design != God by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "I'll start by saying I am a christian so you know where I stand"

      Yes, that you blindly believe in fairy tales. Not a good way to start.

      "In the same way evolution, based on the science, has many holes and flaws. I'm not saying it isn't true but as it is stated and follwed, there are many flaws. But, for all I know they could be flaws in our logic as people"

      Name them. While I know what flaws evolution has, I doubt very seriously if you've ever taken the time to learn them. Prove me wrong please.

    113. Re:intelegant design != God by Tassach · · Score: 1
      you can always assist those who haven't passed their genes on yet
      What part of "ensured the survival of your progeny" didn't you understand?
      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    114. Re:intelegant design != God by katpants · · Score: 1

      having a god that we cannot even start to comprehend is much much more difficult in terms of explanation how things work than not having a god and simply using logic and observation to deduce that energy+time will be enough to create what we see in the universe.

      This is another case of the ambiguity of Occam's Razor that I was talking about before, though more eloquently stated than either of my examples.

      All I have to say to the rest of it is mutation != evolution. Evolution is a series of mutations which results in a new species. This has yet to be seen in nature.

    115. Re:intelegant design != God by indigeek · · Score: 1

      And I am convinced that the best account for this is a single, personal God.
      There is a slight problem with this. According to the laws of physics as we know it, nothing that happened before the big bang has any effect on the world today. So by your definition of god, god does not interfere with day to day activities of the world. Which possibly also means that you need not worship him.
      I'm sure none of the ID guys would like that either.

    116. Re:intelegant design != God by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      this is why you dont argue with christians.

      they have this internal "mouse trapped in a wheel" logic that you can never defeat. run, run little mouse - you must be on a road to somewhere since your running right?

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    117. Re:intelegant design != God by clem9796 · · Score: 1

      "Humanity as a whole, however, does." Thank you. Arguing these two sides, for me at least (agnostic is pushing it), requires proof from which to argue. I see no proof placed in front of me that lends itself to ID, creation, whatever the definition of the day is. I read of proof of older types of human all the time, evolution has at least provided some evidence of being correct whereas the bible must be taken as the only proof we have that God exists ans did in fact create us as we are.

      --
      IANALOOA
    118. Re:intelegant design != God by theguyfromsaturn · · Score: 1
      The plant did not change itself to become immune to the effects of round-up. The strong plants survived and the week plants died.

      Isn't that the basis of Darwinian evolution? At any one time there is a number of mutations that exist in different individuals of a species. Some of those mutations may provide advantages (or disadvantages) under given conditions. Under given conditions, a small percentage of the population having a specific mutation now become better suited to survive, and their proportion increases since they are better adapted at surviving those new conditions. Mutations occur ALL THE TIME.

      Darwinian Evolution does not cause changes in the individuals or species. Evolution weeds out the specimens that don't have the proper set of mutations for a given set of condition. Only with time and a cumulation of mutations throughout the generations do species differenciate.

      --
      I like my dinosaurs feathery, and my pterosaurs hairy (or is it pycnofibery?)
    119. Re:intelegant design != God by AnxiousMoFo · · Score: 1

      Seriously - you want me to believe that the simplest explanation is that sex, butterflies, and Picasso "just happened"???? I'm not there.

      The phrase "simplest explanation" can have two meanings: the phrase which is easiest to understand and uses the smallest number of words, or it can mean the explanation which assumes the least. "God made everything" is certainly simple in the first sense, but it's absolutely not simple in the latter sense. God is an omniscient, omnipotent, benevolent being existing outside of time and space, and, by the way, this being can't be detected by our senses or by scientific experiment. That's a mighty large assumption to make. In other words, it's faith.

    120. Re:intelegant design != God by tshak · · Score: 1

      What flaws do you find in evolution? ... Think about that 1 BILLION YEARS for life forms ...

      This is faith based science at its best. First, we have absolutely no proof that genetic mutation will create entirely new species (macroevolution), we have only observed small mutations within species (microevolution). The "well just give it umptillion amount of years and it will magically happen" is the worst thing that has happened to popular science. The entire theory is based upon error prone and unproven dating methods, as well as data extrapolations that would normally be thrown out if it were any other area of science. But, the religion that is Scientism hates Christianity so much (to an extent, I don't blame them) that they needed to come up with this logical but flawed story that we now teach as fact in our school system. Really, you're using statisical probablity to prove the origin of species. It's ludicrious.

      Please, for the love of science, do not pollute science because of your hate for Christians. Instead, simply admit that "we don't know, but here are the different theories that we're studying".

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    121. Re: intelegant design != God by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Intellegent design does not mean it was God who did it.

      So, where do you think the Intelligent Designer came from? Evolved or something?

      > This is a viable theory.

      No, it's utter bullshit masquerading as a theory.

      > In the same way evolution, based on the science, has many holes and flaws.

      Are you disputing the fact or the explanatory theory?

      Either way, what are the three biggest holes/flaws in the science?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    122. Re:intelegant design != God by lambadomy · · Score: 1

      Also false, there are many examples of new species arising due to evolutionary mechanisims.

      First, your definition is completely false. Evolution is not "a series of mutations which results in a new species". There are a lot of mechanisims other than mutation involved in evolution, such as natural selection, genetic drift, diploidy, etc.

      As for new species arising due to to evolutionary mechanisims, this has been observed in nature. here is a complete article about it. A simple example of this would be, from the article:

      While studying the genetics of the evening primrose, Oenothera lamarckiana, de Vries (1905) found an unusual variant among his plants. O. lamarckiana has a chromosome number of 2N = 14. The variant had a chromosome number of 2N = 28. He found that he was unable to breed this variant with O. lamarckiana. He named this new species O. gigas.

      Differen't chromosomes, can't interbreed - sounds like a new species to me. Admittedly none of them meet your personal definition of evolution, which requires mutation to be the only mechanisim, but luckily you just don't know what you're talking about.

    123. Re: intelegant design != God by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > an Intelligent Design theorist (and the only one I take particularly seriously is Behe)

      If Behe is the best of the lot, then they're in trouble: Behe is easily refuted. His argument relies on a non sequitur ("not evolution --> intelligent design") applied to a strawman version of evolution (evolution isn't the reverse of the process that breaks irreducibly complex stuff).

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    124. Re: intelegant design != God by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > sad part is i know a lot about evolution. a lot they don't teach in schools. i have read books on it, listened to speakers on it, had my questions answered on it, studdied it. I do know a lot. I know a lot that is not common knowledge.

      So, could you name the three most glaring occult flaws in evolution for us?

      > Why do you question ID but not allow for evolution to be questioned?

      Evolution has been under constant scrutiny for a century and a half.

      > Why does a discussion of ID never bring up the merits or science

      Because there are no merits or science. It's a pseudoscience ploy to give creationism respectability.

      It has been examined and found wanting. And like other forms of creationism, its proponents keep pushing it anyway.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    125. Re:intelegant design != God by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      But evolution talks about life on earth. Since you mention 'infinitely improbably', remember that on geological time scales, there is effectively infinite time for a avriety of molecular interactions. If life did arise from the development of self reproducing proteins (I'm surely using the wrong terminology here) it might be improbably, but given the time scales, not infinitely so.

      Also keep in mind that we are not talking just about billions of years but about billions^10 of potential places in the universe for these various "low-probability" events to occur. People are not around to bemoan the fact that these events didn't take occur in most other locations in the universe. There is nothing special about our little corner of the universe; it's just the fact that we happen to be here to witness it which makes it special to us, and we can also wonder about how astronomically impossible it is that the process that created us happened HERE, in this ONE AND ONLY place.

    126. Re:intelegant design != God by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Cancer is largely irrelevant to (and immune from) evoloutionary forces because it typically does not affect creatures until after they are past breeding age.

      Cancer really reflects a balance of competing selective forces. At the level of the organism, selection favors survival long enough to have a reasonable chance of propagating the genes. But individual cells are also subject to selection in the environment of the body for more rapid division. To slow down the "evolution" of cancer cells within the body, there are various safeguards to limit cell division. But these safeguards generally have costs to the organism, so selection at the level of the organism only favors strong enough safeguards to stave off cancer long enough to have a good chance of reproducing.

    127. Re:intelegant design != God by Jboy_24 · · Score: 1
      A later individual stated: A theory is a hypothesis that has survived experimental testing.


      If there is a test of macro evolution that is successful, I would like to know about it. If there is a test of spot evolution that is successful, I would like to know about it. I do not see evidence that natural selection has removed people with vision problems from the gene pool. It has also done nothing about ugly or stupid people. In other words, the testing issue has been weak on both sides. Those in the side of ID will state that the testing, in part, is showing the consistency of design within related things, ie, dna within animals.


      This is the perfect example of why ID is not a theory. You are arguing the merits of your hypothisis, mearly on the claim that your hypothisis doesn't NEED to survive expiramental testing because some other theory, in your opinion, didn't provide expiramental testing.

      That is not an answer, if ID is a scientific theory then it needs to survive on its own merits. It is not in a dicotimy with evolution, where as weaknesses in one is support for the other. A weakness in evolution IS NOT support for ID. Only evidence of an inteligent designer actively working is evidence for ID.
    128. Re: intelegant design != God by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > If you find randomly scattered leaves in a forrest you call it chance. If you find neatly stacked leaves in a forrest you know someone or something created it. Then how can people look at the world and not see it?

      FYI, no one denies that the universe isn't a completely random place.

      What scientists do, when they observe something that doesn't look like it's purely random, is try to find an explanation for it. Hence theories... such as the ToE.

      > I must say i do have trouble with the evolution theory

      Could you enumerate the problems with it?

      > but it really is a theory

      Indeed. And 'theory' is as good as it gets in the empirical sciences.

      > And when there is proof that contradicts that theory you all just joke over it.

      Why do you consider the discovery of soft tissues in a fossil 'proof' that contradicts the theory of evolution? Are you aware that the tissues haven't even been identified yet?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    129. Re:intelegant design != God by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      After all, the scriptures don't say: "And The Lord made light." The say: "And The Lord said, 'let there be light.'" It almost makes it sound like the creation of the universe was pretty much the tacit act of allowing it to come into existance.

      Exactly--the Bible thumpers should execute a strategic retreat back to the Big Bang, because science has no better explanation of that event than religious types do. However, if science defeats the religious types every step of the way all the way back to the big bang, then even lay people are going to start seeing a pattern about the religious types always being wrong.

    130. Re:intelegant design != God by TCQuad · · Score: 1

      Let's make this real simple:

      Google: Define God.

      The first entry makes mention of this, as have most theology and mythology books I have read. God is the name given to the creator. That is the definition of "God". The one who created (and usually, rules) the universe. You cannot under any circumstances say "someone" created the universe, because, by definition, if someone created the universe, that someone must be God.

    131. Re:intelegant design != God by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      My only problem with the theory of evolution is that it states that evolution is random. It seems to me that one of the first things that organisms would develop after sexual reproduction would be the ability to make choices of mates based on whose traits combined with one's own would offer the best chances for survival. This may be why we are attracted to some individuals and not others.

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    132. Re:intelegant design != God by JasontheMason · · Score: 1
      That's just because they're not being honest. They all actually believe God did it. There's simply no other reason to adopt such a hackneyed theory to the extent that you feel you have to prevent eveloution from being taught in schools.

      I disagree. I believe that the term ID is used to differentiate between an "Intelligent Designer" (which some might call God) and God, as in the one who created the world, Adam and Eve, led the Isrealites out of Egypt, etc. I realize that not all people think of it this way, but that separation makes more sense. You will find plenty of people who believe in a God but not the Biblical account of him.

      --
      "Ad infinitem et ultra!" - Buzz Lightyear
    133. Re:intelegant design != God by AhtirTano · · Score: 1
      Good point. If we assume that the designer is not a God, how do we explain the evolution of the designers?

      I don't disagree with you about the validity of ID, but I do like SciFi and valid reasoning, so...

      Intelligent design and spontaneous order from first principles are not logically exclusive.

      Say, for the sake of argument, that our universe emerged from basic principles of physics -- no designer. Now, Earth, AD 3,000; we can manipulate the most fundamental particles of existance, particles of such small size that quarks look like galaxy clusters. Based on this knowledge, we design miniature universes, put these fundamental particles together in a way to create life, ecosystems, etc, all in an effort to try to model the complexities of our universe in a good scientific manner.

      The people in these little universes are the result of intelligent design. The designers did not have designers, because they were the result of spontaneous order (by stipulation).

      It seems, then, that ID could be a valid scientific theory iff they start coming up with ways to test for the existence of design versus spontaneous order and define what it means to be intelligent. Neither of these are being done, AFAIK, and that is the real problem.

    134. Re:intelegant design != God by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      Seriously - you want me to believe that the simplest explanation is that sex, butterflies, and Picasso "just happened"???? I'm not there.
      No. Before sex there was binary fission. Before butterflies there were bacteria and sponges and other simpler organisms. Before Picasso there were cave paintings.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    135. Re:intelegant design != God by Retric · · Score: 1

      Nobody said survival of the fittest was random. Mutation is random but order is based on the idea that only systems that work can reproduce. Think of an egg if the wrong part of that egg's DNA is missing it's never going to hatch so it's never going to mate so it's never going to have kids.

    136. Re:intelegant design != God by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      ID, in fact, intentionally tries to shove these questions under the table. It is nothing but Creationism in disguise, an attempt to get God in the classroom. It's a dishonest legal fiction, and most importantly, it isn't science.

      In other words, ID is evolution at work. Western minds were growing resistent to the ancient strain of Creationism, so it grew a new level of indirection which helped it to infect more minds, expecially the relatively defenseless minds of the young.

      Religion is one of the better examples of evolution around. It is vulnerable to its environment, so it must change frequently.

    137. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree with the poster, I wonder how this got modded up. The punctuation is so terrible that I had to reread it several times to understand what was being said.

    138. Re:intelegant design != God by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      I think it's obvious that I don't think evolution is solely about the survival of *your* kids, but that cooperation between members of the same species (and, as in the case of symbotic relationships) is at work. It may be that the culling function may depend solely on your kids' survival, but cooperation can assist in that while also assisting in the survival of others.

      But whether that's better, or whether it's better to take advantage of their good graces while providing nothing in return, that's a dilemma that only a prisoner could solve.

      Har har.

    139. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you see a cloud that looks like a horse, are you forced to imagine that there was a creative intelligence that designed that cloud, or do you take a more sane approach and think, "wow, it's pretty cool that a random morphing of that cloud causes it to appear from my angle to resemble a horse"? I do not understand why people so stubbornly refuse to accept priniciples which are demonstrated to them on a daily basis in other parts of their lives.

      Isn't the definition of intelligence being able to take what you have learned in one place and apply that knowledge and experience to new situations? Well, then, by definition, ID'ists are not intelligent. Kind of ironic.

    140. Re:intelegant design != God by dwlovell · · Score: 1

      Major flaws in evolution:

      There has not been a single observed naturally occuring mutation that had a positive life-giving effect. If the entire theory is based on these mutations that have a positive effect, how come we have never observed any?

      The fossil record is extremely inconclusive and has been littered with hoaxes and misrepresentations. (Yah, that one shoulder bone from transitional skeleton X is really conclusive!!)

      So the foundation of evolution is transitional forms, and we have no conclusive fossil record of transitional forms. Not only that, but we have never observed any positive mutations in living creatures. What audacity many people have on this forum acting like ID people are quacks on the burden of proof!

      When will all the evolution elitists realize that their belief is a faith just like religion. Yes evolution is a fairly good explanation of things we have observed and things we have not observed, but the ID science is pretty much the same (with respect to proof). I think its fine if you dont want to believe in ID and prefer the evolutionary view, but dont act like evolution has even come close to being proven or factual. Any real scientist will admit that there has been no solid proof for evolution, and as thus is still labeled a theory.

      Thanks,
      David

    141. Re:intelegant design != God by Retric · · Score: 1

      Let me get this straight your saying because we have not seen new species there is some problem?

      Ok from your POV (point of view) you can and do have small mutations. Some of which get passed on to others in the gene pool but not all. Well look at dogs they are still close to wolves and we have been adapting them for long enough to show new breads of dogs. But, if you take a Great Dane and a tiny dog they're going to have trouble mating. They can still do it but it's hard. Now how far into hard does it take before it's a new species? You can take two types of trees and splice them and they keep right on growing are they the same or different. I can take DNA from me and add it to a dog at that works, but we can't bread that makes us new species?

      Now take humans some of us can't mate with each other though genetic issues others just have a harder time of it how hard does it need to be before we are a different species? How about some blonds not mating with non blonds (see WWII) where they forming a new species?

      If it's that important we can set up a system where by you get new species take to fast breading forms of mice and prove the point. I mean it's not that hard to demonstrate you take to large populations and set them apart for a while under different conditions and over time pop new species. And yes this was going on in isolated human populations and yes given time they would be a new species. But once again I am talking about a long time think about this each line is 2x the one above it. Now how far down there do we need to go before we find a new s my guess is 32,768 ish but which would set the upper limit on # of new s at around 2 ^ 32768 (you start with one and every 32768 years you get 2x as many hmm that seems high...) 1
      2
      4
      8
      16
      32
      64
      128
      256
      512
      1024
      2048
      4096
      8192
      16384
      32768
      65536
      131072
      262144
      524288
      1048576
      2097152
      4194304
      8388608
      16777216
      33554432
      67108864
      134217728
      268435456
      536870912
      1073741824
      The point I am trying to get across to you is new species show up when populations are separated over time. There is no magic to this it's just over time separated populations have an increasingly difficult time mating. As to how old things are well none of these things are exact most of them produce numbers that are close as in with in an order of magnitude but it's hard to be precise which is just like ... stars. Yep, some things take time and if the changes are slow it's hard to say exactly when things are going to happen but hey I guess we need ID to say that stars show up I mean some on they start as balls of dust and over time by *magic* the light up and burn for billions of years come on...

    142. Re:intelegant design != God by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      Seriously - you want me to believe that the simplest explanation is that sex, butterflies, and Picasso "just happened"????

      The jury is still out on whether or not this universe will end with a "big crunch". If it does, it will be followed by another universe. In fact, this universe can be just one of an infinite series of universes, one after the other. Given that, no matter how improbably it is for "sex, butterflies and Picasso" to just happen, it eventually will. And when it does, we're around to witness it. Like now.

    143. Re:intelegant design != God by JWW · · Score: 1

      If you make the decision about what to take literally (i.e., not Genesis 1), you might as well throw out the whole Bible as open to whatever interpretation you see fit (i.e., evolution)

      Technically over the ages that decision has been made over and over again. From the interpretation of oral traditions being passed down until they were written down to copying the text by hand to translation to other languages that sometimes did not have the right words to convey the actual thoughts of the original text, to discussions in the church as to which books are official and which are not.

      Yes, you can very well conclude that the Bible is open to interpretation and has been ever since it was first written (or even spoken).

    144. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Science right now can't really take us to the moment of the big bang...

      Actually, it can take us to the point of the big bang and beyond...er, before?

    145. Re:intelegant design != God by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      There has not been a single observed naturally occuring mutation that had a positive life-giving effect. If the entire theory is based on these mutations that have a positive effect, how come we have never observed any?

      That's funny... all those antibiotic resistant bacteria and herbicide resistant weed strains really seem to suggest otherwise.

    146. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because nearly every effort to translate the Bible into English has been done as an effort to do so as accurately and faithfully as possible.

      The NIV just happens to be one of the more recent ones, with access to very early source material which had remained as yet undiscovered at the time of King James.

    147. Re:intelegant design != God by Retric · · Score: 1

      "There has not been a single observed naturally occurring mutation that had a positive life-giving effect."

      False, many observed mutations give positive survival characteristics. Most don't but then again your talking about tiny time scales.

      So the foundation of evolution is transitional forms,

      False, every from needs to be fit or they die out. To evolve from a rat to a man all the forms in-between need to be able to survive. The study of evolution is the study of the creation and destruction of niches in the environment. Take a sea lion now why would a mammal that hunts in the ocean be able to out hunt a fish? What about the way they operate makes something like a sea lion or a killer whale able to out hunt a shark? Why is the blue whale able to become larger than the form of shark that hunts the same food source? And WTF is up with the duck billed platypus?

      As to ID what does it study? Has anyone looking at ID said ahh now here is an new idea that works and evolution did not think of it? ID is the bran child of people who want to poke holes in evolution. There is no theory behind it it's just what the counter argument to evolution morphed into over time. It sounds good but until I see a paper by some ID person with a new finding I can say it's all hot air without falling back to evolution. ID does not stand on it's own to feet.

      While the theory of evolution showed up BEFORE genetic testing it also agrees with genetic testing. This huge new way to compare life forms and all people did was say hmm I guess these things are a little closer together than I thought.

      But, ID is a pseudo science in that it says things that sound good like spontaneous generation did but it provides no new ideas. Spontaneous generation says if you leave grain out you end up with mice so it sounds good to say grain becomes mice (and it does) but the idea said grain becomes mice with out starting with mice is makes people thing there is no point in keeping mice away from grain which is silly. So while evolution can shoot down SG, ID is stuck with no ammo trying to get what point across?

    148. Re:intelegant design != God by Corporal+Dan · · Score: 1

      Nonsense, I've been to a talk by Michael Behe (Lehigh prof for ID) and he claimed that if scientists can figured out how evolution deals with his list of "irreducibly complex" biological constructs, then he will be more than happy to accept it. ID (or at least his version of it) is definitely falsifiable.

    149. Re:intelegant design != God by nysus · · Score: 1

      So, one man, with absolutely one shred of evidence for his hypothesis that evolution can't explain everything, should automatically be accepted until it's proven wrong? Sorry, that's not quite how the scientific method works.

      Those who believe in intelligent design are no different from people who thought thunder and lightning came from the gods because they had no other explanation for it. Fortunatley, individuals who looked for natural causes applied the scientific method and discovered the answer.

      The scientific method doesn't allow for assuming that when you don't know the answer, it's eveidence of a god.

      --

      ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

    150. Re:intelegant design != God by mshomphe · · Score: 1

      The "irreducability" argument is, to put it mildly, flawed. The argument goes something like this:
      ID Evangelist: Wow, the eye is really an amazing piece of work. In fact, it's so amazingly amazing that I can't think of a way that it could have evolved to this point. Ergo, someone must have designed it.
      The ID Evangelist takes a bow, walks off stage, and is hit by a bus that he failed to see

      This is the true problem of injecting God (or the Divine) into science: Argument stops. No matter what happens, you can always say "God made it that way". It's the equivalent of saying that magical leprechauns run the universe, powering our brains with invisible strings and hiding our keys. There is no way to disprove it. Hence it fails to be science.

      Why would you want to practice an "-ology" that had no (dis-)proveable tenants? You can't get anywhere. Science works because it is a free-flowing exchange of ideas, each of which (should be) proveable and testable.

      Without testability, you wander into the lands of Faith and Belief. Those are nice lands, but wandering around in them is not going to make a n alternative-energy car, or a personal jet-pack.

      --
      She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.
    151. Re:intelegant design != God by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1
      Also, the very fact that you can't disprove the existance of the tooth fairy means that the tooth fairy's existance isn't a scientific theory. It'd be pretty easy to disprove the theory that your parents give you the money, (lock them up and see if you still get tooth money) so it's a good theory. And the fact that nobody has disproven it makes it a well-accepted one.

      A theory that can't be disproven is a dead end, because if by it's nature you can't find flaws, how can you improve it?

    152. Re:intelegant design != God by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more. I think of it in terms of understanding - intelligent beings are constrained in what they create by a desire to understand it. Evolution does not understand it's creations in any way, shape, or form. When we look at things that evolve, we see that they are a mess of spaghetti logic, defying complete understanding by any human-like mind.

    153. Re:intelegant design != God by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1
      (interestingly though we still call individual lifeforms 'creatures' even when we claim that they don't have been created by a creator ;) ) Ah, cool! I never thought about the etymology of that word. CREATE-URES. I see it now. Thanks for that.
      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    154. Re:intelegant design != God by orim · · Score: 1

      1) So fine, call it a "linear" event. The universe is given one chance, one big bang, until it dies a thermal death. Still no need for god.

      2) ... also, if you read the rest of that Wikipedia article, it says that the Big Crunch cannot theoretically be ruled out.

      --
      "If you could only see what I've seen with your eyes..." - Roy Batty
    155. Re:intelegant design != God by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1
      Personally, I believe we can't possibly know what religion is right.
      Then why do you declare yourself a Christian?
      --
      Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    156. Re:intelegant design != God by schleyfox · · Score: 1

      Also it is typical Jewish literature, mostly metaphorical. If you don't believe that the Jews liek their metaphors read the kabbalah. Which is another interesting point that most christians do not know of the kabablah's existence.
      NOTE: I am a deist.

    157. Re:intelegant design != God by Rirath.com · · Score: 1

      Then why do you declare yourself a Christian?

      Fair enough... A question I get from both some atheist and Christian friends from time to time. I think one can be open minded about the bible, about religion, about a whole lot of things and still be a Christian. There's a lot of people who will say differently, but that's just not the feeling I get.

      As for why I'm a Christian as opposed to say, a Deist or Atheist, is simply a personal choice. I can't possibly claim to have factored every possible choice, but from my own experiences and from what I've seen, Christianity feels right to me. Deists pretty much believe in God through logic, they make no assumptions about after life, or any personal relationship with God. Christianity offers this, and assumes God does care.

      Personally I believe much of modern Christianity is mislead, offtrack from it's true meaning. Maybe I'm wrong, maybe there's factors I would never think to even include, but I'd rather pick a religion that feels right for me than refuse to play at all because of uncertainty. In the end, I think all roads will lead to the same path... it's the time between now and then that differs.

    158. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "have your ever written a program that uses evolution to find solutions to problems"

      interesting, are you saying that evolution is a programmed function? if not, what law of physics govern the purpose for cell mutation?

      where did that function come from?

    159. Re:intelegant design != God by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      Except us (humans) becoming extinct has nothing to do with the validity of evolution. The ID/GOD supporters have this feeling that Humans are 'special' somehow. For evolution, they aren't.

      There's no reason, evolution wise that Humans HAD to be here at all. In fact, up till the comet 65 million years ago, it seemed far likelier that the "dominiant species" would forever be reptillian. The change in the environment lead to mamillian dominance, and so far, Homo Sapiens has been best adapted, and best able to adapt to the environment. As the neandertals show us, there could always be a mutation that would lead to the rise of a different dominant species.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    160. Re:intelegant design != God by OoSync · · Score: 1

      Just because you can't disprove the tooth fairy theory, doesn't make it a viable option.
      In fact, that's the precise reason to reject the "theory". The ability to test a hypothesis is the BIG difference between science and all the other junk people come up with. Lose the ability to disprove and idea and you're left with something that, no matter how appealing or intuitive, is simply NOT science.

      --

      I always get the shakes before a drop.
    161. Re:intelegant design != God by Kafir · · Score: 1

      My only problem with the theory of evolution is that it states that evolution is random.

      The "theory of evolution" states no such thing. The mutations that provide the genetic diversity on which natural selection can act are random, but the process of natural selection itself, while not purposeful, is not at all random.

      It seems to me that one of the first things that organisms would develop after sexual reproduction would be the ability to make choices of mates based on whose traits combined with one's own would offer the best chances for survival.

      Depends on the organism's way of life - flowering plants seem to be surviving quite successfully, despite being unable to do much about which of their neighbors they are fertilized by. But many animals (from people to peacocks) do chose their mates, and presumably do so based on instinctive judgements about the reproductive consequences of their choices (since animals that make such judgements well will, ipso facto, be selected for). The idea that sexual selection is a significant force in evolution was first proposed by Darwin himself.

      This may be why we are attracted to some individuals and not others.

      Yes. That idea has been taken for granted by evolutionary theorists for decades.

    162. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And they developed their resistance at what expense? What was lost in order to have this "postive" effect?

      And you can't say "nothing", by the way...there isn't a mutation that has happened that hasn't happend at the expense of another attribute.

      Thus, the "positive effect" may not be quite so "positive" as it "seem[s] to suggest."

    163. Re:intelegant design != God by Corporal+Dan · · Score: 1

      Nothing that you just said denies that ID is falsifiable.

    164. Re:intelegant design != God by Physician · · Score: 0

      And how many of the bacteria ceased being bacteria?

      --
      Does God treat us as servants or friends? Check my homepage.
    165. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, one of my h.s. friends who is an IDer says that they do believe in microevolution like this (survival of the fittest) but not in macroevolution like mutations that bring upon an eyeball. I tried to get him to read The Blind Watchmaker but he didn't

    166. Re:intelegant design != God by Sique · · Score: 1

      One of the great misconceptions about the eye is the assumption that the complexity of the eye would be irreducible, so it had to be mutated into being at once. This is simply wrong.

      There are lots of species that have 'rudimentary' eyes, that means: eyes which don't have the full fledged feature set of the eyes of vertebrates or insects.

      The lancelet (branchiostomus) for instance has a simple light sensing system consisting of two cells, called pigment cup ocellus. Basicly it's a single light sensing cell and a single nerve cell to transmit the signal.

      The snail patella has little pits in the skin, where some light sensing cells are located. This doesn't just sense 'light' and 'dark', it also allows for a rudimentary determination where the light comes from.

      The flatworm planaria gonocephala has similar light organs (pigment cups) like the lancelet, but here, like the patella, the pigment cups are located in a deep pit in the skin, thus allowing for a good direction sense and a beginning sense for movement. A similar rudimentary eye can be found with some jellyfish (sarsia). An eye like this works on the principle of a camera obscura: An opening at one end of a box allows single beams of lights to reach the other side of the box and project a (side reversed and on its head) picture of the surrounding. Several cells at this inner side then get different levels of light and send different signals to a brain, which then can reconstruct the surrounding world.

      Ross worms (sabellaria) have a so called bubble eye. It is similar to the eyes of the flatworms, but here the pit is closed by a single cell thin skin, thus protecting the light sensing skin at the bottom of the pit. The bubble is filled with a watery jelly. Here you have already a quite complete eye, with the outer skin working as a primitive lens, an eyeball and a retina, where the picture projected by the lens skin is recorded by light sensing cells.

      From here the different types of eyes have evolved: complex eyes for insects, where hundreds and thousands of those pits were grouped together to create a very accurate picture of the surrounding world, and the eves with adaptable lenses, either by moving the lenses (fishes) to accomodate to different distances or by pressing them to change the refraction of the lense, as with octopoda or mammalia.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    167. Re:intelegant design != God by nysus · · Score: 1

      I've got a theory I made up, just like this Michael Behe fellow, that lightening requires an intelligent being to make the electons flow through the sky. I call this theory "intelligent motive force theory." Go ahead, prove me wrong. I bet you can't. Therefore, intelligent motive force must be real, right?

      --

      ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

    168. Re:intelegant design != God by Retric · · Score: 1

      It's a random process that can be copied.

      Step1:
      Start with random code.

      Step2:
      You take your software (DNA) and make several copies and mutate them randomly. (Using a Random Number Generator).

      Step3:
      You then test your code to see how fit it is. Aka does it do what you want it to and if so how fast is it ect.

      Step4:
      Take the best x% and go to step 2 until you run out of time or you produce some code that's acceptable.

      This works, but takes time. It's best when your trying to solve problems where you can tell if it works but you don't know how to do it. Programs that hop on a pogo stick or make life like movements are much easer to test for than to design which makes them well suited for evolutionary programming.

      Now at no point did I design the software, but by setting the criteria by which it's survival could be tested I created a solution to my problem without designing it.

    169. Re:intelegant design != God by Corporal+Dan · · Score: 1

      Show the electrical theory that causes lightning and you've proven IMFT wrong. Show the evolutionary theory that causes "irreducibly complex" biological structures and you've proven Behe wrong. They are both falsifiable.

    170. Re:intelegant design != God by xilet · · Score: 1

      Just to be anal, hinduism is not polytheistic, it has many avatars, and some believe those are true gods. However most Hindus believe that it is all part of one god. Some believe [not just Hindus, I know a lot of modern christians that feel this way] that the concept of reality is God, that everything in existiance is in itself the nature of god, and it is and is not a concious reality all at the same time.

    171. Re:intelegant design != God by Fished · · Score: 1
      Behe's entire argument can be reduced to "So far as I know, science cannot explain these structures, so I'm guessing someone must have designed it".
      I don't think you're characterizing his argument correctly. HIS argument, as I read it, is that unguided natural selection is not a sufficient explanation for observed diversity. That is, he's not trying to PROVE God, he's trying to point out some weaknesses in evolution.

      I swear, the venom with which the scientific community defends ANYTHING that could go against evolution continues to astound me.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    172. Re:intelegant design != God by nysus · · Score: 1

      It's impossible to disprove something that hasn't been proven in the first place. ID has never been proven to be true and therefore cannot be proven to be false.

      All Behe does is challenge how natural selection can account for the development of certain complex biological mechanisms. Mounting a challenge does nothing to prove that his hypothesis of intelligent design is correct.

      Similarly, though well understood, there are still some unknowns about the phenomena of thunder and lightning. But this gap in knowledge doesn't give me license to say this proves the existence of the IMFT. I also cannot say, "My theory is true until falsifiable. Until you can find an explanation, ID is the only answer." That's ridiculous. Behe is letting his devotion to his religion (Catholocism) muddy his thinking.

      --

      ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

    173. Re:intelegant design != God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To know the odds of something happening in a certain amount of time, you have to know the odds of it happening at all.

      Also, you have started by positing life. Thus you are arguing in a circle. If life exists then life exists? No actual information enters (or exits) the loop.

      By what pathway and under what conditions could a land based animal become winged where the intermediate steps are not detrimental to viability?

      Whatever else you may think of the creative design people, most of you are insulting people who are smarter and more informed then you are.

      If you want to prove your point, you must shoot down their points and since none of you actually understand the point....

      1) Show a natural method by which life begins.

      2) show a method of creating Amino-acids in any environment which actully exists/existed on our planet.

      3) show a method by which these amino-acids get together to build proteans.

      Positing that this can happen given billions of years negates the fact that your have NO idea what the odds of it happening in the first place. This is not science, this is dogma.

      P.S. a program which uses evolution has a few things going for it none of your arguements does.

      1) an intellegent designer
      2) an understanding of the environment into which the program will run.

    174. Re:intelegant design != God by Suidae · · Score: 1

      an Intelligent Design theorist [...] would say that a designer is necessary precisely because it is simpler to postulate a designer than to postulate the world we know coming about without one.

      Given the evident complexity and our fairly apparent lack of ability to see deeply enough to easily explain things, I'm not convinced that any one is now, or ever will be smart enough to say whether it is more plausable that the universe was designed by an intelligent agent or just 'is'.

      I don't have a problem with either solution, but I look around and see many religions, and members of many of them are convinced that others are wrong. It seems apparent to me that there are a great number of people smarter than myself (and even more that are dumber), many of whom are wrong. Given this I don't see any choice that I can make that has a good probability of being correct. Instead it is more rational to invest my energies elsewhere until such time that there is sufficent information to make an informed choice.

    175. Re:intelegant design != God by Suidae · · Score: 1

      You're walking through the desert and you notice neat, uniform ripples in the sand, and you just know someone created it.

      Right, says the believer in ID, God was responsible for the design of the rules of the universe that give rise to the particle dynamics that cause the blowing sand to form into those ripples.

      You see, one of the problems with ID is that there are no possible counter-examples. It simply defines everything to have been created by an intelligent agent. The 'theory' of Intelligent Design cannot be falsified nor does it make testable predictions.

      It seems that its primary purpose lately is to let religous orginizations get some representation in public schools.

      Personally I don't have a problem with people believing that God or whomever designed the universe, it makes not the slightest difference as far as science and learning goes. My problem ID proponents is that they often create appearance of conflict where none exists. The process of science is just intended to find answers that best explain what we see around us, nothing more. It should take away none of the wonder or awe that the faithful feel. If anything it should add to it.

    176. Re:intelegant design != God by Suidae · · Score: 1

      Clearly, a highly intelligent designer of a very complex system would design the system such that it used evolution to minimize design errors.

      Therefore, God exists and is a pretty smart cat.

      Course, we're making observations from within the system. For all we know, our complexity relative to our designer could be similar to that of a very small shell script to ourselves.

    177. Re:intelegant design != God by Retric · · Score: 1

      Nice post AC.

      You can find Amino-acids on balls if ice in space so that are naturaly occuring and you could find millions of tuns of them on early earth.

      PS: Live = self replication. When you simulate evolution you simulate a self replicating code segment that's randomly chaning and hampered by it's enviernment. So by simulating a life form that's randomly changing you endup with one more suted for it's enviernment.

      E.Q.D. Evolution works.

      PPS: If you want to debate this stop posting AC and I will go over all your points.

    178. Re:intelegant design != God by Corporal+Dan · · Score: 1

      This discussion started because someone said that ID is not falsifiable. That is incorrect...prove that evolution can create Behe's "irreducibly complex" structures, and Behe will sit down and shut up. Therefore, it is definitely falsifiable.
      Everything else (Behe's catholicism, your absurd claim that a theory must be proven before it can be disproven) is completely besides the point.

    179. Re:intelegant design != God by nysus · · Score: 1

      In my haste I didn't choose my words carefully. I should have said, "For a theory to ever be proven false, it must supply evidence." He supplies no evidence. He can never supply evidence. Therefore, it is impossible to prove his theory of ID false.

      Stating that natural selection cannot adequately explain some biological machines is not evidence of ID.

      I ask you, what evidence does Michael Behe have for ID?

      --

      ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

  31. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It still has holes, giant unexplainable holes.

    As opposed to Intelligent Design, which simply answers all questions with "God"? That's more Simpsons that sound thinking.

    Frink: Yes, over here, m-hay, m-haven... in episode BF12, you were battling Barbarians while riding a winged andalusia yet in the very next scene my dear, you're clearly atop a winged arabian! Please do explain it!
    Lucy Lawless: Uh, yeah, well whenever you notice something like that.. a wizard did it!
    Frink: Yes, alright, yes, in episode AG04..
    Lucy Lawless: Wizard!

  32. A rational debate by delirium+of+disorder · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Greg Graffin (of Bad Religion fame) has been working on a project to survey academic opinion on biological origins. You can check out some of the process here:

    http://www.cornellevolutionproject.org/

    I have a copy of the dissertation itself...I might scan it and post it in the name of free exchange ideas, although it would be somewhat dishonnest.

    --
    ------ Take away the right to say fuck and you take away the right to say fuck the government.
  33. ID people are not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I've discussed with many a creationalist and intelligent design nut jobs.

    Funny thing is, every person i've ever met who believed in intelligent design, where the LEAST intelligent people I have ever met....

    Religions are for the weak minded simpleton cattle of the general society who have no concept or clue how the universe works, so it of course much easier to just say 'god did it'.

    1. Re:ID people are not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Funny,

      I have spent years studying evolution and Intelligent design. I have determined (for myself) that ID is a much better answer. The Theory of Evolution has many holes which scientists and authors seem to forget about in their reporting of their studies.

      Radio-Carbon Dating has been studied an proven to be inconsistent and not accurate to the original ratios. These inaccuracies can have an error ratio of +/- a million years! A million years.... WOW.

      Okay, so we have fossils, which is understandable due to the passing of time. We have fossils of complete creatures, trilobytes, and whatever. But where are the transitional fossils that show how one creature evolved into another? If we have hundred of thousands of Trilobyte fossils, where are the fossils of the In-Between creatures that should have existed?

      Just a question to pose,,,

      Also, the comment, "Funny thing is, every person i've ever met who believed in intelligent design, where the LEAST intelligent people I have ever met...." is just plain ignorant. I have 3 University Degrees, I am a Mensa Member, And I do my own research into topics like these.

      Funny thing is, Most people I have met who use "Every" to classify people into a lower Intelligence category (or any catagory) tend to be part of that lower category themselves, or lower.

      It is a known that when people cannot defend thier own aruguements they end to lash out on the other party. How Lame is that people have to use words like "Every" or "Always" to defend themselves. Talk about Closed Minds.

      So, The entire public is supposed to be openminded to the Theory of Evolution, But they cannot be presented with other Theories to create and open forum and/or open mind?

    2. Re:ID people are not by pzampino · · Score: 1

      Hmm, an anonymous coward (implicitly declaring his/her intellectual superiority over adherents of ID) ignorantly extrapolating personal (limited) experience to general society. Seems contradictory to me. Peronsally, I think it's easier to say there is no God, but that doesn't make it true.

      --
      "If men will not be governed by God, they will be ruled by tyrants." - William Penn
    3. Re:ID people are not by culhwch · · Score: 1

      I'll take you up on your comment, though I won't claim that I'm intelligent. I won't say I'm a follower of Intelligent Design, but I will say that I believe in God, as creator of this universe, and all other universes whatever they may be. No, the thing I want to understand (or just argue about for a bit) is your last comment. As a Christian, I tend to look at my faith not as the "how" of the universe but the "why", that nagging question in the back of everybody's mind, mine at least, which wants to know "for what purpose."

      Science, by my mind, seeks the mechanisms of our universe. It wants to know how things came to be and, when applied, how we can make them be something to our liking.

      Maybe I am one of the "weak minded simpleton cattle" if true, I'll try my best to live with it. There'd be little else I could do. For now, though, I'm seeking to understand why so many people wish to oppose science and religion. I understand how, in some cases, the answer of religion is not the one that science seeks, and in that category, I wonder why people confuse the two questions, "why" and "how".

      There's a part of me, it's true, which wants to say that Science and Religion are entirely separable. But in the end, I can't bring myself to actually believe it. I think this is the problem that is so often encountered. To people who believe as I do, everything is religion. If it weren't I would tend to think that my faith was rather short sighted. If there is something that science has found, that is, which the quest of "how" has revealed, it serves also the purpose to describe God. I have to admit, that's not a very easy thing to get at, describing God. And I don't claim that I have the answer for how to get there with every scientific claim that's made. I just believe that its possible to get there.

      So the question becomes. when when we're seeking this "how" in our classrooms, does any point of that "why" belong there as well. I can't answer that fully. But I tend to think when we push our own answer for "why" on other people, which is what classroom instruction can easily become, we risk linking that answer with a myriad of other agendas some quite contrary to what a lot of Christians would hope. And still, when a state tries to enforce it's own version of "why" we find ourselves approaching a certain form of tyranny.

      Now when it comes to my beliefs, I believe that everyone has a choice in what they believe. But a state enforcement of that belief, comes quite close to a form of terror.

      Now when it comes to your final statement "so it of course much easier to just say 'god did it'." I tend to think, maybe as yourself, that such an answer is not an escape from scientific search, discovery, and method. No, it's actually just the invitation. Consider it like this: As a Christian, if God did something, I, perhaps, ought to understand it in ever greater detail, so as to understand what I seek as an end, God. Now to put that in perspective, if this universe is infinite, (i'm not totally sure about that, but it wouldn't bother me if it were) then there's quite possibly an infinite amount of exploration out there just waiting for us to try to understand, whether it concerns our past or our present or our future. And if so, my end, understanding more of God, has infinite room as well for exploration. But even if our universe isn't infinite, I'm at least pretty sure that I'll never run out of things to explore in my quest to understand more of God. (I do believe that God is what we would consider infinite, in at least a great number of way of defining that word).

      Now perhaps, one should have a discussion that seeks to understand the consequences of various methods of teaching both the "why" and the "how." Some methods seem obviously to have a place in a state designed curriculum, and to that end, a large majority sees the consequences as helpful to all students, no matter what their religious beliefs. And at the other end of the perspective there are those which many peopl

    4. Re:ID people are not by m50d · · Score: 1
      error ratio of +/- a million years! A million years.... WOW.

      It is insignificant on the timescales we're talking about. If that trilobyte is 399 million years old rather than 400 million years old, what difference does it make?

      where are the transitional fossils that show how one creature evolved into another? If we have hundred of thousands of Trilobyte fossils, where are the fossils of the In-Between creatures that should have existed?

      We have hundreds of thousands of trilobyte fossils because they lived for a billion or so years and then went extinct without evolving into anything else. We do have transitional fossils for many things - look at humans, with homo errectus and so on, a fair line going back to an ancestor common with other primates. Yes there are "jumps", but we have about 5 (that's an estimate based on the assumption I don't want to go look it up) humanoid fossils if that from any time period equal to the size of the gap.

      I don't think it's inability to argue that's making people lash out, it's frustration with IDers who won't accept rational arguments. Which most of them won't.

      The entire public is supposed to be openminded to the Theory of Evolution, But they cannot be presented with other Theories to create and open forum and/or open mind?

      You show me an actual theory and I'll look at it with an open mind. That is, something which explains the observed facts and makes testable predictions. If you can tell me an experiment I can make that will falsify exactly one of evolution and intelligent design (with which it is depending on the outcome of the experiment) I am willing to consider it.

      --
      I am trolling
    5. Re:ID people are not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are fossils of human evolution. Are you saying that every once in a while a version of human was intelligently designed? Then that version was phased out and a new version was intelligently designed? I mean really? Are we just the last iteration of the intelligently designed human?

  34. Evolution does not disprove the existence of God by zmollusc · · Score: 1

    I didn't think that evolution was supposed to disprove the existence of God.
    That is like saying the 'theory of kindly parents' disproves the existence of the tooth fairy. The tooth fairy may enlist parents to replace teeth with money or the parents may ring up the tooth fairy whenever (s)he is needed. It is notoriously difficult to prove a negative, but which is the most likely situation?
    I would like to see the religious people refer to their 'Theory of God'.

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  35. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Xrikcus · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes it is a theory, by the scientific definition, in the same way that ID does not qualify as a theory, it is merely a hypothesis. Theory in science does not mean "unproven", remember.

  36. Indian Creation Myths by purduephotog · · Score: 1

    Well, maybe not Myths...

    I agree. We should have a whole chapter dedicated to each of the gods of creation- how Zeus came about, whom birthed whom, etc. Better still, limit it to a single chapter that encompases every single creation myth by every religion- then cut it down to 35 pages that a normal chapter is. Maybe even less with graphics.

    I for one would appreciate learning about our Native American's thoughts on creation. I wish I had learned; I probably would have prefered them to learning about how the fault of all man kind's problems can be laid down at the foot of a seductive woman.

    But then one day I woke up and said "Huh, this doesn't make sense anymore" and haven't looked back.

    1. Re:Indian Creation Myths by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      We have that class.

      It's called Humanities, not biology. ;)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  37. Its not a theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Evolution is a fact, not theory, people seem to forget that virri evolve all the time (eg bird flu jumping to people, new shit like SARS ect.) people don't evolve as quickly for 2 reasons 1 we are far more complex 2 modern medicine keeps the weak alive.

    For example if a disease were to come along and wipe out most of the human race leaving only those few who were immune in the first place, that would be an evolutionary step because future generations would have an evolved immunity to that virus.

  38. Futurama said it best by portwojc · · Score: 1

    When you do things right people will wonder if you've done anything at all.

  39. Please mod up? by Bananatree3 · · Score: 0

    how is this a Troll?

  40. ID isn't a theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The main problem I have with pushing ID in a science class is that it is not treated as such. For it to be a scientific theorem and not religion, it has to have the ability to be proven wrong. Evolution can be disproven but there is nothing in ID that cannot be argued away with the argument that "God put it there to test our faith." This argument belongs in a Theology or at best an English class.

  41. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Elkboy · · Score: 1

    The bible and christianity are full of gaping holes, logic and otherwise. I don't hear anyone proposing teaching islam or buddhism as alternate religion just because you don't have all the answers.

    Also, you say "unexplainable" holes. You must mean "unexplained" - as in so far unexplained, or unexplained like previous holes that are now filled. Big difference.

  42. Compromise doesn't always work by amorico · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems that school boards often do this to reach some sort of compromise due to political pressure from religious groups.

    The idea that there can be some sort of fair time given in science classes to religious theories is flawed.

    If a religion posits that "number theory is only a theory", and comes up with some religious alternative, then should math classes give them equal time?

    What determines the validity of an alternative viewpoint? Popularity?

    Though it may seem otherwise, anti-intellectualism and the desire to subvert bodies of knowledge to preconceived notions is really no more prevalent than it ever was. That is the problem. Aren't we supposed to be advancing?

    I wish there were Secular Humanist organizations exerting more influence on our school boards.

    --
    "The plural of anecdote is not data." -- Roger Brinner
    1. Re:Compromise doesn't always work by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      If a religion posits that "number theory is only a theory", and comes up with some religious alternative, then should math classes give them equal time? Not to pick nits, but number theory along with most mathmatics are theories. Take geometry, or Euclidian geometry, to be exact. One of it's tenets is that the shortest distance between to points is a straight line. Of course, you can't circumnavigate the globe or go to the moon or put something in orbit with that theory. That's why there is non-Euclidan geometry, too, another theory. Or another example would be the square-root of negative one. We were all taught that a square root is that number when mulitiplied by itself gives the square of that number (ie 2 is the square root of 4). We were also taught that two negative numbers mulitplied together give a positive number (as well as two positive number multiplied together). Therefore, the square root of negative one can't exist because whatever number multiplied by itself would give a positive number, not a negative one. However, it must exist or a whole lot of the physics we study just won't work. To account for that paradox, we have a whole new area of mathematical theory called "imaginary numbers" Face it, most of what we hold as facts in mathmatics and science, really are just theories. But, since they give reproducable results over and over again, we accept them as fact. As for your secular humanist comment. I checked the site you linked to and they make statements about the existance or non-existance of God and therefore make a theological statement. Isn't a religion a set of theological beliefs and wouldn't that therefore make secular humanism another relgion? As such, why should the government prefer that religion over any other?

    2. Re:Compromise doesn't always work by tesmako · · Score: 1
      If a religion posits that "number theory is only a theory", and comes up with some religious alternative, then should math classes give them equal time?

      Please don't spread more confusion about the word "theory". The "theory of evolution" really is a theory in the sense that it is a falsifiable conjecture based on a large body of empirical observations. "Number theory" is of course not, it is there just a word used to refer to an axiomatic system in mathematics, and is as such necessarily "true" (though it is in itself unconnected with any physical objects and incomplete).

      I am sure you know this and intended the fomulation, but too many people seem to have a somewhat poor grasp of how empirical and formal sciences relate so I just want to clarify.

    3. Re:Compromise doesn't always work by amorico · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the clarification. As you can see formt he other reply, you were dead on about the confusion people have. I should choose my examples more carefully in the future.

      --
      "The plural of anecdote is not data." -- Roger Brinner
    4. Re:Compromise doesn't always work by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      I wasn't confused about how theory is used in mathmatics vs other sciences. Where it becomes problematic is in the application of mathmatics to the real world and there, things do become very theoretical. I had a professor who once stated that all of physics was just applied mathmatics. So yes, at it's very core, it may not be theoretical, but then again, where does it's very core stop and application take over. Or put a different way, when do I stop studying mathmatics and start studying physics? In my post, I was thinking more of the applied mathematics vs pure mathematics. It is in the application, where we have to rely on theories (hey, don't even get me started on quanta-mechanics or wave equations).

    5. Re:Compromise doesn't always work by bbtom · · Score: 2, Informative
      Not Secular Humanist (though the ID folks do occasionally throw that card out there), but there is the National Centre for Science Education. There are also local groups in Georgia, Michigan, Alabama, Kansas and Colorado (and probably a few others, but nothing that a quick Google search can't turn up: try $state citizens for science or some derivation.

      You can also use Talk Origins, Talk Reason, Talk Design, EvoWiki and Panda's Thumb to find lots of info on why these people are wrong. If you want to donate money, donate it to the NCSE or Talk.Origins, or perhaps buy some of the books of creationism refuters - I'd reccomend Robert Pennock's book 'Tower of Babel' as quite a good introduction.

      Even my lowly blog has a few things on the ID/creationism debacle.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
  43. While they're at it... by benhocking · · Score: 1

    I'd like them to start teaching my alternatives to Schwarzschild metrics when they're discussing general relativity theory in their high school physics class.

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  44. Intelligent Design is Atheistic by robbway · · Score: 1

    If you are going to use logic that Intelligent Design is likely because it looks that way, you'd have to admit, by the same logic, that is almost infinitely more likely to have be created by a non-entity species than to believe some sort of God did it. Just because it looks like God doesn't make it so. Using science, they draw the wrong conclusion, because of the millions of products humans manufacture. They also all look to be designed, but nobody jumps to the conclusion that God made my stapler.

    It's not only not-science, but an extremely flawed Philosphy.

    1. Re:Intelligent Design is Atheistic by schiefaw · · Score: 1
      I have always had a problem with the "alien transplant" creation story. The problem with it is that it isn't really a creation story. All it does is transplant the problem. Any creation by a sentient entity involves an iterative problem. If a creator is required for complex life to develop, then who created the creator? It doesn't matter which planet life started on, the problem remains the same.

      I vastly prefer the big numbers theory. There is a huge number of planets in the universe. Each has a slightly different environment. If life is possible at all, through whatever means, the sheer number of possible starting places yield pretty good odds of life developing.

      I am surrounded by people who seem to think that the fact that life on Earth is perfectly suited to the environment is a sign of intelligent design. There is a real resistance to accept the idea that any life that was not well suited would never be able to develop. Once all the branches on the decision tree have been pruned, the last one looks like fate.

      --
      Angleyne: You can't bend that girder - it's unbendable! Bender: Well I don't know anything about lifting, so that ju
  45. Re:Open mind? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're confusing the roles here. In this case, the creationist's minds are closed. The creationist opinion was actually the ruling one for quite a number of centuries and Darwin was more like Galileo.

    Also, your mind should never be so open that your brain falls out.

  46. Why was parent moded up? by millahtime · · Score: 1

    This is moded up as interesting?

    This is clearly attacking something he does not agree with. Would this not be flamebait?

    Just because you don't agree with Intellegant Design does not mean it's not a theory with real merits. And to tie it to a God. Your on /. and you should have seen pleanty of sci fi movies where the intellegant design was alians. Mod the parent down.

    1. Re:Why was parent moded up? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because you don't agree with Intellegant Design does not mean it's not a theory with real merits.

      ID isn't a theory -- and it's certainly without merit -- no matter how hard you thump that book.

      Case closed.

    2. Re:Why was parent moded up? by grub · · Score: 1


      This is clearly attacking something he does not agree with. Would this not be flamebait?

      So long as the mythologists continue representing their idiocy as "science", I'll continue to be vocal against it.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    3. Re:Why was parent moded up? by identity0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The difference is, none of those Sci-fi authors claimed to be writing anything but fiction.

      Except for L. Ron Hubbard and the Church of Scientology, who are widely regarded as kooks.

      The intelligent design guys are claiming that their theory is actually how life and humanity started, which is a whole different thing from writing a "what-if" story in Analog.

    4. Re:Why was parent moded up? by shaitand · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Intelligent Design is NOT a theory with real merits. It is a hypothesis with equal logical potential to what is presently the most likely theory.

      The difference being that there is a great deal of real evidence supporting Evolution and NO evidence supporting ID. In the world of science that is a relatively important distinction. So important, that without evidence, you can not call it science at all.

    5. Re:Why was parent moded up? by millahtime · · Score: 0

      This is a falacy. There is a lot of real evidence supporting ID. The problem is no one is taught the science and the evidence. You aren't even aware of the evidence and science behind it. I wasn't aware until I had a college class that opened my eyes.

    6. Re:Why was parent moded up? by kryptkpr · · Score: 1

      Falsifiability:

      Falsifiability is an important concept in the philosophy of science that amounts to the apparently paradoxical idea that a proposition or theory cannot be scientific if it does not admit consideration of the possibility of its being false.

      ID is not falsifiable. Since there is no way to conclusively show you wrong, all the evidence in the world wouldn't make it a scientific theory. There is no science behind it.

      As far as evidence goes, I'm curious .. Enlighten the rest of us, what is this evidence that opened your eyes in college?

      --
      DJ kRYPT's Free MP3s!
    7. Re: Why was parent moded up? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Intelligent Design is NOT a theory with real merits. It is a hypothesis with equal logical potential to what is presently the most likely theory.

      The 'logic' offered in support of ID is really screwed up. ID has exactly the same merits as Invisible Pink Unicorn Theory and Last Thursdayism: an 'explanation' supported by neither observation nor logic, and in fact an answer to a non-existent problem.

      Except of course the social problem of "how do I keep my kids from believing in evolution".

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    8. Re:Why was parent moded up? by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      And this is a fallacy, because IDist's and creationists in general can always claim "That's how God wanted it to be." Intelligent Design, just like Creationism, requires FAITH. Not objective observable fact. In that regard, Intelligent Design can be neither objectively proven or disproven.

      Intelligent Design is the fallacy.

  47. The difference between theories by mo26101 · · Score: 2, Informative

    With Intelligent Design, the proponents start with a conclusion and try to find a way to get the facts to fit the conclusion. With Evolution, the proponents are taking the facts and trying to find a conclusion that fits the facts.

    The theory of Evolution is not perfect, but as a theory based in the scientific method, it is able to change as we learn.

    1. Re:The difference between theories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really mean to say evolutionists DIDN'T look around and say "Aha! We're alive. Let's try to figure out how we got here."

      Be reasonable, ID people and evolutionists are trying to answer the same question.

      If the ID people are right then they face the challenge of putting some good debate and science in front of us. Anybody got a serious/decent ID web site?

    2. Re:The difference between theories by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the ID proponents claim the opposite. Most of their evidence for this amounts to propaganda, but still.

      Supposedly, atheists are always out there scheming to try and lure people away from God, but the biggest stumbling block had always been the existence of life on the planet. So, the evil Darwin dreams up a scam that shows that said life doesn't even require a creator! Now, if that isn't a case of trying to make the facts fit your pre-determined conclusion...

      (Never mind that he seemed more concerned with explaining how some finches would have so much beak shape variation, even though they were very similar otherwise.)

    3. Re:The difference between theories by mo26101 · · Score: 1

      You really mean to say evolutionists DIDN'T look around and say "Aha! We're alive. Let's try to figure out how we got here."

      Be reasonable, ID people and evolutionists are trying to answer the same question.


      Trying to answer the same question says nothing about how they go about trying to find an answer.

      The point is there were no Evolutionists at first. There were scientist collecting information and trying to determine how it all fits together. Eventually, enough facts were collected to start to form a picture and a theory was formed. Again, this is quite a stark difference in methodology.

  48. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

    Dumbass:

    "In common parlance the word "evolution" is often used as a shorthand for the modern synthesis of evolution, including the theory that all extant species share a common ancestor." - From Wikipedia entry on Evolution

    Evolution IS, and has always BEEN a theory.

    --
    Excuse my speling.
    Making The Bar Project
  49. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by rknop · · Score: 4, Insightful

    it is a theory people. Theory. It still has holes, giant unexplainable holes.

    This also describes gravity.

    General Relativity is a theory, in the same sense of the word as evolution is a theory. So is Newton's theory of gravity.

    We know Newton's theory of gravity is "wrong" because in places where it makes divergent predictions from GR, observations show GR to be right. Of course, Newton's theory is a limit of GR, and the fact that it is "wrong" doesn't stop us from predicting the motions of planets or of spacecraft.

    We know that GR is "wrong" because it makes nonsensical predictions in areas where it must be mixed with Quantum Mechanics (another well-tested and well-verified scientific theory). But, once again, it works extremely well where it works.

    So you could say that our theory of gravity is full of holes, giant unexplanable holes, and you would be right. But that doesn't mean that I can't succesfully predict that if I drop my keys, they are going to go down. It doesn't mean that I can't explain the formation of stars through the gravitational collapse of molecular clouds.

    We don't know everything, but we know something!

    In fact, although we can make far more precise predictions with our theory of gravity than we can with our theory of evolution, in some sense evolution is on less shaky ground than our current theory of evolution. After all, we don't have very strong evidence that the theory of evolution is wrong somewhere, but we do for gravity!

    You ID and Creationism. advocates need to get over this term "just a theory" that you use. It just shows ignorance. You need to realize that the popular use of the word "theory" (to mean "speculation") is extremely different from the scientific use of the word "theory" (to describe an explanation of natural processes which may be extremely well tested and well understood).

    -Rob

  50. pick your site. by leuk_he · · Score: 0

    I see no point in discussing it here on /.

    I agree on a different bases: pick your site: k5 of /. You should discuss it one one, not the other. choose k5 for your monthly well balances articles, and /. for your daily quotem of troll articles.

    I get totally confused if /. articles make ik to k5 and vice versa.

  51. Just checking .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this the thread where every mod point is a vote for, or against creationism?

  52. I just wonder if by niiler · · Score: 1
    there are any intelligent design folks who actually hold an advanced degree in computer science, physics, or AI. The idea that complex organisms have to have been created by God is ludicrous. Many of the computers we use are more complex, functionally, than many organisms on Earth.

    I remember when I took a course called "Mechatronics" nearly a decade ago. We used a PIC1684(?) chip, some assembly code, some actuators and some light sensors and put together robots that would search for a light source at the end of a maze. One person put a tail light on his robot and as a result got through the maze before anyone else because all the other robots lined up behind it.

    Mine was not so successful. It would give up searching after about five minutes and then go out to the local Duncan Donuts to grab some coffee and read a newspaper.

    1. Re:I just wonder if by jbessie · · Score: 1

      So, we as an intelligent species can make other complex intelligent things such as computers? So, then who made us?

    2. Re:I just wonder if by rknop · · Score: 1

      there are any intelligent design folks who actually hold an advanced degree in computer science, physics, or AI.

      There are.

      You can always find somebody with all the right credentials to support any wacky idea.

      It just goes to show that the support of one or a few "experts" is not good evidence for much of anything.

      -Rob

    3. Re:I just wonder if by KirkH · · Score: 1

      Your robots were intelligently designed, yes?

      I missed your point.

    4. Re:I just wonder if by imaji · · Score: 0

      http://www.icr.org/

      The Institute for Creation Research

      Whole bunch of them.

    5. Re:I just wonder if by hazah · · Score: 1

      Why on earth would you call a computer "intelligent"? It doesn't know anything, it simply keeps a state, and you manipulate it. As far as "who made us", Do you really want to hear THAT bedtime story?

    6. Re:I just wonder if by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am missing your point. Computers were designed by an intelligence- man. Unless you are going to argue that computers evolved from a lower life form.

    7. Re:I just wonder if by jbessie · · Score: 1

      I suppose I misspoke with the intelligent portion of that statement. Complexity is what I was really getting at, and the intelligent design it took to create it. I apologize for my wording!

    8. Re:I just wonder if by hazah · · Score: 1

      'scoo. I dissagree more with the parent anyway. Some mumbo jumbo about computers being more "complex" than some organisms on Earth. Fortunately he discredited himself right after. Cheers.

  53. Seems that the Christian Right got mod points by Moth7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or so such trollish moderation would indicate. Just because you don't agree with something, doesn't mean that the person posting was intending it to be a troll. A troll is a post designed to attract adverse attention - the parent was merely a logical transposition of the attitude displayed by ID'ists, not an attempt to inflame hatred.

    1. Re:Seems that the Christian Right got mod points by m50d · · Score: 1

      I don't think so. Trolls don't have to be false or anything (cf the java is slow trolls), they just have to attract predictable responses, which his post certainly will.

      --
      I am trolling
  54. Let's hear it for objective reporting! by jpmahala · · Score: 1, Funny

    Oh wait, this is /.

  55. 2 points... by evil_one666 · · Score: 0

    First off, I am not a god fearing christian.

    now-

    1) Intelligent design and evolution are not mutually exclusive theories. One does not contradict the other. It is possible to believe in both theories.

    2) Intelligent design is actually not such a terrible theory. It certainly deserves to be taught in schools. (the arguement that we know the identity of the intelligent designer is flawed though- it MIGHT NOT be God)

    1. Re:2 points... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Intelligent design and evolution are not mutually exclusive theories. One does not contradict the other. It is possible to believe in both theories.

      Uh, no. They *do* contradict each other. Now evolutionary theory itself does not preclude belief in a Creator, only to those who don't really understand it. For example, if the Florida Lottery switches to a computerized number choosing system and starts spitting out the following numbers: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. The next weeks it spews out 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. I don't know about you, but I'm betting on 22,24,26,28,30 for the next week. Evolutionary theory is not much different. We have observations and we try to determine a rule that fits those observatios *and* can somewhat accurately predict new observations. To dismiss our human ability to think and to make judgments is directly contrary to the doctrine of Free Will, and that's sort of what the entire Church is built upon. I am a scientist and a Christian.

      2) Intelligent design is actually not such a terrible theory. It certainly deserves to be taught in schools. (the arguement that we know the identity of the intelligent designer is flawed though- it MIGHT NOT be God)

      The idea that alien races seeded the planet with life is not such a terrible theory. It certainly deserves to be taught in schools. I.e., prove your statement.

    2. Re:2 points... by evil_one666 · · Score: 1

      Nope- you are wrong. Evolutionary theory does usually preclude the existance/influence of a 'creator'.

  56. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by JohnFluxx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    gravity is just a theory as well. Dare you to jump off a building.

    The problem with ID is that it doesn't fulfil the two basic requirements of a science - It's not falsifiable (how do you proof it wrong?) and it doesn't follow occam's razor (why not just argue invisible unicorns created us?)

  57. benevolent by mattmentecky · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one that takes a benevolent approach to situations like this? Forcing curriculum that is non-scientific to be taught in a scientific section is one thing, and I think can be argued/ruled without getting into the very hairy aspects of it all.
    However, am I the only ones that sits back and looks at the religion vs. science or evolution vs. faith and thinks that both sides, at times are equally foaming-at-the-mouth fervent and sometimes just plain weird?
    Faith and science will always be a square peg in a round hole situation. By definition! If faith were somehow provable/disprovable by science or vice versa then we wouldnt have the distinction between the two.

    It is inherent in the design of faith to always always always have an "explanation" for scientific proofs. Talk about fossils and scientific "proof" that the world is older than religion says it is? Thats just God testing the believers from the non-believers is what they will come back to you with.

    I almost think, to take care of school boards with a hard on for controversy is to mandate a class called "Controversial Topics" where all odds and ends are thrown into a mixed bag and hashed out, evolution, intelligent design, abortion, homosexuality...and to prepare you for the real world, students are graded according to just how loud they can yell and afirm that their certain position is absolutely correct.

  58. the earth is flat by asoap · · Score: 1
    I agree. It's as if everyone believed that the earth was flat. Then through intelligence, and testing, we come to believe that the world is indeed round.

    Then we fly into space, we take photos of the planet, and we know for fact, that indeed the earth is round. It's a giant blue marble.

    Then somebody argues that no, that's not indeed true. IT REALLY IS FLAT! God just makes adjustments to everyones cameras and eyes so that it does look like a sphere. He just changes the light in order to test their faith.

    WTF is wrong with these people?

    --
    Treat me like a marketing stat, and I'll treat your movie like a series of ones and zeros
  59. What about intelligent *web*-design? by Ulrich+Hobelmann · · Score: 1, Funny

    Would that be an alternative to /. ?

    Gotta love HTML 3.2...

  60. The K5 article by ajs · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The article is actually pretty bad. I read it last week, and it makes some sweeping assumptions that it never proves. Most of it is just a rather ugly rant about I.D. until it gets into one software simulation topic, at which point the article switches gears and becomes far more technical (not more methodical, mind you, just more technical).

    It seems that the author knew about one specific area of research and set out to write an article that was beyond their capbilities.

    Too bad, as I.D. is a deeply flawed effort, but every attack against it that I've seen outside of the highly technical have been arm-waving affairs that can be easily shot down.

    Real problems with I.D.:
    • It applies Occam's Razor in reverse. That is, it starts with a conclusion, and for every complex question resolves that the simplest explanation is not to deviate from the conclusion.
    • Evolution is not linear. One thing that many people looking at existing species forget is that many of their traits are the result of FAILURES as much as success. An example of this would be marine mammals, which have many structures that are so different from other sea creatures that you could conclude that they could not have evolved naturally. And yet, when you factor in land-mammals the features of sea mammals are easily explained: they are the vesiges of a (as far as marine mammal evolution is concerned) failed attempt to adapt to land.
    • Evolution and design are seen as radically seperate topics because of the nature of the initial assumptions, and yet the idea that evolution could progress from some initially designed state is equally (im)plausible.
    • Evolution and natural selection are often conflated incorrectly
    These are just thoughts off the top of my head, and I'm sure that there are many other excellent examples.
    1. Re:The K5 article by kindbud · · Score: 1

      You didn't mention the two biggest problems with "intelligent design" theory.

      1st big problem: it makes no predictions that can be tested empirically. Even if true, it would not change how biology research is done one bit, because it doesn't say anything about how biology would be different under I.D. than biology guided by evolutionary theory.

      2nd big problem: I.D. states that life is too complex to have have arisen from less-complex non-living origins. Well what about the "designer?" It must be more complex than the things it designed, and so by the same argument, the designer must have a designer, too. I.D. proponents must necessarily be polytheistic.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    2. Re:The K5 article by ajs · · Score: 1

      "2nd big problem: I.D. states that life is too complex to have have arisen from less-complex non-living origins. Well what about the "designer?" It must be more complex than the things it designed"

      That is not sound logic. A simple though experiment can, in fact, disprove it. Given that we develop time travel later today, we have most of the tools needed to begin guiding an evolutionary process in prehistoric earth, thus being our own designers (this introduces a paradox, but since we can replace the human race in that scenario with an equally capable, but non-human race, we can ignore the paradox for sake of argument).

      The assumption that greater complexity is required to produce a given amount of complexity might even be the opposite of the facts. We know that many simple systems can produce vast complexity (the Mandelbrot Set for example).

    3. Re:The K5 article by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Nevertheless, this is a tenet of I.D. that complex things require a more complex designer, sound or unsound, that's what they say.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    4. Re:The K5 article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution and design are seen as radically seperate topics because of the nature of the initial assumptions, and yet the idea that evolution could progress from some initially designed state is equally (im)plausible.

      This is both a result of and a reason for the bipolarization of views. I like to think of science as reasonable and its defenders as reasonable people, but I'm starting to wonder if most slashdotters wouldn't scream fraud instead of considering the idea if we ever found signs that our DNA had been tampered with sometime in the past.

      What if we found a too improbable beneficial mutation occurring within a too short timespan in the history of humanity for it to be anything but a change made on purpose by someone / thing?

      Disclaimer: I'm an atheist.

    5. Re:The K5 article by Rallion · · Score: 1

      I've got another problem with ID...

      What intelligent designer would give us two-leg-walking humans a spinal column that is clearly meant to serve a quadraped? Hmm?

      *Hold back and walks away wincing*

    6. Re:The K5 article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is more to evolution than random mutation, if we found variety spreading too fast for random mutation we would say "I guess after all these years Darwin's still on the money".

      Read his book sometime. First Chapter asks the question why is there more variance in domesticated animal species than their wild stock?

  61. What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again

    No, sorry, it explains the origin of species, not the origin of life. This is the kind of casual misunderstanding that gives credence to the idea that people who support evolution are treading on the toes of God. At a minimum, we need to keep the high-level issues around evolution on the right track and not walk right into the positions that anti-evolutionists set up as straw men.

    Darwin himself explicitly avoided this issue right in the title of his book.

  62. Hello-oo Flatlanders! by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

    If one of us (three-dimensional beings) interacted with a Flatlander, exposed them to our technology, what would they think of us and their two-dimensional world?

    --
    Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
  63. Re:Open mind? by miknight · · Score: 1

    Your statement "the creationist's minds are closed" seems pretty closed-minded to me... And in this day and age, creationists definitely feel like they get persecuted for their beliefs. That's the parallel I was drawing with Galileo (with an added hint of irony).

  64. Origins of Life Joke by Anderson+Fortaleza · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again" Is that a joke ? There's no theory yet explaining the origins of life, and we're pretty much FAR from it.

  65. How to disprove evolution with four questions... by jag7720 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    What is "zero times zero"?
    What is "zero plus zero"?
    What is "zero minus zero"?
    What is "zero divided zero"?


    Answer zero... you can't get something from nothing.

  66. Re:DNA - are simply too complex by zmollusc · · Score: 1

    Are you saying that DNA only works as a whole entire thing and therefore is too complex to have occurred randomly? DNA was most likely a product of an evolutionary development of increasing complexity. Where are DNA's predecessors? Maybe nowhere as DNA has dominated the planet for a long time.

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  67. Re:Separation of Church and State by velvetbrain · · Score: 1
    Even though the phrase "separation of church and state" doesn't appear in those exact terms, the concept is embodied in the constitution. A basic google search turned up this surprisingly useful summary of the issue (linked below)

    ...courts have found that the principle of a "religious liberty" exists behind in the First Amendment, even if those words are not actually there:

    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..."

    The point of such an amendment is twofold. First, it ensures that religious beliefs - private or organized - are removed from attempted government control. This is the reason why the government cannot tell either you or your church what to believe or to teach. Second, it ensures that the government does not get involved with enforcing, mandating, or promoting particular religious doctrines. This is what happens when the government "establishes" a church - and because doing so created so many problems in Europe, the authors of the Constitution wanted to try and prevent the same from happening here.

    Original source article:Separation of church and state

  68. Obligatory Bill Hicks quote... by jasoncart · · Score: 0

    "You know the world's 12 thousand years old and dinosaurs existed, they existed in that time, you'd think it would have been mentioned in the fucking Bible at some point. "And lo Jesus and the disciples walked to Nazareth. But the trail was blocked by a giant brontosaurus... with a splinter in his paw. And O the disciples did run a shriekin': 'What a big fucking lizard, Lord!' But Jesus was unafraid and he took the splinter from the brontosaurus's paw and the big lizard became his friend. And Jesus sent him to Scotland where he lived in a loch for O so many years inviting thousands of American tourists to bring their fat fucking families and their fat dollar bills.And oh Scotland did praise the Lord. Thank you Lord, thank you Lord. Thank you Lord."

    "Get this, I actually asked one of these guys, OK, Dinosaurs fossils - how does that fit into you scheme of life? Let me sit down and strap in. He said, "Dinosaur fossils? God put those there to test our faith." I think God put you here to test my faith, Dude. You believe that? "uh huh." Does that trouble anyone here? The idea that God.. might be.. fuckin' with our heads? I have trouble sleeping with that knowledge. Some prankster God running around: "Hu hu ho. We will see who believes in me now, ha ha." [mimes God burying fossils] "I am God, I am a prankster." "I am killing Me."

    1. Re:Obligatory Bill Hicks quote... by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Prankster gods are common in polytheistic religions. Some aspects of it turn up in the Christian Devil but "The Prankster" usually isn't an unambigously evil figure.

    2. Re:Obligatory Bill Hicks quote... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      "Get this, I actually asked one of these guys, OK, Dinosaurs fossils - how does that fit into you scheme of life? Let me sit down and strap in. He said, "Dinosaur fossils? God put those there to test our faith." I think God put you here to test my faith, Dude. You believe that? "uh huh." Does that trouble anyone here? The idea that God.. might be.. fuckin' with our heads? I have trouble sleeping with that knowledge. Some prankster God running around: "Hu hu ho. We will see who believes in me now, ha ha." [mimes God burying fossils] "I am God, I am a prankster." "I am killing Me."

      You almost had it right. Except it wasn't the fossils... it was the Bible.

      God... fuckin' with our heads. Some prankster God running around: "Hu hu ho. Let's see what they do with this, ha ha." [mimes God writing the Bible] "I am God, I am a prankster." "I am killing Me."

      The Bible truely is the Word of God.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  69. It doesn't matter what they do... by Frobnicator · · Score: 2, Interesting
    ... They'll still be sued.

    If they say "It's the theory of evolution" they'll be sued by all the Fundamentalists who don't believe in science.

    If they say "It's possibly guided by some greater power that we aren't allowed to speak about" they'll be sued by both the Fundamentalists who will tell them they MUST say what power made it, or by the {insert four-letter-acronym} who says the schools are the state, and can't mention anything having to do with religion, even though religion is a HUGE part of the entire history (and present) of the world.

    If they say "It could be both", they'll still be sued, since Fundamentalists on both sides will say "Our Beliefs are the One True Way (tm)", and refuse to accept that any other view may have merit.

    So...

    I propose they just hand out little cards to the students that read:

    "Due to the threat of law suits, all classes will be terminated, effective immediatly.
    Please find the non-toxic, non-branded crayons in the back of the room, and color on your non-branded paper.*
    No students may talk or otherwise interact with other students.
    --- The School Board

    * Do not abuse the crayons or place them in any bodily oriface. Do not break crayons. Do not throw crayons. Do not color obscene picutres or images of anything that my offend any religion, race, geneder, species, or lawyer. Do not show your pictures to any other student or teacher. Assorted other warnings."
    While it doesn't allow for much learning, it doesn't detract from their education any more than the lawsuits are doing. And it will help the school board manage their budget a little better, rather than spending the (already tight) budget on legal fees.

    frob

    --
    //TODO: Think of witty sig statement
    1. Re:It doesn't matter what they do... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...even though religion is a HUGE part of the entire history (and present) of the world."

      Right, which is why schools are allowed to teach about religions in history and social studies classes. This does not extend to saying "they might be right!" in a SCIENCE class.

  70. What science teachers should do is... by deong · · Score: 1

    ...go ahead and follow the law and explain how evolution is flawed and intelligent design is a valid alternative. But don't stop there. When you explain to your high school chemistry class elements and compounds and covalent bonds and such, take about half the time period and explain how chemistry is flawed and there is a valid alternative where really small people live inside the atoms and build bridges so they can visit each other and the bridges bind the atoms together. Maybe the inert gases just have really ugly people and no one wants to visit them.

    Gravity? Well there's this Einstein guy who talked about curved space-time, but clearly those of us more evolved (pun intended) know that the true explanation is that the earth is magnetic and everything on it is made of metal, some metals being softer than others.

    You'd waste some class time, but at the high school level, I think teaching critical thinking is more important than any particular theory. If I had a high school class that couldn't explain exactly what carbon dating is, but could critically examine a theory and draw conclusions from evidence, I'd feel pretty good about things.

    1. Re:What science teachers should do is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If I had a high school class that couldn't explain exactly what carbon dating is,...


      There was a guy in my high school named Corbin. The girls all wanted to date him. Carbon must be a real stud. I hear about him dating a lot. But I'm not too worried about competition from him for the young ladies. It seems he goes for the old fossils.

  71. Have you actually read it? by citizenc · · Score: 1

    Care to mention what even one of those giant, unexplainable holes is? Or do you even know? :)

    Actually, I have a better question: have you actually READ Origin of the Species? Because if you haven't, and are still talking about how it is full of holes, then you're just a pompus blowhard who doesn't know what he's talking about. :P

  72. Question about evolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not to bash one theory over the other, but could someone enlighten me about evolution?

    Everyone would agree that evolution is a slow process. Each change takes hundreds even thousands of years to complete. Wouldn't we then see fossils of in-between animals or creatures? If we evolved from the sea to birds and mammals etc, wouldn't we find numerous fossils of creatures with half wings or characteristics of different species?

    Also a simple question of single cell organisms - the beginning of life. After the big bang how to you get life from inert matter? Or, does the big bang theory state that life always existed?

    Are we supposed to believe that life started in a 'magic' goo of primordial life?

  73. id & SCIENCE by DarkSarin · · Score: 1, Interesting

    As someone who is definitely NOT atheist, I have a problem with both theories (ID & evolution). One (ID) uses poor science, bad logic, and more to try to discredit the other, while the other (evolution) discounts the possibility that there are other ways to reach the current situation.

    Evolution is a great theory, and it explains a lot. It is not perfect, and ignores the very simple concept that IF there is a God (which I beleive there is--I don't want to turn this into a flame fest regarding the supposed virtues of believing one way or another regarding God, however, and so let's just leave that to the side), he certainly COULD have done things a certain way.

    The very simple truth is that an evolved system and a designed system wouldn't look that different from the inside. The only way to absolutely certain would be to go outside the system and see it in it's entirety. We, however, can't do that. It may even be impossible to do so (that is, the system may, in fact, be infinite). What's worse, even if we think we are outside the system, we may not be.

    Here's where some good research would be helpful--create an evolving system (simulation), and design a system to do the same thing, and see if there is much difference. Now do it blind (that is, two teams work independently, so that those designing don't see the evolved system, and the evolving system can't see the designed system), and then compare them. I suspect that they wouldn't be that different. It would be interesting to see.

    The whole question is all really very silly, however. If you are atheist, what does it matter if someone wants to believe that the earth was created in 7 days? If you are Christian, what do you care if some choose to believe that it took billions of years? Now, I think that it is good that evolution is being taught in schools. I think that the ideas of change over time are important enough that everyone, even those who reject an evolutionary beginning to life, should be familiar with this--even if they don't like it.

    Personally, I believe one way, and I think that my particular (peculiar) take on the whole question is sufficient to encompass both God and the scientifically observable facts. I don't have time to post it all to /., however.

    Oh well.

    --
    "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
  74. Re:Open mind? by JohnFluxx · · Score: 2, Informative

    Wikipedia has quite an extensive range of articles on this. (See the NPOV pages etc).

    Basically it boils down to would it promote an even more open mind if we suggested that perhaps invisible unicorns did it?

    Speaking of Galileo, it was the church the suppressed him...

  75. Evolution does screw up by archeopterix · · Score: 2, Interesting
    This means that all signs of evolution also will be signs of intelligent design, simply because evolution is a form of intelligence.
    There are differences between some products of evolution and intelligent design (human engineering). Accumulating many small locally improving changes can be worse than designing from scratch.

    Example 1: human eye. The nerves are connected to the photoreceptors from the outside - the blind spot is where they go through the retina. An engineer would obviously connect them from the outside.

    Example 2: Flatfish. An engineer designing a flat fish would probably come up with something resembling a stingray - straight spine plus symmetrical ribs on both sides. The flatfish is totally unlike this - strangely twisted, it ( "undergoes a metamorphosis that involves the migration of one eye across the top of the head to a position adjacent to the non-migrating eye on the right lateral side" It probably reflects the way it evolved from some kind of "non-flat" fish that had to lay on its side to hide from predators.

    1. Re:Evolution does screw up by Kim0 · · Score: 1

      >There are differences between some products of
      >evolution and intelligent design (human engineering).
      >Accumulating many small locally improving changes can
      >be worse than designing from scratch.

      Yes, but some times evolution does it better than humans, such as the fluid dynamics of fish, or biochemistry.

      Evolution and humans are two very different intelligences, and will thus do quite different designs.

      Kim0

    2. Re:Evolution does screw up by Hast · · Score: 1

      Example 1: human eye. The nerves are connected to the photoreceptors from the outside - the blind spot is where they go through the retina. An engineer would obviously connect them from the outside.
      It's interesting to note here that eg certain octopus does not suffer from the affliction of "blind spot" as their eyes have the nerves connected from the back of the eye.

      Apparently the creator made us humans into the best it could do. Unfortuntaly some details were skipped and he opted to replace a functional solution with a kludge.

      Perhaps the octopus was created by another creator and this is all a big case of "Not Invented Here"?

    3. Re:Evolution does screw up by Dread_ed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unfartunately, you are speaking from the perspective of someone who cannot speak with authority as to whether something is a mistake or not.

      By this I mean that evolution may have tried another way that seems to you to make more sense and it may have had problems that you are not forseeing, resulting in the present status of the creature in question.

      Remember that every faulty design that comes apart at 30,000 feet killing everyone on board was designed by an engineer.

      It is all a question of perspective. Unfortunately, ours is limited in the extreme. Humans are still trying to fathom out the biological mastery that our bodies perform instant by instant to keep us observing. Who knows, where we see an error or mistake evolution may have pulled out one of its greatest triumphs. Hard to tell when you're only human.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    4. Re:Evolution does screw up by tOaOMiB · · Score: 1

      An interesting point, but there's a flaw in your basic assumption.

      Sure, if an engineer were only designing the flatfish, he would design it without the need for metamorphosis, etc etc. However, an engineer designing the whole universe of life is going to want to reuse parts. You want to design millions of species by hand, or create a general few prototypes and then tweak them?

      That's what I thought. Nice try, and I believe in evolution, but you'll need a different argument to hold any water with me.

    5. Re:Evolution does screw up by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Example 1: human eye. The nerves are connected to the photoreceptors from the outside - the blind spot is where they go through the retina. An engineer would obviously connect them from the outside.

      I love this example for when people say "only something intelligent could design us so perfectly!" Plus the fact that cephalopods don't have this problem while all land vertebrates do indicates to me a common lineage and diversifying genes.

      And consider how difficult it would be to change this feature once it was designed this way. Would it be worth it? The design, while sub-optimal, works pretty well. The blind spot turns out not be that big a deal, and we've dealt with it by evolving to move our eyes constantly. I'd reckon precious few creatures have perished because of this particular flaw, so evolution (which only cares about survival, not a human notion of optimality or design elegance) has no impetus to change.

      Which, on the other hand, isn't that unlike human engineering, actually. You could liken it to the sub-optimal bootup process and scheduled process running of Unix. Sure, it could be done better, but why change something that works? You have to have a reason to want to put in the effort.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    6. Re:Evolution does screw up by zCyl · · Score: 1

      Remember that every faulty design that comes apart at 30,000 feet killing everyone on board was designed by an engineer.

      Only because commercial flights always have a copilot. That's like having a spare plane flying beside you in case the first one fails.

    7. Re:Evolution does screw up by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      and I believe in evolution

      I think it'd be better if you'd choose a different way from "belief" to express your acceptance of the notion of evolution.

  76. Evolution isn't intelligent design by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Intelligence is the process of rationally building and testing theories about the world, and then using those theories for useful stuff. DNA is mutated, recombined, merged through sex, and otherwise changed. These changes are hypotheses about the world, in the form of new life forms trying to survive there. Thus life forms which do not reproduce are falsified hypotheses. The useful stuff is survival.

    Intelligent design inplies that the critters and ecosystems they form were planned. Tot tried and tested blindly until it finally worked out nicely.

    Evolution is not intelligent: it's chaotic. It depends on external conditions (wether or not giant comets are crashing about the planet at the time, for instance), and it keeps on repeating it's mistakes, which is not a sign of intelligence.

    --

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

    1. Re:Evolution isn't intelligent design by jimicus · · Score: 1

      until it finally worked out nicely.

      How do you know it has worked out nicely? Perhaps there is a God, perhaps Evolution is His tool and perhaps what he had in mind was rather more advanced than what we have on Earth today. That's allright - God's infinite, he can happily wait a few more millennia.

      Always strikes me as extremely arrogant to assume that Earth as it is is perfect.

    2. Re:Evolution isn't intelligent design by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      How do you know it has worked out nicely?

      Because of imperical evidence: I am here and it is supporting me and billions of other critters like me.
      I have observed the evidence: Earth's ecosystems work.

      Always strikes me as extremely arrogant to assume that Earth as it is is perfect.

      And it just now strikes me as incredibly stupid to read "works out nicely" as "perfect".
      Putting words in my mouth, and you call me arrogant? Hypocrite.

      --

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

    3. Re:Evolution isn't intelligent design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the other way around. It's not the Earth supporting you and billions of other people, it's the people adapting to Earth's ecosystem.

    4. Re:Evolution isn't intelligent design by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      ...it keeps on repeating it's mistakes, which is not a sign of intelligence.

      Then, by that definition, most humans are not intelligent.

      No, I think you've got a lack of intelligence mixed up with insanity:

      "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results." - Benjamin Franklin

    5. Re:Evolution isn't intelligent design by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Then, by that definition, most humans are not intelligent.

      So I keep noticing.

      No, I think you've got a lack of intelligence mixed up with insanity: "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results." - Benjamin Franklin

      Cute : )

      Life is wild, and evolution is chaotic, not purposeful and intelligent. But, yes, insane.

      --

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

  77. Science cannot disprove creation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a broad consensus of scientists that the universe had a beginning (currently believed to be 13.7 billion years ago). Everything we can observe had a beginning. It all came into existence from nothing.

    It is a logical impossibility for science to explain how the universe came into existence (ie, what happened "before" it existed to cause it to exist). Since time itself had a beginning 13.7 billion years ago, it is irrational to talk about what happened "before" the universe came into existence. The events that caused everything to exist were outside our universe, outside the physical laws of this universe, and therefore cannot be observed or even inferred by scientists.

    The only thing science is capable of doing is observing the laws of the physical world, and inferring from them what seems to have happened in the past...that is, how the universe has been rearranged over time.

    We can debate whether evolution fully explains the life we see. But there's no scientific evidence to discuss on the subject of where all that "stuff" came from in the first place.

  78. Topics like these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Topics like these provide a good reminder at how uncivilized the human race still is. The sheer amount of intolerance, hatred, and disgust that Slashdotters emit here for people who have beliefs that differ from their own is amazing. I mean, no other topic -- not even politics -- produces the insane amount of vitriol in messageboards as one that provides people with an excuse to attack the oft well-meaning but equally oft flawed representatives of their common, supreme enemy: the God that will one day hold them accountable for their actions. So insane with rage are the majority of Sladotters at the idea that the God they so hate and fear might be real that they will create such an incredible display of absolute hatred toward those that follow him that makes one wonder at the holocaust that would occur should their voice become the majority of the nation.

    Out of the overflow of the heart does the mouth speak. Topics like these provide a perfect view of this "overflow".

  79. Re:evolution creating cognative ability by zmollusc · · Score: 1

    Woo. Cognative ability is understood, now? Cool. I always wondered how it worked. Guess those artificial intelligences will be only a few weeks away then?

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  80. From how he describes it... by purduephotog · · Score: 1

    .... it wasn't a warning of impending doom or death, it was more of a "don't go there". He talks about it as a voice that says you need to move on or whatnot, and if he doesn't listen to it things start to go wrong in his life .

    OK, that doesn't sound quite write- take out the psyche problems that implies (as my fiancee is a psychologist and she said he sounds normal so I'm not describing him very well)

    It was just a 'move on' push that kept him from working there. And the next year he went back to working on radio towers as it was OK this time.

    Of course, if you take his view on things everything is pre-determined... which means free will is an illusion.

    1. Re:From how he describes it... by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      Coincidence and strange men hearing strange voices in their heads. Beleiving that the voices are real? That's normal, alright.

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    2. Re:From how he describes it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other poster didn't suggest the 'voice' could have saved those lives. He said:
      with his experience might have been able to save those lives

  81. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by dysprosia · · Score: 1

    Actually, 0/0 is an indeterminate form.

  82. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by will_die · · Score: 1

    General Relativity is a theory, in the same sense of the word as evolution is a theory.
    Don't forget theses other great scientific theories.
    Eugenics.
    That all stomach ulcers are caused by stress and no way bacteria could cause it. Read the hardship that scientist went though tring to disprove that scientific truth.
    Even that the earth stands still and the Sun moves around it. That was the scientific thinking for over 2000 years, and watch out what would happen to you if you disagreed with that scientific theory.

  83. flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I question whether a majority of these people are christian conservatives, I do not mean to upset anyone but doesn't it seem like christian conservatives are the brightest bulbs in the box (tm), Indies and Lefties always seem to be more intelligent and interested in sciences(proof: http://chrisevans3d.com/files/iq.htm). It sickens me when then minds of American children are tainted by religious beliefs, they should keep sciences in public and private educations. Catholic schools and equivalent, [i]can[/i] teach sciences as it is a religious institution as well. The fact remains that the U.S. constitution states than nobody shall be bound by a religion, put simply, if any politician praises god, and does it in public, he or she should not get elected... Religion and Politics are the main cause of death in the existence of the human race... we cannot avoid politics, but we [i]can[/i] avoid religion.

    I am an lefty and this was an obligatory post, if it offends somebody, sorry.

  84. What separation of church and state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously. Where is this at? I've looked at the first amendment and I don't see anything there that says that religious and secular shall not mix. I see there that the state cannot establish an "official religion" but I don't see anything besides that.

    And I hate to burst your bubble-there are people of varying faiths all throughout America, and many of them are politically active. Get over it. What is it with you atheists, anyway? What scares you so much about faith in something other than yourself?

  85. How about forcing churches to teach evolution? by cpotoso · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That's an idea! I'll be not so pissed of with churches trying to teach their junk in PUBLIC schools when they are forced to teach evolution in their own turf. Enough said... I see the US becoming more like IRAN in the next few decades...

    1. Re:How about forcing churches to teach evolution? by cpotoso · · Score: 1

      Yes, but what I want is the following: you force me to teach your junk ideas in public schools, then you are forced to teach SCIENCE in your church... (not all churches are so pathetically backwards, in fact, I don't know of any place in the western world other than the US where this is an issue!)

  86. Re:Separation of Church and State by qyiet · · Score: 0

    Various groups have used this imaginary clause in their personal vendettas against organized religion to wipe it from all public view. I don't think the ACLU and other groups who often invoke "separation of church and state" have much constitutional ground to argue from.

    Aparently the U.S. Supreme Court dosn't agree with you.

  87. You are missing the basic point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have looked into this a bit and I am afraid that you are missing the basic point that intelligent design is trying to make. They are essentially saying that there is too much order in life to attribute the formation of life simply to evolution. And I think they may have a valid point. They don't go to odds to say that evolution does not happen. They don't state that dinosaurs didn't happen. In fact they don't designate the existence of God beyond the fact that there must be a creative force at some point that introduced "order" into the system.

    Evolution is random. It is the jerry ringing system of life and one of the greatest argument used to suggest that creationism is not possible is the panda's thumb problem which shows that the panda's thumb developed out of an enlarged wrist bone. Even so, evolution cannot explain unnecessary found in the universe. As an example. Human, mice, monkeys, cockroaches, etc. share a series of developmental genes. A subset of these genes, the homeobox genes, allow for the segmentation of the body into head, chest, thorax, legs, etc. Interestingly enough, in the genome the arraigment of these gene are in that precise order: head, chest, thorax, legs, etc. Why? Evolution fits the first fit and works with that not the best fit. It is not really something that evolution can explain so intelligent design bring cases like these forward and suggest that evolution cannot explain everything. Something to think about.

  88. 6 of one half a dozen of the other... by Zate · · Score: 0

    alot of people shove ID type stuff in the religon corner when in fact alot of it is as rooted in science as evolution is. Its NOT out to prove the Bible, or try to tie any kind of events to the bible. I find it just as amazing how many people can just up and attribute our whole existance to pure chance, and not just any old pure chance but some REALLY large odds. I guess I am more inclined to believe that someone or something manipulated things a little to get them just right to support life. I dont think the earth and the universe just went "poof" and was created in 6 days, but I dont think it just went "poof" out of nothing for no reason either.

    To accept the big bang theory you have to also accept that there was a cause to make that happen.. and with cause comes will and with will comes intelligence.. there had to be a reason and will behind the big bang. I'm more inclined to think that perhaps someone or something layed out a set of complex rules and then tweaked these as things went along. Used these rules to govern how things would work, to make things as autonomous as possible. Is it God ?.. perhaps.. but not in the classical sense I dont think. I dont think he is as concerned with us per say as he is with the over all everything and the way it runs. Our wars, suffering etc etc are our own devices, brought about by our own minds and souls. I think he's more of an observer

    anyhow thats all subjective but my point is its just as incredible to beleive stuff just "happened" for no aparent reason and all this came about on pure luck. Those are some staggering odds. I once heard it expressed that the odds of things being just like it needed to be to make all of this happen is in the order of 1:more particles than exist .. not sure how they got those odss but thats pretty staggering.

    btw interesting book to read : The Case For A Creator. If your any kind of open minded person you'll want to read both sides and this book explores the myths and untruths (according to the author) of evolution, backed by science and modern scientists. Aparently alot of modern scientists on the bleeding edge are being amazed by some of the things they see and find and its causing them to re-evaluate their faith and belief in a Inteligent Designer. I am sure alot of people will dismiss the book, but anyone who wants the "facts" (propoganda) from both sides will take a look and make up their own mind.

    --
    IT is Dead. The industry is Shot Join Others Who Feel Your Pain http://www.internalstrife.com/
    1. Re:6 of one half a dozen of the other... by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      But ID isn't a logically consistent theory: if something designed life, what designed the designer? And so on.

    2. Re:6 of one half a dozen of the other... by MxTxL · · Score: 1

      attribute our whole existance to pure chance, and not just any old pure chance but some REALLY large odds.

      It's only really large odds because you are looking at it from the end point. Try looking at it like this:
      Make a single elimination competition ladder. (You know the ones for almost every sporting event, where the winner advances and the loser goes home). The eventual winner will have been through 5 rounds of increasingly difficult competition and won every time. When he started out, the odds were overwhelming 1 in 64 shot... so the 5 time winner will have overcome "REALLY large odds". But in every competition like this there WILL be a winner and that winner WILL win 5 straight matches and overcome those same amazing odds.... Not big enough of odds for you??? If you had 128 competitors it would have been a 6 time winner the exact same way but with 1 in 128 odds, 256 competitors would have made a 7 time winner overcoming 1 in 256 odds.... You can just keep increasing the number exponentially until you come up with your own personal approximation for the odds of humans evolving out of the primordial muck .... it could be one in 10 trillion odds.... but something would have overcome those odds... in in our case it just happened to be us. There is nothing so special about us that we HAD to be the result of the 10 trillion molecular interactions, it just happened that way...

    3. Re:6 of one half a dozen of the other... by ravloony · · Score: 0

      Flawed example, I am afraid. In a boxing tournament there _has_ to be a winner. Not so with evolution. Therefore the odd are truly high, not lowered by the fact that all the boxers have been through several fights aswell as the winner. In your example, the boxers on the fourth round have all fought four times before getting to that point. In evolution there is absolutely no relation between the different 'fights' , and there is no guarantee that anything will either survive or adapt.

  89. Evolution in action? by dsfox · · Score: 1

    One would hope that evolution itself would eventualy solve the problem of humans who claim to believe such stupid things. The scientific method is there for a reason, people!

  90. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by hunterx11 · · Score: 1
    Intelligent design is simply stating that certain things in life - like DNA - are simply too complex to have been formed by some amino acids randomly millions of years ago.

    Gee, that's funny. Current evolutionary theory states that RNA came first. Billions of years ago. That's probably enough time to get a few lines of Shakespeare out of the monkeys. There are still many things scientists cannot explain; however, there are a rather comical number of things which scientists can explain which IDers are too lazy to learn, and they then proclaim these things inexplicable.

    --
    English is easier said than done.
  91. What about other religions by a3217055 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I hate to bring up a sore topic, there are also other religions participating in American society, what about the Jews, Hindus, Muslims, Jains, Bhuddists and many other religions that are not based on the Bible? What do these groups have to say and why don't they stand up against the topic of evolution ? The reason the intelligent design ( ID ) took place was because it showed lower recruitments in the church after these people graduated High School and thus these wackos thought to teach these kids this sort of mumbo-jumbo. It is pretty messed up to teach kids religious beliefs in school, what happens there was another person in that school that was not of the same religion? Now it gets kind of sticky. Long story cut short, a theory is a theory so is ID and so is God and so is religion and if you start giving different weights to them then you are really screwing the balance of education. Also they don't teach this sort of crap in other countries, no wonder the whole world thinks of us as red-necks and gun carrying freaks that shoot dark african males.

    1. Re:What about other religions by sesshomaru · · Score: 1
      As it happens, I was just at my Buddhist temple yesterday, talking to some other Buddhists about the origin of the universe. I didn't even bring the subject up. The consensus was "Big Bang/Big Crunch" repeated over and over again, forever. So, not intelligent design, though we do have thousands of gods.

      This was considered to be consistent with the Buddha's statements on the origin of the universe.

      --
      "MIT betrayed all of its basic principles."
    2. Re:What about other religions by Gaewyn+L+Knight · · Score: 1

      I agree with you totally that it is all theories... my main complaint these days is that if the theory happens to have any form of the word 'god' or 'religion' even semi-associated with it then we must ban it.

      If we can stop something from being discussed just because 100% of the people don't believe it then we can just about wipe out every single part of life. Yet for some reason they get away with it to keep a 'seperation of church and state'. The framers of the Constitution and Bill of Rights tried their best to make sure that they wouldn't get oppressed for religion ever again... yet their very rule is being used to do it again.

      In public schools keep religion out of science class... it doesn't belong there. But don't repress students minds by saying that evolution is 100% the only possibility. If a student has an inquiring mind... then by all means talk about other theories of how this old world spins.

      --
      Telcos have alot of dark fibre in the States. Most people assume that's optical fibre...but it's actually moral fibre.
    3. Re:What about other religions by a3217055 · · Score: 1

      Yes but the introduction of new theories should be allowed but to have an objective basis in teaching it is very much required in our day and age. But the interesting thing would be to note in which communities these sort of ideas pop up. Like do they show up in rural, inner city, urban etc... and maybe see the influences that cause such ideas to spawn. Anyway students should be given heads up why ID is chosen over evolution etc..

  92. I'm not a fan of Intelligent Design because... by cloricus · · Score: 1

    ...It isn't that Intelligent. Like for Gods sake (I'm a Christian) we aren't made that well, one reason I'm questioning my faith, if we are made in Gods image damn he must be a mangle of evolution as well! So many mistakes, so many biological systems that you can look at and think "damn, I could do better than that." Look at our brains, they are a stupid mess of layers for each era that humans needed advancement in, from primitive layers to advanced thought layers, not just one system for advanced thought and control. Female periods, common, once a month is a huge waste of resources where as other animals that have evolved further have better ways of dealing with it while still having the same reproductive merit. The heart! No redundancy! At all! Legs with such limited shock tolerance that they wear out or get damaged easily. Does this sound like the work of a God? Or even some one Intelligent? I'm Intelligent and not even a biologist or an engineer and I can sit down and come up with better designs for many of these things.
    I believe that church and state should not be the same thing, in any regard, including schools.

    --
    I ate your fish.
  93. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    evolution is, it is a theory people. Theory. It still has holes, giant unexplainable holes.

    Such as?

    Intelligent design is simply stating that certain things in life - like DNA - are simply too complex to have been formed by some amino acids randomly millions of years ago. It doesn't necessarily propose a God figure, but SOME intelligence behind our design.

    Are you Raelian?

    It doesn't propose a God figure, simply an eternal, all knowing, all powerfull superbeing that was there before life existed and that knew in advance how these incredibly complex interactions of millions of molecules would end up as sheep and flowers and people.
    "Oh yeah, that's not a thinly veiled way of saying 'god did it"?

    --

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

  94. ID != Literal Creationism by pbhj · · Score: 1

    As you imply ID != Literal [Christian|7-day] Creationism.

    Also, many Christians believe evolution is the tool used by God. Similarly with the big bang and the creation of our universe.

    I haven't seen sufficient evidence to weigh in with any one [particular] theory as yet, for either situation. But I do /believe/ in ID. I'd probably lean towards evolution from a running start.

    My conviction comes partly from faith and _partly_ from analysis of things like arguments for irreducible complexity of bacterial flagella. Counter-arguments haven't yet convinced me as they tend to have statements such as "careful analysis shows that there are no major obstacles to gradual evolution of the flagellum" [http://www.talkdesign.org/faqs/flagellum.html ]. The implication being: just because an intelligent being can find a possible route then it must have been followed by evolution.

    And then, as we both agree, evolution may be Gods mechanism.

    Simply to discount intelligent design is not scientific as theism transcends scientific reasoning. You can show an extremely high probabilty that evolution will not be falsified, but however much you protest that doesn't deny the possibility of an intelligent creator.

    Flame away!

  95. Re:Atheism also a religion by Sesticulus · · Score: 0

    The ACLU is not argueing for the Atheistic view of evolution in the science class, just that theology not be in the science class. ID is not science. If an experiment or observation does not meet your preconcieved idea in ID, you can simply say the creator made it that way. There is no way to disprove it, that's not science. Put it in the theology class or philosphy, but not science. Check out talkorigins.com, most of the arguments that ID uses aren't particularly valid. All those complicated things and bad metaphors they use can be explained quite simply.

    BTW, what really bugs me about ID is that it's usually put forth by christians who are trying to promote a creationist view point in a science class, but don't want to say creationism. It's deceitful and they are denying their god. It's been a long time since I read the bible, but I seem to remember some very specific passages mentioning that as being a bad idea. If you're a creationist because of faith, that's great, but don't lie about it, that just makes you a crappy christian.

  96. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by IAmTheDave · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You ID and Creationism. advocates need to get over this term "just a theory" that you use. It just shows ignorance. You need to realize that the popular use of the word "theory" (to mean "speculation") is extremely different from the scientific use of the word "theory" (to describe an explanation of natural processes which may be extremely well tested and well understood).

    I was totally in to your response as creative and well stated until this paragraph. To think that a person that believes in ID or creationism is incapable of understanding basic scientific philosophy or even incapable of being true scientists themselves is ignorant and offensive. Being dismissed as a lunatic for raging against mainstream science has plauged true scientists for centuries. Please accept that those of us who like the idea and hypothesis of ID are not low-IQ neanderthals but are in fact intelligent human beings. (Well, at least some of us.)

    --
    Excuse my speling.
    Making The Bar Project
  97. Ugh... by The+New+Andy · · Score: 1
    As a bible believing Christian, this kind of makes me sad. I'm not very convinced at all that the bible is trying to push a 6/7-day creation, considering that a day doesn't even make sense until you have something like a sun (created on the 4th 'day').

    Then conider that on the 3rd day, the land produced vegetation (NIV translation, 1:11). Which sounds like a fairly natural process, to expect the land to produce plants bearing seed in a day - would require some sort of miraculous intervention (not that I think this is impossible) which isn't at all mentioned in the bible.

    For non-proof (*) number 3, look at Genesis 1:5,8,13,19,23,31 (which are all "... And there was evening, and there was morning - the [1..6]th day.") and now compare it to 2:3: "And God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it he rested from all the work of creating that he had done." (NIV). What is missing? It doesn't say the 7th day is over, there is no evening and morning, it just says that this day is blessed. Considering how obvious the 1..6 pattern is, it is a pretty big oversight of the author to leave out this part... unless of course it was intentional and we are still in this 7th day.

    So that is my bit on why 7 day creation sucks. However, I think in the big picture I'm not following a God who says "Believe in this thing unrelated to the whole focus of the bible or you will die". So yeah, hopefully I don't come across as an arrogant prick who puts themselves above other Christians, but I do wish that some would look at the truths their religion is trying to promote and push them - and not pushing a faith based on what was taught as the only option at school, but faith because it is a verify-able (**) truth.

    Uh... sorry from the normal people

    /rant

    (*) un-proof: I realise that these things don't forma biblical proof for a > 24-hour day form of creation, but these give evidence which might suggest the other way. It is near impossible to prove anything outside of a nice well behaved formal system, so this is the best anyone can do I think.

    (**) verify-able: I don't care if it isn't a word (or if it isn't spelt right), and I realise that some people are probably wanting to challenge me to "verify" my faith now as a proof to them. Similar to above - the world could have been created 2 seconds ago and no one can prove otherwise, however most people will agree that it wasn't due to the available evidence. However there is a line where I believe something based on some evidence and other people won't. This means that these things are verified to me, but not necessarily to you. It doesn't change the truth of them however, one of us is right and the other is wrong, it will just be too late when we find out who wins :).

  98. Relitavistic hogwash by caitsith01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So you're assertion is, in summary, that any theory, idea, or fairy tale that can't be disproved immediately has equal validity to any theory based on observable phenomena and deduction?

    true science is the scrutiny of all possibilities of that which we do not know

    I think this is highly debatable. If we took this approach we may as well use random guesses to explain things, because a guess is a 'possibility' in the sense that you describe. And by the way, starting your post with "Wrong." just makes you look dogmatic, not open minded.

    As for the 'first instant of life' argument - do you therefore dismiss gravity because you can't explain the 'first instant of gravity'?

    --
    Read Pynchon.
    1. Re:Relitavistic hogwash by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

      And by the way, starting your post with "Wrong." just makes you look dogmatic, not open minded.

      If by using the word "Wrong" in your opinion made my post instantly dogmatic, then I apologize. I find myself in this debate frustrated by what I see as close-mindedness on the side of evolutionists, and thus probably allow a certain amount of emotion to taint my true intention. I enjoy debate, but dislike the way that Slashdot looks on people who support ID - or even creationism.

      In terms of dogma, I certainly do lean towards ID.

      If we took this approach we may as well use random guesses to explain things, because a guess is a 'possibility' in the sense that you describe.

      I don't think this is necessarily true. It's not like we're supporting 35 different theories of the creation of life. There are two (somewhat) plausible explanations on the table - we are random, or we are created. To ignore one - even if to disprove it (I know - "how do you disprove ID?" - I don't know, ok?) is - IMHO - not appropriate.

      As for the 'first instant of life' argument - do you therefore dismiss gravity because you can't explain the 'first instant of gravity'?

      Comparing gravity to life is always interesting to me. I don't dismiss either - life or gravity. But fucked if we really know what either is. And so both are questioned. However, in science it is ok to question the current theories on gravity, because it can't be traced in any way to religion. But add the word "religion" - attach it to any argument - and it suddenly becomes wrong to explore. We're at the opposite side of the spectrum from Galileo. Instead of being completely stifled by the Church (or religion in general) any attachment to religion is now evil.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    2. Re:Relitavistic hogwash by shawnseat · · Score: 1

      What does "being created" mean? What did They/She/It/He/??? use to "create"? What process was used? When are things "created"? Unless any of those subsidiary questions are answerable, there are an infinite regress of WAGs of the creation of life.

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    3. Re:Relitavistic hogwash by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      It is worth pointing out that evolution does not imply we are "random." Evolution is a process that produces continuous refinement in a fairly orderly fashion.

      You could reasonably describe this as we started from a somewhat random pool of material and evolution took it from there -- the process is essentially anti-entropic in that it imposes order upon disorderly collections of material.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  99. Evolution Untestable in Long Run by Zaulden · · Score: 1

    Despite all this ID bashing, don't you people realize that evolution is untestable in the long run? When my biology class was learning evolution in college, we learned about all the confined cases in which pools of fishes adapted over the short term, etc.

    But my teacher made a clear point that evolution CANNOT BE PROVED since no scientist has the millions of years in which to test it. In science, anything that cannot be tested repeatedly cannot be proved.

    --
    "Time is an illusion, lunchtime doubly so." - Ford Prefect
    1. Re:Evolution Untestable in Long Run by m50d · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. In the long run, it is testable by exactly that - having a devoted clan of scientists administering a millions of years long experiment. But that is unnecessary, thanks to Occam's razor. We know evolution by natural selection does occur - the ponds, e. coli in the lab, etc. This alone is sufficient to explain the diversity of species, therefore we believe it as an explanation of the diversity of species until we find something that requires an alternative theory. So far no such problem has been observed.

      --
      I am trolling
  100. Live And Let Live Man by u-238 · · Score: 1

    What Does It Matter To You Anyway?

    If People Want To Believe What They Want Then Who Are You To Tell Them How To Think?

    Last Time I Checked It Was A Free Country. You Cant Tell People What To Believe, Thats Why The Men Who Founded This Great Nation Of Ours Put In The Separation Of The Church And State!

  101. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please consult a dictionary
    http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=theory

    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.

    6. An assumption based on limited information or knowledge; a conjecture.

    Theory as you mistakenly use the word is covered by (6). Evolution is a scientific theory, covered by (1).

    Saying "it is a theory people", (were you using the word correctly), would be an argument for taking it very seriously, like the theory of gravity, hear of that one?

    This is a classic example of an ID argument, half way through the argument switch between 2 meanings for the same word and see if anyone notices.

  102. why am I not surprised... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    really... I mean, having grown up in Pennsylvania in the middle of nowhere, I'm surprised this wasn't done years ago.

  103. Re:Open mind? by miknight · · Score: 1

    "Speaking of Galileo, it was the church the suppressed him..." Which is precisely why I chose it as an example... *sigh*

  104. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by taskforce · · Score: 1

    I disagree on the point of DNA being too complex for amino acids to form. The best way to explain this is if you put an infinite number of chimps and gave them all type writers eventually over an infinite length of time one of them would reproduce a Shakespeareian play. Nothing is complex for random.

    --
    My 3D Texturing Skinning work (under construction)
  105. Who made god? by notherenow · · Score: 0
    This just gets us back to the question of who made God. I thought we had already evolved from that question.

    The real question is, how does this story get posted on Slashdot? It has nothing to do with nerds. I deem this article "TROLL"

    --
    We all dance, we all sing.
    -The Streets
  106. slippery slope or teachable moment? by danharan · · Score: 1

    I commented on K5:

    I wouldn't be so alarmed about this... the state decides what you have to teach, not HOW you must teach it.

    More to the point, students (children) should not be held hostages to our stupid politicking. Let them learn about both theories, and why scientists don't accept ID (and vice-versa).

    Instead of stuffing their brains with the "right" theories, we ought to be teaching them how to use said brains. We'll need citizens- open-minded but critical thinkers, not PC-drones.

    Both sides in this debate would have us submit children to an authoritarian model of education as long as they're taught their pet-theories. If we want a better democracy, we'll need to educate people to be better citizens.

    --
    Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
  107. Re:Open mind? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, anyone that believes in imaginary creatures - fairies, gnomes, vampires or gods - and wishes to spread thier nonsense on impressionable children should be persecuted.

    If, on the other hand, you want to sit alone in your cave and make believe the leprechauns and pixies are dancing around you, knock yourself out.

    The rest of us are working to try and understand the world around us, not file it away as "super duper unexplainable."

  108. Re:Separation of Church and State by shaitand · · Score: 1

    " But for now, the establishment clause (which essentially holds that government cannot establish an official religion)"

    And if the government were to support or favor any religion they would have established a de facto official religion. Therefore it is impossible to be compliant with that law without a seperation of church and state.

    It is called logic. Some of us prefer logic and fact to a faith-based life. Go figure.

  109. You can't spell "idiot" without ID. by applemasker · · Score: 4, Insightful
    John Calvert, one of the most popular proponents of ID describes the "methods" by which scientists can "detect" design in nature as:

    In summary, if a highly improbable pattern of events or object exhibits purpose, structure or function and can not be reasonably and rationally explained by the operation of the laws of physics and chemistry or some other regularity or law, then it is reasonable to infer that the pattern was designed. - the product of a mind. Based on the above it is reasonable to conclude that design is the best explanation for the complexity of the postulated ancestral cell.
    (see for yourself)

    As William Saletan over at Slate.com has observed, this argument is absolutely idiotic - "It offers no predictions, scope modifiers, or experimental methods of its own. It's a default answer, a shrug, consisting entirely of problems in Darwinism. Those problems should be taught in school, but there's no reason to call them intelligent design. Intelligent design, as defined by its advocates, means nothing. "

    Also, ID fails to account that human knowledge is constantly expanding. It may be true that we cannot presently describe some things by "the operation of the laws of physics or chemistry or some other regularity or law," but that does not mean that someday we will not be able to do so... but until then (and perhaps for some time thereafter) people will insist on calling it "intelligent design."

    Of course, appealing to the public's ability to engage in rational thought is another issue altogether.

    --
    Bush Lies On the Record.
    1. Re:You can't spell "idiot" without ID. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, to recap John Calvert's argument: if its too complex for me to understand, it must be magic... er, God that did it?

    2. Re:You can't spell "idiot" without ID. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is this, someone else spoke their opinion, and it diagrees with yours, so your opinion is not valid?

      Well, I disagree with your opinion. Yours is now invalid.

  110. jumped the shark? by maniac/dev/null · · Score: 1

    Wait a minute, Slashdot is linking to an article from K5?

    Can you say 'Jumped the Shark'?

  111. Intelligent Design != Creationism by Fished · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Look - as I read this sort of article (and the comments already posted) it is quite evident to me that most who are commenting have not made any effort whatsoever to understand Intelligent Design - and that this is true across the scientific community.


    Intelligent design is NOT creationism, although creationists often use it to bolster their arguments. Here are some differences.


    1. In creationism, YHWH created it all. In ID, there is an unknown, unseen designer who might be YHWH, but might also be Mongo Bongo, god of the congo. In evolution, it is assumed a priori that random mutation is the only factor.
    2. In creationism, it happened in 7 days, 6-10000 years ago. In ID, it happened over a period of 4.5 billion years by a process of gradual change. In Evolution, it happened over a period of 4.5 billion years by a process of gradual change.
    3. in creationism, the beginning, middle, and end of the argument is that "God said so in Genesis." In Intelligent Design, some significant questions about the ability of random evolution to create certain structures are raised. In evolution, ALL structures are assumed to be achievable by random mutation alone. (Consider this: for blood clotting to occur, one needs a dozen proteins to be present, none of which serve ANY OTHER PURPOSE in the absence of all of them. How could this evolve?)


    This is a very different animal from the Scopes trial, at least from a legal and theological perspective. What is at issue is not theology vs. science - i.e. church vs. state - but two competing scientific interpretations. That you may regard ID as a sort of reverse Lysenkoism is not so much relevant as the question of who gets to determine what is taught in the schools? Do you really want to declare that current scientific orthodoxy, whatever that changes into every five minutes, is what must be taught in the schools, without regard to the social consequences? If so, I urge you to consider the prominent role "science" and even "evolution" played in the Eugenics movement. It is wrong - even disasterous - to suppose that the fads of scientific orthodoxy should drive our social process.


    And, for what it's worth, I'm neither a creationist nor an Intelligent Design advocate - although I see some merit in the latter. I'm perfectly comfortable if Evolution turns out to be the case all along, because I believe in a God who can work through the random.


    "The lot is cast into the lap,

    but the decision is the Lord's alone. "


    Proverbs 16.33


    Now, you don't have to like ID - that's fine. But I would urge those ranting and raging to consider whether their oppositions to Intelligent Design is founded in a considered evalution kof the theory, or in a knee-jerk reaction against your perception of where it will lead?

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    1. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Ill_Omen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      so tell me, where did the Intelligent Designers come from? Through what process did they become Intelligent?

      Is it just turtles all the way down?

    2. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by lovebyte · · Score: 3, Informative
      Not entirely correct:

      . Evolution happens in other ways than mutations. Horizontal gene transfer from one species to another via viruses for instance.

      . Your blood clotting reference is the same as the evolution of the eye and many other things. You do not know if one and only one ancient protein could not do the job albeit poorly. This gene was then helped by others and did a better job. You do not know this and your ignorance (and ours) cannot justify a supreme being interference.


      As a scientist, I do not need any God hypothesis.

      --

      I'll do it for cheesy poofs.

    3. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Tony · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In creationism, YHWH created it all. In ID, there is an unknown, unseen designer who might be YHWH, but might also be Mongo Bongo, god of the congo.

      And the difference is...?

      In evolution, it is assumed a priori that random mutation is the only factor.

      Please try to understand evolution before making false statements like this.

      In evolution, ALL structures are assumed to be achievable by random mutation alone.

      This is incorrect. First, mutation is not "random." The driving force is genetic diversity within a population, filtered through natural selection. The process of genetic diversification is not fully understood, and this leads a *lot* of otherwise-intelligent people to assume there is something fundamentally wrong with the theory of evolution through natural selection.

      Secondly, the filtering via natural selection is hardly random either. There are definite driving forces behind the selection, but they are not "intelligent."

      Life is a structure of the universe, guided by nothing more than other expressions of mathematics within the universe. Claiming divine intervention in the creation of life is like claiming the mostly-elliptical orbits of the planets, or the statistical decay of subatomic particles, are proof of God.

      The platelet thing has been debunked so many times, I'm not going to repeat it here-- just look for "platelet behe." Or, here's a decent link.

      But I would urge those ranting and raging to consider whether their oppositions to Intelligent Design is founded in a considered evalution kof the theory, or in a knee-jerk reaction against your perception of where it will lead?

      My problem with intelligent design is that it relies on something more preposterous than random chance: it presupposes a divine being guiding the universe. Our inability to fully understand something does not necessitate a divine being. The existence of God is about a quadrillion times more unlikely than platelets evolving, fer crying out loud.

      Finally, and I cannot scream this loud enough, ID IS NOT SCIENCE!!! There. I'd try to make it louder, but I'm in a library. ID enters into the argument with an agenda-- to "prove" the existence of God. In science, if God became a necessary part of the explanation, a scientist would think of certain necessary predictions based upon the existence of God, and design and perform experiments based upon those predictions.

      Since God cannot be tested for in the universe, God is outside the realm of science. For all I know, there is a divine hammer in the universe. But, since I cannot test for God, nor can I make predictions based upon the "knowledge" of God, it is outside science altogether.

      Saying "irreducible complexity is proof of Good" is just as cirular as saying, "The bible is proof of God." Just because we don't understand something doesn't mean God had a hand in it. It just means we're limited in either our knowledge or our capacity to understand.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    4. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2, Funny
      "The lot is cast into the lap,
      .. but the decision is the Lord's alone. "

      and the lamb shall lie down next to the lion.
      ...but the lamb won't get much sleep.

      / w/apologies to woody allen

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    5. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by quigonn · · Score: 1

      Consider this: for blood clotting to occur, one needs a dozen proteins to be present, none of which serve ANY OTHER PURPOSE in the absence of all of them. How could this evolve?

      It seems you think of evolution as going only into one (or a very few directions). Actually, you have a huge diversifications, some of which are not able or less likely to survive than others, and they die then. That's the concept of "survival of the fittest".

      --
      A monkey is doing the real work for me.
    6. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by geomon · · Score: 1

      In ID, there is an unknown, unseen designer who might be YHWH,

      Who created the designer?

      Ad infinitum......

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    7. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Fished · · Score: 1
      I don't think you were listening. You wrote:
      This is incorrect. First, mutation is not "random." The driving force is genetic diversity within a population, filtered through natural selection. The process of genetic diversification is not fully understood, and this leads a *lot* of otherwise-intelligent people to assume there is something fundamentally wrong with the theory of evolution through natural selection.
      What ID says, simply, is that they think that process of genetic diversification can best be understood by appeal to a designer. If you choose to call that "god", that's fine, and most of them would.

      HOWEVER. I don't think that Intelligent Design in and of itself seeks to, in your words:

      ID enters into the argument with an agenda-- to "prove" the existence of God.
      Rather, it is, in its purest form, an attempt by those who already believe in God to reconcile that belief with evolution. It is not an attempt to prove God - believe it or not, most Christians realize that God cannot be proven.

      To me, it seems that ID no more has an agenda to "prove" God than many on the evolutionary side of the debate have an agenda to disprove God. It is, in my not-so-humble opinion, idiocy to suppose that anyone in our culture can be neutral on this question.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    8. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by weston · · Score: 1

      You're going to have this problem at some point no matter what cosmology you subscribe to -- either you'll have to say there's some entity or category of stuff that has always existsed, or you'll have to go through an infinite (or cyclic) chain of predecessors or causes.

    9. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      >This is incorrect. First, mutation is not "random."

      From what I remember in Genetics, mutation *is* random. It has tendencies (IIRC transitions are more common than transversions), but "random" doesn't necessarily (or even usually) mean "uniformly variate."

      >Finally, and I cannot scream this loud enough, ID IS NOT
      >SCIENCE!!!

      Right, neither is the naturalist assumption. It is simply a framework under which people choose work.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    10. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      Well, mutation may, or may not be random.

      I mean, cells do not mutate for no reason. Mutation isn't magic. There's always causation - a lucky strike from a cosmic ray, for example. A buildup of certain chemicals. Failures in the replication process. In theory, given enough data, you can predict mutations, even explain them. In practice, this would require more information than can ever be gotten.

      Evolution concerns the prediction that the simplest assumption - of a completely random and acausal series of mutations, we can still get observable effects.

      ID as a framework, meanwhile, just doesn't work. It isn't the simplest assumption, but instead the most complicated possible one. It introduces the baggage of intelligence were it is not neccessary. And if we allow it as a framework, then it becomes impossible to do any additional work on it.

      I mean, if ID is an acceptable explanation, then why investigate further? It boils down to nothing more than 'everything is the way it is, because the universe is just like that.' Which isn't a foundation, but a statement of defeat and resignation.

    11. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by mbbac · · Score: 1
      (Consider this: for blood clotting to occur, one needs a dozen proteins to be present, none of which serve ANY OTHER PURPOSE in the absence of all of them. How could this evolve?)
      A designer wouldn't make it so complicated.
      --

      mbbac

    12. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Finally, and I cannot scream this loud enough, ID IS NOT SCIENCE!!!"

      By the same token, neither is macro-evolution. Science is the application of the scientific method: 1) observe, 2) hypothesize, 3) experiment to test hypothesis. You cannot perform an experiment to verify either ID or evolution. You can't perform an experiment to prove how something historical happened. It's like me saying "here's a building, I think a robot built it, I'll perform an experiment to see if a robot can build a building to verify my hypothesis". Even if I construct a robot that does produce a building it doesn't prove the original building was produced that way. It's an invalid experiment.

      It comes down to which you want to believe. There observations that seems to support evolution. There are observations that seems to support ID. You can't test either one, so you have to *believe* in the one that is more convincing to you.

    13. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by w9ofa · · Score: 1

      From Grandparent:

      But I would urge those ranting and raging to consider whether their oppositions to Intelligent Design is founded in a considered evalution kof the theory, or in a knee-jerk reaction against your perception of where it will lead?


      From Parent:

      Finally, and I cannot scream this loud enough, ID IS NOT SCIENCE!!! There. I'd try to make it louder, but I'm in a library.


      Well, that solves that mystery. Let's go eat lunch.

    14. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by InfoVore · · Score: 1

      And, for what it's worth, I'm neither a creationist nor an Intelligent Design advocate - although I see some merit in the latter. I'm perfectly comfortable if Evolution turns out to be the case all along, because I believe in a God who can work through the random.

      Taking the position that God is behind Evolution makes you a believer in Intelligent Design.

      Intelligent Design is just a subset of Creationism. Neither are falsifiable. Both qualify as religious beliefs.

      Intelligent Design is just the Creationist Wolf wearing Grandma Science's bed clothes.

      - I.V.

      --
      "These laws they're passing won't even compile anymore, let alone execute." - anon
    15. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intelligent design is a political project that tries to subvert science and what it may teach us about nature and thus by extention about humans and their behavior. Just google for the Discovery Institute and its so called wedge strategy for an example.

      Why can't these activists use their time to add something of real value to human culture. Make art, build a cathedral or something like many of the great artists of old did? Why is it that they have to try and destroy science, one of mankinds greatest achievements? They are like the Taliban blowing up ancient Bhuddist statues in Afghanistan because these statues did not agree with their sense of what gods plan would be.

    16. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Verteiron · · Score: 1

      For crying out loud. It doesn't HAVE to be turtles all the way down.

      Turtles don't have to stand on anything. Turtles swim.

      --
      End of lesson. You may press the button.
    17. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (Consider this: for blood clotting to occur, one needs a dozen proteins to be present, none of which serve ANY OTHER PURPOSE in the absence of all of them. How could this evolve?)

      ERG!!!! This really cheeses me. The statement above does NOTHING to add credibility to ID! Just because you can't understand something, or don't THINK that it could happen, is in NO WAY evidence for a "competing" theory.

      What you have is a hypothesis "The complex combinations of chemicals needed for blood coagulation are too complex to have evolved on their own." Now, GO TEST IT!!!! SCIENCE WILL WORK FOR YOU TOO IF YOU JUST USE IT!!!!

      You can't just throw something out like that and call it a day, unless you are an ancient greek or something. Develop a hypothesis, develop a test for that hypothesis, and then run the experiment. Observe what happens and work it into a theory. For cripes sake, at least bother to go find out if someone has done research along those lines and what their conclusions were. With out that, you just open the door to whatever junk someone wants to throw out there. Like this:

      "It would have taken so much energy to create the universe; I don't see how any one being could have had that kind of power." Whoops, there went God.

      Seriously though, this just demonstrates how poor most people's knowledge of the fundamentals of science are. We have got to do a better job beating this in to our children, like a litany we teach them in kindergarten or something.

    18. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      By the same token, neither is macro-evolution.

      Speciation, which is the usual definition of "macroevolution", has been observed.

    19. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Fished · · Score: 1
      What you, and others like you, who critique me for my lack of detail really demonstrate is that you HAVE NOT READ the seminal work of Intelligent Design, Behe's Darwin's Black Box. That example was the first one he used.

      Look, I'm not a scientist - I'm a student New Testament. And I'm not capable of holding my own in a discussion of any kind of biology. However, as a theologian, I like to think I know at least a little bit about the interaction between religion and secular culture. And I've got to say that I am struck again and again by the unreasoning venom that "scientists" direct at religious perspectives. You have clearly demonstrated that you are violently criticizing a book you have not read, and that makes you no better than the benighted fundamentalists who critique Harry Potter without bother first to read it.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    20. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Tony · · Score: 1

      There are other tests than experiments. Evolution predicts certain things, including mitochondrial DNA similarities between similar species. This has been proven out in observation.

      There is significantly more evidence for evolution than for ID, as ID has no evidence whatsoever.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    21. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Tony · · Score: 1

      If you choose to call that "god", that's fine, and most of them would.

      There's another name for it? If so, I've not heard.

      Rather, it is, in its purest form, an attempt by those who already believe in God to reconcile that belief with evolution. It is not an attempt to prove God - believe it or not, most Christians realize that God cannot be proven.

      I heartily disagree. If they were not trying use this as "proof" of God, they would not be trying so hard to get ID accepted as science. They would merelyl accept this as a personal belief and move on.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    22. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Starcub · · Score: 1

      IMHO the proverb you quoted doesn't support the idea that God works through randomness in an absolute sence. Rather that randomness to which it refers exists only in the prespective of man who is unable to comprehend the ways and works of God. It's not that there isn't randomness in the universe, nor that God does not work through it, but...

      With respect to creation, Einstien was able to comprehend enough about the complexity of the universe in his observation to conclude that at least there was some form of intelligence involved in it's design. When I read the first couple in Genesis, I can't help but come up with the idea that that which God created was 'ordered' which necessarily implies intelligent design. The catch as I see it, is in ones ability to observe what is and truely recognize where it came from and how and why it came to be.

    23. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Any intelligent discussion regarding the subject at hand requires a minimal understanding of the subject. Now, the subject is not really biology but epistemology and the philosophy of science: the objections to ID are not based on the content of the assertions it proposes, but on their standing with regards to the methods of science.

      That a statement such as "The complex combinations of chemicals needed for blood coagulation are too complex to have evolved on their own" (and any other statement for that matter) needs to be verifiable to acquire the lustre of scientificity is tautological. This is independent of its being a statement about biology: it is a condition of scientificity. I for one have absolutely no idea of what the biology of coagulation is, yet it seems obvious to me that such an assertion requires to be verifiable.

      Now, I have to confess that I do not see how a verification of that particular statement might look like. I'd say that a definition of what complexity is and a way to measure it, or at least, to make comparaisons of complexity, would be required; this can be very hard, as it shpould be an objective definition, not based on what we can understand or not, and would probably need a rather delicate mathematical formulation to be of any use. Also, I'd expect that a very precise description of what one means by "on its own" would be needed, and, accompanying that, a description of what "not on its own" would mean, too. After those preliminaries, one would have simply gotten to a point in which the statement to be verified has a precise meaning. As it currently stands, I simply cannot make much sense of it, except as a declaration of what we do not understand. Next, one would need to devise experiments (even thought experiments) which would allow one to verify it or to reject it---it would not be needed that the experiments could be effectively carried out (this is what happens with the experiments needed to validate string theories: we cannot at the current time perform them, but physicists are all the time thinking about them and coming up with new ones and so on): one might device processes to determine an empirical upper bounds on the complexity of what can happen "on their own", for example, and to compare that to the complexity of coagulation (which one would have to measure somehow), or something. Once you do that, the statement would be have adquired the quality of being falseable, and it would become scientific.

      Without doing all this 'homework', it is impossible to take the statement seriously.

    24. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by Fished · · Score: 1
      Any intelligent discussion regarding the subject at hand requires a minimal understanding of the subject. Now, the subject is not really biology but epistemology and the philosophy of science: the objections to ID are not based on the content of the assertions it proposes, but on their standing with regards to the methods of science.

      That a statement such as "The complex combinations of chemicals needed for blood coagulation are too complex to have evolved on their own" (and any other statement for that matter) needs to be verifiable to acquire the lustre of scientificity is tautological. This is independent of its being a statement about biology: it is a condition of scientificity. I for one have absolutely no idea of what the biology of coagulation is, yet it seems obvious to me that such an assertion requires to be verifiable.

      As it happens, while I do not know much about science, I do know a great deal about philosophy of science. (My BA is in Philosophy, and I took 4 courses focused on epistemology and 2 on philosophy of science.) Therefore, I feel quite competent to say that you are deeply mistaken, or at best oversimplifying.

      You are assuming a sort of doctrinaire verificationism rising out of the positivist school. However, most contemporary philosophy of science gives at least a nod to the importance of falsification. In this view, first articulated by Popper, what makes a theory scientific is not that it is verifiable, but that it is falsifiable. What makes it meaningful to talk about a theory is that you can come up with an experiment (or observation) that would falsify said theory.

      In your naive dismissal of Intelligent Design, you are attacking the second point of ID without addressing seriously step 1 of the ID argument.

      1. Observation: there exists biological diversity which cannot be explained by appeal to natural selection.
      2. Assertion: having disqualified natural selection, an intelligent designer is the best available explanation.
      That is, ID theorists are claiming that they have made some falsifying observations regarding Evolution by Natural Selection. This is not a theory, but an observation. Step 2 is an assertion which, while it cannot be verified, can most certainly be falsified (as some scientists have tried to do by demonstrating elements of biological diversity incompatible with the notion of an Intelligent Designer.)

      Tell me something: natural selection, as it's being shoved down the throats of high school students - which is what's under attack, not evolution - is really a universal affirmative assertion. It says, in effect, that "all biological diversity is created by natural processes." (Obviously, this is a very simplified statement of it - but I'm not trying for rigor in a /. conversation.)

      Such an assertion is trivially falsifiable, with a single counter-example, if only one could be found which was undisputed. But how on earth do you propose to verify such a claim? The short answer is you can't - your preferred theory is one that cannot be verified. It can only be falsified - so why on earth are you clinging to the rotting corpse of the Austrian school?

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    25. Re:Intelligent Design != Creationism by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      I am really using the word verifiability as a sinomym for resistance against attempts to falsability; this abuse of language (which it is) is standard (no one says that 'the discovery of Neptune did not falsify Newtonian mechanics'...) and needs no defense. I probably was not clear about this, I guess. Effectively verifying universal propositions is, if the idea makes any sense at all, not a requirement for science. I cling not to any rotten corpses.

      Regarding your two steps...

      The 'observation' you refer to is really a petition of principle. For one thing, it really depends on some fixing of what the rules of natural selection are, but of course these are dynamic, as is any other hypothesis in the realm of science; natural selection as a hypothesis has changed in time, and has changed in a way which allows now to explain things which could not be explained with older versions of the hypothesis--- this is nothing to be surprised at, as science works exactly this way. This does not mean that an hypothesis cannot be justifiably rejected, and there are abundant candidates which would prove the hypothesis of natural selection false. 'Excesive' diversity does not seem one of this candidates: diversity would have to be made quantifiable objectively (as being excesive for my understanding is certainly not a problem...), a rather precise argument should be made in order to establish what the 'reasonable' amount of diversity that would ensue from natural selection is, and justification for the assertion that the actual diversity present in nature exceeds the reasonable amount of diversity consequent to natural selection.

      As for your second step: The assertion "an intelligent designer is the best available explanation" is an assertion about available explanations, not about the universe or the world or anything else. Its content is dependent of making precise what intelligence is (which is a very difficult problem even when one tries to distinguish non-intelligent 'trivial' actions from intelligent ones, let alone when one is trying to describe 'creations of the world' as intelligent actions; does a non-intelligent designer make sense?), what designing means in this context and what is it that is being designed (which is not really obvious: did the proposed designer designe the world as we see it piece by piece, or did he/she/it design rules which when put to work turned an initial state, picked by the designer, into the state of the world we see now---the two alternatives are not equivalent: for an amusing toy example, consider the creation of the game of life by Conway), what the set of available explanations is, and to fix a sense in which an explanation is better than another. For example, why is the absence of a rule a worse explanation for anything than the existence of an intelligent background actor? Can the two hypothesis be distinguished in any way? Before all this is done, your step 2 is nothign mre than a petition of principle.

  112. Although to be fair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is much in Origin of the Species that is now deprecated in our modern understanding of evolution.

  113. Re:Open mind? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    All this talk about how creationism == loony bin reminds me of how poor Galileo must have felt.

    He must have felt the SAME DAMN WAY those teachers are feeling: Religious loonies in postions of power are forcing me to say things I don't believe, and are trying to stop me from teaching real science! And there's nothing I can do about it!

    --

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

  114. Re:Atheism also a religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    If atheism is a religion, then bald is a hair color.

  115. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by jag7720 · · Score: 0

    It still proves my point...
    you can't get something from nothing... thus showing the "big bang" could not have happened... and the "vacume of space" implys that there is something outside of it... and vacume is something.

  116. Neanderthals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Please accept that those of us who like the idea and hypothesis of ID are not low-IQ neanderthals but are in fact intelligent human beings.

    Hmmm, a reference to "neanderthals" in the same paragraph that defends ID over evolution? Interesting.

  117. Re:Atheism also a religion by hahiss · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Are you kidding me? Please tell me that this is a troll.

    No? Okay, so here goes:

    1. Atheism is not a religion because it has no religious doctrines---it is the denial, in fact, of any religious doctrine.

    2. Atheism is not a religion because it has no institutions, no worship, no articles of faith, etc.

    3. Finally, atheism is, as I understand it, the view that there are no good reasons for believing in a god, a goddess, many gods, or many goddesses. The arguments in favor of theism fail, and, given the success of the naturalistic worldview embodied in the sciences, it is only rational to deny the veracity of supernatural or theistic explanations. They need not be false so much as utterly irrelevant. (After all, my folks think that there's magic going on in their computer, and have a tough time grasping the whole computer programs just being 1s and 0s represented as electrical current. Their explanation is false, but it is utterly unnecessary, since we know that computers are electrical, and not magical, devices.)

    That ain't religion, which has at its core reliance on faith (belief without grounds), revealed truth (i.e. magical texts), and supernatural explanations.

    --
    "Every decent man is ashamed of the government he lives under." - H.L. Mencken
  118. Re:Atheism also a religion by Ubergrendle · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I can't disagree more with your comment. 'Athesim' is a categorisation that defines a mode of thought that either actively or passively does not profess a religion or existence of divinity.

    If I understand your argument, you're saying that NOT presenting a relgious context for a scientific theory in a textbook actually defaults into being a religious context because atheism is a religion. This circular logic is ludicrous...at best its a double negative but in reality you're just trying to define the argument so that you'll win. Any argument based on logic requires the taking of positive position that must be proven through argument, atheism is the default non-affirmative state. You are trying to turn atheism into a positive position, with the default state being the existence of a divine power.

    In short, atheism is not a religion.

    --
    John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
  119. Re:Atheism also a religion by mehaiku · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Atheism is a religion only if not collecting stamps is a hobby. Lack of belief in diety does not equal religion. Additionally, your quotes about an "atheistic view of evolution" isn't entirely correct. There are theists who believe that evolution is the means by which their preferred deities manage biology/life. Google for theistic evolution to learn more.

  120. Duh. by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

    That goes without saying. We are talking about religion, after all.

    1. Re:Duh. by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      Yep. god wants you to be rich.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
  121. evolution is not a theory, it's an occurrence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    argh, i may get flamed for this but i have to mention it since this phenomenon makes me cringe whenever i hear the terms jumbled. (and i can't count how many times it's professors and other suposedly learned people who foul this up.)

    EVOLUTION is not a "theory". Nowhere in Darwin's Origin of Species or Descent of Man does the phrase "theory of evolution" appear. Evolution is a biological occurence. At one point in the history of the planet there were certain species, now at this present period of existance there are other species. The intervening eons brought with them biological changes which ARE THEMSELVES evolution.

    The MECHANISM by which these changes came about can be debated in Philosophy of Science classrooms (NOT Biology classrooms) and students can discuss theories such as Natural Selection, Intelligent Design, etc. Darwin's theory was Natural Selection.

    Anyone who uses the phrase "Theory of Evolution" is either badly misinformed, actively trying to mislead people, or just a plain old moron.

  122. More fundamental - what is Science? by dpilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    More disturbing than discussions of Evolution vs Intelligent Design is the fact that, as a society we seem to have lost track of what science really is. Calling Intelligent design "an alternative theory" displays a clear lack of understanding of what a theory is, and behind that, what science is.

    Quite simply, and I know I'll get flamed for some simple mistake in this explanation, science is:
    Studying the universe around us, trying to learn about it and how it works. One aspect of this i a theory. If you have an idea about what something is and how it works, that's a hypothesis. You take your hypothesis, and figure out further implications of it, and propose tests and experiments that can test it. You hypothesis needs to make predictions that were previously unknown, and can be verified by tests and experimentation. If a hypothesis survives some amount of this process, it "graduates" to be a theory.

    But the most important ingredient is an open mind. A hypothesis or theory may be rejected or modified based on experiments and/or facts, and a scientist should always be prepared to do that.

    The early Muslim empire was one of the most enlightened the world has ever seen. Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together prosperously and happily in the Holy Lands. Science was advanced as, "understanding God's works," and for Pete's sake, we still use Arabic numbers. Eventually religious conservatism took over. The US seems bent on following that path, today.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    1. Re:More fundamental - what is Science? by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I can phrase your ideas a little more succinctly?

      "Science starts with a question and seeks evidence to try and come up with an answer."

      How close is that?

      Creationism starts with the answer and tries to explain away the evidence that doesn't fit.

      "Intelligent Design" is an extension of Creationism that tries to do this by saying: "Well God MEANT to do it like that!" This kind of reasoning is at best a non sequitur, and cannot be tested or used to try and predict the outcome of a hypothetical test; which means it is not a theory.
      =Smidge=

    2. Re:More fundamental - what is Science? by dpilot · · Score: 1

      Works for me.

      But a little more than that, I was trying to come across with the idea that experimentation and testing are essential parts of a theory, and even science, itself.

      Another way of saying that "Creation Science" isn't really science, and that "The Intelligent Design Theory" isn't really a theory, because in both cases there isn't room for expirementation, testing, and modification. Kind of a semantic game, but in this case, an important one, IMHO.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    3. Re:More fundamental - what is Science? by m50d · · Score: 1

      The reason for this is simple - philosophy of science is not taught in schools. Try taking a random person and getting them to investigate what the period of a pendulum depends on. Most people can't do it, because they never learnt the most important part of science - how to form hypotheses, test them, refine them, make a theory. That's what we need to start teaching.

      --
      I am trolling
    4. Re:More fundamental - what is Science? by cpotoso · · Score: 1

      I want to second you on the last paragraph: it is rather disturbing how empires decay. The decay of the "muslim empire" as its enlightened world was taken over by religious fundamentalists (kind of similar of what's gradually happening in the US) was quite striking. (I am not saying this was the only cause of the decay, but it is, in my opinion, part of the reason). Where, oh!, where will the US end?

    5. Re:More fundamental - what is Science? by dpilot · · Score: 1

      When did they stop? I remember being tought this in grade school.

      I think I've got to have a serious chat with my daughter, tonight.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    6. Re:More fundamental - what is Science? by m50d · · Score: 1

      I'm 17 and was never taught this. It's implicit if you're paying attention to it, and you won't do well in college science if you didn't pick it up, but you're never actually taught it and I can well imagine over 2/3 of my class not knowing it. (and I think the actual figure is even higher than that)

      --
      I am trolling
  123. From Michael Shermer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.skeptic.com/eskeptic/eskeptic05-04-05.h tml

    "If ID is not science, then what is it? In a 2005 web article on
    "Intelligent Design's Contribution to the Debate over Evolution,"
    Dembski wrote: "Thus, in its relation to Christianity, Intelligent
    Design should be viewed as a ground-clearing operation that gets rid of
    the intellectual rubbish that for generations has kept Christianity
    from receiving serious consideration." IDT founder Phillip Johnson, a
    law professor at U.C. Berkeley, wrote in a 1999 article in Church &
    State magazine: "The objective is to convince people that Darwinism is
    inherently atheistic, thus shifting the debate from creationism vs.
    evolution to the existence of God vs. the non-existence of God. From
    there people are introduced to 'the truth' of the Bible and then 'the
    question of sin' and finally 'introduced to Jesus.'""

  124. Not quite by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "... that evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life..."

    While I believe in evolution, evolutionary theory does not explain the origins of life. It does explain the state of current life forms in existance today and how they may have gotten that way.

    We can demonstrate evolution in numerous experiments today, with plant life and animal life. So we know evolution is a viable theory. However, the theory of evolution does not address, nor does it try to address the origins of life. It only tries to describe what happened to the life after it existed.

    To those of Judeo-Christian Faith out there, evolution does not preclude God's act of Creation. It only describes how the process progressed after that initial creative force.

    The biggest hangup with evolution and faith is with the origin of man. Evolution does not state that man evolved from monkeys. It does observe that there are a lot of similarities with other primates and we do share a lot of DNA.

    But, evolution also allows for the similar traits to be caused by the environment. For instance, if an opposable thumb is advantagouss to grasping or standing upright in the brush is advantagous, then it is resonable from an evolutionary perspective that both humans and primates share these traits.

    DNA sharing is also used to show by some who misunderstand evolution that we came from monkeys. It is true we share something like 96% of our DNA with chimpanzees. But we also share something like 91% with dogs and over half with sea cucumbers. Evolution theory does imply that we would share DNA, but it doesn't comment on whether it comes from inheritance or adaptation. Obviously, using the thumbs thing, from above, there are only so many ways for DNA to create a thumb. Furthermore, the majority of shared DNA between all species has to do with cellular function and basic tenets of live. Evolution does not disallow for that and as a matter of fact predicts that it would happen.

    Even if it were somehow proven that man evolved from lower primates, it would not negate God's creation of man, but only further explain the how. At some point in time a pre-human gave birth to another pre-human that was a little bit closer to a human, that gave birth to another pre-human a little closer again, and on and on, until eventually a human is born and at which point God created man.

    Back to the original comment though. Evolution, in simplified terms, states that things evolve and adapt to their environment and those traits which give an advantage tend to win out and thrive, becoming new species. It does not, however, say how life began (it's origins, so to speak). That debate is left to the philosophers and theologians.

    1. Re:Not quite by lukesl · · Score: 4, Informative

      DNA sharing is also used to show by some who misunderstand evolution that we came from monkeys.

      Your argument about "DNA sharing" is technically incorrect. It is possible to demonstrate that we "came from monkeys" using DNA evidence because it is possible to distinguish between convergent evolution and common ancestry at the DNA level. One of the reasons this is true is because there are many DNA sequences that can code for the same protein sequence, so if the DNA sequences are more related than would be expected by chance, that implies common ancestry (because functionally, only the protein sequence matters much). There are also other things, such as position of genes on the chromosomes, that can not be attributed to convergent evolution. Not only can it be shown that chimps and humans share a common ancestor, but there are algorithms that can predict the approximate time that the most recent common ancestor existed for humans, mice, flies, horseshoe crabs, flowering plants, etc.

      Even if it were somehow proven that man evolved from lower primates, ...

      It HAS been proven that man evolved from lower primates. The fact that many people in the US do not believe this is due to widespread ignorance of just how strong the data is.

    2. Re:Not quite by rawb · · Score: 2, Informative

      Dawkins tries to describe how life originated in his book "The Selfish Gene". Basically, he starts by suggesting that survival of the fittest really started as survival of the most stable. Crystals and rocks are his examples here. Non-stable patterns break down, stable patterns stay together. Before rocks and crystals, everything was liquid, a part of the primordial ooze. And at some point, somewhere, a molecule formed that could replicate. It didn't have a cell wall. It didn't produce proteins. It didn't do anything. As a matter of fact, it was almost no different than crystals, as crystals also attract the same molecules on top of it in much the same pattern. The big difference here is that the new layer of the molecule would break away from the old. It'd be seperate, and could then attract its own new layer. Copying errors at this point resulted in probably a very quick destabalization of the molecule and potentially even breaking apart... unless it was a better result that could perhaps stay stable longer. If you think about it, these early replicators, the first at least, didn't even need to stay stable for all that long at all. It just needed to stay stable enough to make a handful of copies, some of which would not stay together, and others would be better or the same. I know I haven't given Dawkins the justice he deserves, but I thought this might explain some of the correlaries to Darwinism.

    3. Re:Not quite by roastedMnM · · Score: 1

      evolution does not preclude God's act of Creation Just for the record: Natural Selection and (fundamental, Bible believing) creationism are fundamentally incompatible because the Bible describes a God of love and life and natural selection is a process of death (death of the less fit). If you consider natural selection necessary for evolution, then evolution and (fundamental, Bible believing) creationism are incompatible.

    4. Re:Not quite by khallow · · Score: 1
      Even if it were somehow proven that man evolved from lower primates, it would not negate God's creation of man, but only further explain the how. At some point in time a pre-human gave birth to another pre-human that was a little bit closer to a human, that gave birth to another pre-human a little closer again, and on and on, until eventually a human is born and at which point God created man.

      Sigh. This seems a pretty witless comment. First, as mentioned by other posters, there's pretty strong evidence including that DNA evidence you casually discard that man shares common ancestry with primates including in particular bonobos, chimpanzees, and gorillas. I find this attitude to be particularly surprising since humans look and behave like primates.

      What really would negate your hypothesis is if "God" doesn't exist. I merely state the obvious, but I see no evidence that humans were "created" or that a god or gods exists. Prove this God exists and that he created humans or some other lifeform or created part or all of the universe, then we'll have something to discuss.

    5. Re:Not quite by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      I know that I over simplified the DNA sharing, but then again, I didn't think slashdot was the place for a doctoral thesis.

      Humans and chimps sharing a common ancestor is not the same thing as evolving from monkeys or chimps. Nor is it the same as saying man has evolved from lower primates. All that can be said is that man and the lower primates shared/evolved from a distant common anscestor.

      And, even saying that, is soley based on the mathematical probabilities used to extrapolate the data.

      Using the same data, it's possible to state that the common ancestor between primates and man was more human than not and at some point in the past, the branch which became modern primates broke off of the human branch (I don't hold that to be the case, just that the probabilities do allow for it).

      Because all of the DNA "evidence" is based on these mathematical probabilities, to say anything more than modern man and modern primates share a common ancestor is not fact, not even theory, but supposition.

    6. Re:Not quite by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Although the Bible does say "...Unless a grain of wheat falls to the earth and dies, it remains but a grain of wheat." So death is not incompatible with Bible believing.

    7. Re:Not quite by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Let's try going back to Logic 101.

      B evolved from A.
      C evolved from B.
      D evolved from B.
      E evolved from C.
      F evolved from D.

      Both E and F share a common ancestor B. But E didn't evolve from F, nor did F evolve from E.

      Now substitute humans and chimpanzees for E and F. We get Bothe humans and chimpanzees share a common ancestor (we don't know what). But humans didn't evolve from chimpanzees and chimpanzees didn't evolve from humans.

      You are mixing cause and effect and the point of the post. The cause and effect error is that common ancestor does not equate to evolving from two similar species. The point error was that evolution does not negate that somewhere along the line humans came into existance. This is not incompatable with those who belief that God created man. None of the post, btw, was about whether God exists or not. Your bias brought that into the discussion.

    8. Re:Not quite by khallow · · Score: 1

      You are mixing cause and effect and the point of the post. The cause and effect error is that common ancestor does not equate to evolving from two similar species.

      I didn't make the claim that humans evolved from any other modern primate. The progenitor species is long gone.

      The point error was that evolution does not negate that somewhere along the line humans came into existance. This is not incompatable with those who belief that God created man. None of the post, btw, was about whether God exists or not. Your bias brought that into the discussion.

      First, cough up this magical definition of "human". The best ones I've seen are genetic in nature.

      If you bring God into a discussion of the creation of man or anything else for that matter (and you did), then you automatically bring up the question of whether such a being or beings exist to perform the activity. It's a prerequisite. It's pointless to consider who created what when the existence of suitably enabled gods hasn't been shown in the first place.

    9. Re:Not quite by Falrick · · Score: 1

      evolution does not preclude God's act of Creation.

      If you believe in evolution, then you must also believe that the beginning of Genesis is a nice story and nothing more. Genesis lays out a very specific time table and set of events. On day 6 God created man. If we accept the premise that Genesis isn't an actual account of the creation of the world, then that brings into question whether the Bible is fact, or just a collection of nice stories.

      While I will concede that I don't understand everything I've read in the Bible, and yes, I've read much of it, I do believe that it is true as written. The world, and everything in it, were created in six days by God. So yes, I do feel that a belief in evolution, that is, evolution as the explenation of human's origins, does preclude one from a faith in the Jewish or Christian God.

      As for teaching intelligent design in school, I don't have any confidence that the school system could get it right. Not because the teachers are incapable, but just because those people against it won't let it be taught correctly.

      Personally, I'd be happy if schools would at least teach that evolution isn't fact, just a theory. It's an opening into which they can then consider other possibilities. Yeah, I think it would be great if everyone in the world believed in God and creationism, but God gave us free will, and some freely choose not to believe.

      --
      something clever
    10. Re:Not quite by advid · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't the existance of genetic disorders be incompatible with Biblical creationism, under that view?

      Natural selection is not a process of death. It doesn't require those not selected to die, just to have less children.

      --
      - "I'll probably get modded down for this."
    11. Re:Not quite by lukesl · · Score: 1

      Humans and chimps sharing a common ancestor is not the same thing as evolving from monkeys or chimps. Nor is it the same as saying man has evolved from lower primates.

      I agree that it's not the same thing as saying that we evolved from chimps, which I certainly never meant to imply. However, we share a common ancestor with them, and the split occurred when both humans and chimps were primates, so it IS the same as saying that man evolved from lower primates. Primates that are extinct today.

      Because all of the DNA "evidence" is based on these mathematical probabilities, to say anything more than modern man and modern primates share a common ancestor is not fact, not even theory, but supposition.

      Even if it were true that we couldn't demonstrate that humans evolved from other primates using DNA sequence alone, there is lots of other evidence, including skeletons of primitive humans, etc.

      Your use of the concept of probability is also a little disingenuous. There's a certain finite probability that all the oxygen atoms in the room you're sitting in will all go into the corner simultaneously, and you'll die. Similarly, there's some finite probability that all the evidence supporting the idea that humans evolved from nonhuman primates occurred by chance alone. All the tiny little uncertainties of experimental science will never go away, but scientists still reach conclusions and call them things like "theory" and "fact."

    12. Re:Not quite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note: Many think this verse is talking about the death and resurrection of Christ.

    13. Re:Not quite by roastedMnM · · Score: 1

      To the Christian, genetic disorders are considered a result of the fall of mankind, and the widespread negative effects (e.i. things dying). It doesn't require those not selected to die, just to have less children. (And then for it's line of decent to die out eventually).

    14. Re:Not quite by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      You are correct, you didn't claim that humans evolved from any other modern primate. I was responding to two different posts and inadvertantly attributed that to your post. Sorry, my mistake.

      I'm not sure what the definition of human has to do with the discussion.

      If you reread my original post, I brought God into the discussion only to point out that God creating everything (Judeo-Christian perspective) is not mutually exclusive of evolution.

      My post did not actually say God exists (although I believe God does), nor did it make any other points in reference about God. I simply pre-answered the critique one normally hears from the fundamentalist argument about evolution being contrary to God creating man.

      As for it being pointless to discuss, because God's existence can't been shown is inconsistent with the original reason the mention of God was presented, but hey, I'll bite.

      I assume that you believe that you exist. I also assume that you believe you are made up of molecules which are made up of atoms. Prove to me beyond a reasonable doubt that these atoms exist. And then, please tell me what they are like. I don't think you can, but if I'm wrong, make sure to include me in your Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech. (BTW, if you are planning on talking about protons, neutrons, electrons or quarks, you would also have to prove their existance, too -- although, electrons would be pretty straight forward).

      In short, we accept all kinds of things in life that we can never fully understand or prove and it doesn't seem to cause any sort of problem. The best we can do is describe the effect of something, but that isn't the thing itself.

      Without becoming too metaphysical, very often what we observe is not the reality that exists but only our interpretation of that reality. Furthermore, it is often the case that the actual observation changes the reality of what is observed, too (ie electron microscopes, super-colliders, etc.)

      If we get into things like Heisenbergs (sp?) uncertainty principle which states something like if you know how fast something is moving then you can't tell exactly where it is and if you know exactly where something is, you can't tell how fast it's moving. (has all kinds of implications for your proof of atoms and their particles, above), then we realy have a problem with determining if anything that moves exists or not. Heisenberg was talking about electrons, but it does scale well.

      If I shoot an arrow through the air, at any given moment I can only tell it's speed or where it's at, not both. Why, well to tell where it's at, I would probably have to resort to high speed photography and capture an image of it related to everything else. But, if I do, then I can make no statement about it's speed, because it is now still. If my only observation is that of the moving arrow, then at any given moment, I don't know precisly where it is at or whether it is even there. Probability will tell me where it should be at, but there is no guarantee that it actually is. Likewise, with all of those still images, I can calculate the speed, but that is also assuming the arrow is where it is supposed to be in the fractions of time that aren't covered on the film.

      It's all based on probability, so most likely it is where it's supposed to be, but we can never know for sure, even if we time slice smaller and smaller frames, there is always a frame in between. And if that in between frame, the arrow happened to be on the moon, well then it's speed is significantly faster than we calculate based of the known frames. As highly fetched as all of that sounds a lot of physics depends on it.

      But, given the above, if we can't every "truly" know where the arrow in flight is or whether it actually exists, but we don't have a problem talking about it, why then is it a problem to talk about God without knowing exactly where God is or actually exists?

    15. Re:Not quite by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Maybe we're having a problem with semantics. When I refer to lower primates, I'm referring to lower primates that are those primates in existance today, but not as advanced as man( in the zoological sense of the word). Like man, they have former ancestors from which they have evolved. But these former ancestors are no more a lower primate(zoological) than our human ancestors are human. They (the ancestors) are just one step along the evolutionary chain that has produced the lower primates and man.

      I agree that there is substantial circumstantial evidence to evolution besides using pure DNA, but a lot of people would try to discount it and there have been some pretty big blunders in classifications of species of animals.

      My use of probability in this discussion is based on the normal mathematical probability one learns or should learn in school. DNA testing is not 100% accurate and there are numerous things that may impact the results. Being a pure mathematical endeavour, once error is inserted, that error tends to multiply (or maybe I should say the probability of that error multiplying is high). Scientist rely on this introduced error in back-tracing DNA to other species to determine how far back the common ancestor was.

      The probability that you describe with the oxygen atoms in the room is based on Heisenberg's (sp?) uncertainty principle which I related to in a different post. In short it says that for an object in motion (and atoms are in motion, so for everything), we can either now how fast it is moving or where it is at, but we can't know both. Instead, we rely on probability to determine where the object (atom, electron, 747) should be at and as long as we find it there, we aren't to suprised. However, if it's not there, ie all of the oxygen moves to the upper corner of the room, we would be in for a real suprise.

      Even with all of the uncertainties that scientists must deal with, they refer to things as facts, but in reality, they know they aren't. Just look at how physics and chemistry have changed their theories (not facts) over the last 100 years. Even matter, may no longer be matter, but some kind of energy string vibrating in space. But, to be fair, for those kinds of things, scientist do refer to things as theory.

      My point in talking about probability, is that even with probabilities pretty high in support of evolution (which I do believe occurs), we can never be 100% sure of what evolved from what. If we use DNA, then we have an ever increasing error rate the further back we go. If we use the fossil record, well, lots of structures can look similar without necesarilly being related to each other.

    16. Re:Not quite by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      I believe that the story of Creation in Genesis is true, but just not factual. It states that God created everything and imparted in man a special role in that act of creation. That's the true part. As to being a textbook on how God did that, the early Hebrews weren't concerned with that and Genesis, was never intended to be such.

      When a four year old asks her parents where she came from and the parents respond that she came from mommy and daddy's love for each other, that is true (well hopefully it is), but not a factual answer, at least not from a biological perspective.

      Another problem with looking at Genesis as a factual account is that there are two stories of creation in Genesis (Gn 1.1 and Gn 2.4). Things are created in a different order between the two accounts. If they are both 100% factual accounts, then how can this be (although I hear that some denominations remove the second account to eliminate this problem).

      Again, the purpose of both of these stories of creation is not to give us a text book on how God did it, but instead, to shed light on our place in all of God's creation and our relationship to our Creator.

      From that framework, evolution and God's act of Creation are not mutually exclusive. The Bible contains the why and science contains the how.

      As for the comment about schools teaching intelligent design, well, they can't even get evolution correct (most teach Darwinism instead of evolution), so I wouldn't trust them regardless of what they taught (evolution/Creation/ID, etc.).

    17. Re:Not quite by lukesl · · Score: 1

      Maybe we're having a problem with semantics. When I refer to lower primates, I'm referring to lower primates that are those primates in existance today, but not as advanced as man( in the zoological sense of the word). Like man, they have former ancestors from which they have evolved. But these former ancestors are no more a lower primate(zoological) than our human ancestors are human.

      I agree, there was a misunderstanding, and I agree with what you're saying. However, I would argue that it is valid to call our last common ancestor with a chimpanzee a primate, despite the fact that it's extinct. If it existed today, zoologists would call it a primate, so I think it's a valid thing to say. For example, I'm pretty sure Homo erectus is considered a primate, despite the fact that it's extinct.

      The probability that you describe with the oxygen atoms in the room is based on Heisenberg's (sp?) uncertainty principle which I related to in a different post.

      Actually, the oxygen molecule thing has nothing to do with the HUP, as far as I know. It has more to do with thermodynamics. Basically, as I understand it, there's a finite probability that warm water will spontaneously turn into boiling water with ice cubes in it, it's just that the probability is so ridiculously low that in practice, we can talk about "laws" of thermodynamics as if they weren't probabilistic. Of course, I'm not a physicist, so I could obviously be wrong about that, but that's what I remember from college physics.

      Even with all of the uncertainties that scientists must deal with, they refer to things as facts, but in reality, they know they aren't. Just look at how physics and chemistry have changed their theories (not facts) over the last 100 years.

      I'm a scientist, and I would modify what you're saying a little. I would say that we refer to things as "facts," but it's not that we "know they aren't" facts. It's that we know that the fact that they're facts is never demonstrated in an absolute sense, which is a very different thing. For example, I'd argue that the roundness of the earth is a fact. It's impossible to ever demonstrate absolutely that we're correct about the fact that the earth is round, but at some point you have to just sweep that under the rug and accept it. Science is full of times that people can prove something to the 99.9% level, and after that they just accept that it's correct.

      Also, there are qualitatively different types of scientific "facts," and I think talking changes in mathematical models in physics and chemistry is a bit of a false analogy. For example, I can say "I ate a banana for breakfast yesterday," and that's a fact, not a theory. If someone says "here is a set of equations that can quantitatively explain the movement of matter exactly," that's a qualitatively different kind of statement. That's the kind of thing that becomes a "theory" with sufficient experimental support. Whether or not I ate a banana for breakfast yesterday is a factual question, and experimental resolution of the issue yields a factual answer. So basically what I'm saying is that the question "Is evolution real?" is a factual question, and the answer is either yes or no. If we can demonstrate that the answer is yes to the 99.999% level, it's simple sophistry to argue that there's a finite probability that we're wrong.

    18. Re:Not quite by khallow · · Score: 1
      No problem with that error. I probably overreacted a little. Maybe I'm overreacting below as well, but I had a lengthy disagreement with a couple of your statements.

      I assume that you believe that you exist. I also assume that you believe you are made up of molecules which are made up of atoms. Prove to me beyond a reasonable doubt that these atoms exist. And then, please tell me what they are like. I don't think you can, but if I'm wrong, make sure to include me in your Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech. (BTW, if you are planning on talking about protons, neutrons, electrons or quarks, you would also have to prove their existance, too -- although, electrons would be pretty straight forward).

      It's not easy, but there is more than a century of experiments that you can duplicate or just read about. For example, Millikan's oil drop experiment demonstrated that charge was quantitized (necessary precondition for electrons) or the gold foil experiment of Rutherford and company which demonstrated that atoms are composed of a hard dense center surrounded by a much less dense cloud of opposite charged objects. Quantum electrodynamics does a really good job of explaining electromagnetism (ie, it jibes well with experiment) at the quantum scale in the absence of strong gravity or the strong and weak nuclear forces. This explains the behavior of atoms (as observed under particle accelerators or scanning tunneling microscopes). Quarks haven't been shown to exist IMHO, though there is experimental evidence (eg, observed jets of particles called "quark jets") consistent with their existence. String theory, quantum loop gravity, and a host of the more recent speculation really doesn't qualify since we have yet to come up with suitable experiments to usefully distinguish the theory. The theory is worth considering because at some point we will have sufficient test apparatus to study the theory.

      I agree that yes, we are just talking about our subjective view of reality. But this view has a certain consistency, parsimony, and reproducibility to it. Frankly, I think any sufficiently advanced intelligence is going to have ideas about physical reality that we would readily recognize and be able to map to our own even if they are otherwise totally alien to us.

      But with religious or mystical viewpoints on God and other things of that nature, there's no natural viewpoint that everyone evolves to or can agree on except on the vaguest of terms. Plus, there's a significant fraction that are absolutely convinced of their particular viewpoints. This conviction doesn't seem to help make their viewpoints correct either.

      Here, I'm purely empiricist. Effect is the sum of existence. In other words, these beliefs are irrelevant unless they have some effect on the universe. Ie, if there's a difference between a universe created by a god or gods, and a universe created through happenstance, then the question of the existence or nonexistence of said gods matters. We should show that there's some sort of an existence after death before we speculate on what could happen to you (rather than to your easily observable corpse) after you die. We should show the presence or absence of a soul before we talk about what souls are or aren't and what can happen to them. And so on.

      Even worse, I see no signs that this lack of evidence will be resolved. There's no obvious test one can perform for determining the existence or non-existence of a god. Dying doesn't really work since it isn't reproducible (I can't die multiple times and compare the afterlife experience), and there's no real evidence that anyone who has died has communicated with the still living.

  125. Yes, it is. by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    As an atheist, I am alarmed when people try to mark religious belief as science.

    Doh, that's what pseudoscience is! Remember what the term Pseudo means: Imitation.

    Pseudoscience is a new term used to describe the attempts of religion to be masked as science, specially in destructive cults.

    1. Re:Yes, it is. by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      Pseudoscience is a new term used to describe the attempts of religion to be masked as science

      It's not limited to religion. Other pretend sciences count under the term too - like ESP and using crystals to draw out "toxins" and stuff like that.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    2. Re:Yes, it is. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've heard about those ripoffs too, fortunately I paid extra to get a certified crystal.

  126. Re:Atheism also a religion by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Atheism is then as much a religion as Islam,

    Aside from, you know, the lack of churches, holy books, priests, and fanatics who kill people because of their god's commandments.

    Atheism, agnosticism, those are not religions. They are not things that people have been indoctrinated to believe in since birth through the use of ceremony and ritual. They are an absence of religion.

    --

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

  127. Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by readin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I find evolutionary theory completely plausible. Some difficult problems remain in my mind, like why the number of chromosomes differs from species to species, but I see no reason that they can't be solved eventually. We see the concept of evolutionary processes demonstrated all around us everyday, and earth is old enough for a lot of evolution to have occurred. As a scientific explanation, evolution works.

    However, as a source of all truth, science doesn't work. Science has a fundamental problem with a reliance on logic. Any arguments to prove logic are inherently circular and (by logic) cannot be trusted. Science further has a problem in that when it gathers evidence for one thing, it gathers evidence for many things. We don't use Occams Razor because there is reason to believe that simpler is more true, we use it for our own convenience. Perhaps most importantly, science assumes everything has a cause. When you look back at the creation of the universe and of time itself, you realize that causality must break down. Therefore there must be something or someone beyond science.

    In my own life I have seen enough evidence to believe in God and in his son Jesus. As part of that, I believe I am called to believe in Adam, Eve, the garden of Eden, etc.. I do not believe, nor do I expect anyone else to believe, that these ideas are easily compatible with science or much of the evidence we have found of dinosaurs, neanderthals, etc..

    However, evolution is only one explanation of the archaeological evidence. Another explanation is misleading clues placed by a god who puts a high value on faith. Another is that evolution was guided by god's hand until he created Adam and Eve.

    In short, I don't have a problem with believing in both. When trying to understand the behavior of men and women, both the fall of man and the evolution of man present valuable lessons. Both explain how men and women will react to situations. Both explain the world as it is. And neither belief precludes the other.

    As for what should be taught in school, no one can be well-educated in this day and age without understanding evolution. But the students also need to be told that when it comes to history, all science can do is show whether an explanation is plausible. It can never prove what really happened.

    --
    I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    1. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Another explanation is misleading clues placed by a god who puts a high value on faith.

      More than honesty is valued, apparently. You believe in a trickster god, like Loki. How do you know this god did't create the universe five minutes ago, with fake memories of a lifetime implanted in our brains? How do you know some other trickster god hasn't deceived you?

      I see no way to know anything, from your viewpoint. Everything is suspect, unbelieveable.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    2. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In short, I don't have a problem with believing in both. When trying to understand the behavior of men and women, both the fall of man and the evolution of man present valuable lessons. Both explain how men and women will react to situations. Both explain the world as it is. And neither belief precludes the other.

      the problem is that you are subscribing to just ONE of many religions. there are so many to chose from! and how did you chose christianity? probably by birth - your parents were that, I would assume.

      imagine if this were shifted to another field. I am a painter because my parents were painters and that's the "correct" way to be and to see the world. sculpters are all wrong. they're lost souls. musicians, same thing. the only real way is painting.

      how absurd, right?

      well, you 'randomly' chose xtian. it can't be any more right than the others since its at the same level as the others. competing for who created the world. the jains believe one thing, the zoro-astrianaughts (heh) believe another. the xtians another. the sikks another. and so on. with so many randomly competing ideas, who are you to believe? WHY would you believe your parents' view simply because its how you were raised?

      otoh, science is science everywhere. the sikks and jains and xtians all see apples fall to earth due to gravity, they see water go from solid to liquid to gas as its heated, etc etc.

      so why is there the set of things that all can agree on and observe - yet we also want to give credence to things that no cultures can commonly agree on? and yet call those things 'facts' the same way that science produces facts?

      when whispering the chant to god produces the same result in all religions and languages, then I'll believe religion is on the same level as science. until then, its just hocus-pocus meant to impress and control primitive man.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    3. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by readin · · Score: 1

      How do you know this god did't create the universe five minutes ago, with fake memories of a lifetime implanted in our brains?

      I don't. As I said, there are many explanations consistent with what we know.



      I see no way to know anything, from your viewpoint. Everything is suspect, unbelieveable.

      Yes, working from logic we discover only that we can know nothing, and even that discovery is suspect.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    4. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by readin · · Score: 1

      How scientific is it to base your beliefs on a popularity contest?

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    5. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by jmvidal · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In my own life I have seen enough evidence to believe in God and in his son Jesus. As part of that, I believe I am called to believe in Adam, Eve, the garden of Eden, etc.

      Is that scientific evidence? You know, reproducible double-blind experiments?

      If so, then you should write a paper about it. You would get a Nobel prize, hands down. Imagine that, actual evidence for the existance of a supernatural being. You would be the new Einstein!

      More than likely, however, you believe because that is what your parents/teachers taught you, just like a billion or so muslims belive Mohammed is God and a billion or so Hindus believe in Shiba et.al.

      Please, stop and think. Why do you believe? Do you really have any evidence aside from some old stories? Why is your "Religion" the "one true Religion"?

      What the world needs now is more atheists.

    6. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by ttfkam · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Evolution by natural selection of individuals differentiated by random mutation happens. It has been observed. Every time you buy produce at the grocery store, you have your evidence.

      Google "Lysenkoism" for more information.

      We may not know every minute detail, but you would be hard-pressed to convince me that evolution through the process of natural selection is merely plausible.

      That said, people are mischaracterizing Intelligent Design. Many ID adherents accept evolution but only on the micro-level (changes within a species). Most of the arguments fall along the "irreducible complexity" line of thought.

      That said...

      ID is still bullshit. To anyone who likes ID, I hate to break it to you, but the eye is not irreducibly complex. A bacteria's flaggellum is not irreducibly complex.

      In other news, infants are occasionally born with tails (vestigial traits).

      And of course the best way to identify a dogmatic idiot: If the individual brings up the Big Bang or abiogenesis, they don't understand what evolution is. The best part is when the bring up the old Miller experiments of life from non-living chemicals (abiogenesis). Yes, that experiment was fatally flawed. However, they consistently fail to mention Dr. Sidney Fox and his much more recent experiments.

      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    7. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by thundergeek · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I did not choose randomly.

      I chose a God of love, who reached down and touched me several times in my life to put me where I am now.

      Through my life, there have been several times where I should have been dead. For one, I grew up in Detroit, and when I say "in Detroit" I mean "IN DETROIT" not in a bordering city. I lived in a neighborhood that 911 did not respond to!

      Evolution didn't protect me there. It wasn't some g-nome that I inherited from my parents. Of the 10 friends I grew up with, only 3 of us are alive today, and one is in jail. Call it natural selection, population control, dumb luck, or God. I choose God.

      Science can't explain why when I fell 15 feet from a tire swing, shatering my 5th vertebre, and the doctor said I would never walk again, I did so just 4 hours later!! Science takes thousands, God takes seconds.

      No theory can explain why I grew up with a hole in my esophogus for close to 15 years, with air, spit, and food sitting directly on my heart, and after the operation (of which I had less than 1% chance of survival by science) there was no infection.

      There have been NO other religions who's god has healed, spoken, touched, or send a Son by divine appointment to die on a cross. There are no other gods who CAN be proven by archeology, history, and yes, even science (logic, ratios, and probability). There is NO other god who uses LOVE to interact with his people.

      Muhamid thought he was possessed by a demon when he heard from ALAH (alah means "the god" and is one of over 150 gods that were worshiped at the time, contradition?), and was left in cold sweats, seasures, and even thought he was going mad, he almost threw himself off a cliff! Even if you believe in alah, science will claim old Muhamid couldn't have expeirenced this event.

      Christians aren't "competing" for who created the world. If it were, we'd miss the point. Instead, ask why we were created.

      God IS Love, He wants to give, and recieve love. He had the angels, but they were "programed" to worship God. He created us with a free will, so we would WANT to worship Him.

      I want to worship Him because He touched me, healed me, LOVES me, and I continually hear from Him. There is NO science that can explain what has happened to me, but there IS scritpture, and above that, experience.

      If you grew up a painter, you became a painter because your family taught it to you, but that doesn't mean you should stay a painter. If you have an experience with sculpting, and thought that it's the way to go, you would switch. Not because your defiant, but because you had a real experience that touched a nerve.

      quote "when whispering the chant to god produces the same result in all religions and languages, then I'll believe religion is on the same level as science. until then, its just hocus-pocus meant to impress and control primitive man."

      I don't chant, I'm not Catholic. I have a personal relationship with Jesus. If you and I were friends, and all I did was "chant" to you the same prayer, over and over and over and over and over... you get the picture. I hope. Instead, I speak to Jesus, just like I'm speaking here. I thank Him for what he's done in my life, for saving me, healing me, LOVING me. Then we chat. Again, if we were friends, we would start our conversation getting each other up to speed since the last time we spoke, it's the same in prayer.

      Hocus-pocus won't impress any true seeker of God. I can't perform a miracle to entertain you. But if you need prayer and a miriacle in your body/spirit, or even finances, I can pray with you to find God. To let HIM show YOU he exists.

      No one can change your mind, but you, that's how we work. Signs and wonders are nothing unless it impacts your life. As a painter, you can tell me all day long how awesome of a paint job you finished, but until I see it and experience the awe, it's just a testimony. It doesn't make it any less of a paint job. You had a personal attachment with the job, not me. But I can take part of that experience when YOU lead me to the place of completion.

      God (the creator, lover, friend, father) is that place of completion.

      Sorry this is so long, and by the way, I love science!

      Later

    8. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if I am not an atheist, if I dare to belive in higher structures invisible to us, will I be executed by the Holy Atheist Inquisition?

      I don't believe in a God as a person. I do believe that *everythin* is alive and death is an illusion. Yes, a rock is alive too. Its all a matter of expression. A rock can only react on the lowest levels, a humans has much more ways of expression.

      I don't run around and tell everyone that they are wrong am I am right. You do. "You believe in something? You MORON! You are yet another creationist dork!"

      I see several fundamentalists here. The bone-headed Christians and the equally bone-headed atheists ("you must not believe in anything because we tell you not to!"). We need more open-minded people, not people running around forbidding everything.

    9. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by m50d · · Score: 1

      The only argument I can make for being logical is to look at the results. Science following the scientific method allows us to predict a huge array of phenomena with reasonable, sometimes near-perfect, accuracy. We can trace orbits of planets and predict them hundreds of years into the future and so far they haven't deviated from the predictions. By contrast everyone I've ever seen try to predict anything based on the bible has ended up with egg on their faces. That's why I believe firmly in the scientific method.

      --
      I am trolling
    10. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by JasonBee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >So if I am not an atheist, if I dare to belive in higher structures invisible to us, will I be executed by the Holy Atheist Inquisition?

      Who said anything about killing or being killed? Everything always comes down to some kind of blasphemy punishable by death with you Faith Types.

      The argument a has always been about two different modes of thinking - one based on belief, and on based on reason. They are not mutually exclusive, but in practice they tend to be confused with each other. What some people on the science/epistemological-side find offensive is that empirical knowledge has been compared to creationist idealism - and made itse competitor. You have one group that takes their knowledge from interpreting the Bible/Koran/Baghavad Gita (which is fixed in scope), and the other that is taking their knowledge from watching how the world works...in a sense they are letting nature and observation write their "book". That latter knowledge base is always re-writing itself due to eveolving knoweldge and discovery.

      How you have confused this as a form of anti-religion is beyond me. Science is a process, NOT a belief system. And the reason cretionists are being ridiculed more often than not is that they pick on silly things like the age of the earth when you could also be attacking things like the general theory of relativity. By framing your arguments as being science vs creationism you are avoiding the inevitiable. Scientific thinkers will always pick each other's hypotheses apart. If you want to at least debate scientists on the merits of creationist beliefs vs scientific knowledge, at teh VERY least play the game. If lack of "proof' is reason to discard evolutionary theory then lack of proof is what you're holding up as a replacement theory

      How bizarre...

      P.S. And if you're a little rusty on your history please remember that Galileo merely postulated that the SUN was the centre of the universe (solar system), upsetting biblical theory that the Earth was the centre of the Universe. He was nearly put to death for those "discoveries". Under that kind of a climate can you imagine any Christian Astronauts getting off the ground had Galileo's "scienctific" insistence not paid off?

    11. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Yes, working from logic we discover only that we can know nothing, and even that discovery is suspect.

      Well, then I guess you'll be logging off, since we can't know anything about solid state electronics, this communication is impossible.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    12. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by readin · · Score: 1

      I agree about the good results we usually get from logic. I use it myself. It seems to be the best mental tool we have. But, our belief in it is circular. You say people who predict things based on the Bible get egg on their face? Have you ever made a prediction based on logic and turned out to be wrong? I have. Most people I know have. So what do we do? We go back and examine the logic for the place were we made a mistake. We have so much faith in logic that no matter what it does to it we assume the logic is right and we ourselves are in error. We keep searching until we either give up (while keeping faith that the error is there somewhere) or we find something we can call an error. Of course, if we were mistaken before we could be mistaken again. But the point is, no matter what we believe in logic. Our mental processes simply won't accept that it could be wrong.

      Our belief that logic is true is so instinctive to us that we disbelieve anything to the contrary. Is logic like the unfaithful husband and ourselves like the wife who keeps finding excuses for all evidence to the contrary simply because the husband is a good provider?

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    13. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by readin · · Score: 1

      Yes, working from logic we discover only that we can know nothing, and even that discovery is suspect.

      ----

      Well, then I guess you'll be logging off, since we can't know anything about solid state electronics, this communication is impossible. But you can't prove this communication is impossible unless you rely on logic, and as I just showed, we cannot prove logic is reliable without resorting to the fallacy of circular logic. So, logically, I don't have to log off.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    14. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by m50d · · Score: 1

      I have been wrong based on logical predictions, but pretty rarely as a proportion of the predictions I make, and it has always been because I started from a wrong assumption or made an error. You say we could be mistaken again if we were mistaken once, but once you see an error, it's obvious. You can check it by asking someone else, they will immediately see which one is the right one even without knowing which gives the "wrong" result. Everything we believe about logic can be built up from a handful of basic principles, and if you reduce your reasoning down to them you can always find the error, at least IME. Also, I've known times when my correction was wrong, and I knew it was wrong. It made the answer come out right, but the correction was still wrong, and I wasn't satisfied until I found the real cause of the bad result. I fiddle with my logic all the time, and try to "break" it, so I can see if there's anything wrong with it, but I've yet to find something that makes me lose my faith in it.

      --
      I am trolling
    15. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Logically, you haven't got a leg to stand on. You play word games and think you gave discovered some cosmic knowledge. All you have discovered is that language is imprecise. It is your mindset that is limiting, not logic itself. Logic is a tool, but in the hands of someone with your outlook, it is more like a chipped flint than a precision scalpel.

      In any case, this topic has squat to do with science or evolution, and doesn't belong in the science class anymore than home economics belongs in P.E. Perhaps this belongs in mental masturbation class.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    16. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I find evolutionary theory completely plausible. Some difficult problems remain in my mind, like why the number of chromosomes differs from species to species

      That makes perfect evolutionary sensem through a variety of very rare - but ordinary - fluke events. Amongst millions of individuals over millions of years rare fluke events are certain to occur repeatedly. A chromosme may be lost, so long as that loss is not fatal. A chromosome may be picked up from another species (this happens a lot with bacteria, and humans have TONS of genetic material that has been inserted by viruses). One or more chromosmes may be duplicated. For example Downs Sydrome is a human with an extra chromosome - a duplicate chromosme #21. If a duplication is not fatal and manages to found a line of decendants, the duplicated chromosomes will then diverge. For example two genes for seeing the color green is harmless, and one may easily diverge into a gene for seeing red light. Duplicate that gene again, and again diverge, and you have a gene to see blue light. You then have human color vison. An extra copy of a digestive gene may diverge into a gene for a new neurotransmitter. Or one copy of a duplicated gene may just diverge into useless junk DNA.

      Changing the number of chromosomes is a pretty serious mutation, and usually fatal or crippling. It is thus rare compared to the usual gene mutations. Mutated chromosome number is unlikely to survive unless it happens to coincide with another mutation and overall yeilds some usefull effect. We have pretty well mapped out the evolutionary tree, and you can pretty well pin down where in the branchs specific chromosomes were added or lost. Closely related humans and chimpanzees have 99.6% the same DNA. The entire mammal family carries the X/Y gender chromosome.

      However, evolution is only one explanation of the archaeological evidence. Another explanation is misleading clues placed by a god

      I will accept such a possiblity. However if there is a malicious decieving god then it is impossible to say *ANYTHING* meaningful at all. The universe and all of your memories could have been created a nanosecond ago. You could be a brain in a glass jar being feed sensory illusions of a world around you. You cannot rationally think or talk about anything to anyone.

      So a prerequisite axiom of any rational thought or communication is the assumption that we are not being deceived by some malicious god. That if there is a god, it is a god that supports the rational observation and exploration of the universe.

      Any communication on any subject implicitly carries the axiom that if there is a god, it is a god that supports science.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    17. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously you didn't read the part that clearly said that I am not into Christian fundamentalism - otherwise you wouldn't have written the reference to Galileo. So, let me say it again: I AM NOT INTO CHRISTIAN FUNDAMENTALISM.

      Now, for the part why I "confused" it. Lets have a look at your earlier posting.

      Is that scientific evidence? You know, reproducible double-blind experiments?

      If so, then you should write a paper about it. You would get a Nobel prize, hands down. Imagine that, actual evidence for the existance of a supernatural being. You would be the new Einstein!

      More than likely, however, you believe because that is what your parents/teachers taught you, just like a billion or so muslims belive Mohammed is God and a billion or so Hindus believe in Shiba et.al.


      So, basically, everyone who is not an atheist is a dumb, weak-minded fool?
      You know, there are not only atheists and crazy Christians. You might want to get a greater horizon.

      Please, stop and think. Why do you believe? Do you really have any evidence aside from some old stories? Why is your "Religion" the "one true Religion"?

      Yes, yes. I better get some treatment to cure me from my heret^H^H^H^H^Hirrational beliefs. You said yourself that beliefs and rational thinking are not the same, yet you attack beliefs on a rational level, which is just plain wrong.

      What the world needs now is more atheists.
      I think this sentence is yet another explanation why I stated that you basically said that atheists are right and everyone else is wrong.

    18. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by readin · · Score: 1

      "you haven't got a leg to stand on" "You play word games". All these accusations without a shred of reasoning to back them up. It sounds like you trust logic even less than I do.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    19. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The major religions on the Earth contradict each other left and right. You can't all be correct. And what if all of you are wrong? It's a possibility, you know. You must care about the truth, right? Well, the way to winnow through all the differing contentions is to be skeptical. I'm not any more skeptical about your religious beliefs than I am about every new scientific idea I hear about. But in my line of work, they're called hypotheses, not inspiration and not revelation.

    20. Re:Evolution seems plausible, not proven. by tez_h · · Score: 1
      Man, you're so insightfully right. It isn't remotely scientific to base any scientific theories on popularity. Wow. So have you just convinced yourself that science isn't a popularity contest of any sort?

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
  128. Re:Open mind? by shaitand · · Score: 1

    "Isn't this just promoting an open mind?"

    No, this is teaching non-science to science students. ID is a fine hypothesis, but no more. Evolution is a theory with evidence supporting it.

    Creationism is considered loony because the proponents have picked random myths and chosen to believe them with no evidence. Further, they have chosen to cling to those myths in the face of contrary evidence time and time again. Galileo on the other hand observed physical evidence and developed a theory based upon it. That was one of those cases where creationists chose to cling to myths in the face of contrary evidence.

  129. to the majority of comments I've read here: by yossarian+dent · · Score: 1
    Without making any claims on the issue at stake here, I'd just like to point out the irony involved in watching people who pride themselves on being liberal, open-minded, and tolerant lash out bitterly at people who want to be heard.

    I'm not saying they can't be ignorant; I'm not even saying they're right. I'm just saying that, next time, before calling people "kooks," "nut jobs," and the like, while using grammar that would be contradicted by a proper third-grade education, ask yourself what your primary ideological grounding is.

    If it's, "I'm always right," then, by all means, go on your merry way, continue violently attacking the beliefs of others, and enjoy dying alone.

    If it's, "I like to keep an open mind because I know I don't have everything figured out," promote an intelligent without resorting to logically fallacious ad hominem attacks to give your argument more thrust. It's antics like these that give liberals a bad name.

    --
    sig not ready: (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail.
    1. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by sbenj · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There's a difference, I'd argue, between open-mindedness and "blind" open-mindedness. It's important to be open-minded, of course, but open-mindedness in the face of overwhelming contradictory evidence is just the sort of perverse, bending-over-backwards-to-be-fair behavior that's often derided, and justly so, as political correctness in other contexts.

      The problem is not what other people believe, it's that a fairly large chunk of our society is willing to believe things that directly and clearly contradict physical evidence and to alter our political process and how we educate our childred to remove any references that might be upsetting to their view of the world.

      This is an old argument, but for the most part I think we'd agree that when you finish boiling down the evidence ID is simply religion (specifically, some Christian beliefs (that not all christians agree with, not trying for flamebait here, just noting the source)) in camoflouge.

      How can you live in a modern, technological society and ignore the evidence of your own experience? To give one example, If you go get an MRI or an X-ray you're benefitting from some of the same technology and body of knowledge that allows us to date fossils. How can a person stand up and denounce evolution in one minute, and in the next go get a chest X-ray? People who are unable to filter out this sort of obvious mental nonsense are driving our politics and our policies, and it's a scary thing.

    2. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by yossarian+dent · · Score: 1
      I recognize your point, but there are some things I'd like to note.

      #1 - Carbon dating and MRI technology may be based on using similar properties of radioactivity, but to equate them in the sense of denouncing one use of the knowledge and accepting another is, in my opinion, a grave mistake roughly equivalent to dismissing a person as inconsistent who denounces using guns for killing people but uses one to defend his family from a bear. Same basic principle (granted, I'm not a scientist, so I could be slightly off, but I think my point still gets across).

      #2 - No one will ever be able to prove religion. No one will ever be able to prove evolution. If, however, evolution is correct, and all the evidence on both sides is presented, people should be able to figure it out for themselves once given all the information. To exclude one side of the argument (a side that is still very much alive as far as scientific investigation goes) from the education system is to promote ignorance in the same way as teaching solely an "outdated" theory.

      Basically, I'm saying that we shouldn't be teaching either side as "the right way" because - let's face it for once - no one knows. (And here I said I wasn't actually going to get into the issue.) Teach all available, accessible, and remotely plausible ideas; and let people grow up thinking critically about them and making up their own minds. Anything less is an insult.

      --
      sig not ready: (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail.
    3. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by shawng · · Score: 0

      "If you go get an MRI or an X-ray you're benefitting from some of the same technology and body of knowledge that allows us to date fossils. How can a person stand up and denounce evolution in one minute, and in the next go get a chest X-ray?"

      Intelligent Design makes no claims on the age of the earth. I would call myself a proponent of ID, but I don't claim that the earth is only 6000 years old. Do you have any criticisms of ID itself or do you only have a problem with those who believe in a "young" earth? By the way, X-rays and radioactivity are not exactly the same thing, but I understand the point you are making.

    4. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by sbenj · · Score: 2, Insightful
      No one will ever be able to prove religion. No one will ever be able to prove evolution.

      There's a difference here, and it goes to the root of what science "is".

      Evolution, as a framework for understanding the world in a scientific and rational way, is always subject to proof or disproof by verification. ID is by definition above and beyond proof or disproof,as arguments about actions of a supreme being. By definition this supreme being can do things we can't, so we can't verify or disprove any assertions about his/her/its actions, because, partially, the whole point of dragging the supreme being into this argument is in response to, or an expression of our admission that we don't understand it.

      Science is by definition about things we can prove or disprove. A statement about which we can do neither is, again by definition, outside of the province of science.

      In otherwords, it's religion.

      It's one thing to say, and reasonable as well, that you have beliefs that are outside of the framework of pure and strict rationality. Pure ratinoality is in itself a pretty weak philosophy to life your life by, at least to me. It's quite another thing to argue that your desire for trans-ratinal beliefs should be afforded the same status as rational ones.

    5. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by yossarian+dent · · Score: 1
      Evolution, as a framework for understanding the world in a scientific and rational way, is always subject to proof or disproof by verification.

      I probably should have been more specific, and my ambiguity was the result of an implicit assumption that I probably should not have made. I was speaking of the aspect of both evolution and ID as the origin of human life. Looked at in that way, evolution will never be proven nor disproven by verification (barring the invention of a time machine). Judged by your criteria, therefore, evolution as a theory of the origin of life is just as much religion as ID.

      It's quite another thing to argue that your desire for trans-ratinal beliefs should be afforded the same status as rational ones.

      To me, this seems like you're short-changing yourself. If you hold "trans-rational" beliefs because you feel rationality to come up short in the full and accurate description of life, why should your properly rational beliefs, though admittedly insufficient, hold an inherently higher status than trans-rational beliefs?

      --
      sig not ready: (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail.
    6. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by sbenj · · Score: 1
      I was speaking of the aspect of both evolution and ID as the origin of human life. Looked at in that way, evolution will never be proven nor disproven by verification (barring the invention of a time machine).

      I disagree. While it's true that we'll never actually witness the origin of human life, we can verify those pieces of it that we can figure out how to test, for example some aspects of the process of natural selection. We can also trace some elements of the progression of evolution through the fossil record.

      It's possible that one day we'll find out that fossils are a huge practical joke perpetuated by aliens with too much spare time and a strange sense of humor. This is a dumb sounding example, but note-
      a)the same argument has literatlly been made by creationists, albeit in better sounding form (God put fossils in the earth as a "test", or so that his existance would remain an open question).
      b)You really have to venture this far afield to figure out a scenario where evolution turns out to be flat out wrong.
      In any case, there's an enormous gap between "our best guess, which may, in ways we can't see right now, be wrong" and "since it's only a theory, then anything I come up with is equally possible".

      If you hold "trans-rational" beliefs because you feel rationality to come up short in the full and accurate description of life, why should your properly rational beliefs, though admittedly insufficient, hold an inherently higher status than trans-rational beliefs?

      A good question, and one that occurred to me as I was typing my too-quick response. "Trans-rational" is a pretty crappy term, and confuses more than it helps. What I really meant was something like:
      I hold personal beliefs that are not covered by logic and for which logic is insufficient. Logic, for example, does not tell me that killing is a bad thing. Science is in itself insufficient for morality. It is insufficient in itself to help me decide on those things in my life that I value.Above and beyond this, beliefs about the workings of the universe that cannot be scientifically derived (e.g. Supreme Being) are inherently personal. I do not have the reight to impose these on others, to force others to teach their children these beliefs, etc.

      The scientific is our shared consensual belief. To refuse to share these beliefs, as many do today, is in my view to refuse to participate in the modern world. You're welcome to do that, just don't come into my life and impose it on me. The people who do that are not intereseted in consensus, they're interested only in forcing others to agree with them to lessen their own cognitive dissonance and make them feel better about their own beliefs (my view, of course). This is (again, in my view) intolerant, ignorant, and just plain wrong.

    7. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by yossarian+dent · · Score: 1
      While it's true that we'll never actually witness the origin of human life, we can verify those pieces of it that we can figure out how to test, for example some aspects of the process of natural selection.

      That's testing the progression of life, not the origin. I see a large difference between the two (but, once again, I might have to defer to someone with a more intimate knowledge of natural science - this is why I was trying to avoid speaking to the issue and taking a shot at the logic of the arguments involved instead). I've never heard the argument you mentioned promoted by creationists (and I've been around a lot), but it doesn't surprise me...though it does amuse me.

      The scientific is our shared consensual belief.

      That doesn't sit entirely well with me; partially because there are areas of wide disagreement among scientists about a variety of topics; partially because I feel the pure objectivity that scientists purport to have is nearly impossible for us, as humans, to attain; and partially because I don't feel that the average person knows enough about most of these topics to have formed what could properly be called a "belief" beyond the same kind of blind acceptance that you maintain as the main fault of Christians. That sentence was way too long.

      The people who do that are not intereseted in consensus, they're interested only in forcing others to agree with them to lessen their own cognitive dissonance and make them feel better about their own beliefs (my view, of course). This is (again, in my view) intolerant, ignorant, and just plain wrong.

      I agree. I'm not arguing in support of forced belief systems; I tried to emphasize that last time. What I see a lot of people doing, however, is promoting very incomplete theories as the only fact and screaming bloody murder if someone tries to tell anyone that there are other ideas out there. If an idea is ridiculous, it will, in a rational society, be supplanted by truth or the closest available alternative. Those who do not accept its replacement would not have accepted it whether or not forced acceptance was attempted. Teaching alternative ideas to children, adults, whomever does not equate to forcing them to accept them. The problem you mentioned is exactly the problem I see in this debate at large - people are trying to lessen their own discomfort by lambasting those who don't agree with them - their reactions make them seem frightened of an idea they consider childish, and it doesn't make sense. If they are confident that evolution is, in fact, the most rational choice available, what do they have to fear from it being taught side by side with ID, alien cross-fertilization, or anything else anyone can come up with?

      --
      sig not ready: (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail.
    8. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by sbenj · · Score: 1
      You make some good points.

      That's testing the progression of life, not the origin.

      To distinguish the origin of life in this case from the progression is a nice point, but it seems to me that talking about the origin of life on this level would be a philosophical argument (because it seems to me that this only makes sense if you're talking about the origin of conciousness? ).

      The scientific is our shared consensual belief.
      That doesn't sit entirely well with me;

      Yeah, OK, I have to acknowledge that this was "reaching" a bit; even so, I think it's appropriate for a rationality-based worldview (which is what a scientific worldview boils down to) is an appropriate baseline for public policy, certainly for the teaching of science.

      Teaching alternative ideas to children, adults, whomever does not equate to forcing them to accept them. The problem you mentioned is exactly the problem I see in this debate at large - people are trying to lessen their own discomfort by lambasting those who don't agree with them - their reactions make them seem frightened of an idea they consider childish, and it doesn't make sense. If they are confident that evolution is, in fact, the most rational choice available, what do they have to fear from it being taught side by side with ID, alien cross-fertilization, or anything else anyone can come up with?

      Here's where I think you're just plain wrong. Any educator, or a person with young children in particular could tell you that children are not capable of making value-neutral distinctions in this way. If you teach it in the classroom, you give it status as "accepted". Few adults, even, question what's authoritatively told them in High School, much less elementary school. Indeed, there are entire political groups that are based pretty much on the violent emotional resistance to facts that contradict what people have been taught in High School.
      If you teach evolution, creationism, and alien cross-fertilization, you 1) have less time to teach evolution and 2) teach that all of these are equally likely. If you teach evolution you teach a powerful scientific idea. If you teach a bit of a lot of things, you teach ... a bit of a lot of things, it's a disconnected mess, and is unlikely to be retained or worth anything to the student.

      Contrast these:
      1) We have a week to teach HS students about computers. (this is highly idealized, but bear with me). The teacher begins to talk about basic binary signals and progresses up to simple nand/nor, circuits, opcodes, etc (I've seen books that do this, a fair understanding of what a computer "is".
      2) We have a week to teach HS students about computers. We spend a day on a walkthrough of Microsoft Windows, talk about the abacus, and make sure to spend time on religious ideas about knowledge. Or something.
      In (1) the students will have a real understanding of a domain of human knowledge. This is real education. In (2) they'd have a hodgepodge of crap. If you ever read a HS textbook on anything (a very instructive excercise, BTW) you'll see that it's full of watered-down nonsense that any self-respecting kid will feel honor-bound to forget right after the exam. My main point is that in the interest of being "fair" we're turning an exciting and illuminating idea into uninteresting mush.

    9. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by yossarian+dent · · Score: 1
      ...it seems to me that talking about the origin of life on this level would be a philosophical argument (because it seems to me that this only makes sense if you're talking about the origin of conciousness? ).

      For this we'd have to, as you're alluding to, define "life". Turning this into a philosophical argument, and thus making it quantifiably unsolvable (except for perhaps taking an analytic philosopher's approach), would only be accomplished by accepting a philosophical definition for the term "life" itself. I think scientists would be loath to accept this, yet it's the only way any scientific theory can escape the burden of quantifiable proof for the origin of life.

      If you teach it in the classroom, you give it status as "accepted".

      I might have to concede this one, but my personal experience contradicts the assumption implicit here; namely, that anything that is taught as "accepted" is, in fact, genuinely accepted by the student. Which brings me to...

      Few adults, even, question what's authoritatively told them in High School, much less elementary school.

      I can speak from the experience of myself and that of friends and acquaintances and say that this is a generalization that does not always hold; "few" is an ambiguous term that needs to be quantified and more specifically defined before it can have force. Personally, many of my current beliefs challenge if not flatly contradict what I was taught as a child. However, I've seen plenty who support your argument - is teaching a rational view to those who refuse to be critically reflective to begin with going to help? Certainly it will make more people agree with you, but is not the goal of a rational society to promote criticism and challenge of popular belief in search of something better, more accurate? Thus, if your argument about few people challenging what they are told holds, society is a lost cause because, while we may have a decent start on a scientific answer now, it will never go any further because no one will question it...except for the minority that I mentioned who are willing to criticize foundational beliefs, whether they are brought up with them or not. This minority have always been the ones to promote positive change in science to begin with, and it won't matter what they're taught.

      I'd also like to mention that your high school computer analogy is amusing but, I feel, inapplicable, since you threw together a wide mixture of information rather than different ideas on the same topic.

      I have to say that I'm enjoying this discussion (I don't get the opportunity often, as I'm surrounded by a rather, err, conservative academic environment at the moment). If it gets old, let me know.

      --
      sig not ready: (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail.
    10. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by sbenj · · Score: 1
      >Few adults, even, question what's authoritatively told them in High School, much less elementary school.

      I can speak from the experience of myself and that of friends and acquaintances and say that this is a generalization that does not always hold; "few" is an ambiguous term that needs to be quantified and more specifically defined before it can have force. Personally, many of my current beliefs challenge if not flatly contradict what I was taught as a child. However, I've seen plenty who support your argument - is teaching a rational view to those who refuse to be critically reflective to begin with going to help? Certainly it will make more people agree with you, but is not the goal of a rational society to promote criticism and challenge of popular belief in search of something better, more accurate? Thus, if your argument about few people challenging what they are told holds, society is a lost cause because, while we may have a decent start on a scientific answer now, it will never go any further because no one will question it...except for the minority that I mentioned who are willing to criticize foundational beliefs, whether they are brought up with them or not. This minority have always been the ones to promote positive change in science to begin with, and it won't matter what they're taught.

      This, I think, is our base disagreement. How do you educate to get people who think for themselves? Putting aside the inconvenient thousands of books I'd imagine have been written on this, I have 2 points to make re: evolution vs. ID/creationism.
      1) Teaching people to think critically is at best a difficult undertaking. In our current political climate it is even more an uphill battle. The very forces pushing creationism push uncritical acceptance. In a sense, teaching evolution is a bit of a statment that only knowledge that has passed the test of critical examination is worthy of being taught as science.
      2) It doesn't help to just "give up". If you teach creationism alongside evolution not only do you validate sloppy thinking, and not only do you create scientifically illiterate kids, but you abandon one of the very things that has a chance of creating a critically-thinking adult, the exposure to a real idea.

      See, I think that most pre-college education is predigested and oversimplified, certainly much of what I remember. An encounter with a real idea in all its complexity and depth can be a life changing experience, one that is notably absent from textbook-style volumes. Here's what I mean-
      Someone, a few years back wrote (I think it was actually Leo Buscaglia, of all people) that if you read one poem, really read just one, then you're lost. What he meant (recalling from context) was that you could go one absorbing things on autopilot forever, but once you've really seen what there is to see in one poem, or one novel, or ... etc etc. you see the depth of what exists in art, science, knowledge. To teach ID is to deny this experience in the interest of pleasing a vocal political minority.

      I'd also like to mention that your high school computer analogy is amusing but, I feel, inapplicable, since you threw together a wide mixture of information rather than different ideas on the same topic.

      Yeah, it was a bit weak, hopefully you get what I was shooting for, sort of in the sense of what I've just written above.

      I have to say that I'm enjoying this discussion

      Me too, though the time it's taking me to write these posts reminds me why I don't do this too often....

    11. Re:to the majority of comments I've read here: by yossarian+dent · · Score: 1
      How do you educate to get people who think for themselves?...teaching evolution is a bit of a statment that only knowledge that has passed the test of critical examination is worthy of being taught as science.

      OK, but if you teach only evolution, there is no background to the application of that critical examination; thus, you resort to uncritical acceptance, the charge you made against pushers of ID. You seem to be equating including ID in a curriculum with unequivocally supporting it as an idea. Scientific thought as we know it today arose from people who questioned the uncritical thought supported by organized religion - if nothing of this background is taught, if no one learns to question their foundations, we may end up with ideas that are more quantifiable than before, but ideas that are nonetheless universally accepted for the very reason you mentioned earlier - people taught one thing will rarely question it. You're leaving them with no background for scientific revolution should the need or opportunity arise. It's just a more rational form of religion. In order to educate critical thinkers, we must show the methods by which unsupportable ideas are defeated.

      If you teach creationism alongside evolution not only do you validate sloppy thinking, and not only do you create scientifically illiterate kids, but you abandon one of the very things that has a chance of creating a critically-thinking adult, the exposure to a real idea.

      I don't see how you reached this conclusion. You're not limiting their exposure at all; you're still teaching the "real" idea of evolution. Shouldn't science courses provide the foundations of science along with the plain facts in the hopes that the principles will be used to uncover new facts? The foundations to scientific thought include the forms of reason that led some scientists to reject ideas such as ID. This, in turn, includes teaching the original idea that was rejected.

      I have to admit that maybe I'm digging a little too deep for pre-college educations. The funny thing about education as I remember it was that at each level you reach, you find that they flat out lied to you in the earlier levels just to make things simpler. For example, until I got to high school, there were three states of matter - solid, liquid, and gas. When I got to high school, all of a sudden there was plasma. I was frustrated to discover that this had been conveniently left out of all those previous years. I think that education of this sort should be a gradual introduction. No, you don't have time in 5th grade to go into the reasons that Da Vinci had to hide corpses in his closet to study them nor the thought that led him to do so, but you can at least lay a foundation. For early education (pre-high school and maybe even into high school), I'd have to argue that it's better to raise issues and leave children with questions that either later information or personal study can answer rather than offer them simplistic facts that they can accept completely without knowing why they're accepting them. I think this is what has caused the tendency that you mentioned to not question anything you're taught in school - you're not given anything to question.

      --
      sig not ready: (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail.
  130. Factual by bkruiser · · Score: 0

    Where is the "bible" in this...? Where are the fundamentalists? Scientifically they are absent. This is a theory, similar to the big bang with the bang as a creature. Please hold your idiodic responses. I have heard them all, many many many times.

  131. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we take out everything but basic letters and numbers, we are left with TKxGUJ5909B2Ei, which just happens to be the password for my porn share.

    Random, indeed! That string definitly had intelligent design behind it.

  132. Evolution != origin of life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when does evolutionary theory explain the origin of life? Evolution may explain what happened after that initial spark, but the summary is incorrect in equating the two.

  133. There are... by Goonie · · Score: 1

    The postdoc who works next to me is a full-blown creationist; he's also been published in some of the top conferences in the software engineering field. I wonder whether he perceives any contradiction between being a hard-headed sceptic in his work and the blind faith he displays as a Christian. I don't want to ask him about it because it risks another earbashing about the supposed wonderful powers of prayer and the joys of accepting God into your life.

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
  134. Assumptions = false by solomonrex · · Score: 0

    Don't generalize:

    "They are all religious, and do not know what theories or evolution are"

    This is horribly smug for a post that got modded up.

  135. Evolution says nothing about origin of life, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    only the origin of species. Even Darwin said he had no idea how life started, but he had a pretty good idea about how species evolve --- after life got started.

    1. Re:Evolution says nothing about origin of life, by benna · · Score: 1

      As the author of the article, I admit that that was a poor choice of words. You are correct.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  136. Re:Atheism also a religion by readin · · Score: 1

    You say atheism is not a religion because "it is the denial, in fact, of any religious doctrine" and "Atheism is not a religion because it has no...articles of faith" Because there is no proof that all religions are wrong, it is an act of faith to assume that they are. So the statement that atheism denies all other religions and at the same time has no faith is contradictary.

    --
    I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
  137. Separation of church and state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Other than a line in a letter written by Jefferson, tell me exactly where in our law this supposed separation is.

    The Federal government has NO BUSINESS in education AT ALL. If a state or county or city wants to teach something, then they have the right to teach it using their own tax money. If you don't like it, move to another city, state, or county. That's what this country was meant to be. Vote with your feet. States are sovereign entities, little experiments to find the best way of doing things.

    Does anyone remember that in the early days of this country that some states had state religions? All the Constitution forbids is the establishment of a NATIONAL religion. If you lived in a state with Catholicism, for example, as its religion, you'd move to a state that had no official religion or one that had your religion.

    Go ahead and give all the power to a power-hungry central government. But don't bitch to me about losing your "rights". Remember that a government big enough to give you all you want is a government big enough to take all you have.

    Of course the fundamentalists are wrong about the origins of the Earth and humans. But they have the right to believe whatever they believe. Since we've let the state and Federal governments have control over our schools, there's no place left for them except home schooling (not all parents are capable) and private schools (that a lot of people can't afford). No, they see their tax money being used to teach things to their children that they disagree with, and they feel that they're in a corner with their backs to the wall. Give them a break with school vouchers if you don't want them in the "government" schools. At least let them feel like that their money is being used for the proper education (from their point of view) of their children.

    Live and let live, or we all lose in the long run.

  138. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 1

    If you want an explanation minus a god figure, read some science fiction. Greg Bear is a hell of an author, and he has 2 different books with a similar backplot.

    Bacteria evolved, apparently from nothing, but all multicellular life was literally engineered by a planetwide intelligent colony of the germs. That's even used as an explanation why evolution isn't smooth, they get another bright idea, and within a single generation, another species is created.

    It's even plausible, in a science fiction sort of way.

    We oughtta co-opt the ID bandwagon, and peddle that as the primary theory. They might abandon it rather quickly.

  139. Re:The deal with these fundamentalists by TufelKinder · · Score: 1

    The reason outspoken atheists are rare is that the absolute denial of the existence of God is a difficult position to defend when one has to acknowledge that they do not know everything.

    --
    If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. -- George Orwell
  140. Evolution _does_ disprove God! by jdreyer · · Score: 1

    regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution?

    Because evolution posits random mutation and natural selection! If there's one fact to take from the theory of evolution, it's that evolution is purposeless! If you believe that what you call "evolution" is a tool of God, you are not talking about Darwinian evolution. You really are talking about so-called Intelligent Design. And that opinion may be comfortable for you, but it is simply not borne out by the last century of biology.

    Check out some Richard Dawkins quotes on this subject, e.g. this one: "Certainly I see the scientific view of the world as incompatible with religion."

  141. Wrong on several counts by lheal · · Score: 1
    Honestly, just what is the deal with these fundamentalists? I have two issues with these people.

    I'm not a fundamentalist, but I don't think evolution has been proven as fact. I've never seen or heard of evidence showing one species changing into another. Plenty of variation inside of a species, but no crossover. My mind is open to it, but until it shows up I'm not convinced.

    There are lots and lots of fossils. What's missing are transitionary forms: a pre-dolphin with legs or a pre-dolphincow with fins.

    Given the depth and breadth of the fossil record, it seems odd that there aren't many, many such finds, rather than zero.

    Most Creationists I've heard talk about the flaws in carbon dating. I don't really understand carbon dating. Could someone please explain it to me, again? It's at the crux of the 6e3 v. 4e9 year-old Earth debate, and it seems kind of like hand-waving to me.

    As for God playing tricks on us, I think He does stuff just to humble us. Doesn't always work.

    --
    Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
  142. Brain damaged analogy. Sorry. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not an ID proponent, but the gravity analogy is dumbass. You can test and observe the results of gravity in the short term, so no one is going to jump off a building if they have some alternative theory of gravity.

    1. Re:Brain damaged analogy. Sorry. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I'm not an ID proponent, but the gravity analogy is dumbass. You can test and observe the results of gravity in the short term, so no one is going to jump off a building if they have some alternative theory of gravity.

      And we can test and observe the results of evolution over the short term.

      I would like to add that for both gravity and evolution we can study long term evidence and records. We can map out entire galaxies / genetic trees.

      Objection to "macroevolution" is like objecting to "macrogravity". Like suggesting that gravity might not work all the way out to Pluto because we haven't actually seen Pluto make a full orbit yet. (Pluto has a 248 year orbit and was only discovered in 1930. So we've seen less than 1/3 of it's orbit so far.)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  143. it by spiritraveller · · Score: 1

    You teach the fact, with respect for dissenting viewpoints, just like any other topic. If you are discussing the birth place of a famous person, and there exists some doubt about the location, most decent textbooks discuss the question. Evolution and counter-evolutionists should work the same way. There are holes in the most complete theory of evolution. They should be addressed. You can point out it is a theory that is not able to entirely proven, like a mathematical equation might be.

  144. Get Your Own Dirt! by blikksem · · Score: 1
    Until you guys can explain the punch line in this joke - with ANY degree of clarity, you're all just foaming at the mouth and are lost in your own delusions - just as most believers in evolution are. Seriously, just how much of a leap of faith is that? Blikksem

    One day a group of scientists got together and decided that man had come a long way and no longer needed God. So they picked one scientist to go and tell Him that they were done with Him. The scientist walked up to God and said, "God, we've decided that we no longer need you. We're to the point that we can clone people and do many miraculous things, so why don't you just go on and get lost." God listened very patiently and kindly to the man and after the scientist was done talking, God said, "Very well, how about this, let's say we have a man making contest." To which the scientist replied, "OK, great!" But God added, "Now, we're going to do this just like I did back in the old days with Adam." The scientist said, "Sure, no problem" and bent down and grabbed himself a handful of dirt.

    God just looked at him and said, "Oh no. You go get your own dirt!"

    1. Re:Get Your Own Dirt! by blikksem · · Score: 1

      No takers? Come guys, I would have expected at least 1 comment. This is where the entire "big bang" concept (mass /energy) falls flat on it's face.

  145. Wrong.... by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Atheisim is simply a lack in belief in a god or gods. No more no less. Buddhism, Taoism and Confusianism are eamples of atheistic religions - that is, religions that exist and flourish, have entire sets fo ethics and philisophic underpinnings that do not have, or see a need for, an omnipotent creator or supreme being.

    The point of separation of church and state is to ensure that no one religion, including the atheistic ones take over.

    The school board is teaching a science class and is teaching the fact of evolution. Evolution has a tonne of evidence supporting it - evidence that continues to grow, not shrink. "Intelligent Design", on the other hand, has NO evidence supporting it and is simply the latest incarnation of Creationism - a belief based not on facts but on the creation myth of a particular religion, Christianity. As many posters have pointed out, ID takes a conclusion ("God created the Universe" or "We appear to be designed so there must be a designer" etc) and try to find evidence to support it (I can't give an example of this becasue apart from the sophistry of "Irreducable Complexity" ther is none). This is not the scientific method and thus not science.

    I would not want the Christian creation myth taught as fact in a science classroom, no more than I would want the Native American one taught, or the Autstailian Aboriginal one taught or the Buddhist one taugh. Like it or not they are not fact. ID can be taught in Comaprative Religion classes or Philosophy even, but not in science because it is not science.

    Now perhaps some day some real evidence supporting ID will come along. The beauty of science is, if that unlikey day ever comes along, science will re-evaluate and change it's stance to better fit the observable and experimentally verifyable facts. In this instance ID will become part of the science class then. Ironic that ID proponents don't do the same - despite all of the evidenced to the contrary the refuse to change their view and cling desparately to a myth.

    Whether you like it or not, teaching something as fact, based not on evidence but on a strong belief in the Judeo-Christian creation myth, is not science. Teaching this in a public school is the state actively endorsing as fact the mythology of a single religion - Christianity. This is a clear violation of the separation of Chruch and State. Would you like it if the school in question was teaching the "Earth was created by a Dream" Australian aboriginal myth or the Pagan\Ancient Greek version in science class? I doubt you would. And non-Christians don;t want your version taught as fact either.

    If you want ID taught as fact in a science classroom, prove it. Provide evidence. Until then, it belongs in mythology class.

    Philosphy is questions that may never be answered. Religion is answers that may never be questioned.

    --
    Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    1. Re:Wrong.... by vjmurphy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And the reality is that all of us are atheists. As Stephen F. Roberts once said:

      "I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours."

      --
      Vincent J. Murphy
      Spandex Justice
    2. Re:Wrong.... by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I am wrong, but I thought Atheism is more than a lack of belief in a god or gods.

      I was under the impression that atheism was strictly against god. IE, an atheist believes that there is no god. (Meaning they have a way to prove it to themselves.)

      This is different from an agnostic belief, in which one simply does not know whether there is a god or not.

      I suppose I could look all this up on Wiki...

      --
      If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
    3. Re:Wrong.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a nutshell, there are two "flavors" of both agnosticism and atheism

      Strong atheism: belief that definition of God is contradictionary and as such, it is impossible for any kind of god to exist.

      Weak atheism: belief that nonexistance of god is the best default position to assume as proof is unavailable.

      Strong agnosticism: belief that definite knowledge of God is impossible to attain even in theory.

      Weak agnosticism: belief that "I lack sufficient data and/or analytic capabilities to decide either way"

    4. Re:Wrong.... by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Nope, you are wrong.

      Atheists generally do not believe in God because there is no evidence to support the assertion. Some don't believe because it never occured to them the need for such a construct.

      "There is a God" is not the default condition that atheists must prove wrong. It is up to the theists to prove that such a thing as God exists.

      The burden of proof is always on those making the fantastic assertion. Blair Scott of the American Athiests has a good answer on his page. The site is quite informative.

      He has a great analogy there which I will borrow to explain:

      If I tell you I have a poodle at my house. You will believe me. Why? Well, you know poodles exist and you have observed them. Or you have other evidence of the existance of poodles like pictures and foot prints, even if you havn't observed them.

      Now if I tell you that I have a purple poodle that can fly and predict next week's lottery numbers, will you believe me? I hope not. In this case, I had better come up with some pretty compelling evidence. But if I don't and tell you you must believe me on faith, is it up to the anti-poodlist to prove that the dog doesn't exist? Is it reasonable to take the default stand that this creature exists until proven otherwise?

      Nope.

      You don't beleive in the poodle because there is no evidence, not becasue you can prove to yourself that it doesn't exist. You do need to "prove" anything.

      In case you missed it,dog==god, anti-poodleist==athiest.

      I'll stop being an atheist when theists can prove that God exists. I'm not picky. Bible God, Vishnu, Great Spirit, Loki, Venus...any old God will do.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    5. Re:Wrong.... by runderwo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I would not want the Christian creation myth taught as fact in a science classroom
      I think there's another problem here too. 'Technology' and 'science' are so often confused, that science classes are no longer about science anymore. For the most part, what we refer to as 'science' classes are just nature and technology classes - teaching students the answers to the questions that science has asked.

      A real science class would present the students with problems and show them how such problems are approached through the scientific method, because this is the essence of science. It would show them how to design scientific tests, which would give them an intimate understanding for what claims are within the scope of science and which are actually questions of philosophy or faith. And it would instill in them a distrust for conclusions which are presented without any empirical evidence.

    6. Re:Wrong.... by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      Makes sense,
      Thanks.

      --
      If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
    7. Re:Wrong.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've tried to find web sites that present these arguments in simple language. Most are too long and involved for people to wade through. Here's some I found readable. Does anyone know of other sites that have a concise presentation of either side?

      http://www.doesgodexistanswer.net/

      http://www.leaderu.com/offices/billcraig/docs/crea tion.html

      http://www.iep.utm.edu/o/ont-arg.htm

    8. Re:Wrong.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      holy crap that's good.

      It sums up in one sentence one of the concepts I usually have great difficulty explaining.

    9. Re:Wrong.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree that ID, et. al should be relagated to being taught in Sunday schools, etc.

      However, what bothers myself and a whole lot of other people is the megalomaniacal mindset of the science set who post here. Yes, science will change and say, 1000 years from now, it is quite possible that your stitting at your computer espousing these views will look very similar to a primate sitting in a dirt hole poking berries up his nose. The whole mindset that "I am so right because I believe in science, science is based on facts, and religion is not." is just entirely faulty. You are still _believing_ in something aren't you? A lot of those facts are _conjecture_ aren't they? A lot of knowledge that once was considered fact is now _refuted_ is it not?

      The simple fact of the matter is that "scientific" evidence that god exists will most likely never be found. The simple fact of the matter is also that complete and irrefutable evidence for evolution / beginnings of the universe will not be found either.

      In this case I have a hard time with one person calling another person an idiot for believing in theory "A" as opposed to theory "B". Especially when those in the fist camp have been so wrong so often.

      Personally, I have no problem with either camp and the arguments I see tossed around are relatively childish and banal.

    10. Re:Wrong.... by BraceletWinner · · Score: 1
      The analogy you present is flawed. We have observed poodles. We know they are (usually) not purple, they cannot fly, and cannot communicate to humans any psychic knowledge that they may have. Proving that you have this type of poodle is as simple as showing us. We have never observed God, so we don't know how to prove that there is one.

      I believe that there is a God because there has to be. The Big Bang (or whatever started this universe) didn't just happen out of nothing. Some entity that we don't understand and haven't observed set everything in motion. I'm not demanding that you believe that the Creation of the Bible is correct. I'm just saying that if you're using your analogy, atheists are the ones that have to prove that there is no God because God not existing is the more fantastic claim by far.

      And understand that I am separating God from religion here. The God that "created" the universe could be the Christian God, Allah, C3PO, a combination of all three, or something completely different.

    11. Re:Wrong.... by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      Atheisim is simply a lack in belief in a god or gods. No more no less

      Not so fast there... An atheist is someone who believes there is no deity. What you're describing is more like an agnostic, which is one who believes that we cannot know if there is a deity.

    12. Re:Wrong.... by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      I believe that there is a God because there has to be. The Big Bang (or whatever started this universe) didn't just happen out of nothing.

      God didn't just happen out of nothing, did he? Where did he come from? Who or what created God?

      Now, I'm pretty sure that you will come up with some variation of "God has always existed, and therefore was not created", so let me postulate this: there has always existed a 'larger universe' (I have no better name for it) and at some point there was a 'hickup' in this larger universe in the form of the big bang that created the universe that we can observe today.
      Now, you will no doubt ask what caused this hickup. Surely God set all that in motion, no? Well let me ask you this then: what caused God to set this in motion? Even if God has always existed, at some point, something caused God to decide to create our universe. Must we therefore conclude that there exists some kind of uber-God?

    13. Re:Wrong.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please substitue "poodle" with "the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal". You haven't seen one of those lately, have you?

    14. Re:Wrong.... by BraceletWinner · · Score: 1

      Most people think of "God" as the deity of a religion, and I'm not saying that this is necessarily the case. I'm saying that some force bigger and/or more powerful than our universe created our universe. If it was a "hiccup" in another universe, then God created that universe, or the one before, etc... God has always been there - it has to have always been there. It's something we'll probably never comprehend, and maybe we're not supposed to. Who knows? We may all be in a globe around a cat's neck... but something put it there.

    15. Re:Wrong.... by Shag · · Score: 1
      As many posters have pointed out, ID takes a conclusion... and try to find evidence to support it... This is not the scientific method and thus not science.
      Eh... if "conclusion" means "statement of fact" (which I suppose it does in the ID case) then you're right. But scientists regularly reach conclusions (called hypothesis) and then try to find evidence to support them.

      (And in physics and cosmology, if the evidence that's found doesn't quite fit, we just decide there must be some other mysterious thing causing the results... like planet X, or aether, or dark energy! *grin*)

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    16. Re:Wrong.... by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Which poses and interesting dilemma: How do we refer to someone who simply doesn't care whether or not God exists? The need for such a term simply wasn't required for a long time - it was assumed you cared and had a particular stance: either you believed God existed, believed God didn't exist, or believe you couldn't know. Not caring wasn't an option. These days it is an increasingly common stance on the subject and deserves a proper term.

      I have run into various proposed terms like "apatheist" or some such, but they're nt formally recognised anywhere.

      Jedidiah.

    17. Re:Wrong.... by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      but something put it there

      And that's where you're wrong. If "God" is not necessarily the God of the Bible, but can be "some force more powerful than our universe", and that "force" or whatever it is can have existed always, then there is no real reason why our universe (or the "larger universe" from which it sprang) cannot have existed always, thus eliminating the need for such a force, God, or any other supernatural explanation. Claiming that God "must" have created the universe, but then not investigating what caused God because that is beyond comprehension is no different than simply saying that we cannot possible know what created the universe in the first place. So why even bother with God? Just say we don't know what created the universe and call it a day. No God required. Adding God doesn't explain anything, and over the course of human history has only caused much pain and suffering.

    18. Re:Wrong.... by Mjaum · · Score: 1

      You have this quite backwards, dear.

      Science is not the process of getting things right. It is the process of getting things wrong.

      Every theory, once proven to be wrong, is exchanged for a new and better theory. However, the old theory was still a useful and necessary stepping-stone towards the next one.

      Evolution is useful because it allows us to understand the world better than we would without it. It is a stepping-stone towards an even better understanding. This new understanding, however, is very likely to keep most of the parts of evolutionary theory intact.

      The creation stories in the bible was once our best theory as to how the world had come to be. They are, in that way, a part of the scientific legacy. However, we have, luckily, moved far away from these in the last few thousand years. Now we know more, and we can see that these stories do not in any way explain the universe as we see it. Thus, claiming that these ancient and disproved theories should still be taught as science is stupid. To teach every theory about the universe that has cropped up in the last few thousand years serves no purpose in a science class.

      One does not 'believe' in science. Science is a tool that we use to understand the universe. To find the answers to the questions we ask. Religion cannot be used for this purpose because it claims to already have all the answers.

      ID searches for the questions that need the answer which ID has already provided. The problem is that *any* question can be answered with 'someone did it'. It is the easiest, simplest, most general answer imaginable. But it explains nothing. "The butler did it" does not make a good detective story. We want to know why he did it, and how, and with what. Because then we can *understand*, and not just *believe*.

      -Mjaum

    19. Re:Wrong.... by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Ahh but that's the rub...

      In science, observed facts (not enough visible matter accounted for in stars, pertubations in the orbit of an outer planet) whose causes are unknown are the basis of these hypothosese. Anything that later turns out to be false, or doesn't fit with this and other observed or experimental data is tossed aside (such as your aether - reasonable when first proposed, but later found out to be untrue).

      The more information that is gathered, the clearer the picture (well unless we're talking Quantum mechanics...;-) )

      ID on the other hand, takes a conclusion (that the universe was designed and created, infering therefore the existance of a supreme being or Creator) and finds the evidence that only shows this to be true. Ignoring or actively trying to discredit evidence to the contrary. And for ID there is lots of evidence to the contrary.

      The conclusion should fit the evidnence, the evidenc should not fit the conclusion.

      Beyond that, most of ID can be boiled down to pointing out weaknesses in evolution and saying "So how do you explain that then? Eh? Huh? See, it must be God so ALL of evolution is wrong..."

      Hardly scientific. And provably false.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    20. Re:Wrong.... by delirious.net · · Score: 1

      >> a belief based not on facts but on the creation myth of a particular religion, Christianity Many religions, including vey old ones have creation myths.

      --
      Don't speak about time until you have spoken to him.
    21. Re:Wrong.... by Shag · · Score: 1

      In the case of dark matter and dark energy, I think the conclusion fits the lack of evidence. ;)

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    22. Re:Wrong.... by Physician · · Score: 0

      Nobody can take you serious when you call the theory of evolution a fact and state that there is no evidence for intelligent design. In fact, there are thousands upon thousands of creationist scientists who have provided multitudes of evidence for intelligent design. Now if you think the evidence can be interpreted differently, then fine, but don't deny the fact that evidence can logically be shown to support intelligent design as well.

      --
      Does God treat us as servants or friends? Check my homepage.
    23. Re:Wrong.... by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Well, that may be so, but I am willing to bet my next paycheque that if you ask the ID crowd which creation myth they mean, it sure as hell won't be the Aboriginal "Dream time" one.

      They aren't talking about the classical Greek version...

      They aren't talking about anything in the Vedic scriptures or the ancient Persian myths (well, except for cribbing Gilgamesh).

      They aren't talkinga bout multiple creators involved in the world.

      They aren't saying it was Slartybardfarst or Erich Von Daneken's aliens.

      They are talking about a single, monolithic, immortal and everlasting God that created the world through a conscious act of will and still acts in this world to change things. This is the creation myth of Jews, Christians and Muslims. And in the US right now, its not the Jews and Muslims that hold sway...

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    24. Re:Wrong.... by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Ahem

      Here is the definite web repository on Evolution. Feel free to look around and refute any of the evidence for evolution they present.

      Here's another.

      And another.

      Not quack pages. Real, serious pages.

      Oh, and thousands of Christian clergy also support the truth of evolution.

      Now, nobody can take YOU seriously when all you do is claim there is no evidence for evolution (which there is, see above for but a small sampling), talk about the multitudes of evidence for ID, yet fail to show any such evidence?

      So let me ask:

      What is the process of speciation that ID endorses?
      What observed or experimental evidence is there for this?
      Where is the evidence for this from other fields, such as physics, chemistry or archeology\anthropology?

      Let me know when you can present this.

      I am more than willing to change my view of ID if the evidence is presented and can be verified and can hold up to scrutiny. Are you willing to do the same in regard to evolution? Are you prepared to admit that evolution is correct if the evidence is shown? Even if that means the Bible is wrong or it opens the possiblility that God doesn't exist or isn't needed?

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    25. Re:Wrong.... by BraceletWinner · · Score: 1
      Claiming that God "must" have created the universe, but then not investigating what caused God because that is beyond comprehension is no different than simply saying that we cannot possible know what created the universe in the first place.
      Thanks for making my point. Something created it, and we don't understand it. This is what I am referring to when I say "God". I specifially said I wasn't referring to a specific God of a specific religion. And I never said we shouldn't investigate, just that we don't understand God right now. We may find proof tomorrow or never, but it doesn't change the fact that something created our universe, caused the Big Bang, or carefully placed millions of fossils for us to find and ponder.
    26. Re:Wrong.... by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      Something created it, and we don't understand it

      I wasn't precise enough in my wording it seems.
      You are saying that something created the universe but we don't know what.
      I'm saying we don't even know if something created the universe.
      Your statement is an assumption.
      My statement is fact.

    27. Re:Wrong.... by BraceletWinner · · Score: 1

      I think you have the fact/assumption logic reversed. Something had to create the universe. It hasn't always been there and it didn't spontaneously appear out of nothing, therefore some external force created it.

    28. Re:Wrong.... by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1
      Something had to create the universe. It hasn't always been there and it didn't spontaneously appear out of nothing

      That's an assumption. As I said: if "God" or some other "force" can have existed always, then there is no reason that the universe cannot have existed always.

      You are assuming that the universe cannot always have been there, but that there is some other thing that can have always been there. Why?

    29. Re:Wrong.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is totally wrong. Evolution has no direct evidence to support it. There is no experimental evidence that shows that a dog can evolve and learn to fly. Intelligent design can be seen in cars and trucks and planes and everything that utilizes engineering and physics. If evolution is plausible then surely a scrap of metal can evolve into a truck. Right? Evolution needs experimental support before there is any confirmation of the scientific theory. Evolution needs laboratory experimentation that conclusively shows that an animal can learn to fly or that dolphins can learn to walk. There is no concrete conclusive experiment that proves this.

  146. Follow the Evidence by PineHall · · Score: 1

    This interview and Atheist Richard Carrier's article explains that the world famous now former atheist Antony Flew believes in a non-interfering creator. Creator may be too strong of a word for him. First cause might be better. His god is a minimal god, but it is the complexity of life, especially DNA, that caused him to acknowledge that science can not explain the origins of life. But here is a someone, a famous atheist, that is now convinced that there is some Intellegent Design.

    1. Re:Follow the Evidence by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      in an infinite universe, why would you need Intelligent design when all events will occure anyway?

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  147. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Stormcrow309 · · Score: 1

    Actually it is the Newton's Law of Gravitation. A theory is a comprehensive explanation of a given set of data that has been repeatedly confirmed by observation and experimentation and has gained general acceptance within the scientific community but has not yet been decisively proven. We have had theories proven wrong before.

    I think the real issue is that we have too many people trying to prove everyone else is stupid and wrong when they should be working on turning their theory into a law.

    My personal belief is a mixture of Evolution and Intellectual Design. Does it make me better then everyone else? No. Does it make me less intelligent then everyone else. Hardly. People treat Science as a religion and treat 'real' religions as crutches for the weak, when it is they who are trying to cover over their own feelings of inadequacy. Remember, a real atheist would not try to convert people.

    --

    In God we trust, all others require data.

  148. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    All you're proving to me is that you weren't paying attention in spelling class...

  149. Demographics and location by SeanDuggan · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I'm going to have to disagree with you on this one. "Most"? 90% of the Christians I personally know tell me that the Bible is the literal word of God, and evolution is one of Satan's attempts to derail good Christians and keep them from the kingdom of Heaven.

    I know a lot of Christians. It's entirely possible that both of you are speaking truthfully here. I grew up in the Bible Belt, Southern Baptists and Fundamentalists and such, and they indeed hold that position. I now live in Newark, OH, which is majority Catholic. When back in Ashland, KY, I could have truthfully said that most Christians I knew believed wholeheartedly in Creationism. Here, I can truthfully say that most of them believe that God uses evolution much like any other tool. {furrows brow} And honestly, isn't the use of evolution by God the whole point of Intelligent Design? You're talking about fundamentalism as regards a policy which accepts evolution. Or are we talking about different values of "Intelligent Design"?

    --
    This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
    1. Re:Demographics and location by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      It's entirely possible that both of you are speaking truthfully here.

      Valid point. Here's my reference area: As a military member, I've lived in Tennessee, Florida, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Maryland, Texas, New Mexico, Japan, Korea, and southern England. I'm currently in Maryland. The 90% figure I posited would certainly not be true in Japan or England, but holds true every place else I've lived.

      I'll debate the point as to whether Intelligent Design is "God's Evolution". I'd be more willing to accept that if the proponents of it weren't themselves putting it up to compete with evolution. If ID included evolution in its paradigm, I'd think that they would be trying to teach it as a subset, rather than trying to get it removed from school curiculae.

  150. I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by caitsith01 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Excuse the capitalisation, but there are two parts of the world that have these sorts of problems.

    1. Nutbag developing world theocracies: Iran, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia
    2. The United States of America

    I would say on recent form I would rather have my education system run by the average developing nation than the USA. At least the China-Japan textbook dispute, for example, is easily understood in terms of racial and historical tensions. They're not, for example, trying outlaw logic and reason.

    Seriously guys. The joke's over. OVER. We're all getting very, very afraid of you. I'm starting to be a lot more comfortable with the notion that China and India may soon be superpowers. I'm actually *glad* Russia still has a massive arsenal of nukes: Putin may be a dictator-by-proxy, but AT LEAST HE'S NOT INSANE.

    Since the end of the Clinton era:
    - fundamentalists have begun winding back your education system to around the 700-800AD mark
    - 'faith based' programs have become legitimate government policy
    - it has become abundantly clear that the Whitehouse is controlled by a man who does not understand science but does fervently believe in a very particular type of capital-G God
    - you have waged war on two moslem nations
    - religious voters have become the dominant force in national US politics
    - Americans have apparently accepted on faith the ridiculous argument that there is 'no evidence' of global warming
    - America has closer ties to other religious-fundamentalist states (e.g. Israel, Saudi Arabia) than it's secular, liberal-democratic former allies in 'old europe'

    Now all this would be fine, except that the religious nutcases that seem to have taken over your country are made incredibly powerful by... why yes, by SCIENCE. That logical, agnostic, provable, testable system we all know and love. Well, those of us outside the US know and love, anyway. SCIENCE has made you rich. SCIENCE has made you powerful. SCIENCE has, unfortunately, given you the weapons to destroy the entire world or precisely targetted bits thereof at the press of a button. Could stealth bombers fly from Missouri to any point on the globe and deliver laser guided bombs based on the teachings of Christ? Why, no - that would be SCIENCE we have to thank for that.

    Let us take, as a comparison, Italy. A very religious country, by all accounts, rabid devotion to the Vatican, everyone in sight attending church regularly. Yet the Pope effectively outlaws contraception, but Italy's birth rate is startlingly low. Why? Perhaps Italians are so religious that they really do what they're told? Or perhaps Italians are religious but they understand the difference between faith and allegory on the one hand, and logic and reason on the other. They're not noted for their chaste ways, in any event, and I'm sure Durex and Ansell make hefty sales over there.

    So how about we cut a deal? I'll even give you two choices.

    1. You let your country go back to theocratic-totalitarianism, by all means. Hound down anyone who uses logic and reason to explain the world. Only, hand over everything that's been developed with science before you do so. Give up all those wonder drugs, all your DVD players that allow you to watch 'The Passion of the Christ', all your giant auditoriums with 100 metre high video screens where you go along to sing your Christian songs. We'll look after them in 'old europe' and the antipodes if you like, and you can burn each other at the stake until the cows come home (only the cows will probably be dead because you rely on science for farming these days).

    2. You forget the dogmatic crap and listen to the parts of the bible that actually matter, such as *turn the other fucking cheek, *do unto others, *beams and motes, *the good samaritan, *the FUCKING MONEYLENDERS IN THE TEMPLE YOU STUPID FUCKS. FUUUUUUUUUUCKKK!!!!!!!!!

    And if you're not a religious nutcase but you are in the U.S., don't fucking apologise. DO SOMETHING. You are to blame for letting these rabid fundamentalists take over. YOU have to stop them.

    Ok, I'll now be modded into oblivion, but I feel slightly better.

    ####THIS POST BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE WONDERS OF SCIENCE####

    --
    Read Pynchon.
    1. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by sbenj · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Well, as an American, I'm not terribly happy about the America-bashing. Let's just say that statistically the people who have the beliefs you're describing are about 1/3 of the country, maximally, they've pretty much taken over our gov't, along with a fair number of sociopaths who are willing to use these people for their own aims (cough, cough, ...Delay... Frist... cough).
      Current issue of Harpers (not in the online vers, unfortunately, but one of the best things I've ever read on the subject, highly, highly recommended) provides a very good description of this, BTW.

      Bush was apparently right about one thing. He said at some point that fundamentalist regimes were going to be the new problem for the 21st century (or did one of his familiars say it? Hard to remember).

      Guess we just didn't think it would be us.

    2. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by ewe2 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      To comment on your Italian example, they go further than that. In rural Italy, it's not uncommon to have the local Communist/Socialist/Unionist posters on the church wall. They do go to church, it's true, but on the understanding that the men can smoke. The religious calendar is adhered to, not least because there are fireworks.

      In other words, the Italians are sensible people who prefer to enjoy their life rather than muck about with all that argument you Americans seem to prefer.

      --
      insecurity asks the wrong question irritation gives the wrong answer
    3. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by PenguinBoyDave · · Score: 1

      Here is what I notice from this, and many other posts: 1. If you are an American, you are at fault in some manner unless you are outspokenly anti-Christian and pro anything other than Christian. 2. You are a Christian in any way, shape or form. It doesn't matter what our views are, if you look at the posts on this topic, you are called a troll, etc. if you don't bash creationism. Go figure. I admit that there are many Christians who bash science, etc. I am not one of them. However, I am guilty by association apparently. So, if I must be a troll for being a Christian who believes the Bible...fine. If I am a troll because I don't buy off on Evolution...fine. If I am a troll or am a bad person because I am an American who tollerates differences of opinion, culture and religion, fine. I'd rather be a troll and stand up for what I believe than bash others for their different beliefs.

      --
      I'm not a troll, but I play one on Slashdot.
    4. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should re-read option 2 of the grandparent. I would say that if I had to choose a religion, genuine Christianity in the Jesus sense, not the Billy Graham/George Bush sense, would be my clear preference. If you really deserve the adjective 'Christian' then I can totally, utterly respect that. It's more dogma that's the problem. The US happens to choose Christian dogma when it chooses at all.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    5. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by moz25 · · Score: 1

      Great post. I salute you.

    6. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by PenguinBoyDave · · Score: 1

      As a Christian, let me say this: THE WORST THING TO HAPPEN TO CHRISTIANITY IS ORGANIZED RELIGION. I am a follower of Jesus Christ...period. I don't like much of what I see the "church" doing in the name of God. If anything, please know that not all Christian's fit the mold that much of society puts us in...we're all not unreasonable. Actually...many of us are just nice people.

      --
      I'm not a troll, but I play one on Slashdot.
    7. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by CaseOfThaMondays · · Score: 1

      Amen!!!

      --
      thats pretty much my best post ever. I spent like 3 hours typing it.
    8. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by subtropolis · · Score: 1

      Amen, brother.

      The problem isn't Christians - we know that. The problem is the American Taliban that has been gaining in power recently. They don't seem to care much for the teachings of Jesus. One of the reasons we see them as so dangerous (not to mention odious) is that they can efectively get away with murder by waving around the bible (and shouting a lot).

      --
      "Our interests are to see if we can't scale it up to something more exciting," he said.
    9. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bad troll! BAD! Get back down under your bridge, or no dinner!

    10. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by catstack · · Score: 1

      As an American Catholic, I'm a little annoyed when Creationism gets taught in science class in our Public Schools. However, I'm more annoyed by your fundmentalistic Anti-Americanism. Have you spent any time in this country?

      I often listen to foreign news sources on National Public Radio late at night (CBC, BBC, Deutsche Welle (sp?) and others) The Canadians have some insightful things to say about Americans. The Brits spend most of their airtime on Soccer and Cricket (what's the deal with cricket anyway). Finally the German media seems completely clueless. They are as self-righteous and condescending as the worst Creationists here.

      Now, for you Europeans who don't understand how us Americans can be so stupid as to teach Creationism in Science class, here's a quick civics lesson.

      1) Public schools in America are under the control of a locally elected school board.

      2) On election day, you are asked to select around 6 names for the Board of Education from a list of about 20. Usually, the people that run are retired school teachers & they generally do a pretty good job. However, folks running for the Board of Education do not have the same name recognition as candidates for Governor, Senator, President....

      3) If your Board of Education has 6 members, it only takes 4 Creationists to push through their agenda.

      4) Rest assured, that those four Board of Education member will have *huge* negative name recognition for the next election. These problems come, and they do go away at the next election cycle.

      5) This country is really, really big. We have thousands of individual Boards of Education. That we only have problems in 0.1% of those Boards is telling. The sky is not falling.

      By the way, I used to work in the Nuclear industry developing Nuclear Power Plant training simulators. The last ones I worked on were for several German utilities. I've heard that Germany is decommissioning all of their Nuke plants because of the Greens. WTF! I thought you guys cared about Global Warming?

    11. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by spruce · · Score: 1

      Ok, I'll now be modded into oblivion, but I feel slightly better.

      That's hilarious. All you have to do to get a +5 around here is spew some random fact about how America is teh eVal (not that there aren't many valid criticisms).

      But if you want to actually accomplish something with your posts, don't yell and scream frothing at the mouth. Personally I'm an aetheist and I don't want regligion to have anything to do with government - but your the tone of post pisses me off so much that I really don't give a shit about the valid points you made.

      BTW - where do you come from? I'm sure it's a perfect place without problems of it's own.

    12. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >And if you're not a religious nutcase but you are in the U.S., don't fucking apologise. DO SOMETHING. You are to blame for letting these rabid fundamentalists take over. YOU have to stop them.

      Don't you think I've tried? Do you think I voted for the George Bush the dumber? In case you hadn't noticed the fundamentalist attacks here are on rationality and objectivity itself. You can't reason with these fucks.

      I hope this is only a shallow wave of the counter-enlightenment that it breaks against the beachhead of objective reality and recedes. Like any other counter-enlightenment movement it has deep roots in European culture. A love of punishment for those branded "criminals" and a fear of change. I'll do what I can but my direst warning is that the culture of fear and hate that allowed it to happen here could be re-awakened over there. Why don't you do you best to see it doesn't spread?

    13. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by bani · · Score: 1

      what's wrong with zen buddhism? it's certainly a lot less violent than genuine christianity.

    14. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by morzel · · Score: 1
      However, I'm more annoyed by your fundmentalistic Anti-Americanism. Have you spent any time in this country?
      Ironically, we non-Americans generally don't care about local American politics or the way of life in the USA. We're not really interested in your local politics. We are very much interested in (and worried about) your foreign policy and the impact of the Bush administration on the rest of the globe and our lives in particular.

      In a couple of years, the USA evolved (that's evolution theory right there for ya ;-) from a friendly allied superpower, into a not-so friendly superpower that acts unilaterally and touts the "either you're with us, or you're against us" mantra. The "anti-americanism" you're experiencing is partly caused by the stance of your government towards us.

      When I am in the USA, the perception I get are from the people I meet and work with, the places I see and the things I do.
      When I am outside of the USA, that same perception is 95% based on whatever your president and his cronies are up to that particular day. A lot of us don't like that, and it shows in the media.

      Just so you know: we don't dislike every individual American (why should we), but the words and actions off your (re-elected!) president surely rub off.
      Dubya is just the chauffeur of the American limo. You all are sitting in the back, and have the right to replace him when he's driving you guys somewhere where you don't like to go.

      --
      Okay... I'll do the stupid things first, then you shy people follow.
      [Zappa]
    15. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't say the guy doesn't have a point though.

    16. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by borawjm · · Score: 1

      I'm a little confused as to how you can blame science on the American's as a bad thing. Considering, many of our discoveries are based on, or in conjunction with, the disciveries of other scientists in other countries. You'd think that they'd have to take part of the blame aswell. Furthermore, much of our technology is used to improve the quality of our lives and not soley for desctruction as you speak. The great thing about America is that we are so diverse and that there will allways be opposition to whomever is in charge. This is good, it keeps us in check, and prevents us from getting out of hand, which, from your point of view, we already are.

    17. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by lunarolivaw · · Score: 1

      I generally agree--a few small objections, however:

      1) Israel is not a religious-fundamentalist state (not that I'm defending Israel or any state for that matter, but it simply is not).

      I also have objections of the normative kind, but those are not within the allotted scope of this discussion--nor, I might add, was the content of the post to which I'm replying. (Normative discussion about whether posts whose content is outside the allotted scope of a discussion should be permitted is also outside the allotted scope of this discussion.)

    18. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by CaperNZ · · Score: 1

      That's hilarious. All you have to do to get a +5 around here is spew some random fact about how America is teh eVal (not that there aren't many valid criticisms).

      So your point is?

      but your the tone of post pisses me off so much that I really don't give a shit about the valid points you made.

      Christ, you get annoyed by *America Bashing*, but conveniently forget that these views do not come from a void.
      The western hemisphere didn't get up one day and decide that it needed to spend its time posting on slashdot saying 'America is te Sux0r'. It's not like we sit here all day wondering how our lives are incomplete unless we piss of some Americans.

      Rather if people in *other* countries have enough feeling on American policies, even if they are blunt and to the point (BTW Well done grandparent) you may wonder why they have enough feeling on the subject to spend 20 minutes of the day writing something like that. And it's not for the usual crap you are spoonfed about *hating our freedoms*.

      BTW - where do you come from? I'm sure it's a perfect place without problems of it's own.

      I'm sure it isn't, but look at it this way. Let's say the poster comes from New Zealand. What foriegn policy of this country affects you, or world geopolitical events? Compare with current American empire building, how does that affect the poster? I would be surprised if you knew of a policy of the former, while the latter drastically affects world stability. Does that mean that if you really don't care about the formers policies, healthy debate about the latter should be outlawed?

      And before you come back with the general argument that since America is the only remaining superpower, hence they will annoy other countries no matter the policy, just remember that smaller countries have affected world events by misguided policies (Afganastans harbouring of terrorists for example, it isn't like that wasn't a large talking point and discussion in America for a very long time)

    19. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It annoys me when people assume that science and faith are separate, and that Christians are anti-science, or especially that any scientist of any repute must be non-Christian. The below scientists (among many others) were well-known Christians:

      André-Marie Ampere (as in 'amps')
      Charles Babbage (his early math machines were predecessors to the computer)
      Johann Bernoulli (mathematician)
      George Boole (mathematician)
      Robert Boyle (chemist)
      Johannes Kepler (scientist/astronomer)
      Blaise Pascal (mathematician)

      I've just listed a few, the below is a great reference (there's around 1600 listed on there).
      http://www.tektonics.org/scim/sciencemony.htm

      Your attitude, "Without us atheist scientists, you Christians wouldn't have what you have," is ridiculous, because if you look in depth at the history, it's more like, "Without us scientists of Christian faith, you atheists wouldn't have what you have." If you believe that God created the universe, and created us with intelligent minds (which I do), it's pretty ridiculous to think that looking into how he created the world is a fundamentally non-religious activity.

      And that doesn't mean you have to believe in evolution either, or that anyone who doesn't believe does so for purely faith-based reasons. There are many good non-religious scientific oppositions to evolution (read Shattering the Myths of Darwinism by Richard Milton).
      I believe that it takes as much faith to believe in evolution as it does to believe in creation, and to hear a lot of people who don't have any stake in it defend it really backs up that claim. While I acknowledge there are Christian evolutionists, many who believe in evolution I believe do so so that they don't have to believe in God, a God who will stir up their lives, change things around that they like the way they have them, a God who will force them to examine who they really are inside and why they exist. In that way, belief in evolution can be a crutch, as many argue that belief in God is.
      And the way evolution is being taught in this country is terrible- read Icons of Evolution by Jonathan Wells- examples of evolution, diagrams of evolution, and other things that the general scientific community long ago proved were false are STILL included in modern biology textbooks that they teach in high school and college- I doubt this is just an oversight.

    20. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by WarmBoota · · Score: 1

      This is probably the most insightful comment I've seen in a very long time. We Americans live in a country that mocks the theocracy of Afghanistan's Taliban and Iran's Imams, but is oh-so-cozy with Intelligent Design being taught in classrooms.

      I was raised Catholic, and I was also raised to believe that people railing against the 10 Commandments were freaks with too much time on their hands. I don't believe the latter any longer. Sure there is a historical precedent, but the idea is that Atheists, Agnositics, Muslics, Jews, Christians, and whatever else are all equal in the eyes of the law.

      The history of mankind has shown that zealots on any side are capable of barbarism. That's why any intrusion of religion into politics is anathema. That's why the conservative Christian vote is so terrifying.

      A Christian (conservative or otherwise) state is as unfair to the citizens as is a Muslim state. No one in their right mind would advocate that McDonald's limit their Friday menu to McSalads and Filet-o-fish, but somehow right-wing Christian non-science seems like a good idea.

      Every day Germany looks better. At least their memory is still there

      --
      90% of everything is crap. Also, crap is relative.
    21. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      ...Seriously guys. The joke's over. OVER. We're all getting very, very afraid of you. I'm starting to be a lot more comfortable with the notion that China and India may soon be superpowers. I'm actually *glad* Russia still has a massive arsenal of nukes: Putin may be a dictator-by-proxy, but AT LEAST HE'S NOT INSANE..... ...And if you're not a religious nutcase but you are in the U.S., don't fucking apologise. DO SOMETHING. You are to blame for letting these rabid fundamentalists take over. YOU have to stop them.

      Ok, I'll now be modded into oblivion, but I feel slightly better.

      ####THIS POST BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE WONDERS OF SCIENCE####


      The United States has been both a leader in science and industry in the world as well as a nation of strong religious faith for a very long time. The Harvard MBA - fighter pilot President of the United States who announced the goal of the United States to go to Mars might just have a clue or two that eludes you.

      However, you do raise some points worth discussing. Bringing the burning light of reason to the Christian world is, no doubt, long overdue in some people's minds. The question is, who will do it? The French secularists who perpetrated Revolutionary terror? Perhaps the pagans of Nazi Germany or ancient Rome? (Yes, pagans. Look it up.) How about the atheists of the Soviet Union, North Korea, and the rest of the Communist block with their harsh repression of religion and agitation for atheism? Or perhaps the modern Europeans can show the United States the way, that is if they hurry before their imploding native populations (why is that?) and high immigration rates turn Europe into an Islamic continent in about 50 years. With all of the wrongs that you attribute to Christianity in the United States, shouldn't you be more concerned about paganism and atheism in Europe and Asia, particularly given the massive body count they created, often in their own country? (1-200,000,000) Or is it Christianity that scares you more than massive body counts?

      Frankly you come off as less of an advocate for science than as simply anti-religious, perhaps to the point of mania. The two aren't the same.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    22. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by cold+fjord · · Score: 1


      I'm curious.... where do you think the violence is in "genuine christianity"?

      Don't you see the problem with the refusal of absolute pacifists to confront and oppose evil under any condition?

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    23. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by bani · · Score: 1

      the problem is what christians define as "evil" -- which is the same problem islam has.

    24. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by spruce · · Score: 1

      So your point is?

      My point was that the parent post threw up the usual "Oh I know I'll get modded to oblivion for saying this" when it's actaully the popular opinion around hear.

      I don't get annoyed with america bashing, I get annoyed with the type that the parent was spewing. And also, I know anti-american views don't come from a void (as I noted in my own post above which you kindly bolded.)

      And you have no idea the level of knowledge I have and where I get my information. You probably assume I only watch Fox news. I'm quite capable of critical thinking and know it doesn't have anything to do with "hating our freedom." The logic behind the 9/11 attacks was far crazier than hating our freedom.

      Does that mean that if you really don't care about the formers policies, healthy debate about the latter should be outlawed?

      Where in my post did I say anyting of the sort?

      Now take these two statements and see which one you would react to better:

      FUCK! You stupid fucking Europeans just sit on you asses all the time and don't ever do shit when there's a problem in the world to be dealt with!

      or

      I really think the current situation in Warrandia calls for immediate action, let's work together to help these people out!

      I prefer my healthy debate in format 2 - and will stop listening to you promptly if you sound like a rambling jackass.

    25. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by SeattleGameboy · · Score: 1
      If I am a troll because I don't buy off on Evolution...fine. If I am a troll or am a bad person because I am an American who tollerates differences of opinion, culture and religion, fine.

      You are a troll, not because you "tollerate" differences of opinion, but because you have don't refuse to recognize what is an belief (ID) and what is a fact (evolution). And no, that does not make you a bad person, it just make you an ignorant one and unlearned one. Seriously, open your mind. There are other books than just bible. Read, learn, explore, why would you want to waste a beautiful gift from God like your brain?

    26. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you spent any time in this country?

      I often listen to foreign news sources on National Public Radio late at night (CBC, BBC, Deutsche Welle (sp?) and others) The Canadians have some insightful things to say about Americans. The Brits spend most of their airtime on Soccer and Cricket (what's the deal with cricket anyway).

      How hypocritical. You complain that somebody is ignorant of your country, and then spew ignorance about other countries. Us Brits don't spend most of our airtime on soccer and cricket at all. If I had to guess, I'd say that you are getting a distorted view because what is presented to foreign nations is skewed towards the expat community, who like to follow their home sports even when they have emigrated.

      3) If your Board of Education has 6 members, it only takes 4 Creationists to push through their agenda.

      The obvious question is "what the hell are you doing electing one person willing to force religion into science, let alone four?".

    27. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by catstack · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry if you think I'm hypocritical because the BBC shows on National Public Radio spend a good deal of time on soccer and cricket. It is a fact though. You are probably right that those shows are geared to the expat community.

      I know that British folk have other cares, but it isn't properly reflected in the news programming carried on Public Radio. CSpan, a cable network that covers Congressional meetings live, does carry the Prime Minister's Question Time periodically. Now that's a show: it's enlightening, animated and amusing- all at the same time....

      Now, to your second point. The obvious answer is that Board of Education races don't get much news coverage because 99.9% of the time, reasonable people get elected. Newspapers don't typically bother asking candidates about their religious views and how they would effect their policy decisions. Likewise, many other local races don't get much attention either: Clerk of the Court, Judge of the Orphan's Court, etc...

      If a group of Creationists want to pack the Board of Education, they could simply run a dozen candidates and have a decent chance of succeeding. Keep in mind that most people have never heard of any of the candidates; they might pick the first six candidates on the ballet or pick using the enny-meeny-miney-mo method. Sure its a crap shoot. We ought to be better informed, but usually we get decent, well-meaning Boards of Education. The alternative to having a democratically elected School Board is to have an appointed School Board. Some jurisdictions in this country do exactly that. Personally, I'd rather retain the right to elect my local school board than let the State of Maryland or the Federal Government decide for me.

      Bad election outcomes are news because they are rare. If this kind of thing were more common, then you can be damn sure there would be better vetting of the candidates prior to the election. Furthermore, if a Board of Election pushes Creationism, that Board will be rediculed, won't be reelected and may even be recalled.

    28. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by cold+fjord · · Score: 1


      Interesting. What does Christianity, as opposed to any particular individual Christian, brand as evil that you find objectionable?

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    29. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have met some very nice Christians. They believe in Jesus's teachings and are considerate to all. They are the best people. They are the worst.

      If all the Christians were as rabid and insane as GWB it would be obvious that something had to be done.

      If the Nazis were ALL assholes from the beginning, they could have gathered the support they needed to come into power. There were good people who followed some Nazi principles--good people that either allowed the title to be applied to them (ala The Pope) or good people that actively agreed with their goals (rebuilding Germany) and figured that their eccentricities could be overlooked.

      When some Germans pointed out the fundamentalist fear-based mentality, I guarantee a bunch of Nazis stood up and said "Look at me, I'm a good person, why are you condemning all of us". Without the well-intentioned ones (probably a majority of the Nazis in the beginning), perhaps the Germans would have stopped the Nazis before they got into power.

      It's these good people that can't see what they are enabling that is the problem.

      First of all they defend Christianity by saying "Look at me, I'm good". In effect, they are (very effectively) defending GWB and every murder he has committed, and every child he's left behind, and every dollar he's stolen--even aiding him.

      If you are a good Christian, please at least recognize that your pride in being Christian is a sin before Jesus!

      I will not forgive a single one of you. I will not forgive myself, being an American. but I don't know what to do.

      I wasn't this scared until the hate-based anti-gay voting in the last election. That made me realize that this movement is the most dangerous man-made thing to happen to the earth, ever.

      This Fundamentalist movement is hate and fear based. By associating yourself in any way with such evil, you are yourself supporting it and part of it.

      During the inquisition, would you have had the guts to dissociate yourself from your religion and stand against it, would you have let the fundamentalist Christians that took the gays away in Germany do so just because they called themselves Christians? I believe the KKK justified their anti-black views using your Bible.

      Oh, also, the biggest argument against Christianity is wrong is that a nice person like Jesus would have had NOTHING to do with the horrible things that have been done to the world in his name--we'd have all been a lot better off without him, and if his father had a clue what damage he was causing he certainly wouldn't have sent him.

      I'm posting anonymously because I am Afraid of Americans too.

    30. Re:I'M AFRAID OF AMERICANS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  151. It's a theory! by Lennavan · · Score: 1

    Evolution is a theory because it can't be proven. We can find evidence, like the fossil record or comparing DNA sequences and Homeobox genes among related species, but until someone is able to come up with an experiment that accurately tests it, we're stuck.

    The only evolutionary studies that I can think of would take thousands of years to conduct. Anyone want to fund me?

    To those of you who believe in ID, give me a break. ID is not an alternative; there are no -good- alternatives to evolution. Evolution is the only "theory" supported by the evidence.

    If this were about seperating theory from fact, why aren't we demanding alternatives to the Pythagorean Theorm? Maybe God can intelligently design a triangle that doesn't follow that? Because that will remain a theory too until all numbers can be tested (which isn't possible).

  152. Of course there will be lots of comments! by VernonNemitz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One problem is this:
    The claim "intelligent design is a valid alternative" is LOGICALLY FLAWED, and here is why:
    Answer this Question: "Was the Intillegent Designer intelligently designed?"
    If YES, then there is an endless recursion of intelligent designers.
    If NO, well then consider that WE HUMANS tend to think of ourseleves as intelligent designers. If a Universal Intelligent Designer could manage to exist without being intelligently designed, then why can't WE exist without being intelligently designed?
    Q.E.D.

    1. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by tompaulco · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That hypothesis makes the assumption that the Intelligent Designer is part of the creation and therefore had to be created Himself. That is not what creationists believe.
      Further, going one step lower, your argument could be used as a question to show that Legos don't have to be intelligently designed. They could just exist by themselves.
      Except of course, that Legos and the designers of Legos are part of the universe, whereas creationists contend that the creator created the Universe and is NOT part of it.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    2. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by B'Trey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It doesn't matter whether or not the Creator is part of the Universe or not. If you can postulate that the Creator exists without cause, then you can postulate that the universe exists without cause. If the complexity of the universe requires a Creator, then the complexity of the Creator requires a MetaCreator as well. Talking about existing inside or outside of the universe is sophistry and doesn't address the real essence of the argument. Why would a complex entity outside of the universe not require an intelligent cause, but a complex entity inside the universe necessarily require one? Is the outside of the universe a magical place where complexity springs into existence without cause? Hardly sounds like a scientific theory to me.

      Note that I'm not arguing that Creationist don't make the argument you presented - they certainly do. But that argument is as flawed as the rest of their pseudo-scientific assertions.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    3. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by joshmccormack · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If NO, well then consider that WE HUMANS tend to think of ourseleves as intelligent designers. If a Universal Intelligent Designer could manage to exist without being intelligently designed, then why can't WE exist without being intelligently designed?

      What you're talking about is philosopy and reasoning. If someone believes in Intelligent Design, this may not be through reasoning it out, it may be from faith.

      Your question also puts humans a little higher up than some others do - some consider the gulf in intelligence between them and their God to be so vast as to make comparisons like that meaningless.

    4. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by John+Harrison · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Answer this Question: "Was the Intillegent Designer intelligently designed?"
      If YES, then there is an endless recursion of intelligent designers.

      If you are LDS, then the answer is yes, and yes there is an endless recursion, or at least that is the implication. Of course if you are LDS, then evolution probably doesn't bother you much.

    5. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by telecsan · · Score: 1

      The claim "intelligent design is a valid alternative" is LOGICALLY FLAWED, and here is why:

      You have the assumption that the universe is logical. This is not necessarily the case. Furthermore, you assume that even if the universe is logical, that we as humans fully comprehend the logic to which the universe conforms. Again, a flawed assumption.

    6. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by m50d · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't assume that. If the creator exists, even outside of the universe, how come? Was he created, and if not, why do we have to have been created.The grandparent has a valid point wrt legos, it's just overruled by the inability of legos to reproduce, which shows they must have been created.

      --
      I am trolling
    7. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by alienw · · Score: 1, Funny

      Replace "faith" with "stupidity" and you will be right on.

    8. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by orangesquid · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Complexity *does* spring into existence without cause.
      Entropy is forever increasing. We are moving toward zero complexity.
      Either entropy hasn't always been increasing, or the universe started with full complexity.

      I simply define the "Creator" as the complexity of the universe at t=0. I don't try to come up with intelligent creature with some sort of pseudo-existence that "built" the universe.

      If you make the argument that our perception occurs in the timewise direction of increasing entropy because that is the direction that supports causation, that's fine (who says which way is "forward" in time?). It just means that our perception of causality and the Creator are one and the same.

      I'm sure I'll get a thousand people saying "What an idiot," "Study some philosophy," "You premise is flawed," etc. I'm not going to argue with you, because I don't HAVE an argument; I have a definition. (And, btw, I have taken Honors Philosophy courses at Univ. of Del. Also, if you haven't studied Jean Baudrillard's Simulacra and Simulations, please do.)

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    9. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I do object to your use of the term "Creator". To me, it seems that the term implies some sort of intentionality and even personhood, and I don't believe that is what you're trying to convey.

      --

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

    10. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by FractalPenguin · · Score: 0

      *sarcasm* Yeah but the Universe is usually means Every(physical?)thing. How can there be Everything AND Another thing? While everythiing itself defines 'there is no other thing except this everythiing'! Creationists may does not know what really universe means. What do you think of the universe? Something that has some stars and some dark matters?! *sarcasm* *sarcasm about architecture of human brain everywhere*

    11. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Lifewish · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That hypothesis makes the assumption that the Intelligent Designer is part of the creation and therefore had to be created Himself. That is not what creationists believe.

      No, of course it isn't. They attempt to remove the whole "start of time" paradox by positing a timeless entity to start it off. This is actually fairly sensible, but it doesn't explain a) how a timeless entity can act to create something given that he has no time to move in, b) how we can assume that said entity is anything personal as opposed to some kind of automatic law of nature, and c) why said entity would stick around after creation to fiddle with the lives of some carbon-based fluff on one planet in a vast universe.

      Moving back to evolution:
      Further, going one step lower, your argument could be used as a question to show that Legos don't have to be intelligently designed. They could just exist by themselves.

      And if we had no evidence for the creation of lego (and particularly if we had some evidence for it being in some way self-generating) we'd have to accept that it was creating itself, without necessarily some supernatural being to kickstart the process. However, neither of these conditions holds.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    12. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by CFTM · · Score: 1

      You're using a straw man argument here; I'm not saying that I agree with intelligent design I'm just saying your argument isn't a valid one. It's falls under the same category of "If God is all powerful than God can create a rock that God cannot list thus God can't be all powerful". It'd be like me saying that I can make a square-circle...

    13. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by orangesquid · · Score: 1

      That's true. Creator isn't really the best word to use, because I don't think humans, planets, and stars were created by anything other than Nature herself. But, I like to call Nature a Creator, so I have "someone" to thank for being alive =)

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    14. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Their bible has Expansion Packs.

    15. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your proof ends in a question. It is not finished, don't abuse proof theory.

    16. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by bombadillo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Entropy is forever increasing. We are moving toward zero complexity.
      Either entropy hasn't always been increasing, or the universe started with full complexity.


      I believe you are mis-understanding the laws of thermodynamics. The law is generally presented in it's simple form and only covers a closed system. You can do some googleing on more advanced explenations of Thermo dynamics.

    17. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by bkruiser · · Score: 1

      Nice... The question then becomes, is there a being that is a first cause or a matter that is a first cause. Would you concour that this is the essence of the disagreement? Niether can be proven yet. Neither can be disproved yet. --- Oh and any proof for one, can be proof of the other until we can differentiate incidence from accident.

    18. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by cynic+pi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would just like to point out that the high modded posts in this thread are an extremely intelligent discussion, and that perhaps after the students are being taught evolution, this exact discussion could happen.


      If there was actually intelligent discussion like this in High School I might have actually showed up more. And if we shield our children from this discussion, and others like it, then aren't we being complicit in their ignorance.
    19. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by jadavis · · Score: 1
      Everyone immediately associates intelligent design with faith and evolution with science. But look at the scientific method:


      1. Observation and description of a phenomenon or group of phenomena.

      2. Formulation of an hypothesis to explain the phenomena. In physics, the hypothesis often takes the form of a causal mechanism or a mathematical relation.

      3. Use of the hypothesis to predict the existence of other phenomena, or to predict quantitatively the results of new observations.

      4. Performance of experimental tests of the predictions by several independent experimenters and properly performed experiments.


      I don't really think evolution fits the scientific method either. Evolution is probably correct, but it's mostly circular logic anyway. When I hear evolution I think to myself "Organisms which are better fit to live until reproductive age will be more likely to reproduce". That's not science, that's at best an observation.

      If some species changes genetically over time, and it appears to be more fit, people point and say "evolution". But nobody can say ahead of time what will actually happen quantitatively. And if two scientists try to conduct and experiment, they will get different results.

      Evolution explains the past. Science is about predicting the future.

      I'm not religious, but it seems to me like the secular people are really reaching for a way to "disprove" religion. I think the whole thing is stupid because I don't think evolution should be taught as a theory either. It's reduced to circular logic and it doesn't have reproducible results; how is that a theory?
      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    20. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All that shows is that we don't need an Intelligent Designer. It doesn't prove one did not exist.

      Say man creates a basic lifeform from chemical matter. That creature would be Created. And yet, it theoretically could also have spontaneously generated.

      How do you tell the difference?

    21. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      how a timeless entity can act to create something given that he has no time to move in
      This shows why opponents and proponents of creationism can never convince each other. Opponents keep wanting to try to understand a creator in terms of universal components of time and material. You ask how a creator could create the universe when he has no time to move in. A few posts up, someone asks how there could be the universe AND be something else (that being the creator). In terms of science, there can't. Nothing can happen without time, and everything is made of matter. Nothing can exist outside of the universe, which is the sum of all matter.
      Scientifically, this is true. But I have no problem believing that a creator created the universe, time, nature, scientific principles and so forth, but having created those things doesn't mean that he is limited by those things. He doesn't have to operate in time, doesn't have to be composed of matter, etc. Science can prove that such a creator can not exist in this universe, however, the scientific rules and properties that govern the creation do not necessarily apply to the creator.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    22. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by orangesquid · · Score: 1

      [If you mean the flawed notion that "evolution can't happen because it means decreasing entropy," I completely understand that evolution is an open system (what we gain when we evolve is matched by the losses around us): the universe is inherently spiritual and meaningful, as a whole. That's what usually comes up in these kinds of discussions, but that's not what I'm referring to. I don't think you're referring to it either, but it doesn't hurt to check.]

      I just mean that, if someone says our universe has some innate complexity S(0) = k, then k is the "Creator." This is known as pantheism (it's generally considered an abomination by the Church, because it is seen as "worshipping the creation, not the creator," but I digress). At any rate, entropy is always measured relative to something (like anything in physics); we only have delta-S, never absolute S. Basically, if you want to believe in God, let God = S(0). Worship Nature; plant some trees and fall in love life.

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    23. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by lambadomy · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're completely misunderstanding the second law of thermodynamics. It only applies to a closed system (meaning there is no external source of energy).

      The Universe as a whole is probably a closed system, so on average for the whole universe at once, entropy is increasing. But that does not keep individual areas of the universe to have decreasing entropy, or increasing complexity. The earth is one such system, because we have a huge burning energy source beaming down on us, the sun. Someday yes the sun will burn out, and perhaps the whole universe will die a whimpering heat death. But in the meantime the sun still shines, and we still get a lot more energy than we need to increase complexity on this small planet.

    24. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by FreakyControl · · Score: 1

      Why do non-conformists all dress the same? Life is full of paradox's and inconsistensies, but that doesn't mean that nothing exists. Before I continue, I would just like to mention that I don't believe creationism should be taught in schools, but that they should point out that evolution is a theory (see my above comment).

      Just because you have the ability to talk in circles doens't mean that you've disproven the existance of God, or anything like that. Ever think that certain things are beyond the full understanding of the human mind?

      For instance, our brains are optimized to predict the performance of second order systems, since much of what we encounter in nature can be approximated as such (like the trajectory of a rock flying through the air). Systems that exhibit behavior higher than second order, or exhibit enough non-linearities that they can no longer be approximated as linear, are extremely difficult, if not impossible, for our minds to predict.

      Likewise, it is extremely difficult to visualize things of greater than three-four dimensions. Actually, it is impossible for at least 99.9% of the population of visualize things in greater than 4 dimensions. While we use mathematics to represent n-dimensional systems, this math is by no means perfect (as it assumes linearity).

      My point of all of this is perhaps we can't come up with a perfect explanation of things because some things are above the state of our minds. Perhaps things will become clearer as we evolve, but for now I hold my religious beliefs as a very good approximation of what is true, much like a linear approximation is a good approximation of many dynamic systems. While it is always possible to excite the nonlinearities and drive that description to a point of instability, it is still a very good approximation.

    25. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by orangesquid · · Score: 1

      Shit, whoops. I even used preview but I missed it! The ": the universe is" should come in the second paragraph, after "degress)"

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    26. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Distinguished+Hero · · Score: 1

      Well, the universe doesn't seem able to reproduce, so by your argument, it must have been created by some sort of creator...

      --
      Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
    27. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by BytePusher · · Score: 5, Interesting

      As a fundimentalist I think perhaps my views could be valuable. First, intellegent design does not contradict evolution. Intellegent design does not support evolution. It simply states that there probably was some intellegence involved in this phenominon we call "life." It does not go so far as to state where the intellegence resides, whether it is in God or mice.
      Secondly, regarding God needing a creator. Most fundimentalists consider God to be even outside time. Unchanging, simply existing. In fact the name given by God, which Israel was to refer to him by means something similar to "He who exists." This name is often times refered to as the tetragrammon, which is often times translated as Yahweh or Yehovah(YHWH), but no one really knows how it should be translated. Anyway, the point is that a God which simply exists, which is timeless and unchanging could not be created. Since the term "created" implies both change and some dependence on time. God therefore could not "spring" into existance, because "springing" implies some sort of change and dependence on time. He simply exists, timeless and unchanging.
      I would also like to address the issue of fossils. It's wrong to suppose that God created fossils to test men's faith. God is not cruel or deceptive. Many fundimentalists do not understand the nature of God as described in the scriptures, but rather the nature of God as described by poorly trained teachers. God is described as providing plenty of evidence for his existance, such that no man is without excuse to be without faith(Romans 1). Therefore, God's nature is quite the opposite. He is revealing the truth of himself, which men choose to ignore. We are the ones who are deceptive. God tests men's hearts by providing every reason to believe.
      I hope this clears things up a bit. My purpose was not to argue or refute anyone, but simply to provide an accurate understanding of what Christian Fundimentalists believe.

    28. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by John+Harrison · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Their bible has Expansion Packs.

      All bibles that have something called the "New Testament" have expansion packs, so yours might be an upgraded version as well.

    29. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Major+Lame+Brain · · Score: 1

      One of the key points you fail to note about science's predictive power relating to past events is that it does make predictions about the future as well. If an archeologist finds a bit of partially uncovered bone and hypothesizes, "this is a 6,000,000 year old bit of dinosaur rib" there are a number of implicit predictions based on evolutionary theory that can be made and tested: if it's 6,000,000 years old then rocks tested in the surrounding strata *will* also be found to be 6,000,000 years old; if it is a rib then it *will* curve in such a manner; if it belongs to a dinosaur, it *will* be consistant with other dinosaur bones, etc., etc. Note the use of future tense. Discoveries about the past do allow scientists to make testable predictions about future results.

      Inteligent Design cannot make similar predictions (unless the prediction is simply, "we will continue to find complexity") and therefore is not science.

      --
      I report to Colonel 2.6.1 and General Chaos is his boss.
    30. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      God invented humans just a little bit after humans invented God.

    31. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Retric · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's not a question of could there be a god but rather is there any reason to act like there is.

      Let's say we have somone named bob that's all knowing all powerfull and realy likes good mexican food. Now he could have created the world / space and time just to get good mexican food infact he could make infinatly many worlds just so he can get good mexican food but knowing this would it tell you anything about how to live your life?

      Knowing that something could creat our world just to eat one meal and then leaves it along for all time realy does not change you an anyway shape or form thus if you can't know god as you point out why try? You don't try and dig a hole to china knowing how far it is do you?

      Anyway, I can visualise things with more than 5+ dimensions just fine and I can look at the world and never say "there needs to be a god." so why should I treat anyone who things otherwise as anything other than a fool?

    32. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Bradmont · · Score: 1

      You're missing one thing: Anything that has a beginning requires a cause. Creationists and naturalists alike agree that the universe had a beginning (be that creation, big bang, whatever). The universe having an initial cause does not lead to infinite recursion if we allow for the fact that the cause of the universe never had a beginning, and thus, needs no cause.

    33. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Ever think that certain things are beyond the full understanding of the human mind?

      No. Why should they be? You didn't even make it past the second paragraph without a flawed premise.

    34. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      In terms of science, there can't.

      If it's possible then, by definition of science, it's possible in terms of science (bear in mind that science is merely the most effective approach to generalising from extant data and, to a lesser extent, choosing what data to gather). Therefore, if there is a creator of the universe, science will be able to explain him/her/it given half a chance. So far, said creator, if he/she/it actually exists, has been unwilling to volunteer for medical experiments, hence we can only imply what things must be like for him/her/it. However, implications can still be made.

      Nothing can exist outside of the universe, which is the sum of all matter.

      Not technically accurate, but I won't go there.

      He doesn't have to operate in time

      If God doesn't vary in time then it (he) either varies in space or doesn't vary at all (I can't think of any other option; feel free to correct me). In the second case, it wouldn't be complex enough to affect the universe in meaningful ways. In the first case, it could be complex enough but, given that there is no known selection criterion to be applied to potential Gods, it would be unlikely to behave in a way that would be meaningful to us (imagine randomising a floppy disk's contents and then trying to boot off it).

      In either case, the chances of meaningful behaviour (such as the tweaking of evolution) coming from such an entity are slim to none, for the exact same reason that the spontaneous development of the human eye is slim to none. Fortunately, we have a change-based explanation for how human eyes could come to exist; a similar explanation for an unchanging God is implausible.

      In my opinion, this is why science so far suggests an absence of intelligent yet timeless God - cos the idea itself is implausible. Time is an enabler, not a restriction, and is a prerequisite to meaningful intelligence.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    35. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by alucinor · · Score: 1

      You raise a very good point that there is no difference between claiming that the Universe is self-creating or that a Creator is self-creating -- or that creation is not necessary for one or the other. However, we already know that creation is a necessary step for the Universe, since it has been proven to have had an origin.

      I believe, though, that you're taking the argument that both a self-creating Universe or Creator are equally logical, and so the extra step of adding a Creator seems excessive, like having an unfactored equation.

      For a little bit of fun philosophical metaphysics, consider this: the god of the Jewish and Christian faiths calls himself the "I Am"*, which also translates as the "To Be". It seems to me that their god claims that he ~is~ the very property of Existence itself.

      The difference between having a Universe or Creator as the origin of existence is basic: a Creator has a self-will, while a Universe doesn't.

      So while thinking about origins bends logic in any case, it seems a degree more logical for a Creator to be self-creating, since it would have a self-will, both possessing and being the source of all existential phenonema.

      The base of all existence to the philospher, if not to the scientist, is simply, "I am". Perhaps this is in fact God.

      And for that matter, even the scientist has to base all observations on the law of "I am" before any observations can be made. Call it a prayer to an implicit God. But in this sense, we all must be believers.

      * "I am" is translated in English Bibles as "the LORD". A real shame.

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    36. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by alexhohio · · Score: 0

      My question, the one that gives me a headache to think about- is if the big bang is the source of the universe, what was around that little speck of matter before it exploded (yes I know that is an elementary way to describe the big bang)? Does space end? If it does, what is on the other side? Where did the universe come from, or on the flip side, what/who created God? I wonder if we will ever have the answers to these questions in our lifetimes.

      --
      Almost every Harvard student was High School Valedictorian- After a year of college, half are in the bottom of the class
    37. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Ceyx · · Score: 1

      Actually Entropy (in the thermodynamic sense) S is NOT measured relative to something but defined as S:= -k_b*SUM_i(p_i*ln(p_i)), k_b being the Bolzmann konstant, p_i the probability of the state i and finally SUM_i the sum over all possible states i (Pretty hard to calculate ;-))

      Just nitpicking here, doesen't really change any argument above ;-)

    38. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by shaved_weasel · · Score: 1

      Life is full of paradox's and inconsistensies, but that doesn't mean that nothing exists.

      That doesn't mean that nothing exists??

      followed by.

      Just because you have the ability to talk in circles doens't mean that you've disproven the existance of God, or anything like that

      Like most religious view points I've read or heard, I don't get most of what this person is saying. Maybe I just can't visualize lying to myself.

      Since when did the limitation of humans perceptual faculties mean that we should just stop and say, well, the rest of the answer is GOD? I can imagine the scientists now saying..." you know that Quantum Mechanics stuff is just too hard...let's just say God and go have a beer." Is this some intellectual way of saying Uncle?

      FreakyControl writes Ever think that certain things are beyond the full understanding of the human mind?

      Yes, that's why we have science. To discover and understand what is out there.

    39. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Frymaster · · Score: 3, Insightful
      God is not cruel or deceptive.

      highly unlikely.

      1. god is omnipotent
      2. being ominipotent, the creation, alteration or elimination of any state or states requires zero effort or time.
      3. given that any action requires zero effort or time, the choice between performing and action and not performing an action for god boils down to only a choice of will or desire, not ability or effort or any other constraint.
      4. thus, action and inaction are, functionally, the same for an omnipotent god.
      5. children starve to death every day.
      6. god does nothing to stop this startvation.
      7. this inaction to prevent said starvation is the same as a direct action to cause it.
      8. deliberately causing children to starve to death is cruel.
      9. god is cruel

      ipso-frickin'-facto.

    40. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by m50d · · Score: 1

      OK, I'll rephrase, since we don't know of any natural process which can (ultimately) produce legos.

      --
      I am trolling
    41. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your child is very sick and needs to get a painful treatment, does that mean that you are cruel?

      If God even allowed to have his son die a painful death, then there must be something bigger going on for him to allow this. If you take a closer look at the bible, it says very clearly that all this pain and suffering is _temporarely_ to prove something very important to all intelligent creatures including the angles. Even God himself suffered by seeing his son get killed. So we are not the only ones who suffer. The bible further says very clearly that God will correct everything, and all pain and suffering will be forgotten by mankind. And that time is not here yet.

    42. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As Aristotle observed, everything in the observable universe changes and all those changes have causes. It is this nature of the observable universe (not its complexity as you say) which requires it to have a first cause by his thinking. For it to be a first cause, without a cause itself, it necessarily didn't follow the rules of the observable universe, and so should not be considered apart from it.

      Thus by logic alone he reached the essentials of the belief that Jews of the same era and before had from the writings of Moses, that the universe had a creator (YHWH), who was eternal and unchanging, and Who was by His own description the "I am" or the "to be".

      Which is also the point expanded on by the 18th century Christian philosopher Emanual Swedenborg, who says that within the essence of God is "Being" itself and "Coming-Into-Being" itself, and describes in some detail how God creates the finite (the universe) from the infinite (Himself). (See his book "Divine Love and Wisdom".)

    43. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Complexity *does* spring into existence without cause.
      Entropy is forever increasing. We are moving toward zero complexity.


      This reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of entropy. Entropy is actually a movement toward increased complexity at a molecular level. Consider, for example, the mixing of ink, an entropic process. When you initially add ink to water, all of the ink is in one place, and all of the water without ink is in another, a very simple system. Over time the molecules of ink become intermixed with the molecules of water in increasingly complex ways. This is really why entropy increases--there are more ways in which ink molecules can be intermixed with water than there are ways in which they can be segregated. The mixture is more complex. Life depends upon retaining certain configurations of matter of relatively low complexity. Entropic processes--such as random mutations and replication errors increasing the complexity of DNA--are crucial for evolution. All processes of life, including evolution, are ultimately driven by the tendency of entropy to increase. Without increasing entropy, we would all be dead.

      The earth is maintained in a nonequilibrium (submaximal entropy) state by energy from the sun. The thermonuclear reactions in the sun generate enormous amounts of entropy. Hence, the total entropy of the system (sun + earth) increases constantly, in agreement with the 2nd Law.

    44. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by BitterAndDrunk · · Score: 1
      unless, of course, you choose the losing side.

      Then your suffering will be eternal, thrown into the pit where there will be "wailing and gnashing of teeth".

      Which is certainly the sign of a benevolent creator, no?

      --
      You better watch out, there may be dogs about . . .
    45. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by thsths · · Score: 1

      > The claim "intelligent design is a valid alternative" is LOGICALLY FLAWED, and here is why:

      Actually, the reason is a lot simpler. "Intelligent design" is not a theory at all, because it does not explain anything. All it says is that live is as it is because it is designed by someone more clever then us, and so we should not bother to find out why it is as it is.

      Evolution can be tested, and it has been tested so many times, that it is very difficult to question on factual grounds. Intelligent design cannot be tested, and it cannot be used for anything useful either.

      I have no problem with the teaching of intelligent design, as long as it is not taught as a theory.

    46. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've tried to find web sites that present these arguments in simple language. There's not many. These were OK.

      http://www.doesgodexistanswer.net/

      http://www.leaderu.com/offices/billcraig/docs/crea tion.html

      http://www.iep.utm.edu/o/ont-arg.htm

    47. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      As a fundimentalist I think perhaps my views could be valuable. First, intellegent design does not contradict evolution. Intellegent design does not support evolution. It simply states that there probably was some intellegence involved in this phenominon we call "life."

      The concept of God is not inconsistent with science or evolution. The objections to intelligent design are not to the concept of an intelligent creator, but rather to the temptation to assert "God did it" as a sufficient and complete explanation of biological phenomena such as the origin of species. Evolution does not invalidate a role for God, because God could be intelligent enough not to have to micromanage the design of each individual species.

    48. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by eggnet · · Score: 1

      Anyway, I can visualise things with more than 5+ dimensions

      This is complete BS. Maybe you can visualize a 3d projection of it, because you've seen it. Maybe you can visualize a 3d+time projection of a 5d object because you've seen a computer generated projection with the viewpoint changing enough times to fool yourself.

      Or, maybe you've convinced yourself you really can visualize a 5d object, but it's nothing more than that.

    49. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      What you're talking about is philosopy and reasoning. If someone believes in Intelligent Design, this may not be through reasoning it out, it may be from faith.
      And that's the point: reasoning belongs in the classroom; faith doesn't.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    50. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by B'Trey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd love to see this. However, any teacher who explicitly takes on creationsim like this is very likely to lose his or her job. Creationist don't want creationism evalutated in a scientific light in the classroom. They want it taught as a plausible alternative to evolution, and no mention of it's inherent silliness discussed.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    51. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1
      Why would a complex entity outside of the universe not require an intelligent cause, but a complex entity inside the universe necessarily require one?

      It's because everything in the universe is observed to have a cause. Contrariwise, complex entities outside the universe have never been observed to have one.

      --Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    52. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by tjstork · · Score: 1

      There is a lot of those who use intelligent design to say silly things like radioactive dating doesn't matter and that the earth is actually 5000 years old as opposed to nearly 5 billion. It's one thing to take the deist view that says God designed things and set things in motion, which I believe. It is another to say that God made it all look this way but it is really not. Why would God lie?

      --
      This is my sig.
    53. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by naasking · · Score: 1

      >It doesn't matter whether or not the Creator is part of the Universe or not. If you can postulate that the Creator exists without cause, then you can postulate that the universe exists without cause.

      This is not necessarily true

      > If the complexity of the universe requires a Creator, then the complexity of the Creator requires a MetaCreator as well.

      Also not true. Does a fundamental force require a more fundamental force to explain it's existence? Accepting the existence of a creative force, does not imply that that force is somehow further reducible, or even necessarily complex at all. You r preconceptions of what constitutes a "creator" are causing the contradictions you see.

      In the above proof by Hatcher, the "Creator", whatever it may be, is part of the universe (not oustide it), but creates the universe.

    54. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Others have pointed out that they have seen scientist lose such arguments because they don't know how to deal with an argument.

      For example, you need to hammer home that science is basically built on one or two principles such as that a theory has to be falsifiable.

      Without knowing that you have to structure the argument with that foundation you end up having to fight "what makes your belief better than mine?" and you can never win that.

      Why am I arguing that one side (evolution) should win, rather than just let then argue about it? Well otherwise they might feel since the ID side won the argument, that is the correct theory.

    55. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by CloakedMirror · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You were right until point four. Action and inaction are not functionally the same, since the outcome of each is different. Since you use a ladder-form of argument all points after that are pointless at best, and more likely flawed.

      But, even if I ignore that you have built your arguments in such a poor manner, your whole hypothesis is flawed. You pre-suppose two things...
      1. God is cruel because children starve.
      This is wrong from every angle. Did God not provide all of mankind with enough resources to provide food for all of us? It is our irresponsible, and greedy, use of the resources He gave us that causes starvation throughout the world. It is our exercise of free will that causes suffering in this world.
      2. Inaction to prevent said starvation is the same as direct action to cause it.
      If this is the case then you are responsible for the starving children of the world. God created us all to help each other. Your inaction causes the pain and suffering of starving children that is every bit as bad as what you accuse God of. You have the ability to do good, but you don't because in your mind there is nobody to hold you accountable. God does good, even though there is nobody that can hold Him accountable.

      --
      Evolutionary thinking will move you down the road, revolutionary thinking will put you on a new road!
    56. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by shaved_weasel · · Score: 1

      Excellent links, thanks. Though, I would argue the simplicity of some of the information provided.

    57. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would just like to point out that the high modded posts in this thread are an extremely intelligent discussion, and that perhaps after the students are being taught evolution, this exact discussion could happen. If there was actually intelligent discussion like this in High School I might have actually showed up more. And if we shield our children from this discussion, and others like it, then aren't we being complicit in their ignorance.

      Of course they should have this conversation. In a philosophy course though, NOT a science course.

    58. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Retric · · Score: 1

      Nope I have never looked at 3d projections of 4d objects. But I did start by taking a box in 3d move it to make a 4d box. Now look at that it's 4d box with 16 corners. Do the same thing with a 4d box it's now got 32 courners and is a 5d box.

      Granted some of this stuff get's hard but so is working with complex 3d objects. A 4d box can have a 2d, or 3d lid. But does it need a 3d lid to take a 4d sphere out of it? Nope. but I kept wanting to say yes.

      The only realy odd part is 3d objects are flat in 4d space so you can stack as many of them as you want in a 4d box. Now the math guy in me goes L,W,B,A,B,C when thinking about a 6d object but I can still take a few 3d objects and stack them like cards in 4d space.

      Ok, rotations in 4d+ space are hard but I can't do that well in 3d space anyway so I will give ya that one if you want...

      Anyway, I don't see the big deal about it 4d+ objects is. They work like strings interchangable objects in 3d space but so do 5d objects in 2,3, or 4d space. Two 5d donuts in 5d space that are lined look like 3d donuts in 3d space but you can change the size / thickness of those 3d donuts by moving them through 5d space.

      The other way of looking at a 4d box is to take a 3d box and paint it from black to red along Lenght, black to green along W, and black to blue along H, a 4d box has black to white along 4th (a) so the box can get lighter or darker by moving the 4th (a) axis.

    59. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1
      And that's the point: reasoning belongs in the classroom; faith doesn't.

      Really? How do you prove the scientific method? Do you use the scientific method? If you do, aren't you being circular?

      -Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    60. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Retric · · Score: 1

      He could move in a second set of time where his actions change our time but he can go back and forth at will. Think an animator who keeps fliping the pages after each change he makes to any of them.

      Anyway, your wasting time if your going to argue with somone who beleaves in something with out cause and feels the need to bring others to there POV.

    61. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a continuation of this arguement.

      Me: "Who created the creator?"
      Them: "The creator always existed?"
      Me: "What did the creator do for the infinite amount of time prior to creating the first thing? If an infinite amount of time was spent without having created, what imperfection was there that caused the creator to create something?"

    62. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Gleapsite · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've seen this argument before, let me boil it down to the essence and then present the counter (do correct me if i misrepresent you in any way).

      Premises
      1. God is all powerfull and all knowing
      2. God allows evil to exist in the world.
      Conclusion
      1. God is evil.

      That is in essence my understanding of the argument. The counter is quite easy, yet offers no resolution to the problem (as does approxamately all theological arguments)

      Premises
      1. God is all powerfull and all knowing
      2. God allows good to exist in the world.
      Conclusion
      1. God is good.

      enjoy.

      --
      face the world with eyes of fire.
    63. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      He could move in a second set of time where his actions change our time but he can go back and forth at will. Think an animator who keeps fliping the pages after each change he makes to any of them.

      True. Of course, then he'd have to have a beginning himself...

      Anyway, your wasting time if your going to argue with somone who beleaves in something with out cause and feels the need to bring others to there POV.

      You're sadly probably right. These days I mostly argue points like this a) to keep my debating skills up to scratch and b) in the hope that someone'll come up with an interesting point that I need to think through.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    64. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      The essence of the scientific method is DIRECT OBSERVATION. Does direct observation require faith? I think not.

      The alternative, of course, is that everything you "experience" is actually just a figment of your imagination. In that case, why are you wasting your time imagining this?

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    65. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The original poster's point is valid. Why does intelligent design stop at the "creator"? Would it be blasphemy otherwise? If that's the case, then we're delving into the realm of superstiton.

    66. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Floody · · Score: 1

      My question, the one that gives me a headache to think about- is if the big bang is the source of the universe, what was around that little speck of matter before it exploded (yes I know that is an elementary way to describe the big bang)? Does space end? If it does, what is on the other side?

      Same thing that is inside a singularity.
      Next question?

    67. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Items one through four all feed into/from each other. No problem with that.

      Item 5 is not dependent on 4 or it's precedants, so it doesn't really belong unless you are starting a new construct. But, that's beside the point.

      Item 6 is where your logic breaks down. You have done/written nothing to support this statement. The key part is not the starvation but that God does nothing to stop it.

      Is it possible that your item 6 is wrong and therefore rest of your statements based on it?

      How about substituting:

      6. God provides a world that can produce more than enough food to feed everyone on it.
      7. Some of mankind has taken the resources provided it and hoards them, leading to further starvation. (20% of the population consumes 80% of the worlds resources).
      8. Deliberately causing children to starve to death is cruel.
      9. Man is cruel.

      See, if you remove the intentionally false statement, then logic follows and the true result is presented.

    68. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Verteiron · · Score: 0

      If more religious fundamentalists were as rational in the presentation of their beliefs as you are here, there would be fewer problems in the world.

      I disagree with you on almost every point you bring up, but it is your right to believe what you want. Thanks for presenting your point of view while respecting _my_ right to believe what I want.

      --
      End of lesson. You may press the button.
    69. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by alucinor · · Score: 1

      Well, whether one believes in a god or not, the blame rests not with god anyway, but with wealthy people who refuse to share, or else just distance themselves so conveniently from the problem.

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    70. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      1. thus, action and inaction are, functionally, the same for an omnipotent god.
      2. children starve to death every day.
      3. god does nothing to stop this startvation.
      4. this inaction to prevent said starvation is the same as a direct action to cause it.
      5. deliberately causing children to starve to death is cruel.
      6. god is cruel

      You assume that this starvation is not necessary or useful on a larger scale. I would argue that it is in fact the consequence of free will that leads to such suffering. If we didn't suffer the consequences of our (and others') actions, then we'd all be children. That children starve is lamentable, but eliminating all suffering by fiat robs us of our sovereignity. It robs us of our pain.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    71. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Premises

      1. God is all powerfull and all knowing
      2. God allows good and evil to exist in the world.

      Conclusion

      1. God does not want to get rid of either, good or evil. At least not right now.
      2. God is neither all-good nor all-evil
      3. I placed an order for new Mac mini.

      Speculation
      1. God is beyond good and evil
      2. There is no good and evil

    72. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > He simply exists, timeless and unchanging.

      If he is timeless unchanging, how could he create a universe? Why would he? If he is unbound by time, that means the things he created are timeless as well, and therefore the universe always existed. Certainly seems unlikely that only 10K years have passed since the timeless one changed his mind.

    73. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10. ?????
      11. Profit!

    74. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would argue that it is *we* who are cruel. If we devoted the time, energy and money we invest in everything else we do, we could easily prevent children starving to death. We just haven't figured out a way to get over ourselves yet. Maybe we're God's tool to prevent children from starving, and he is therefore not cruel, but really...that's missing the point.

    75. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Floody · · Score: 1

      Really? How do you prove the scientific method? Do you use the scientific method? If you do, aren't you being circular?

      You don't. It's not a theory, it's a method. Note the fact that it isn't called the "scientific theory", but rather the "scientific method."

      If your point is that the method doesn't "work", then how do you explain the ability to follow it and predict an experimental outcome accurately?

    76. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by BytePusher · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Frymaster, good thoughts. I think though, that your view is limited. I'll do my best to represent God in this case without saying something incorrect, but please realize that my understanding is limited as well.
      First, I would say that life and death must be viewed from a different perspective. From Isaiah 57 it is seen that, for some, death is not a punnishment, but a realease from the hardship of life. The point being is that our typical view of death does not fit God's view of death. The way God sees the world and the way we see the world is entierly different.
      Therefore, since the way we see the world is limited, because we lack information and understanding, we should be careful when judging God who sees all things.
      Another example is, that from God's view he would be completely justified if he decided to destroy the entire world. Yet he hasn't done it... yet. Men are the most evil kind of creatures. Those children aren't starving because there is not enough food in the world, but because some have too much and are unwilling to give to those in need. They are starving because men want power and money(Sudan for example). In 1st Peter we can read that God is patient, giving everyone the fullest chance to come to him and not be destroyed. From that view, he is kind if he only allows us to continue to live and does nothing to help or end oppression, hunger, injustice and so on.
      However, in his kindness and wisdom he chooses to be involved in this world in a way we understand as good, for our sake, that we would understand that he is good. He provides a way for us to be with him despite the fact that we deserve to be destroyed. That way is through Christ. He has provided for many who hate him their entire life. Why? Because he is kind.
      Think about children who often times(mostly in their teenage years) believe their parents are the most evil hateful people on the planet, but their parents are really doing the most loving and kind things they know how. They may not understand, perhaps they can't understand, but their parents still love them and care for thim. God is a much more loving father than any human father. We just often times can't see or understand what he's doing so we're angry.
      I hope that this clears up any confusion. Again, I am by no means skilled enough to represent God in a way that is complete, but I hope that what I've said is sufficient.

    77. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > creation is a necessary step for the Universe, since it has been proven to have had an origin.

      Can you provide a link (or even a simplistic explanation) as to how this has been proven? I have seen no such proof and would like to see it.

    78. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by skaffen42 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      OK, so how about this?

      Let us pretend I am a really rich guy. Because I am also a really nice guy I allow a destitute couple to move into one of my houses. Pretty soon the husband starts abusing his wife. He keeps her locked up in the basement, beats her and refuses to give her food. She is slowly starving to death and in great pain.

      I see all of this happening, but I don't interfere. It is not me killing the woman, so I am not being cruel. Even though I can help her at any time by calling the police, I just sit and watch her suffer.

      So is it OK for me to just sit there and watch her die? I guess it is, because I am only doing what God would do in the same situation. And we all know that God is good...

      --
      People couldn't type. We realized: Death would eventually take care of this.
    79. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by GenSolo · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter whether or not the Creator is part of the Universe or not.
      Actually, yes it does matter. The reason for this is that outside the Universe, space and time have no meaning (by definition of Universe as the container holding all space-time.. quibble as necessary). If space and time have no meaning, essentially everything we know (including causality) has no meaning because all of our observations are based on existance inside space-time. As such, outside the Universe, it is possible for an entity to simply exist without cause; however, inside the universe all events have a cause (traced back to the Big Bang where the cause is "we don't know because we don't know what happened before this point because space and time cease to make sense here").

      Also, note that some Creationists believe that God is the entire Universe and created it within Himself. Others believe that God contains the Universe and created it within Himself but also exists beyond the Universe. Others believe that God exists in some other "place" outside of the Universe and created the Unvierse outside of Himself. Only the last of these would even potentially require a MetaCreator as it implies some dimension and direction to this extra-Universal region (since it would contain at least two subregions, Creator and Universe).

      Is the outside of the universe a magical place where complexity springs into existence without cause?
      As time has no meaning outside of the universe, the concept of "springing into existance" has no meaning because the concept of "before" has no meaning. Thus, it's possible that outside of the universe, something exists without cause. Inside the universe, we can observe that this is not the case, but as we can't observe outside the universe, we have to accept the possibility that it could be the case there but not here.

      Hardly sounds like a scientific theory to me.
      No one knows because all of science is based on observations inside the universe. Frankly, the existance of "outside the universe" is mere speculation and hardly sounds like a scientific theory to me. On the other hand, the non-existance of "outside the universe" is equally unscientific speculation. The only scientifically valid statement about such a region is that we don't know anything about it. (Again, note that I'm referring to the universe, not a universe, the difference being that the universe contains all space-time whereas a universe contains all space-time at one point along a fifth or higher dimension of some sort, which may or may not exist.) The entire discussion can't be scientific because it assumes the existance of an "outside the universe", which we have no evidence for or against. Then again, the entire discussion of "before the Big Bang" is unscientific because we have no evidence for or against the existance of such a time (that is to say, the dimension of time may be finite).

    80. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      Circular reasoning is fun!

      1. God is omnopotent.
      2. If God exerts His will over people, as you assume, then our decisions are based on His guidance and preferences.
      3. More people drink tea than any other beverage (excluding water, of course).
      4. Since we like tea, He likes tea.
      5. A lot.
      6. No, I mean He REALLY likes tea.
      7. God is a tea cozy, alright?

      I can do this all day if you want. I could prove that God is His own naval lint if you want me to.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    81. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > The law is generally presented in it's simple form and only covers a closed system.

      That statement is used to point out that the Earth is not a closed system, but if we are talking about the Universe (we still are, right?), we don't know if it's a closed system of not -- we would have to be able to either observe it as a whole or observe something adding energy from outside the universe, both of which are (currently? eternally?) impossible.

    82. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Thangodin · · Score: 1

      Congratulations. By your narrow definition of science, you've managed to exclude several branches of physics, including astro-physics, where timelines are so huge that the future will, for our purposes, never arrive to be tested.

      Evolution is an ongoing process, and can be observed in species that exist today. In fact, that's where most of the research is done; evolutionary theory has its most pressing application in the study of new diseases. Evolutionary theory is an indispensible part of this. Stop teaching it, and you cripple medicine. There is also a wealth of evidence in the fossil record that can be used to test hypotheses.

      The argument with religion is that religion attempts to make claims about the world, which are blatantly false and have serious practical implications. Maybe you don't mind people lying and spinning BS to kids who can't tell the difference, but I do.

      You may not be religious, but you sure as hell don't know anything about science.

    83. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "creator created the Universe and is NOT part of it."

      This is my belief exactly.

    84. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1
      First, intellegent design does not contradict evolution. Intellegent design does not support evolution. Then why do proponents of Intelligent Design claim that their body of work is an alternative to evolution?

      Secondly, regarding God needing a creator. Most fundimentalists consider God to be even outside time. Unchanging, simply existing. The same tired, old, rhetoric. If you are content with an uncreated god that is far more complex and powerful than anything, why do you object to a much less complex uncreated universe? And, of course, there is no physical evidence at all for your outside-of-time creator.

      It's wrong to suppose that God created fossils to test men's faith. God is not cruel or deceptive.

      Of course, if you accept that fossils are what they appear to be, you have to give up on the idea of a literal interpretation of Genesis. Of which the literal story of Adam and Eve is a part. So once you admit that fossils are real, you pretty much end up with humans evolving from non-human, ape ancestors over a few million years.

      And I'll let slide that you imply that you are a better-informed spokesperson for the Christian Fundamentalists. What you say is directly contradicted by Dobson, Falwell, and many others who claim to speak for Fundamentalism.

    85. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by BytePusher · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ok, so I'm gonna try to reply to a number of comments, but my time is limited. So, here goes:

      Anonymous Coward: I disagree with you on this. The ID theory, as espoused by its biggest advocates (I'm thinking of Dembski, Behe, and Johnson, specifically) constitutes an attack on evolution.

      Me: Dembski, Behe and Johnson perhaps stretch the concept further than it should be taken.

      Anonymous Coward: I would also like to address the issue of fossils. Except you did not. Where did those fossils actually come from?

      Me: The fossils came from animals... often times big ones. I do often ask myself how does my understanding of fossils fit into my understanding of the age of the earth as recorded in the bible. It doesn't so one of my understandings is flawed, but I tend to believe my understanding of fossils is the one that is flawed. An interesting note is the discovery of soft tissue inside a T-Rex thigh-bone. That discovery has caused many scientists to realize their understanding of fossils is flawed as well.

      tgibbs: objections to ID and "god did it"

      me: ID doesn't go so far as to say, "God did it." There are many who believe, "aliens did it," who are also proponents of ID.

      tjstork: There is a lot of those who use intelligent design to say silly things

      me: A lot of people say silly things. :)

      Verteiron: If more religious fundamentalists were as rational in the presentation of their beliefs as you are here, there would be fewer problems in the world. I disagree with you on almost every point you bring up, but it is your right to believe what you want. Thanks for presenting your point of view while respecting _my_ right to believe what I want.

      Me: Thanks and thanks for respecting me. I agree. Really the issue comes down to fear. There is fear on both sides, which causes much of the irrationality. If you respond calmly, sometimes others will calm down as well.

      VernonNemitz and hesiod: "Unchanging" defines a pretty static situation. As in "unable to Create", because some sort of Change must occur within the Creator for that Act to happen.

      Me: This is a sort of fun thing to think about. I borrow my understanding from flatworld explorers(please google it). If the physical galaxy including time is 4D(or perhaps higher), then God being of a higher dimension than time could create it all at once essentially creating all time and all space at once. In fact it's possible that all time and all space are simply an expression of a timeless God and there could be and likely are many more aspects to God which will never be seen.

      Sorry if my spelling or grammar is off... I'm kinda rushing through this. I'm also sorry if I offended anyone or wrote too harshly. Please know that I intended no insult.

    86. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by BLAMM! · · Score: 0, Troll

      So anyone who thinks something different from you is a fool? You must be real fun at parties.

    87. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      After a few moments of stunned silence, I realized what a powerful objection this is. In fact, it's a universal acid, a show stopper. Its application is almost limitless. For example, people say that Mt. Rushmore was sculpted. But that does nothing to explain the origin of the sculptors! Similarly with respect to all examples in which we infer the activity of an intelligent agent. All those explanations fail to explain the origin of the agent itself, and are therefore unjustified. Therefore, we can never infer design in any case. Therefore, if you are reading this, you have no justification for inferring that someone has written this post. It's best just to stop the regress of explanation at the computer screen itself.

    88. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by hasdikarlsam · · Score: 1

      I don't *want* the pain; feel free to rob me of it.

      I'm probably not going to argue the point, but to me the notion that all pain is for the better ranks alongside deathism for sheer sophistry. Its only use is to justify the pain/death, and I refuse to believe there's any deeper meaning.

    89. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by hesiod · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > If your child is very sick and needs to get a painful treatment, does that mean that you are cruel?

      If you are a Christian "Scientist," treatment is not an option. But since you can manage to use a computer, I'll asume you are not one.

      Your hypothetical asks if you would trade suffering for a cure. The question was why would an uncruel god choose suffering AND death? Riches after life is great in theory, but if you want 6 billion people to believe you are all powerful and good , punishing them for being born in the wrong area is not the way to do it. I'm imperfect and I can figure that one out, yet your almighty can't get that simple concept through his dense fucking skull (assuming he had one)? We can only rely on what we see; I see needless suffering through inaction of man and, if you believe in one, inaction of a god.

      Allowing someone to suffer and die when you have do do the equivalent of "nothing" is cruel. No amount of handwaving and faith will change that.

    90. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Inzite · · Score: 1

      Great argument up until point 8. However, you can argue that deliberately causing children to starve to death serves some sort of greater purpose. For example, it could allow us to recognize the difference between pleasure and pain - if there were no pain, how would we be able to appreciate pleasure.

      Personally, I'm a big fan of causing children to starve to death. The more the merrier. It just allows me to better appreciate my pleasure. Unless, of course, the child starving is my own. But I'm working on a great degree in Computer Science, so I shouldn't ever have to worry about feeding my family. Right? ;*)

    91. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by _Potter_PLNU_ · · Score: 1

      It's pretty sad that you stretch so hard to try to show that God is cruel.

      That fact that children starve to death is not due to the cruelty of God, but the evils of mankind. We are given free will so that we may choose whether, or not, to be in commune with God. God allows us to make that choice, and other choices, for ourselves. Too often, people make wrong or even horrible decisions that result in the present, or future, repercussions.

      Yes, God could intervene if He wanted to. Why doesn't He? I don't know, nor do I assume to know why. You, sir, have displayed a sense of arrogance at judging God for not intervening. I contend that a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, and God, is more meaningful when one is given the choice rather than when we are forced to do so. That is what it would mean if God micromanaged everything, and always intervened.

      A child that stubs its toe accidently, and is caused pain, is not the fault of the father. Unless, of course, you expect the parent to constantly tell the child what to do, and not to do. Even so, the parent is not cruel for letting it happen. The father still swoops up the child in his arms and tells them "It's going to be okay."

      --
      "Hard work never killed anyone." -- Some Dead Guy
    92. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's pronounced "BOB".

    93. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by nacturation · · Score: 1

      You assume that this starvation is not necessary or useful on a larger scale.

      Necessary and useful starvation? Where have I heard that before? Hang on, I think I hear Godwin's Law calling...

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    94. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by arevos · · Score: 1
      If your child is very sick and needs to get a painful treatment, does that mean that you are cruel?
      God defined as an entity that is both omnipotent and omniscient. Your example is flawed, because it presumes that God cannot cure this sickness without pain; clearly, if God is omnipotent, he can.
    95. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Retric · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I said with out evidence. If you ask a 6 year old if there is a Santa they can think back and point out people talking about Santa, going to the mall and seeing Santa ect ect. But when was the last time you looked "God" in they eyes and said hi.

      Now some people says there is a god and others says there is not. But, if you assume your god is the only God feel free to point you evidence to the billions people that believe in god(s) but not you God.

      My father's first wife thought she could talk with god's only son. Yep, she spent years in an institution for believing the same thing many people do. Now why do I get to call her insane and people will agree with me (doctors and such) but people get upset when I call others with the same beliefs fools?

      I don't think you're a fool if you think the US is going to win more medals that China at the next Olympics. I don't think you're a fool if you think the US is going to win less medals that China at the next Olympics. But, if you're a 40 year old that believes in Santa then yea I will call you a fool.

    96. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      Uh... this is pretty far from a logical proof. Maybe you should look up Proof by Contradiction before you go spouting "Q.E.D."s. If anything, I'd say this is speculation.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    97. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by arevos · · Score: 1

      You're setting up a straw man argument. It is important to realise that the phrase, "God is not 100% good", is not logically equivelent to "God is evil".

      Good and evil exist in the world. Since God has the power to eliminate both, it may follow that God does not exclusively proscribe to either extreme.

    98. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      Complexity has to spring up out of nowhere. The idea of infinite recursion of causality is the only alternative to an abitrary complexity (one created without cause) which is a complexity in itself. Even if the causality of the universe and the meta-universe are infinitely recursive, that still doesn't exclude an abitrary complexity. The universe, nor meta-universe, nor any other itteration of this recursion need not exist, therefore it's existance is equally arbitrary. There's no way of getting around this, some elements of existence have to be arbitrary.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    99. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution does not invalidate a role for God, because God could be intelligent enough not to have to micromanage the design of each individual species.
      And by definition (omniscient) has to be at least that intelligent.

    100. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, all you did was walk around the "who created god?" question. If god always existed, why couldn't the universe/reality have always existed?

    101. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when do we know of any natural process which can ultimately produce a universe (Note: such a process would have to explain "before" the Big Bang)?

    102. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Dread_ed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "7. this inaction to prevent said starvation is the same as a direct action to cause it.

      The action that caused the suffering was perpetrated by mankind and is therefore wholly different in structure, content, and validity than if God himself had caused it. The reason? Mankind has free will and God has made provisions for the eternal lives of the children that are starving.

      "8. deliberately causing children to starve to death is cruel.

      MANKIND causes children to starve by his actions, not God. Therefore mankind is cruel, not God.

      In essence you have said that since God can clean up our messes easily he should do it even though he did not make them in the first place. You are also saying that God is responsible for the actions of mankind, and that mankind is not responsible for the contemporaneous repercussions of his actions. Please forgive me, but I do not want a God that hovers over the Earth waiting to wipe my ass for me when I soil myself, regardless of how many baby wipes he can conjure out of thin air or how softly he can rub my buttocks. Actions carry repercussions and people have to take responsibility for them, good or bad.

      Blaming God for the things that mankind does is an age old ploy. In fact, Satan does this many times in the Bible and with more subtltey and intillect than you have mustered in this attempt(no offence to your mental skills).

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    103. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Frymaster · · Score: 1
      That fact that children starve to death is not due to the cruelty of God, but the evils of mankind.

      okay. how about polio? are people who get polio "evil"? are they being punished for a sin? are they undergoing a punishment for the evil of others?

    104. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      I hate to interject reason here.

      highly unlikely.

      god is omnipotent

      This is NOT a necissary constraint for a deity. If we start with the proposition that there is at least one creator deity, that does not necissarily imply omnipotence. This is an invalid assumption.

      being ominipotent, the creation, alteration or elimination of any state or states requires zero effort or time.

      This does not follow from omnipotence, not expilicitly anyways. The ability to do something does not imply anything about effort, it is merely a statement of what can be accomplished.

      given that any action requires zero effort or time, the choice between performing and action and not performing an action for god boils down to only a choice of will or desire, not ability or effort or any other constraint.

      thus, action and inaction are, functionally, the same for an omnipotent god.


      If you first two postulates necissarily followed from a creator god, you'd have a valid point here.

      children starve to death every day.

      god does nothing to stop this startvation.

      this inaction to prevent said starvation is the same as a direct action to cause it.

      deliberately causing children to starve to death is cruel.
      god is cruel

      Devils advocate time on this one. You forgot step 6.5, from God's point of view, what happens on Earth is neccissary something that is matter of concern for the deity. This matter matter of concern is at the very foundation of good vs. evil. This of it like this are YOU evil for killing ants when you step on them?

      Even given omnipotence, which isn't necissary for a creator god, there is no reason to declar that the ability to do something implies the need to do something. This deity could be spending all it's time trying to save another deities eternal existence, or something like that.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    105. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      c) why said entity would stick around after creation to fiddle with the lives of some carbon-based fluff on one planet in a vast universe.
      Uhm, if said entity is timeless, the concept of "sticking around" seems rather meaningless. If he simply exists without regard to space or time (as the theologies generally involved in this discussion consider an omnipresent deity), it seems impossible for him to do anything but "stick around". Why said entity would fiddle with any part of the universe (note, with infinite time, if you're going to fiddle with any of it, why not fiddle with all of it) is beyond me, but I suppose that's rather the point, isn't it?

    106. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the outside of the universe a magical place where complexity springs into existence without cause? Hardly sounds like a scientific theory to me.

      The problem is that we humans tend to frame everything with respect to our known universe. Our science only works with respect to our known universe and is therefore limited to it. Is it therefore so difficult to believe that an existance outside of our known universe may operate by a set of laws which we as humans are entirely incapable of comprehending? (such as eternal existance, an uncreated intelligent Creator, etc.) To demand that every theory be backed by human science is closed minded in that it makes the assumption that our own known universe is the beginning and end of all existance. In the same light, the only way we humans can have knowledge of an existance beyond our own universe is by divine revelation. Most world religions are based upon a claim of unique knowledge of divine revelation. Christianity, the faith of most creationists, is unique in my experience, in that it gives the only satisfying explanation of our human condition in relation to a loving and compassionate Creator. It is also unique in that it is the only faith whereby salvation from death, as with revelation itself, is a gift from the Creator rather than a possible earned reward for sufficient human striving.

    107. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      The New Testament, The Qur'an and The Book of Mormon could all be seen as "Expansion Packs" to the Torah and Talmud.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    108. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      The argument would have to do with the creator being outside of time which governs the physical world. (i.e. a start and an end) You have to add infinity to the characteristics of a creator. No begining, no end and imposible to measure by running tests. Not trolling just something else to think about besides getting off work.

    109. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      I don't have a problem with you believing what you believe. I choose toe disagree.

      I do have a problem when people use the political process to mandate that what they believe in be taught in science classes, when it is very clearly not science.

    110. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God always was always has been and always will be.

    111. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the creator, time means nothing. No time passed before creation, and no time has passed for the creator since creation because time only exists within the creation. The creator exists in a state of perpetual-now. It's always now and it always was now and it always will be now for the creator. For us, this makes no sense, but we're just a bunch of hydrocarbons bouncing around on a big rock, so what the hell do we know?

    112. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by zokrath · · Score: 1

      Luckily for the numerous suffering chilcren of the world, The Lord has a special place reserved for them in Heaven, and the wonders of eternity shall infinitely outnumber the woes of this existence.

      Furthermore, God maintains a fairly 'hands off' policy since the birth, death, and resurrection of Christ. He now works primarily through the good will of humans, rather than by raining manna down on hungry masses.

      If God made sure that all of would-be hungry children were not, then why stop there? Prevent all crime and cruelty, stop all wars and disease, disallow natural disasters and catastrophes.

      And then without a doubt we would become spoiled and weak, and free will would become nonexistent.

      Those children are starving not because God is cruel, but because humanity is cruel. Overpopulation and a lack of concern from most of the 'civilized' world are human problems, not divine ones. It is up to the more fortunate to help the less so.

      Should an professional trainer come in during a little league baseball game and train some of the less athletic children? Sure those children might not enjoy being less able than the star players on that little diamond, but compared to the potential joy of the rest of their lives, such unhappiness is miniscule. Furthermore, it is up to the parents and coaches to improve and encourage the children, not an outside force whoc an guarantee success with no effort.

    113. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by bbtom · · Score: 1

      "intelligent design does not contradict evolution".

      What of the work of Michael Behe? The very method used by Behe contradicts evolution and scientific practice. We start out with a problem - how do complex things form? - and we can either come up with a solution (ie. a series of progressive steps guided by natural selection towards a useful end prouct) based on the evidence and information or we simply say "that's too complicated for science, we must invoke the Intelligent Designer". The latter explanation does not answer the question in any useful or meaningful manner. It's not science.

      Evolution is science, since it does provide us with useful and meaningful information that "gee, we don't know how this happened, therefore god did it" doesn't. It says: "this complex progression of steps happened, and we can look further in to it and find more and more steps, with multiple different organisms and little routes that evolution can take".

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    114. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the state of the art in these arguments is that since the big bang started time and space itself, it created all the tools with which we have to understand the universe with as well.

      So God may have caused the big bang, since 'something' had to cause it. And, therefore, God lives outside of and unbounded by that time/space that he created. Since our tools (logic, measurement, etc.) are bounded by time/space, we can never say that God did not start the big bang. However, we can also never say anything 'about' God. By postulating his existence beyond the reach of our understanding, this argument has also made God irrelevant.

      God 'of the gaps' has now been pushed back to the only foreseeable gap that can never be closed.

    115. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Neat proof. Flawed as a proof of God, but neat. Among other things, it assumes that everything must have a cause, which is far from proven. It ignores the possibility of infinite regression - an infinite series of causes with no end. The unique, self-caused phenomenon, which Magi (Magi - wiseman, hmmm....) calls God can just as easily be called "The Universe."

      Fundamental forces don't require a more fundamental force to explain them. But if you accept fundamental forces, then you can't argue that a force requires God to explain it. If you lose the requirement for a Metacreator, then you also lose the requirment for a creator. You can't have it both ways.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    116. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Alexei · · Score: 1

      Since the term "created" implies both change and some dependence on time... That's the problem I have with this line of reasoning. Why would an eternal and unchanging God decide to create a universe? An unchanging God can't "come to a decision" or "take action" because those events imply change.

    117. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by m50d · · Score: 1

      AIUI quantum fluctuations allow particles to appear at random. Given long enough that would result in the appearance of a universe.

      --
      I am trolling
    118. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Physics+Dude · · Score: 1
      So, tell me what is logically wrong with an "endless recursion of intelligent designers"?

      See what a math degree will do to your thinking process. ;)

    119. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by bbtom · · Score: 1

      You are making the flaw of thinking that science only deals with what we do now. What about forensic science? Or archaeology? Forensics is a science: it uses scientific tests and principles to determine whether historical events happened, and to help piece together a story - the rubber matches up with the car tyre. The fact that there is a skid from a tyre doesn't "prove" that the guy robbed the store, but it can corroborate other evidence.

      If you saw a man walk in to a store, pull a gun out and point it at a member of the staff, steal some money, got DNA evidence from some sweat that hit the floor during the robbery, matched the bullets in the gun to the type of gun he's got a licence for, and had a couple of eyewitnesses see him pulling away at high speed, you'd be able to say the guy committed robbery. You could then predict that if he did commit the robbery, he wouldn't have been home at a certain time, he wouldn't have answered a phone call that his friend made at that time, or wasn't there when his neighbour popped round to borrow a teaspoon. Each of these little things goes to support the theory that this guy did it. That theory could be wrong, but we build up all the pieces.

      Similarly, with evolutionary theory, we can predict "based on what we know, if you go and look here, you'll probably find this type of fossil". You go there, start excavating, and, shortly after, you've found yourself the fossil you're looking for. As you fit more pieces of a puzzle together, you get a better and better idea of the picture and a better idea of where the different pieces go. This is the predictive power of evolutionary theory.

      Science deals with historical facts. Evolution is one of those facts.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    120. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by bbtom · · Score: 1

      I'm reckoning that Bush will use that as a justification for the War on Terror to get Silicon Valley supporting it:

      "Hey nerds, those terrorists read the Quran. Guess what that's like? *SERVICE PACK 2*!!!"

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    121. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by ChatHuant · · Score: 1

      Complexity *does* spring into existence without cause. Entropy is forever increasing. We are moving toward zero complexity. Either entropy hasn't always been increasing, or the universe started with full complexity

      Your reasoning is faulty, because it's based on a misunderstanding of the principles of thermodynamics. All the principles of thermodynamics require is that the global entropy stay constant or increase. That does not in any way preclude local variations. Entropy can very well decrease locally at the expense of an increase in entropy in other parts of the universe.

      That's how life works: it uses energy from various sources to decrease its entropy. The energy that the lifeform needs to maintain its complexity (and therefore local low entropy) is degraded and dumped into the environment as heat, body wastes etc. That leads to a net increase of global entropy in the universe, but allows the lifeform to exist.

    122. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your interesting contribution, it's always great to hear a view from the other side of the fence. A couple of points of interest:

      First, intellegent design does not contradict evolution. Intellegent design does not support evolution. It simply states that there probably was some intellegence involved in this phenominon we call "life." It does not go so far as to state where the intellegence resides, whether it is in God or mice.

      I'd disagree with this - the system of thought known as the theory of evolution is clear on the subject of intelligent (in the personal sense) action not being required. In fact this was one of the prime reasons that scientists of the time tended to support the argument - it meant you could cut out that big messy assumption that was God. Bacteria are not noticeably intelligent (sensitive, yes, but not intelligent), and yet the theory of evolution applies to them too.

      Most fundimentalists consider God to be even outside time. Unchanging, simply existing.

      This is something I've been giving some thought to lately. In particular, I can't see any way that an unchanging thing, whatever its nature, could behave in a way that we would consider to be intelligent. Without time there is no thought, no feeling, no gathering of information, no action. Time is an enabler, not a restriction; a timeless God would have to have every single one of his actions on this universe hardwired in advance. I find this far more improbable than evolution.

      It's wrong to suppose that God created fossils to test men's faith.

      How do you square this with the fact that the fossil record + radio carbon dating seems to imply evolution? Examples of this are the gradually increasing complexity of life (movement from diploblast to triploblast, from cartilage to bone, etc) and the existence, in some cases, of clear intermediate stages (e.g. feathered dinosaurs).

      God tests men's hearts by providing every reason to believe.

      Factually inaccurate - a big neon sign saying "I WOZ ERE" would be another (non-extant) reason to believe. Less sardonically, I'd note that, of those who study the world around them (who we call scientists), only 5% or so are creationist and, of the life sciences and other fields in which the participants would be expected to be especially well-read on evolution vs. creationism, only 1% are creationist. Figures taken from this summary. I wouldn't tend to label a concept rejected by the majority of professional thinkers on the subject as being obvious.

      Thanks again for participating. I'd be interested to hear your views, but I will of course respect your wishes if you do prefer not to argue. Only by challenging our views can we confirm or disprove their validity.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    123. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by SilvergunSuperman · · Score: 1

      This may not be worth my time, but a logical person will at once see that point "8. deliberately causing children to starve to death is cruel." is a judgement based on personal belief, and not a scientific fact. Cruelty cannot be proven or disproven based on science, since it is an ethical argument. The belief that "God is not cruel" is a statement based on the belief that all action or inaction on his behalf is motivated by something other than cruelty. Therefore any logic argument proving cruelty can be immediately argued away by saying "God is not cruel, therefore..."

    124. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by naasking · · Score: 1

      Among other things, it assumes that everything must have a cause, which is far from proven.

      Ask any physicist whether there are non-causal events; you will receive a resounding 'no'. Ask them to prove it, and you'll get funny looks.

      No one can prove the non-existence of non-causal phenomenon. So, until we witness one, we operate on the premise that causality holds. I personally suspect that causality has deep roots in the foundations of logic itself, but that is merely a suspicion at this point.

      It ignores the possibility of infinite regression - an infinite series of causes with no end.

      Actually, it does not. The self-caused phenomenon, G, is itself an infinite 'causal loop' (if you can even think of it that way), causing itself, and the birth of the universe.

      The unique, self-caused phenomenon, which Magi (Magi - wiseman, hmmm....) calls God can just as easily be called "The Universe."

      The proof demonstrates that "The Universe" (as defined) cannot cause itself. If you have another definition for "The Universe" other than that presented in the proof, then perhaps you are right. The definitions in the proof are fairly basic and make sense however, so you'd be hard pressed to justify changes.

      The proof also demonstrates that G, cannot be a composite element (ie. it has no constituent components), thus the universe is already ruled out since "the universe" is "the set of all things" (ie. it is a set with constituent elements).

      Fundamental forces don't require a more fundamental force to explain them. But if you accept fundamental forces, then you can't argue that a force requires God to explain it.

      I think you are tripping yourself up, as you are caught up in your preconceptions of "God". Why cannot God itself be a fundamental force? This is essentially what the proof demonstrates, a creative element of the universe.

      The true flaws in the 'proof' are addressed in the follow-up comments. Additionally, the association of logical implication ('->') with causation seems dubious, but other than that, it is sound as a *logical* proof. The assumptions may be unsound, and any connotations of using the term 'God' to describe the 'creator' element may be dubious, but they are outside the proof's scope.

      In summary, the proof itself is not flawed. The foundation upon which it is based may be however, as may be be any further associations we may wish to make of the conclusions.

    125. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Frostalicious · · Score: 1

      god is omnipotent

      It is clear to me that God of the bible is NOT omnipotent. He took 6 days to create the world, then rested. There are many other examples but this one is pretty clear.

    126. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by alucinor · · Score: 1

      Well, I'll correct myself: I suppose maybe it hasn't been completely proven, but with the observation of the cosmic background radiation of the big bang, it seems to have been created at some point. By "created" don't just assume I'm talking about divine creation, just cause and effect. I don't think, though, that many scientists talk about a non-created, ever-existing universe anymore. I just assumed that since this has left the discussion, it must have been proven somewhere.

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    127. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by ashayh · · Score: 1

      Whose god are you talking about ? The idea of god and ID does not begin and end with christianity or judaism.

      If you've read the Quran, it repeatedly mentions how god has 'blinded' the enemies of believers. Or how god has 'hardened' the hearts of non-believers. Or how it is god's will that non-believers will never find the 'true path' to allah.

      Hinduism repetedly talks about how gods come down to earth to deceive humans.

      Creationism != Christian Fundy creationism.
      All other religions have creationist beliefs. If you are standing up for your god or your ID beliefs, it is up to you to prove why only YOUR beliefs are correct and the Hindu/Buddhist/Egypy/Greek/Inca/Eskimo/Scientology beliefs are wrong.

      After all, these other people 'believe(d)' in their god and ID theory equally fervently. It is up to you to prove why ONLY the bible is correct.

      Many fundimentalists do not understand the nature of God as described in the scriptures, but rather the nature of God as described by poorly trained teachers.

      These 'other' creationists will say the same thing about you.Why are they wrong and you right? Their 'proof' is the same as yours: high-horsed assumption.

      There is only ONE truth.

    128. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Necessary and useful starvation? Where have I heard that before? Hang on, I think I hear Godwin's Law calling...

      Better check your ears - there is no hint of racism in what I am saying. People are starving because of the actions of others. Frequently, their rulers have sold them down the river. If nobody was starving, then there would be little chance of someone like Charles Mugabe or Kim Jon Il being assasinated or overthrown. Fact is, our suffering at the hands of George III is what is responsible for our country being here in the first place.

      This struggle is the very thing that defines us as humans.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    129. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by alucinor · · Score: 1

      I said this in the context of a self-creating universe, in which the universe is its own creator, which is the scientific view -- and frankly, the only view science can really take.

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    130. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by naasking · · Score: 1

      Fundamental forces don't require a more fundamental force to explain them. But if you accept fundamental forces, then you can't argue that a force requires God to explain it.

      Forgot to address this...

      You make a good point, and yet the G does not attempt to explain the operation of other fundamental forces, but their existence; I think we're tripping ourselves up with the word "fundamental" here. A force would be fundamental in that it cannot be explained by further reduction into an interaction between more 'fundamental' elements.

      The proof implies the existence of G, an element that creates all other elements in existence, but has nothing else to do with them. The existence of G does not reduce the operation of the electromagnetic force any further, thus, EM is no less a fundamental force. If G hadn't created charged particles at all, then EM wouldn't even enter the picture.

    131. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      I don't *want* the pain; feel free to rob me of it.

      Fine, enjoy life as a pet.

      I'm probably not going to argue the point, but to me the notion that all pain is for the better ranks alongside deathism for sheer sophistry. Its only use is to justify the pain/death, and I refuse to believe there's any deeper meaning.

      Not all pain is for the better, but arguing that all pain is wrong or that removing all of it is somehow a good thing is utter foolishness. When there is no pain, there is no desire for change.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    132. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your analysis in point 3. is off, and this error is carried through the rest of your arguement. It is true that God, being an omnipotent being could trivial end all pain and suffering, not just feed starving children. However, is it creulty or apathy the only explanation for God's lack of interference?

      Think about not just this case, but every injustice, harm, or evil in the world. What if God made all that disapear and remove all human vices instantly (because that's what it would take to keep people from doing harm to each-other), and he would insure that no problems ever happen again? Now you have a world were no one suffers, everyone loves everyone else, and ever person's need is satisfied.

      On the surface it sounds like paradise. Yet, think about if we substitute another agent for God, say an all powerful government. For the sake of arguement, let's say that this government is totally uncorrupt and genuinely acts out of the willingness to help everyone. Even given that a lot of people (especially some "vocal" slashdot posters) would rail against it, even if every want or need of their own was fulfilled.

      The reason for this is that the only way this can truely come about is by removing a person's ability to choose their actions completely. In the case of an earthly entity this would likely be done by some sort of coercion, force, or other manipulation. God could just make people incapable of hating or hurting each-other. In either case, people would not really be in control of their lives.

      I find it odd that many of the same people that complain about human third parties trying to control their lives have, problems with the concept of a supreme benevolent being not electing to do the same thing. I guess even most atheists trust God more than they do their fellow human beings. Seriously though, God doesn't prevent every tragedy because it would ultimately render our free will meaningless.

      The price of our ability to choose our actions is that we are imperfect beings in a imperfect universe. A perfect being, even one living in an imperfect universe, wouldn't really have a choice because they would do the right thing. Conversely, an imperfect being's choice would be meaningless if they were completely protected and provided for regardless of their actions.

    133. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your theory lacks context. Here's an analogy... Through your isolated view, you would also agree that cutting off a person's leg is cruel. What if cutting off that person's leg is the only way to save his life from a gangrenous infection? Here, you can certainly see there is a greater good behind this seemingly cruel action.

      I am not saying that children are like gangrene (well... most children). What I am saying is that there's a lot more involved to every action or inaction that God makes. And considering that only He is omniscient, there are reasons for Him allowing disasters to happen that are far beyond human comprehension...

      <><

    134. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The flaws that I see in your argument are that point 5 (" children starve to death every day. ") is unproven. This should probably be reduced to the more easily provent "children starve to death" at times (which, unlike the former statement, is almost certainly true).

      The second flaw in your argument is point 8 (" deliberately causing children to starve to death is cruel "). This, too, is merely an assertion.

      But perhaps the most significant flaw is point 1, that "god is omnipotent ". The statement is true only for very limited meanings of "omnipotent". Even Jewish and Christian doctrine deny your definition, since there are some things God cannot do (for example, lie, if Hebrews 6 is to be believed).

      There is also the issue of free will (assuming you aren't a hypercalvinist). But of course, most people would like to ignore this issue because it shows who is really responsible for child starvation. In other words, you asserted that "Children starve to death every day". If that is true (i.e., if we accept the validity of point 5 and 8 of your argument), then that means you are aware of it. Yet, instead of sending that starving child an MRE (UPS will deliver just about anywhere, so don't try to use the "I can't do anything about it" escuse), you instead try to blame your sin of inaction on God.

      God isn't starving that child; you are. Far from proving that God is cruel, you have only proved instead that you are. cruel. Of course, this brings up the question of why a loving God would create such a cruel bastard as yourself, but perhaps it was to motivate the rest of us. Of course, that still doesn't explain why he would let you know where all the starving children are, rather than give that information to someone who might actually do something about it.

    135. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grow a forebrain and join the world of the THINKING.

      Belief in an imaginary, invisible man in the sky who grants wishes is tribal behaviour that serves only to comfort those who are unwilling or unable to think for themselves. This blind faith has, historically, served the primary purpose of enslaving those weak-minded individuals to serve the whims of other men.

      There is no such thing as god... (nor the Tooth Fairy, Santa Claus or the Boogeyman)

    136. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by halber_mensch · · Score: 1
      Mankind has free will and God has made provisions for the eternal lives of the children that are starving.
      But again, you're back to square one in this argument because god could by action or inaction cause mankind to not have free will, which by your definition is what allows mankind to cause suffering.

      So, again we have god making inaction to prevent the starvation, which is the same as a direct action for an omnipotent being, which is a malicious action.

      I'm not necessarily saying I support the parent argument, but you are competing on the grounds of logic here and your counterargument is an appeal to false authority at worst and circular argument at best.
      --
      perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"
    137. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by BytePusher · · Score: 1

      I am Christian and I clearly stated that I was talking about the God named by YHWH. If you read the article, "fundimentalist" refered to Christian Fundimentalists. Regarding ID theory, I was basing my statements off of the most basic understanding of ID, which does not directly refer to God. Some believe aliens did it. I didn't go so far as to talk about why ONLY the bible was correct, nor did I attempt to prove anything. I simply stated my beliefs and of course I think I'm right.

    138. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by snilloc · · Score: 1
      stipulating a definition always tends to make things simpler, regardless.

      my primary problem w/ your definition is that it uses the word "Creator" in a way that seems to me to be contrary to any previous definition. I can stipulate that "peanut butter sandwich" =df "pickles with wasabi", but that doesn't give me a useful definition.

      So...er... Your premise is flawed.

      FYI, a big component of Intelligent Design is logical criticism of evolution. A biggie is "irreducible complexity" - or the idea that there are some complex systems (ecosystems, organic systems, etc.) that could not have evolved gradually because each component is necessary for the system to exist and there is no benefit to a partial implementation of the system. There are arguments back and forth on this issue, but if criticism based on logic is out of bounds or "pseudo science", then that doesn't say much about the scientific-ness of atheistic-evolution.

      -BA Philosophy, Political Science, U Rochester.

    139. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      If you do postulate that the universe can exist without cause, then you negate all of the cosmology on how the universe came to exist (such as the big band, etc.)

      I'm not sure you want to go there, because if the universe can exist without cause that means it exists outside the natural order of things, because the natural order is for cause and effect.

      Taking it a step further, the universe does exist which means it is outside of nature.

      If the universe is outside of nature, then it's nature of existence of being outside of nature is it's cause and therefore the universe has a cause.

      Since nothing can have and not have a cause, there must be a flaw in your reason and it goes back to your original hypothesis of the universe existing without cause.

      Note, none of this presupposes that the cause in question is God. It is just that that the universe has a cause. Note, also, that none of this makes any statement as to whether God or the Creator in the original post exists without a cause, that would be another logic flaw (if a then b does not mean b therefore a).

    140. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      it seems impossible for him to do anything but "stick around".

      True, my wording there was ever so slightly dumb... Cheers for calling me on it.

      Why said entity would fiddle with any part of the universe (note, with infinite time, if you're going to fiddle with any of it, why not fiddle with all of it) is beyond me, but I suppose that's rather the point, isn't it?

      My question was more how than why. How can a timeless being perform an action? The very concept implies that there is something in existence now (the action) that wasn't in existence then. And if he can't perform actions, if the only behaviours he can have are those that are intrinsic to his very nature, then how can he be said to be intelligent? Such a God would be blind - unable to detect stimuli, unable to react, unable to even realise that there was something apart from itself in existence.

      All this would mean that God could only act in the way that was hardwired into him. Anthropomorphising such an entity is like anthropomorphising the cosmic background radiation, and such a God would be just as random - why should the hardwiring be set up in such a way that said God would interfere with any of its creations in such a way that it helped life evolve? The chances of that happening make the chances of, for example, a human eye jumping from nothing seem like falling off a log.

      I'm getting sleepy now and am probably repeating myself so I'll stop. However, like I say, I'd be wary of accusing God of timelessness without thinking through the consequences.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    141. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by boethius · · Score: 1

      Mmm... I wouldn't say ipso-facto.

      Man is in the habit of placing his view of what God "should" do all the time, simply because he could do it.

      God "should" have prevented 9/11.
      God "should" have stopped the bombings today in Iraq.
      God "should" have prevented a friend of mine from having her son hit on his bike and killed.
      God "should" have prevented a small child from dying of leukemia today.
      And, God "should" prevent children from starving every day.

      God "should" do it because he could it. He is clearly a cruel God because He doesn't stop horror, violence, cruelty, starvation. Yes, this makes perfect sense. In fact, it makes perfect sense to me too, ipso-facto or otherwise.

      However, I believe this is clearly man's philosophy attempting to compete with God's philosophy.

      As a Christian, I believe there is a reason why God does the things He does even when we are unable to fathom it. In fact, He usually does the things He does and we will probably always be mostly unable to fathom it all.

      As a rational, thinking, reasonable person this is still very, very hard for me to understand and grasp. Few people wouldn't stop all pain and suffering if they were capable of doing so--so why doesn't God?

      Perhaps children--and people in general--starve so that we will be moved with compassion to help them. This does happen, daily.

      Perhaps a child--the most innocent of all--dies of leukemia to cause us to value our own lives and the lives of other children that much more. Perhaps it persuades some to drive toward better treatments for leukemia--a far more treatable and effectively curable disease than it was 30 years ago--and other cancers.

      Perhaps horror and violence occurs to cause us to question our motives in committing acts of horror and violence in the first place. God gave us free will to decide to commit acts of horror and violence, after all. Though the force behind such acts may be evil, they did not happen out of the blue by some vague and mysterious force. Humanity willfully commits such acts against itself, daily, around the globe, and not just in Iraq or Afghanistan or NYC on 9/11. It's no revelation that violence and horror has been consistent with man's behavior and character for many thousands of years.

      It is also possible we should see what is bad and horrible in this world in order to convince ourselves that there is an alternative both to this world and to the behavior that causes horror and violence.

      If life were free of horror, violence, pain, suffering, and oppression--in other words, free of consequences--I seriously doubt that we as a species would (dare I say it?) evolve.

      I believe it is possible that God's purpose is not to make us wonder so much why He doesn't do what he "should" do and instead wonder why we do not do what we should do.

    142. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by BytePusher · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the polite response. Of course I'd like to talk more about the subject. I reccomend you go back and look at the post I made responding to the many responses.

      Regarding ID contradicting evolution... perhaps you're right, but it depends on your definition of evolution. First cell? Speicies level? Sub-species, etc... The way I see it, evolution on some level has been observed(bacteria, sickle cell, dog breeds). I am personally a creationist, but I'm open to the idea that God can do whatever he wants and that I could perhaps(gasp!) interpret scripture incorrectly. I don't really find the evolution-creationism debate interesting. Something happened, we're here and I believe in God.
      Most of your other comments have been addressed in a comment I made at the same thread-depth as your comment.

    143. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by arminw · · Score: 1

      ..."He who exists."...

      Indeed true! In fact when they came looking for Jesus to arrest Him in the garden they asked who they were looking for. Then He answered them "I am" the same phrase given at the burning bush you are alluding to. The result was that they all fell over onto the ground, a detail that many readers miss. The self existing One become human, revealed for an instant that He is God and the enemies fell over as if dead.

      Science is very good at answering "how" questions, how things work, but is bad at "when" questions and even worse at answering "why" questions. Answering "when" questions and as to when things began or when things may end always requires making assumptions largely based on the observable present. To try to answer for example when the Grand Canyon was formed requires making certain assumptions about erosion rates, climate and who knows what else. Scientific asssumptions are really faith based since no one was there to see the Grand Canyon getting formed. The millions or billions of years postulated for these "when" questions of long ago are based on the assumption (faith) that the processes we see or can imagine today may be reasonably be mapped back in time.

      We see no fossils being made today, because when a living organism dies it is generally decomposed and its parts are recycled by other organisms. Only in the absence of oxydation and decay causing organisms is it possible to make a fossil. The existence of fossils therefore implies a removal of both of these and perhaps other decay causing mechanisms in a short time frame. This means that at the time fossils were made there was a large, world wide discontinuity of some kind that prevented the presently known mechanisms of decay from operation on a large number of the then existing life forms. Modern science cannot deal with such discontinuities since it is impossible to make any reasonable, let alone correct assumptions about them from our present perspective.

      Answering "when" questions in the opposite direction, the future, is even more problematic. In predicting "Gobal Warming" for example a large number of assumptions are made which most likely are wrong. Some so called scientists think they can predict the climate in a hundred years, yet can't even accurately predict the next day's weather at times.

      It is amusing to read some of the predictions of the past concering almost any conceivable subject and then compare this with what actually took place. Man is singularly bad at prediction of the future. God challenges humans to be godlike by accurately predicting the future. (Isaiah 41:23)

      When it come to the "why" questions, science specifically and humanity in general is totally at a loss. Why are we even here? Are you really an accident whose ancestors way back have crawled out of the primordial slime? Why are the laws of physics so exactly the way they are, so we could exist and observe them? Philosphers and sages have wrestled and are still debating these "why" questions.

      Left to ourselves we will never find an answer, but the One eternal self existing God has given us an answer, a revelation we can BELIEVE if we so choose to or not. He who exists totally outside of our space-time dimensionality, came and limited Himself to time and space, became human, in order to communicate to us in an understandable way, who He is and why we are here. The Bible, chronicles some of answers to the "why" questions. God tells us that He has chosen the criterion of FAITH to determine a relationship to Him. Faith is universal to all mankind, unlike intelligence, wealth, health, location or any other human activity or quality. Anyone can believe or not.

      --
      All theory is gray
    144. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Zphbeeblbrox · · Score: 1

      Intelligent design can indeed be tested. And has been tested. Just like Evolutions has been tested. Neither one has arrived at conclusive proof.

      --
      If you see spelling or grammatical errors don't blame me. I tried to preview but IE here at work borked the CSS
    145. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by badxmaru · · Score: 1

      I would branch off your idea at 4,

      5a) I'm alive to write this post.
      6a) God keeps me alive and typing.
      7a) This action to keeping me alive is the same as a direction to cause it.
      8a) Keeping slashdotters alive is a good thing.
      9a) God is good.

      this whole argument has been used time and time again, let's not rehash.

    146. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by msundman · · Score: 1
      You are an idiot.
      1. It's idiotic to make oneself suffer.
      2. There has been suffering in your life (and probably will be more).
      3. There is no suffering when one is dead.
      4. You have not ended your life.
      5. You are an idiot.
      ipso-frickin'-facto.
    147. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by TheOldFart · · Score: 1

      If even a fraction of the so called fundamentalists had the clear mind you've exposed, I would probably respect them. As is, I see them no different than those muslim radicals they so love to hate.

    148. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by $uperjay · · Score: 1

      What reason is there to posit God at all?

      Yes, it is reasonable to say that to avoid infinite causal regress, we could assume a cause that itself was uncaused. But why should we anthropomorphize this cause and make it into a human-like agent?

      'Light ID' that suggests life was created by some non-deific intelligent agent is really just a roundabout way of positing God all over again, because any non-deific intelligent agent would have to itself have been created.

      If anything what you're describing should more reasonably be ascribed to some sort of universal law, something that 'just is'. We can and do accept these laws as uncaused causes in our own lives; if we give the uncaused cause of existence agency and personality, why shouldn't we give these qualities to gravity, causality, thermodynamics, and all the other 'universal laws' we live with?

    149. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, YWVH/Jehovah does _not_ mean he who exists. It's sort of an amalgam of the words was-is-will be on top of one another, which is easier in Hebrew than English, since the basic form of Hebrew words is 3 letter root + conjugation.

      There's no 'he' or 'who' in there at all.

      The only thing more annoying than creationsists, I think, is fundamentalists who quote Hebrew, even though they don't know any.

    150. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by zbyte64 · · Score: 1

      oye, people are so limitted in thinking.
      One of the major things of christianity is that the world of the non-physical is of greater consequence then the pysical. I set forth the following arguments:

      Now lets just say everything was handed to mankind on a silver platter, what would happen to us? We would stagnate and never grow (mentally or socially). It is rather human nature to create inbalance (seperation from rich and poor) and to inflict suffering on others to increase one's comfort. Yes this is sad, yes God(s) could step in, but what would be the point? Mankind would again digress and God(s) would find itself stepping in constantly, taking away any purpose to live. Now i know the whole, well God knows what we do before we do it, etc,etc, but that would be good for a whole new thread of discussion. For now i will adress why life _is_ suffering(Budha pointed that out). I know that wasn't a satisfying argument, but lets take another route of reasoning

      Suppose there is no higher power, no God(s), then that would mean there is no purpose to life other then to seek pleasure. It also means that those of us that do good deeds for the benefit of the community and not the benefit of ourselves (often intertwined) are fools, and should concentrate on manipulating the system. If this is the case, then mankind is surely doomed, and if not doomed, then this is really sadder then thinking there is a god who just sits back and lets "bad" things happen. The reason for that is at least we can assume there is a purpose for those events if there is a god, if there is not a god, then life just sucks, and has no meaning, and i should just go rape women and kill myself before i get caught (i wouldn't do such a thing).

      So while both paths of reasoning end up highlighting that life is suffering, the focus is that there is either a purpose to the suffering, or no purpose at all. We are left with that choice to make, a 50/50 chance because this is out of the realms of science (for what good is science outside the universe). I choose to believe there is a purpose other then satisfying my biological wants and needs, and that the genetics/personality that makes me kind and generous to others is not a flaw.

    151. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Gleapsite · · Score: 1

      Ok, I can agree with you, and i choose to append my previous argument to read for the conclusions: God has a(n) good/evil aspect.

      --
      face the world with eyes of fire.
    152. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the hell was this modded insightful?

      1. You are rich (by international standards).

      2. Being rich, sparing a couple of dollars every month requires almost zero effort or time. (sure you have to find the right charity and fill out an envelope, but that'll take a whole 3 minutes, close to nothing).

      3. Given that sparing a couple of dollars every month requires almost zero effort or time, the choice between performing an action and not performing an action for you boils down to only a choice of will or desire, not ability or effort or any other constraint.

      4. thus, action and inaction are, functuanlly, the same for a rich slashdotter.

      5. children starve to death every day.

      6. You do nothing to stop this starvation.

      7. this inaction to prevent said starvation is the same as a direct action to cause it.

      8. deliberately causing children to starve to death is cruel.

      9. you are cruel.

      AC

    153. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by jadavis · · Score: 1

      ...you've managed to exclude several branches of physics, including astro-physics...

      Yup.

      Maybe you don't mind people lying and spinning BS to kids...

      You obviously missed the point of my post. I don't think that "Intelligent Design" should be passed off in schools, that's just stupid.

      I was merely pointing out the flaws in evolutionary theory, which seems pretty weak to me, if it's any kind of theory at all.

      It may be worthwhile to talk about evolution, and many concepts of evolution are based on scientific principles, but it's just not a theory in my opinion.

      Science doesn't explain things. It doesn't even seek some kind of truth. It just makes predictions, and tests them.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    154. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by jadavis · · Score: 1

      Forensics is a science: it uses scientific tests and principles to determine whether historical events happened, and to help piece together a story

      Interesting that you used that example, I also associate evolution with forensics.

      Forensics are based on science. They aren't testing a theory, they are applying already accepted theories and laws of science to determine what plausibly happened. Same with evolution: they carbon date some stuff, they examine bone structure, apply genetic theories, and presto, tell you what they think happened (e.g. "A fast predator was introduced, and the gene pool gradually promoted bigger legs in the prey so they could run away"). So forensics are science-based, but not science. Same with archeology.

      I just don't think it's productive to mix science with the effort to explain events. Science is used to explain events, but explaining events in and of itself isn't science. Explaining events is a perfectly valid persuit, and it works hand in hand with science (i.e. the advent of DNA as evidence of criminal activity).

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    155. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by clymere · · Score: 1

      I hate to be the grammar nazi, but it really harms your defense of fundamentalists if you can't spell the term right ;)

      --
      once you go slack, you never go back
    156. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by _Potter_PLNU_ · · Score: 1

      Did I say that children starve to death because of _their_ sins? I didn't even say that it happens because of their parents sins. In fact, I said nothing of the sort. People in Iraq starved and died because of Saddam and his regime. People in the Ukraine starved and died because of Stalin and communism. People in Germany died because of Hitler and Nazism. Polio is a non-sequitir. There is no comparison between the evil that happens due to people's actions, and something that occurs naturally in nature.

      As I said, I do not believe God micromanages, because of that he allows "slack in the system", as I heard someone put it once. Is the fact that my brother is mentally handicap proof that God is cruel? No, it just happened!

      I'm sorry if you have to believe God is cruel in order to discount other's belief in Him.

      --
      "Hard work never killed anyone." -- Some Dead Guy
    157. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by jadavis · · Score: 1

      Let's say that I have some bacteria in a dish. It has survived for a million years under those conditions. Now, you introduce the bacteria to an altered environment, and you leave them that way for a million years. Assuming some survives, evolution says that the gene pool will have shifted to support the new conditions. OK, that's sort of a theory, but there are problems.

      What if the gene pool really doesn't change much, and it's just that fewer bacteria will be alive in there at any one time? I suppose an evolutionist would say that it's a less hospitable environment or something, but that really doesn't explain why the theory failed. How long is this supposed to take? What environmental factors can the gene pool be expected to accomodate, and which ones are just less hospitable and cause a population decline?

      So we have this "prediction". But the fact is, no matter what happens at all in any timeframe, an evolutionist could say "that's how the theory is supposed to work". A theory has to be disprovable also, if given a certain set of data. Let's go through the cases:

      (1) The bacteria all die. Well, evolution can only work so fast.

      (2) The bacteria become genetically different and flourish. That's some good evolving going on.

      (3) The bacteria become genetically different and experience a population decline. Oh well, it's less hospitable.

      (4) The bacteria don't become genetically different. You need to wait longer.

      If you drop a book, and it flies upward, you just disproved gravity. How do you disprove evolution? What data would disprove it? A theory must be disprovable, or what are you supposed to be testing for?

      Inteligent Design cannot make similar predictions

      I don't think any reasonable scientist would contend that ID is a coherent, testable theory.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    158. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by nasor · · Score: 1

      Your statements about the earth not being a closed system are correct. However, I have to nitpick your use of the term "complexity" when referring to entropy and the second law of thermodynamics. This is a mistake that even educated people often make, and it's something of a pet peeve of mine.

      People often have a vague idea that at low entropy things are complex, while at high entropy they are less complex, and they then extrapolate this into an assumption that a closed system couldn't spontaneously become more complex without violating the second law of thermodynamics. In actuality, entropy is not a measure of the "complexity" of a system and the second law of thermodynamics doesn't have anything to do with how "complex" a system is. Most people, for example, would consider a microchip to be far more complex than an ice crystal - but the entropy of a microchip at room temperature would be much higher than the entropy of a low-temperature ice crystal of equivalent mass. In fact, the entropy of a microchip is probably higher than the entropy of a cold pile of silicon and copper crystals of equivalent mass. This means that from a thermodynamic perspective, it would not necessarily violate the 2nd law for a pile of silicon and copper crystals to spontaneously assemble themselves into a working microchip!

      It's a mistake to think that the second law or entropy has anything to do with "complexity" in the way that we normally use the term.

    159. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Ask any physicist whether there are non-causal events; you will receive a resounding 'no'. Ask them to prove it, and you'll get funny looks.

      That is not correct. Previous to quantum mechanics this was true and is exactly why Einstein was so reluctant to accept it. However, these days no legitimate physicist doubts quantum mechanics or the fact that many quantum effects are perfectly random, i.e. they have no cause.

      Ok now, getting past that, if you read the notes the original poster himself clarified that what was proved was not a god as is described by Christianity or most any other faith, it is merely a "creative" force that did nothing other then create itself and the universe and does nothing else. No explanation is given how this very limited definition of god is anything more then the big bang.

      Even if this is a valid logical proof, it doesn't appear to accomplish much of anything.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    160. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      I think what you are saying is that because God made mankind with the ability to cause suffering that suffering that mankind creates is directly attributable to God.

      What I am saying is the buck stops with the one with free will who commits the act. Saying that God gave me the ability to do what I want, and everything I do is his fault because of this is a complete denial of what free will is. In other words, when I, a being with free will, make a decision, have a thought, or commit an action, the I am responsible. I cannot attribute my actions to another person.

      Just because God does not come down from heaven to straighten out your mess dosent make him cruel or evil. Consider that there could be noting more destructive to the psyche of a human than a God that constantly fixed the problems that they created. Ever seen a spoiled child? Imagine an entire race of beings that populated the whole Earth that had that same mentality. For a neat exploration of this theme please read http://jedinite.com/mopi/ about Prime Intillect.

      Anyways, regardless of that argument, you are appealing to the wrong deity, in the Biblical sense. According to the Bible, Satan rules this world currently, and the things that occur do so on his watch. In fact, the whole point of the creation of humankind is an object lesson to the angelic beings who oppose God.

      Satan postulated that angels and mankind do not need God to exist peacefully. God handed over the world to Satan to prove His point. Satan is now, according to the Bible, trying to institute utopia on the planet and bring in the 1000 years of peace that Christ promised that only He would do. Therefore, if the point of contention is the character of God described in the Bible, and if you agree with the parent, you should be complaining to Satan about his improper rule, not God.

      I find it very interesting that the arguments against God and his character are VERY similar (some are identical) to the ones that the Bible describes Satan having.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    161. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hang on a bit!

      It's wrong to suppose that God created fossils to test men's faith. God is not cruel or deceptive.
      God's nature is quite the opposite. He is revealing the truth of himself, which men choose to ignore.

      You've mentioned fossils only to say that you have no idea at all where they come from, but it sure as hell isn't God's work as that would be deceptive. So, where do they come from? Haven't you just shot a hole in your entire belief system?

      And as for the idea that God could exist outside time and hence there's no problem in where he came from, that's no answer either. You could just as easily say the universe used the same trick and time just applies within the universe. It's a crock both ways.

      I think while there's still a tiny corner of rational thought in your head you should use it to throw off this fundamentalism you claim to believe in but haven't really thought through.

    162. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      You argue that it may be possible that a creator was not created because "outside the Universe, it is possible for an entity to simply exist without cause".

      Where then does the universe exist? More importantly, where did the big bang exist? If we assume that the big bang created the universe, then we can not say that the big bang existed within the universe. The big bang must exist within that which is outside the universe. Therefore, by your argument, if it is possible that a creator came into existance without cause, it is just as likely that the big bang could have came into existance without cause.

      Argument II:
      The same argument can just as easily be made without relying on a big bang (we're trying to simplify like good scientists. Occam would be proud).

      Where then does the universe exist? It would be absurd to say that the universe exists within the universe. The universe itself then must exist within that which is outside the universe (just as we don't think of ourselves as existing in space, but the earth itself certainly does). Therefore, by your argument, if it is possible that a creator came into existance without cause, it is just as likely that the universe could have came into existance without cause.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    163. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you must have a really pathetic life.

      Well, if only pain makes you want to change...

      ha-ha!!

    164. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! No implied racism. Some populations simply don't have what it takes to survive in our modern world. The struggle is defines us as humanity.

      Mein Führer has a first name, it's A-D-O-L-F;
      Mein Führer has a second name, it's H-I-T-L-R!!

    165. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That you need pain in order to understand pleasure is more sophistry.

      Greek sophistry.

      Not true, the pain and pleasure responses are separate in the brain.

      Plato, as always, was wrong, because he was a wanker, not a scientist.

      So... You can keep your pain. And if you want, you can have mine too, it'll help you understand your pleasure better.

    166. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If God is outside of time as you state, then he already knew the path of your life as he created the universe. So, by the way he created the universe, he knew how you will react in the course of time as you perceive it. This doesn't leave any free will to you -- by the way God created the universe, he already knew all causes and effects resulting in a predetermination of every single decision you think you made.

    167. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by neurojab · · Score: 1
      This is urban legend, but a very applicable story, so posting it anyway :)

      A well-known scientist (some say it was Bertrand Russell) once gave a
      public lecture on astronomy. He described how the earth orbits around the
      sun and how the sun, in turn, orbits around the centre of a vast collection
      of stars called our galaxy.

      At the end of the lecture, a little old lady at
      the back of the room got up and said: "What you have told us is rubbish.
      The world is really a flat plate supported on the back of a giant
      tortoise."

      The scientist gave a superior smile before replying, "What is
      the tortoise standing on?"

      "You're very clever, young man, very clever,"
      said the old lady. "But it's turtles all the way down."


      In the end, defining God recursively makes about as much sense as having one God which just happened to be there, which makes about as much sense as the world coming into being on its own (none at all on all counts). We are a paradox. I hereby call for everyone to vanish immediately, because whether or not there is a God, we cannot exist.

    168. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 1

      If you drop a book, and it flies upward, you just disproved gravity. How do you disprove evolution? What data would disprove it? A theory must be disprovable, or what are you supposed to be testing for?

      An instance of spontaneous generation (abiogenesis) would be a good start. Find some rotten meat that turns into flies (or bacteria), and you'll have the ear of a few biologists.

      --
      iSKUNK!
    169. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Some populations simply don't have what it takes to survive in our modern world. The struggle is defines us as humanity.

      And some populations just get screwed. All the racism is your own.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    170. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meaningless difference. They contend 'the creator' exists and anything which does has an origin. What difference do alternate universes make? If one exists in which existance doesn't imply an origin, we could logically inhabit one of those universes and their arguments crumble to dust.

    171. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Yehovah(YHWH), but no one really knows how it >>should be translated

      I think that is pronounced Yahoo!

    172. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by cahiha · · Score: 1

      It simply states that there probably was some intellegence involved in this phenominon we call "life." It does not go so far as to state where the intellegence resides, whether it is in God or mice.

      Well, that's a hypothesis, it just is one for which there is no evidence whatsoever.

      Most fundimentalists consider God to be even outside time. Unchanging, simply existing. [...] He simply exists, timeless and unchanging.

      OK, well, then "God" is not intelligent, because things that exist "unchanging" and "outside time" fail to satisfy basic attributes of what we call "intelligent".

      Christian Fundimentalists

      I can't figure out whether you are trying to be funny or just can't spell.

    173. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Pooua · · Score: 1
      If a Universal Intelligent Designer could manage to exist without being intelligently designed, then why can't WE exist without being intelligently designed?

      Because we are finite beings, unlike the "Universal Intelligent Designer."

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
    174. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by N_Hill · · Score: 1

      To the evolutionist I ask: How did matter or energy come into existence?

      Your point is flawed because of your presupposition that "Universal Intelligent Designer" is based in our space/time domain.

      Mathmaticians are certian that they are more then just four dimensions. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/elegant/math-flash.ht ml (flash fun)

    175. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Pooua · · Score: 1
      It doesn't matter whether or not the Creator is part of the Universe or not.

      Actually, it makes all the difference. If a being exists outside our Universe, that being is not subject to our physical laws. The very nature of time and space don't apply to that being, as they apply to us. As a result, that being cannot be described with our physics. Indeed, it may be that nothing outside our Universe (including the supposed metauniverse from which our Universe is proposed to have originated in Hawkings model) can be described by our physics, because our physical laws sprang into existence with the origin of our Universe.

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
    176. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by naasking · · Score: 1

      That is not correct. Previous to quantum mechanics this was true and is exactly why Einstein was so reluctant to accept it. However, these days no legitimate physicist doubts quantum mechanics or the fact that many quantum effects are perfectly random, i.e. they have no cause.

      Sorry, this is incorrect. Just because the outcome of an event cannot be predicted, does not mean it did not have a cause. The meaning of "randomness" is unpredictability, not noncausality. I challenge you to cite me a single noncausal event studied in physics (or any science for that matter, but physics is the most likely place you would find one if it exists). I myself made the mistake of believing randomness and causality were mutually exclusive when, in fact, they are not.

      Einstein had trouble accepting quantum physics because of its apparent non-local effects (faster than light signalling between particles) which contradicted his theories of relativity.

      No explanation is given how this very limited definition of god is anything more then the big bang.

      Indeed, the 'creative force' would be the cause of the big bang itself.

      Even if this is a valid logical proof, it doesn't appear to accomplish much of anything.

      If you're looking for a valid logical proof of a creator (given you accept the assumptions), then you have one. Many people would consider that a significant step forward.

      Hatcher (the originator of the proof), apparently goes on in his book to demonstrate that the god he proved was also "all good", "all knowing", etc. but I haven't read it, so don't take my word for it.

    177. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "but simply to provide an accurate understanding of what Christian Fundimentalists believe."

      You are most certainly NOT a fundamentalist.

      In my parents church (which I attended for 13 years) your well reasoned thoughtful arguments would have seen you barred from the church. I know of 6 familys that "left" the church after the parents questioned a particular teaching. You were allowed to question it once, but if you didn't submit you were a tool of the devil and ostrasised.

      My parents best friends had this happen to them, when they questioned the churches move toward making big money (just think with a million dollars we can build a BIGGER church, with 10 million, etc,etc) rather than staying with its roots as offering an back to basics alternative to big religion (catholisism, church of england, etc). They lasted about a month before they went from being much respected elders in the church to being viewed with suspicion (it's the devil in them) were the whispers of the time.

      Anyway, its probably not a good idea to group yourself together with people who would be happy to burn you at the stake.

    178. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Not all pain is for the better, but arguing that all pain is wrong or that removing all of it is somehow a good thing is utter foolishness. When there is no pain, there is no desire for change.
      Only because God made it that way! God could have made the universe such that without pain, there is still desire for change. He supposedly created everything that exists and the laws governing the entire universe. He could have made a world where there is good without bad. He could have made it so there was no pain, and no disadvantage to that. He could have made existence such that there was no such thing as disadvantage. And you might think that was boring, but he could have made the world such that there would be no such thing as "boring" either.

      God created everything. He could have made an existence with only positive aspects and no negatives, but he didn't. Why did he make existence like this instead (assuming he didn't do it by mistake)?
    179. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      god is omnipotent

      There are some Christian sects which do not believe this. Mormons for one believe that God is exceptionally powerful but is bound to obey certain laws and constraints, some which we know and some which we do not.

      BTW, one such interesting constraint Mormons believe is that God must allow cruelty and pain to happen, within certain bounds, because we ourselves arranged to come to this world and have these terrible things happen to us (or to cause them): we knew what we were getting into.

      The specific contradiction you're posing has been around for aeons and is known as theodicy, and it does indeed cause all manner of problems for all those crazy religions which insist on infinites. Other fun stuff: can God make a rock so heavy that he can't move it; can God kill himself; yadda yadda. Mormon doctrine doesn't weasel entirely out of theodicy difficulties, but it eliminates quite a lot of them.

    180. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      God allows us to make that choice, and other choices, for ourselves.

      Ephesians 1:4-5 - "He hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love: Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will."
      2 Thessalonians 2:11-12 - "God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all might be damned."
      2 Timothy 1:9 - "Who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began."
      You might want to double-check your understanding of your religion. If nothing else, the jury's still out on the whole Free Will thing.

      A child that stubs its toe accidently, and is caused pain, is not the fault of the father.

      That's true. As far as I know, the average father is neither omniscient, omnipresent nor omnipotent. If you claim that God is more than one of these things, Frymaster's argument holds. Unless you can spot a logical fallacy?

      You, sir, have displayed a sense of arrogance at judging God for not intervening.

      And you, sir, have displayed a sense of arrogance at judging God worthy of your worship. Whichever way you fall, a decision, a judgement, has to be made about whether it's worth following God or not. I choose "no" as I don't believe he both exists and is good/loving/just. You choose "yes" - presumably you do. But how dare you treat an attempt to use one's brain as a crime? And how dare you slander a supposedly just, merciful God who wants us to grow as people by suggesting that he'd do the same?

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    181. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Job 42:

      1 Then Job replied to the LORD :

      2 "I know that you can do all things; no plan of yours can be thwarted.

      3 You asked, 'Who is this that obscures my counsel without knowledge?' Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things too wonderful for me to know.

      4 "You said, 'Listen now, and I will speak; I will question you, and you shall answer me.'

      5 My ears had heard of you but now my eyes have seen you.

      6 Therefore I despise myself and repent in dust and ashes."

      God doesn't fit himself into your own personal definitions, nor are his ways easy for us to comprehend. God requires action on our part to save the hungry children of this world. Therefore, I would first blame myself before I would blame God.

      It's like Adam and Eve. They were not thrown out of the garden because they sinned. They were thrown out because they blamed God, saying it was his fault because he made the snake and provided the woman. Had they repented, they would have been forgiven and would not have had to face their punishment.

      God is not cruel, God is Holy. He is what he says he is, partly because it is his right as God to define the words he uses to describe himself. Who are we to judge him? We are dust and ashes.

      Before you point the finger at God, you can at least read Job, if not the entire book.

      Fun fact: Job is the one of the oldest pieces of literature ever discovered (if not *the* oldest).

    182. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      Satan postulated that angels and mankind do not need God to exist peacefully. God handed over the world to Satan to prove His point. Satan is now, according to the Bible, trying to institute utopia on the planet and bring in the 1000 years of peace that Christ promised that only He would do. Therefore, if the point of contention is the character of God described in the Bible, and if you agree with the parent, you should be complaining to Satan about his improper rule, not God.

      I'm intrigued - I don't think I've ever heard that version before. Do you have any references?

      On a side note, if you hand the keys of your car to a drunken teenager you kind of deserve to have it wrapped round a tree. What happens on Satan's watch is still God's responsibility.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    183. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by cas2000 · · Score: 1

      > some consider the gulf in intelligence between
      > them and their God to be so vast as to make
      > comparisons like that meaningless.

      then why do they all have such a dumb, petty, small-minded god?

      if nothing else can convince you that there is no god, maybe you'll be swayed by the fact that all the major religions propose a preposterously small-minded and insignificant god (e.g. a patriarch-shepherd) as the creator of a vast and incredibly complex universe.

      it makes no sense at all.

      it just defies belief.

      (yet some people manage to believe it anyway. my theory is that they are either insane or stupid or both).

    184. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You assume that our human minds are able to understand God and how he created the universe, etc.

      You're wrong.

    185. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by amRadioHed · · Score: 1
      Sorry, this is incorrect. Just because the outcome of an event cannot be predicted, does not mean it did not have a cause. The meaning of "randomness" is unpredictability, not noncausality. I challenge you to cite me a single noncausal event studied in physics (or any science for that matter, but physics is the most likely place you would find one if it exists). I myself made the mistake of believing randomness and causality were mutually exclusive when, in fact, they are not.

      Don't get me wrong, I am fully aware of complexity theory. I myself would like to believe that the world is deterministic at it's deepest levels, however this is by no means a certainty by modern physics. The deeper theorists dig the universe appears to get more random, not less. Virtual particles appear from seemingly nothing and then disappear again without a trace. At the lowest meaningful levels it is postulated that time and space have none of the linearity that we percieve at higher levels. Will we eventually find our universe to be the clockwork world idealized by Newton? Maybe. But let's be realistic, we're nowhere near that today.

      Einstein had trouble accepting quantum physics because of its apparent non-local effects (faster than light signalling between particles) which contradicted his theories of relativity.

      I don't believe entaglement is what he was referring to when he said that "God does not play dice with the universe".

      Indeed, the 'creative force' would be the cause of the big bang itself.

      By the explanation given in the link I included, the creative force is not described as causing the big bang, they sound to be one and the same.

      Hatcher (the originator of the proof), apparently goes on in his book to demonstrate that the god he proved was also "all good", "all knowing", etc. but I haven't read it, so don't take my word for it.

      Again, from the one who posted the proof (i have not read the book either, though I would certainly be interested)
      "Definition:
      god: the being perfect in power, wisdom, and goodness who is worshiped as creator and ruler of the universe."

      Where did you get this def'n? If you got it from those Bah'ai handouts, it's completely irrelevant. Hatcher's god as laid out in my post has no such attributes; there is no ruler, ultimate power, or ultimate wisdom proven anywhere. Hatcher does go on about the nature of god in his book, but that is irrelevant to this proof.
      The poster confirms what you say that later in his book Hatcher goes more indepth about the nature of god, but he doesn't say what the nature is. Also, whatever he explains later in the book will need entirely new (and seeminly contradictory) proofs as this proof portray's a creator that is no more then a sudden big, er, explosion of "creative" energy from which he and the universe originated. It is said he has no other attributes at all which based on that proof, somewhat rules out an "all good" or "all knowing" creative force.
      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    186. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by lxw56 · · Score: 1

      Unless God has a non-cruel reason for allowing the suffering.

      Adam and Eve, as representatives of the human race, brought death and suffering into the whole world (Genesis 3). This is a just punishment for sin - justice is one of God's defining characteristics (Psalm 19:16), which explains why humans have a strong sense of justice.

      God's justice demands that sin be punished, and children are born sinners, therefore they suffer from the curse as well as the rest of us. However, God didn't stop with punishment. He gave each human a means of eternal salvation from death, requiring absolutely no effort on our part, and at great cost, the greatest possible cost, to Himself: the humiliation and death of His son. If He were cruel, would He not have withheld this grace and saved Himself a lot of pain?

    187. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A creator doesn't require a creator to be created. This is just circular logic without any fact. Proving God exists is much more plausible than evolution happening. It is highly unlikely that things evolve from rocks to complex organs and brains. There is more evidence for God in the existence of Evil and paranormal and unexplained elements that can't be rationalized by science. There is also evidence for a soul and there is room for religion is scientific debate. Some of the greatest scientists were religious such as Newton and Einstein which shows that religion is not pseudoscientific.


      By circular logic I can say a dog needs a cat to create it. A creator doesn't need anything and can exist just as the universe exists. The universe exists and it doesn't need an origin. In fact reality must exist and doesn't need an origin. The Universe doesn't need to begin to begin. Something can exist without a beginning because something must exist for there to be existence.


      Evolution is just a theory. No one has proven evolution conclusively on a grand scale. There is micro evolution but there is no conclusive evidence for whole scale fish to dogs evolution and it is just conjecture without any direct observable evidence. You can't use fossils to prove grand scale evolution. Fossils can be misconstructed and missinterpretted. The only way you can prove something is to be at the beginning 4 billion years ago. You can't even prove the age of the earth. There isn't really definite proof that mammals evolved from fish. Evolution is Pseudo-Scientific because it is influenced by bias and the philosophic view of atheism. Evolution is not a theory about having an open mind or letting the facts dictate the conclusion. Evolution rushes to judgement and denies some obvious facts and statistical probabilities. A lot of theories are proved by direct observation and grand scale evolution has not been. A lot of animal and human attributes have engineering principles embedded in there construction that simple evolution can not adequately explain. An example is the brain which has many attributes of being designed or engineered and not randomly constructed. Eyes and limbs and the heart and other organs are also sophisticated and have elements of engineering and physics. Other elements such as hair or fur coloring have very little functional use which also advocates intelligent design but have artistic use. Intelligent design is not pseudo-scientific. It is very much an important test of the evolutionary theory and if the evolutionary scientists want to use opinion instead of reason to attack a perfectly constructive argument then they are letting bias get in the way of true science. In normal science theories must evolve from creditable attacks and theories that survive tests evolve into laws. Intelligent Design is even more scientific than evolution.


      The people who attack religion are the atheistic scientists who want to disprove God but end up not disproving God. Atheism is just as much a religion as religion. When you put God into the equation you are a religion whether you believe in one or not.


      It's totally rediculous for secular scientists to want evolution being tought in schools which violates the separation of church and state by advocating a view about God and religion. Evolution is very much a religious view as much as teaching biblical doctrine in public High Schools.

    188. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe people disregard the opinions of "fundimentalists" because they can't spell words like "intellegence", "phenominon", and "existance".

    189. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a militant agnostic with less lofty views, My problem with intelligent design, and I assume I share this with most people, is not whether it is including or excluding evolution or creation. My problem is, like creation, it is theology, not science. Explaining something we don't know with intervention from mysterious beings is not provable and tends to shut down all other discussion. How many times have we gotten frustrated with a child's constant asking "why" and just wanted to say "because that's the way god wants it?" This is what intelligent design is intended for.

      Evolution is a theory, not in that we don't know if it's real, it is as real as the round earth theory. It's a theory in that we don't know everything about it. We haven't filled in all the gaps. What we do know can be repeated and a lot of what we guessed at has turned out to be true with later, more advanced research. There are parts of it we have gotten wrong and parts we will get wrong in the future. But the nature of science isn't to attempt to have an answer for everything. Science is the attempt to find proof of everything we have an answer for.

      Creation and intellignet design do not belong in science class besides or replacing evolution because they are not science, they are theology. They do not belong in American public schools because we have a constitution that prevents us from promoting one religeous view over others. We have churches and private schools and a persons home for teaching all the creationism and intelligent design you want to teach. The only reason some would want to push this type of theology into public school is to force their particular religious view on as many students as possible.

      I think some people who are pushing in this direction need to take a step back and think about how lucky they really are that they are in a country that allows them the freedom to come up with new theological ideas like intelligent design and make a tax shelter out of it. Please, leave the science teaching to the scientists.

    190. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by f3773t · · Score: 1

      Your reasoning is sound ... not saying you are wrong ... But then what if the Universal Intelligent designer just is without beginning ... without end ... just as I think of the space where the universe exists to be there ... before the universe and then after ... This is not a concept I fully grasp and I don't any one does ... but then just because no one can fully grasp it doesn't mean to say it isn't true. Eg my pet dog ... I don't think he fully grasps all aspects of my existence ... but then it don't mean they are not true!

    191. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by dormroomgeek · · Score: 1
      "If NO, well then consider that WE HUMANS tend to think of ourseleves as intelligent designers. If a Universal Intelligent Designer could manage to exist without being intelligently designed, then why can't WE exist without being intelligently designed?"
      Honestly I have never seen a human make something out of nothing. So, are we intelligent designers (or creators) or are we merely intelligent manipulators? And even if we do think ourselve as "intelligent designers" what does it matter? I can think myself the President of the United States but that does not make it true.
    192. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by adamgolding · · Score: 1

      you have a flawed understanding of being 'omnipotent'--i am an atheist, but i would like to explain how theists, (i think it was the scholastics), resolved this little problem: rather than saying that god can do 'anything', they say that god can do anything which is *possible*. for instance, god cannot make a contradiction true. also, perhaps god is limited by other laws. the rule can't be "for any action x, god can do x", since that would mean god could make a contradiction true. the rule was thought to be (again i think it was the scholastics) "if x is a possible action, god can do x", a corollary of this is "if you can do it, god can do it! (and probably better)" suffering is explained by saying that God made this word "the best of all possible worlds" and so the suffering in it must be the consequence of some sort of trade-off--and it's usually said that the culprit is giving us free will and the chance at redemption, etc.

    193. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by TodPunk · · Score: 1

      I have to disagree with this perception as it is limited in scope and application.

      If I put my child on a chair and have them sit there, undaunting, for several minutes, this act in and of itself is meaningless, and somewhat cruel. If you step out a bit and see that this is a punishment, or a response to a wrong-doing of the child, it seems less cruel, if not totally benevolent. Or maybe it is cruel. Cruel, after all, is an opinion, of which you cannot define an absolute, but I digress.

      In another example, I am speeding. I am therefor doing something wrong. However, if you look at a slightly larger scope, you see I am rushing a dying orphan to the hospital in an Ambulance, it seems less wrong. If you step out again and see that I've stolen the Ambulance, it seems more wrong, or perhaps more noble, depending on your interpretation. Either way, the original assumption that my speeding was the wrong, is not wholly correct, if correct at all.

      The same is with all things you might consider tragedy. Perhaps the simple act of causing a child to starve to death is a cruel thing, but stepping out further and further, it seems less and less like what you originally anticipated it as. Perhaps the death of the child was the only thing that made a negligent father to raise the other children correctly to become people that profoundly effected society for the better. Or perhaps it drove them all into depression and they all eventually died as well. Regardless, religion aside, omnipotence would lend itself to a grander purpose or at least a different perspective than the one you offered, and if you're omnipotent, you can essentially do no incorrect things, because you set the rules by which right and wrong are judged, so this gets bigger and bigger until we're at square one again and both of our points become less and less valid.

      Besides, Utopian societies are not happy because they have nothing to compare it to anyway. Philosophy 101 stuff. Contrasting perspectives create more prominent impressions, etc etc etc

      --
      This forum Sig is licensed under the LGPL.
    194. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A child stubbing their toe is not really the fault of the parent. A child injured through the neglect of the parent though is not the same as this.

      If a parent allows visitors to their house to leave knives lying around must carry some blame. Someone who sits idly by while others cause harm to their child must carry some blame.

      Your god, based on what I've seen is not good, perhaps not evil. Your god is at best neutral.

      You are not really given a choice though are you? Either you worship your god or you go to hell. This is like me saying, eithet you can worship me or I'll let you sink with your ship. Really, you have little choice if you value your future.

    195. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by cornjchob · · Score: 1

      Just wanted to say excellent post, and I do not envy your allegiance with a group whose 'poorly trained teachers' and poorly trained students seem to be the most vocal out of you. Keep it up.

      --
      We now have confirmed reports from an informed Orange County minister that Ethel is still an active communist.
    196. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by cornjchob · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure you want to go there, because if the universe can exist without cause that means it exists outside the natural order of things, because the natural order is for cause and effect.

      Not if the 'natural order of things' is a byproduct/manifestation of the universe

      --
      We now have confirmed reports from an informed Orange County minister that Ethel is still an active communist.
    197. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by cornjchob · · Score: 1

      Then your suffering will be eternal, thrown into the pit where there will be "wailing and gnashing of teeth".

      Which is certainly the sign of a benevolent creator, no?


      Benevolent doesn't have to go hand in hand with being a pushover

      --
      We now have confirmed reports from an informed Orange County minister that Ethel is still an active communist.
    198. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by BitterAndDrunk · · Score: 1

      I'd think pushover would be the furthest thing from my mind. Maybe sociopath, but certainly not pushover. Eternal damnation for 80 years of sin. . . the worldly equivalent seems to be the death penalty for shoplifting. A little excessive, IMO.

      --
      You better watch out, there may be dogs about . . .
    199. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      It's turtles all the way down ...

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    200. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      Sorry, son. Fundamentalists' views are _never_ valuable. Doesn't matter whether the fundamentalist in question is a christian, muslim, hindu, marxist, neo-liberal, ... Pick your lunacy.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    201. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Major+Lame+Brain · · Score: 1

      An interesting thought experiment...Fortunately, part of the theory of Natural Selection (though not at Darwin's time) is that there exists a mechanism for the evolution of species -- genetics. By examining how genetic material has changed in your experiment, you in fact provide further support for the theory. In each of the cases you describe, one can show that Natural Selection remains consistant as does the mechanism of inheritance, mutation, etc. By repeating the thought experiment a thousand times (or some other sutible number) and examining the changes in the genetic structure of the organism, one could theoretically disprove Natural Selection -- if no changes in the organism's DNA ever occured and all died, or if some other effect was shown to be responsible for the organism's continued survival, you'd have gone a long way toward undermining the current theory of evolution.

      The nature of scientific theory is such that all are constantly subject to modification (if not rejection). In your counter example you have chosen an excellent case study. Newton's theory of Gravity was in fact disproved -- The theory of relativity shows that the instantaneous transmition of the force of gravity is untenable. While gravity itself was not disproved, the proposed mechanism was.

      Your statement that theories must be disprovable is extreme. Theories make predictions. Those predictions must be disprovable and if they are disproved, then the theory is subject to revision or rejection.

      Inteligent Design as a theory is a paradigm shift (it would overturn current consensus in the scientific community). Therefore, the burden of proof lies with proponants of the "new" theory.

      --
      I report to Colonel 2.6.1 and General Chaos is his boss.
    202. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      The proof is fraught with flaws. For example, P1 says this:

      "The existence of a whole system obviously cannot precede the existence of its components (rather, the constitution of a whole obviously supposes and depends upon the prior or simultaneous existence of its components). We thus have the principle of limitation, which asserts that, for every composite phenomenon A, A cannot be a cause of any of its components."

      Yet V is defined as the universal superset composed of everything that has been, is, or will be. But claiming that V includes everything that will ever be violates the underpinning of P1, since V cannot preceed the existence of its components. If V contains things that are not yet but will be, then V is an invalid set.

      Another flaw appears in the first argument:

      Can V cause V, V->V?
      Proof:
      If V->V, and E is an element of V, E el V, then V->E which is not possible according to P1.
      Therefore, V-/->V.

      Therefore, there must exist some phenomenon G, such that G->V
      G must be an element or a subset of V, since V is the superset containing everything


      The argument "Therefore, there must exist..." is predicated upon the assumption that there must exist a cause for V. This isn't proven, nor is it listed in the definitions which define the assumptions. In fact, the definitions specifically say:

      D1. B is without cause (uncaused) if, for no A does A->B hold

      It specifically allows for the possibility of B being without cause. If one simply asserts that there is no A for which A -> V, V is therefore uncaused, there is no need to postulate G, and the rest of the proof falls apart.

      You dismissed this above by deferring to the authority of physicists, but this proof isn't based upon the work of physics. It's self-contained - it depends only upon its own assumptions and definitions. It either stands or falls upon its own weight, not upon the word of physicists.

      There are other problems as well. Let us say that g is the set of all things which are self caused. g contains one element - G. Thus we have, by definition, G el g. Since V is the superset of all things, it follows that g el V.

      Since G->V, then P2 says that G->g.

      On the other hand, given G el g, P1 says that G-/->g.

      So it is the case that both G->g and G-/->g, which violates P3.

      There are other problems as well, but these are sufficient to damn the attempt.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    203. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by cornjchob · · Score: 1

      Regarding relevant religious texts you're warned repeatedly; it's the diet(y's/ies') job to decide how much of a sin it is to not believe in them. That said, I personally agree with you.

      --
      We now have confirmed reports from an informed Orange County minister that Ethel is still an active communist.
    204. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > the universe is its own creator, which is the scientific view -- and frankly, the only view science can really take.

      I don't know about that... "Science" can also take the view that it has always existed. Of course, there is no way to prove that one either, so it would be untruthful to state it as fact either way.

      Oh well, I guess I'll have to continue living unsure where we came from... Well, besides our parents.

    205. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by ewillyb · · Score: 1

      I'm on the side of evolution. But the argument that a Creator who employs intelligent design must have Herself been created by a Meta-Creator just demonstrates a total lack of understanding of what God means to people that believe in Her. Regardless of one's position on evolution, those people that believe in God believe that She transcends time and space. It's like magic. There is no scientific explanation; no need for infinite recursion. That's the point. It's faith, stupid! What makes this whole argument even sillier is that the most impressive astro-physicists on earth have no frickin idea how the universe was born. If the big bang theory holds, then how did that matter happen to be all in one place in the first place, and what is matter, and what's outside of the universe, and ... All of these unknowns and unknowables leave a lot of room to believe in a Creator. A non-infinite-recursive Creator. That being said, there is no God.

    206. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by alan_dershowitz · · Score: 1

      I really dig those user mods, the apocrypha.

    207. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by ezeri · · Score: 1

      That version would be his own, it is definately not a view that would be held by any major christian denomination, or any prominante theologians. If would like to know what the bible realy teaches just ask and I'll be happy to post a response, but what dread ed posted is definately not it (no offence dread ed, but its not).

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    208. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by halber_mensch · · Score: 1
      What I am saying is the buck stops with the one with free will who commits the act. Saying that God gave me the ability to do what I want, and everything I do is his fault because of this is a complete denial of what free will is. In other words, when I, a being with free will, make a decision, have a thought, or commit an action, the I am responsible. I cannot attribute my actions to another person.
      You're simply re-stating your original argument that I proved to be false. I'll prove it again for your ignorance.

      1. Assert "god is omnipotent" to be true
      2. Omnipotence is defined as "having unlimited power", and god's set of actions encompass all possible actions
      3. This lets us form the statement "God has unlimited power if and only if God is omnipotent", since a definition infers an exclusive relationship
      4. Assert man is not omnipotent. Since man is not omnipotent, man cannot have unlimited power from argument 3.
      5. Assert man's actions are exclusively his own.
      6. If man's actions are exclusively his own, and he does not have unlimited power, then they do not intersect the set of god's actions
      7. For any set S Union U- (the complement set of all actions), the result is the empty set, meaning man's set of actions is empty.
      8. Therefore at least one of your assertions is false, and god is responsible for all actions, god is not omnipotent, or man is omnipotent.


      I find it very interesting that the arguments against God and his character are VERY similar (some are identical) to the ones that the Bible describes Satan having.
      So label me a heretic because you cannot form a logically valid argument. If you will notice, I am not arguing about god but only your arguments. As it so happens, I do believe in a god, but I do not make the same wild assertions about that god as you do.
      --
      perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"
    209. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      6. If man's actions are exclusively his own, and he does not have unlimited power, then they do not intersect the set of god's actions

      The conclusion of point 6. is non sequitar. You are using mathmatetical definitons to setup categories and trying to limit them like a mathmatietical proof. If we are dealing with free agents then these the conclusions drawn by this exercise is meaningless and inane. Regardless of other differences both God and humans have wills. Abstract numbers and number systems do not have wills do not have wills. Unless you are trying to argue that God, humanity, or both have do not have wills; you can not say either party would be categorically uninterested in the other.

      7. For any set S Union U- (the complement set of all actions), the result is the empty set, meaning man's set of actions is empty.

      If you were dealing with non-free agents, this line would mean something. When you factor in any form of arbitrary action (God may or may not be arbitray, but humans definately can be) than the chance of any particular action taken by any human is no longer the same. This means that S Union U- may not result in an empty set.

      8. Therefore at least one of your assertions is false, and god is responsible for all actions, god is not omnipotent, or man is omnipotent.

      I think the false assumption is that the behavior of either God or human beings can be reduced to simple algebric rules.

    210. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      But the argument that a Creator who employs intelligent design must have Herself been created by a Meta-Creator just demonstrates a total lack of understanding of what God means to people that believe in Her.

      No, your response indicates a complete lack of understanding of what I'm addressing.

      I was raised in an extremely fundamentalist Christian home. (By extreme fundamentalism, I mean we did not celebrate Christmas, Easter, Halloween or any other holiday other than attending church. We did not go to movies, bowl, play pool or participate in any other "wordly" activities. When I was in the third grade (1973), we packed up and moved to a little town (Bangs) in the middle of the desert in Texas for the express purpose of getting away from unholy influences. If you want to know more, Google "David Terrell." You might want to add a religious term to get past the football player references.) I'm well aware of what the Creator and creationism means to believers.

      However, I'm not addressing issues of belief and faith. I'm exclusively addressing the argument that creationism is a scientific theory - that the belief is logically and scientifically consistent with what we know about the universe. If someone wants to profess a faith in God, I have no issue with that what-so-ever. But if they want to claim that their faithful belief is a scientific theory and demand that it be taught in public schools, then I have a big issue.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    211. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps educated people disregard the views of "fundimentalists" because they can't spell words like "intellegence", "phenominon" or "existance"...

    212. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by halber_mensch · · Score: 1
      The conclusion of point 6. is non sequitar. You are using mathmatetical definitons to setup categories and trying to limit them like a mathmatietical proof. If we are dealing with free agents then these the conclusions drawn by this exercise is meaningless and inane. Regardless of other differences both God and humans have wills. Abstract numbers and number systems do not have wills do not have wills. Unless you are trying to argue that God, humanity, or both have do not have wills; you can not say either party would be categorically uninterested in the other.
      6. If man's actions are exclusively his own, and he does not have unlimited power, then they do not intersect the set of god's actions

      Perhaps I should have used 'acts' instead of 'actions'. I'm attempting to show that if man's acts are exclusively his own (his set of acts intersects no other set), and man is not omnipotent(man's set of acts is not equal to all acts), then man and god cannot share any set of acts.

      Since man's set of acts S does not intersect U (the set of all acts, which is equal to god's set of acts G), then S must be empty or god's set of acts G does not equal U and god is not omnipotent; assuming previous assertions are true.

      I think the false assumption is that the behavior of either God or human beings can be reduced to simple algebric rules.
      That's fair. I must make that assumption to proceed. If you can prove that assumption false, then my argument can't be conclusive.
      --
      perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"
    213. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by RhadamanthosIsChaos · · Score: 1

      Speaking as a Christian (though not a fundamentalist by any means), and an Engineer, I appreciate your attempts to describe the fundamentalist views to us here. I think part of the problem that some people here have is the concept of a being that exists, that has always existed, and will always exist. It just breaks down all the axioms and principles of engineering and science to recognize that that's possible.

      I believe that God and Science can coexist... but we can't try to apply God to Science, or Science to God. If every time we observed an unexpected result we called it an Act of God (an extreme example, of course), we'd never improve our theories.

      I think that it should be possible to create a scientific view of the universe that adequately describes everything in it, without depending on God.

      I also think that it should be possible to be a Christian, in that universe.

      Maybe I'm wrong, but I hope not.

      --
      +++OUT OF CHEESE ERROR+++ REDO FROM START +++
    214. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by ewillyb · · Score: 1

      Well yes, I did misunderstand you (I was however making a general point to the /. readers, not to you per se). Now that I see where you are coming from, I must ask, are you a product of the Kansas school system? What are your data points to suggest that creationism is a legit scientific theory? The simple fact that there are gaps in evolution? That, because you can't explain how cell's evolved to be so complex that there must be intelligent design behind it? The fact is, natural selection with probabilistically distrubuted mutations thrown in does explain how complex organisms could have evolved over Billions of years. The fact that there are gaps in the evolutionary theory does not call it into question. Rather, the fact that the theory is predictive, observable (with zero contrary observations!), measurable, and there is an overwhelming scientific consensus should be convincing enough for anyone with a shred of intellectual honesty. And I'm only saying this because you base your argument on science. If you were the typical faith-based Creationist, I would not even argue with you -- there would be no point. Did you know that the observation that the Earth revolves around the Sun is just a Theory?

    215. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > God is not cruel or deceptive. Many fundimentalists do not understand the nature of God as described in the scriptures, ...

      It would help if they learnt how to READ and see the numerous CONTRADICTIONS in scripture.

      i.e.

      Don't kill...
      Exodus 20:13, Dt.5:17 "Thou shalt not kill."

      Kill everyone...
      Exodus 32:27 "Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, Put every man his sword by his side ... and slay every man his brother, and every man his companion, and every man his neighbor."
      1 Samuel 15;7 "Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass."

      This is especialy problematic -- as this is traditionally misintrepreted as referring only to murder. But the original Hebrew is lo tirtzach, which clearly translates "Thou shalt not kill." Dr. Reuben Alcalay's Complete Hebrew/English Dictionary says that the word tirtzach, especially in classical Hebrew usage, refers to "any kind of killing," and not necessarily the murder of a human being.

      Commanded sacrifices...
      Ex.20:24 "An altar of earth thou shalt make unto me, and shalt sacrifice thereon thy burnt offerings, and thy peace offerings, thy sheep, and thine oxen: in all places where I record my name I will come unto thee, and I will bless thee."

      Never commanded sacrifices...
      Jeremiah 7:22 "For I spake not unto your fathers, nor commanded them in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, concerning burnt offerings or sacrifices:"
      Hosea 6:6 For I desired mercy, and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings.

      Slavery is OK ...
      Ephesians 6:5 Servants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh; not with eyeservice, as menpleasers; but in singleness of heart, fearing God.
      Colossians 3:22 Servants, be obedient to them that are your masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in singleness of your heart, as unto Christ.
      Titus 2:9-10 Servants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh; not with eyeservice, as menpleasers; but in singleness of heart, fearing God.
      Colossians 4:1 Masters, give unto your servants that which is just and equal; knowing that ye also have a Master in heaven.

      Slavery is NOT ok...
      Lev 19:18 Love thy neighbor as thyself.
      1 Cor.7:23 Be not ye the servants of men.
      Matt 4:10 Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve.
      Matt 23:10 Neither be ye called masters: for one is your Master, even Christ.

      The point is -- why would you listen to any one who worships the false name of "Jesus" when there is NO 'J' sound in Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek or Latin?

      Peace

    216. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by causeeffect · · Score: 1

      First, intellegent design does not contradict evolution. Intellegent design does not support evolution. Intelligent Design does qualify evolution, setting it more analogous to the evolution of internal combustion (or contemporary art, or the English language, or...). To provide contrast in the previous sentence, I'm searching for an analogy to fit the random process described by modern Evolution, but I can see none. Where else does a system grow more ordered of it's own power and volition? This is what frustrates me, what did frustrate me when I tried desperately to reject the idea of Higher Intelligence implied by Intelligent Design.

    217. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      I am interested in your understanding of some of the events in the Bible and their reasoning.

      First, if Satan has been promised by God to go to the Lake of Fire for what he performed BEFORE the creation of mankind, why is he tolerated to do what he does now on Earth?

      Why was Job allowed to be tested beyond all humans besides Christ for no other obvious reason than a discussion between Satan and God?

      Why does Satan continue to roam the Earth even after Christ has performed his actions on the Cross?

      Why in Genesis 6 are there angels that interbreed with humans and what is the connection withthe flood?

      What actions and methodology does Satan use to complete the "I wills" that he states in Isiah? Ie. what is his plan and how has he carried it out to this point. Here are the statements that he has made:
      I will ascend into heaven.
      I will exalt my throne above the stars of God.
      I will also sit on the mount of the congregation on the farthest sides of the north.
      I will ascend above the heights of the clouds.
      I will be like the Most High

      Also, knowing that God is omnipotent, how can Satan, an immensely powerfum and similarly intelligent being make these claims with any shred of hope to accomplish them? This really refers back to the frist question about the "I wills" but is an amplification.

      Why does Jesus Christ state that "there will be wars and "rumors of wars" until I return" and what does that mean?

      BTW, this is all part of the doctrine of the Angelic Conflict, however it is considerd from the point of view of the plans and purpose of Satan. If you are unfamiliar with the angelic conflict there is a brief discussion of it on Bible.org.

      Please form responses from your own theological background, not just in response to the limited information you have read about what I think.

      I am definitely interested in what you think and have been taught about these subjects.

      As for the things I stated not being part of any major denomination, I readily accept that. However, name one major denomination that consistently teaches systematic theology, that teaches from the original languages, or that uses isagogics and exegesis in their daily teaching.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    218. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Huh? Evidently, now you're REALLY misunderstanding me. Just because I was raised in that environment doesn't mean that I don't have a brain, nor does it mean that I'm not capable of evaluating those beliefs and rejecting them.

      I'm completely and utterly opposed to creationism being taught in school. I don't question evolution at all. I think there's still a great deal we don't know about it. (How much of a role does neo-group selection play? What, specificially, is it in the environment that determines whether and how certain genes are expressed? How did that sensitivity evolve?) But evolution itself it as much a fact as anything else that we know about the universe we inhabit.

      My point is this: I don't question people's faith. I can claim that the universe was created 6000 years ago, complete with fossils buried in the ground, carbon isotopes in differing proportions and red shifted stars scattered throughout the universe, and there's absolutely nothing anyone can do to disprove it. I don't believe any such claim, but I'm fully aware that there's no way to disprove it. If someone chooses to believe such a thing, its none of my business. My original post, to which you replied, wasn't intended to disprove that type of faith. It was intended to address the issue of whether or not such beliefs are in any sense scientific.

      Your point, that for many people faith is not scientific and thus not amenable to scientific dissection, is valid but irrelevant to this particular discussion. If you accept that creationism is a matter of faith, you remove any justification for having it taught in public schools. If you reject that and claim that creationism is scientific, then you must also accept that it is amenable to scientific dissection. One can't have it both ways simultaneously.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    219. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by GenSolo · · Score: 1

      Actually, I argue that the creator didn't come into existance at all but rather simply exists because time is only meaningful inside the universe. To come into existance requires that there was a point in time where the entity did not exist and a later time where the entity does exist. I argue that outside of the universe, it is possible that the entity simply exists because there are no different points of time.

      Furthermore, I noted in the post to which you reply that some suggest that the creator and the universe are in exactly the same thing, that essentially the universe is the inside of the creator and thus that the organization that we see as the universe exists within an entity that--basically--created itself.

      My primary argument, however, is that we can't know with any relatively-decent certainty anything about what exists beyond the universe (or even whether anything exists beyond the universe) and that therefore all attempts to discuss the root cause of the universe (or even to discuss whether or not such a cause exists) are conjecture at best based on our current ability to observe the universe. Therefore, I conclude that the possibility of a creator can't be dismissed as pseudoscience because the declaration that a creator does not exist is just as groundless. The correct statement is that we don't know whether or not a creator exists. Religious people (theists) believe that a creator exists. Athiests (use whatever word you want, I distinguish "athiest" from "agnostic") believe that a creator does not exist. Both positions are pure belief and without any scientific ground. Science shows that we can't reasonably demonstrate whether or not a creator exists, and therefore any statement affirming the existance or non-existance of said creator is completely unscientific.

    220. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by naasking · · Score: 1

      The deeper theorists dig the universe appears to get more random, not less. Virtual particles appear from seemingly nothing and then disappear again without a trace. At the lowest meaningful levels it is postulated that time and space have none of the linearity that we percieve at higher levels. Will we eventually find our universe to be the clockwork world idealized by Newton? Maybe. But let's be realistic, we're nowhere near that today.

      Ok, I have a few qualms with this:
      1. You are talking about a model of reality as if it were real.
      2. There is nothing in modern physics that says nor implies that any event, including virtual particle creation and annihilation, is noncausal. Unpredictable yes, noncausal no.

      I don't believe entaglement is what he was referring to when he said that "God does not play dice with the universe".

      Here's a good link explaining Einstein's philosophical difference of opinion on the interpretation quantum physics. It essentially boils down to causal determinism, and predictive determinism. While all events are causal, we cannot necessarily gather enough information to be able to predict outcomes even given a correct model of reality. I'm sure there are physicists who would adaondon all sense determinism, but it's my distinct impression they are few and far between (and not well regarded at all).

      By the explanation given in the link I included, the creative force is not described as causing the big bang, they sound to be one and the same.

      Not necessarily. G can give rise to E1 which can then cause E2 which can then cause the big bang. There can be any number of steps between G and the big bang. There is no reason why G cannot be the cause of V by transitive closure. As long as the intervening causal events are one-shots, ie. they merely cause the next stage of the process, I don't see why the proof would discount them.

      Again, from the one who posted the proof

      That being me... ;-)

      The poster confirms what you say that later in his book Hatcher goes more indepth about the nature of god, but he doesn't say what the nature is.

      It's mentioned further here (thought not in much more detail than I outlined here).

      It is said he has no other attributes at all which based on that proof, somewhat rules out an "all good" or "all knowing" creative force.

      To be fair, it's not at all clear to me what "non-composite" means exactly. What exactly does it mean to be a member of a set in the proof's model? I'm not sure that an "attribute" is a member of a set for instance.

      This may leave open the possibility for much interpretation unfortunately.

    221. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by gtkuhn · · Score: 1

      Imagine how it would be to be a high school student in that class knowing what you know now. Armed with the arguments of experts, you could chew the poor creation teacher up with the logical contradictions of intelligent design.

    222. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the clarification. Also thank you for making the distinction between atheist and agnostic. As an agnostic, I am endlessly frustrated by friends who after hours of discussing our beliefs still fall back to "So, you're saying you don't believe in god?"

      I do question your distinction between something that always was and our universe which appears to have had a beginning 15 billion years ago. Many current theory's suggest that the big bang may not have been the first of its kind. These theory's suggest that the big bang may have been proceeded by the universe collapsing in on itself. Another more current theory is M-Brane theory where it is supposed that the big bang could have been caused by the collision of two branes. Both of these ideas suggest that our universe may not have come from nothing but it's current incarnation is just another chapter in an eternal cycle.

      Your primary arguement is almost faultless, although I would have to say that the belief in a fantastically unfathomable universe + a fantastically unfathomable god is less credulous then the belief in a fantastically unfathomable universe alone. Believing in this crazy universe itself strains logic, but the damn thing just won't go away.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    223. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by naasking · · Score: 1

      Yet V is defined as the universal superset composed of everything that has been, is, or will be. But claiming that V includes everything that will ever be violates the underpinning of P1, since V cannot preceed the existence of its components. If V contains things that are not yet but will be, then V is an invalid set.

      The set of all states of finite state machine is quite well-defined regardless of the machine's current state; similarly, so is the set of all things that have been, is or will be.

      The argument "Therefore, there must exist..." is predicated upon the assumption that there must exist a cause for V. This isn't proven, nor is it listed in the definitions which define the assumptions.

      You are suggesting a noncausal phenomenon? Show me one shred of epistemological evidence that suggests the existence of noncausal phenomena and I'll accept your criticism as valid.

      Either that, or you are perhaps falling back on the possibility of an infinite regression of causes. Hatcher did specifically address this point, but either I didn't get it down in time, or his argument was fallacious. You'll note that I already addressed this point in my followup post noting the proof's potential flaws. I recall him discussing it, but I also recall either not following his reasoning or not being satisfied with his explanation.

      As I've noted elsewhere however, infinite regression of causes interacts negatively with entropy. An adequate resolution, on way or the other, remains to be seen.

      In fact, the definitions specifically say:

      "D1. B is without cause (uncaused) if, for no A does A->B hold"

      It specifically allows for the possibility of B being without cause. If one simply asserts that there is no A for which A -> V, V is therefore uncaused, there is no need to postulate G, and the rest of the proof falls apart.


      I believe Hatcher made that definition merely for completeness. Epistemologically, we have no experience with noncausal phenomena and no justification to believe they have any manifestation in reality. Until we do, we must omit them from any metaphysical arguments.

      You dismissed this above by deferring to the authority of physicists, but this proof isn't based upon the work of physics. It's self-contained - it depends only upon its own assumptions and definitions. It either stands or falls upon its own weight, not upon the word of physicists.

      I did not argue by physics authority. I made an epistemological argument based on observation (about which physicists have simply been more thorough).

      The proof is a metaphysical assertion of reality, so it cannot stand on its own two feet; it must also agree with our epistemological knowledge of the world.

      There are other problems as well. Let us say that g is the set of all things which are self caused. g contains one element - G. Thus we have, by definition, G el g. Since V is the superset of all things, it follows that g el V.

      Since G->V, then P2 says that G->g.

      On the other hand, given G el g, P1 says that G-/->g.

      So it is the case that both G->g and G-/->g, which violates P3.


      This is a misapplication of P1. g is logically equivalent to G, ie. g<=>G, so P1 doesn't apply since it reduces to G->G which is already established.

    224. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Lots of handwaving but no substance. Whether or not the set of state machines is quite well defined or not is irrelevant. P1 is predicated upon the premise that a set can not preceed the existence of its components. V does that. Whether or not V is a valid and well defined set within the context of set theory does not in any way change the fact that V violates one of the premises of this particular argument. If you remove that premise, then P1 falls.

      As for noncausal phenomenon, the exact argument you made concerning noncausal phenomenon applies equally well to self-causal phenomenon. Epistemologically, we have no experience with self-causal phenomena and no justification to believe they have any manifestation in reality. Until we do, we must omit them from any metaphysical arguments.

      As for g, you're now arguing that single member sets are invalid? That g and G are logically equivalent is the essence of my point. To put it more simply, any component is necessarily equivalent to a single set containing itself. Self-causal phenomenon is therefore a violation of P1. There is no reason to say that P1 doesn't apply, or that it's a misapplication of the postulate except that applying it so invalidates the argument you're trying to champion. The correct conclusion, in that case, isn't that the postulate doesn't apply but that the argument is invalid. If we're allowed to pick and choose which postulates apply to which phenomenon, I'll simply say that P1 doesn't apply to V.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    225. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by fenris_23 · · Score: 1


      I think the problem is that most of these people honestly believe that logic cannot be employed to infer anything truthful about creation.

      They believe, in faith and without question, that God created this universe X years ago (where X depends on the particular brand of faith) and no amount of logic could prove that statement false.

      Where they get mind-stabbingly annoying is when they attempt to use logic to disprove science. They are basically claiming that our logic cannot infer anything about creation and is therefore moot. However, they can employ their own logic - based upon sketchy facts and assumptions - to disprove scientific arguments.

      And I am not even here considering the people who make invalid arguments accompanied with their sketchy facts and assumptions. They make my head ache.

      For any theory to be scientific - inmo - the theory must be well-grounded and make many risky, testable, and (most importantly) falsifiable predictions. Most interpretations of Evolution fit that bill yet intelligent design does not. I place it in the philosophy bucket. Not that there is anything wrong with philosophy. Philosophers are better equipped to deal with these people anyway...

    226. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by LovedByGod · · Score: 1

      What is this philosophy 101, arnt there any real scientists out there that can defend evolution with something more than philosophy. I believe in God, that He crated the universe as He said He did and we live on a young earth. This forum is like the universities, if they are afraid of what you are saying they hide it and don't mod it up!!! Secular scientists where is your champion, the one who will debate science, not philosophy or the Bible!!!

    227. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by naasking · · Score: 1
      P1 is predicated upon the premise that a set can not preceed the existence of its components. V does that.

      How does V do that precisely? You stated that V is an invalid set, yet P1 makes no claims about the nature of V other than that each element of V must exist before V can be said to exist.

      As for noncausal phenomenon, the exact argument you made concerning noncausal phenomenon applies equally well to self-causal phenomenon. Epistemologically, we have no experience with self-causal phenomena and no justification to believe they have any manifestation in reality. Until we do, we must omit them from any metaphysical arguments.

      Uncaused phenomena is a much stronger claim than self-caused phenomena. You've pointed out a situation where the proof is making a verifiable claim which is good. You may formulate your own proof based on uncaused phenomena if you like, but the premise that causality can be violated is much stronger than the claim that a phenomenon can cause itself.

      As for g, you're now arguing that single member sets are invalid? To put it more simply, any component is necessarily equivalent to a single set containing itself. Self-causal phenomenon is therefore a violation of P1.

      I suggest you read the definition of P1 more carefully.
      We thus have the principle of limitation, which asserts that, for every composite phenomenon A, A cannot be a cause of any of its components.

      Now we can quibble over whether a single member set can be considered composite. It seems quite clear to me that it is not. g is not a composite phenomenon because it consists solely of G.
    228. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      How does V do that precisely? You stated that V is an invalid set, yet P1 makes no claims about the nature of V other than that each element of V must exist before V can be said to exist.

      The definition of V is ...the universal superset composed of everything that has been, is, or will be.

      What part of "or will [exist]" contradicting "must exist before V can be said to exist" is it that you don't understand?

      Uncaused phenomena is a much stronger claim than self-caused phenomena.

      It is? Why? Self-caused phenomena necessarily imvolves a temporal paradox, since it involves a phenomenon having an effect before it exists. (Unless you're postulating that G has always existed. But since G el V, that would mean V has always existed, and you specificially rejected that.) Uncaused phenomena violates causality, but it isn't at all proven that causality is a universal vice local phenomena. (In other words, causality may apply within the universe but not to the universe.)

      We thus have the principle of limitation, which asserts that, for every composite phenomenon A, A cannot be a cause of any of its components.

      Now we can quibble over whether a single member set can be considered composite. It seems quite clear to me that it is not. g is not a composite phenomenon because it consists solely of G.


      Certainly I'd quibble over that. More generally, I'd quiver over the existence of the limitation in the postulate. Why is it specified that P1 applies only to composite phenomena? What essential characteristic does composite phenomena have that non-composite phenomena lacks which leads to the distinction? What we have is an attempt to specificially define the postulates such that they lead to the conclusion we seek. This is commonly called "begging the quesion."

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    229. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite true. The sun's energy doesn't do any good unless it is directed properly, ie: Photosythesis. Take a look at a car that has been sitting in the sun for 20 years, with its now destroyed paint job, and tell me the sun's energy did something to make the car better.

    230. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      The only realy odd part is 3d objects are flat in 4d space so you can stack as many of them as you want in a 4d box. Now the math guy in me goes L,W,B,A,B,C when thinking about a 6d object but I can still take a few 3d objects and stack them like cards in 4d space. This is not true. In 4d space, 3d objects are still 3d. You're just compressing away extra dimension to see a picture you can actually conceptualize, which is (surprise) a projection of what a 4d object would look like. As well as you can conceptualize it, it's truly impossible to visualize a 4-dimensional object without compressing it into a 3-dimensional configuration. Doing otherwise would be tantamount to picturing a new color in your mind, that is not made up of any other previous colors.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    231. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Retric · · Score: 1

      stack them like cards in 4d space

      A 3d object in 4d space is like a 2d object in 3d space in that it's thin and flat. If you rotate them you could stand one / next to another \ to get /\. But if you have just one 3d object in 4d space it's going to fall over.

      Picture a new color... Ok X-Ray I have never seen one but fine there it is. In fact I know a lot about it and how it works and I have even pictured them coming out of a gun in the dentist's office and going though my mouth. It's not red blue or green but now your saying I can't picture it?.

      PS: What is your point about this stuff anyway?

    232. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by ezeri · · Score: 1

      For the first to the answer is very complicated, I realy can't think of any good way to put it into words with our writing pages of stuff. It has to do with the sovergnty of God and his plan for the whole of creation. Our love for him required the ability for us to turn away from him, or we would be mindless slaves. Thats about as good as I can answere in short.

      Why does Satan continue to roam the Earth even after Christ has performed his actions on the Cross?

      Jesus's actions were not to cast Satan into hell. The devil has always been, and will always be defeted, Jesus came here to save humanity.

      Why in Genesis 6 are there angels that interbreed with humans and what is the connection withthe flood?

      It was an example of the evil that had become the world.

      What actions and methodology does Satan use to complete the "I wills" that he states in Isiah? Ie. what is his plan and how has he carried it out to this point. Here are the statements that he has made

      He doesn't, he knows hes defeted, he knows what he has coming, the only thing he does is try to mess up God's creation and turn mankind against God.


      Also, knowing that God is omnipotent, how can Satan, an immensely powerfum and similarly intelligent being make these claims with any shred of hope to accomplish them? This really refers back to the frist question about the "I wills" but is an amplification.


      Pride. Why do people today chalenge God? Clearly we are far less qualified that satan would have been when he was the arcangel of worship, yet we persist.

      Why does Jesus Christ state that "there will be wars and "rumors of wars" until I return" and what does that mean?

      That there will be wars and rumors of wars until he returns? Perhaps I'm missing what your asking.

      However, name one major denomination that consistently teaches systematic theology, that teaches from the original languages, or that uses isagogics and exegesis in their daily teaching.

      The only one listed there that might not be common would be teaching from the original languages. There simply aren't that many people who know the original languages, but even those pastors who don't teach by reading from the original languages use concordances. And actualy, the pastor of the Calvary Chapel I go to does teach from the original languages.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    233. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1
      No, you simpleton, you've observed phenomenon which lead you to the assumption that there is such a frequency of light beyond what you can visibly see. Whooptee doo! That's not seeing a new color your dense cretin. It's the same thing for the issue of four dimensions, what you're saying is not true. In 4-dimensional space 3-dimensional shapes do not just "become thin and flat", they don't fucking change. You change them in your mind beacause the only way to effectively observe 4-dimensions of space is to compress it into 3-dimensions.

      You're not picturing a new color by looking at an X-ray machine, you imbecile, you see grey, and white, and whatever color the machine is. Then when they show you a resultant picture you see black, and blue, and white. Where's the "new color" you're picturing? Observing something's effects are not the same as picturing it. Just like condensing an image into a form you can understand is not picturing it.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    234. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Starcub · · Score: 1

      Jesus came to us 2000 years ago and did miraculous things things that people witnessed first hand; many people still didn't believe in him. Man has an amazing ability to rationalize anything that can't be immeadiately explained.

      Reality is sometimes a matter of perspectives. This leaves me wondering exactly how much secular science could even hope accomplish towards either proving or disproving that God created the universe. Probably many people would never believe God even existed unless they personally experienced heavenly intervention in thier own lives. I think that's why people often say God finds you before you find him.

      Those who are "converted", such as myself, often say they found him in the realization of his creations. But really, the process of coming to believe (which can be more powerfull than the actual realization) is only as powerful as it is unique to the individual believer.

    235. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Retric · · Score: 1

      A 1d object in 2d space is thin.
      A 2d object in 3d space is thin.
      A 3d object in 4d space is thin.
      A 122d object in 123d space is thin.

      Anyway, you seem to think like those people who say the mind is limited to language forgeting that I can tell Red 32,000 from Red 32,001 on a moniter there both red but they are not the same red. You can think about things you have never seen like black holes or quarks. When I think about X-ray's they have a collor that's distint from all others. It's not red, blue, green, or off white it's X-Ray.

      My moniter can show 1024*1024*1024*2 distint colors and even though I have not seen them all I can still picture them just fine.
      Picture a rock, now picture a rock with changes in density. Is it something you can see?

    236. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I said with out evidence.

      The "evidence" is all around; only a fool could miss it.

    237. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      Judging from the excerpt ...on a moniter there both red but they are not the same red. I can gather all I need to about your mental capacity. There's no use trying to trick anybody else.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    238. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Retric · · Score: 1

      And I can gather you have no understanding of context. When a simple example is used to illustrate the fact a mind can differentiate things without a preexisting linguistic context you get stuck with the details and miss the point. PS: Some people think seeing an IQ > 160 tells them something about my mental capacity but they and you have no clue.

    239. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      Simple really. Satan and his angels who did not participate in the angelic salvation event (whatever it was we do not know but it seperated permanently the 1/3 of the angels and Satan himself from Eternity in the presence of God and damned them to the Lake of Fire) claimed that God was unjust when he condemed them. In essence they said "how can a God who is love condemn them to eternal damnataion? Isn't that a conflict of character?" This declaration was made in front of the entire heavenly host. God, being who He is created mankind in order to prove that he is just, loving and righteous, as he has discribed Himself.

      Your appeal to free will is trumped by the fact that angels had the same ability, before man was ever created. Satan and his angels had the same problem that Adam had in the garden, rebellion. Why recreate the free will play again when you had not dealt witht he first one? Of course the reason is above.

      Unfortunately I do not think that you have ever heard of the angelic conflict. This is established Christian doctrine, regardless of the fact that many churches do not teach on it (this problem is epidemic in that many church teachers teach things that are patently false and ignore things that are part of systematic Christian theology. But who could tell you the differnce unless they teach systematic theology like in seminary and break down the scriptures from the original languages?). It explains why God allows Satan to continue to do what he does on the Earth as well as the reasoning for the creation of mankind. It explains (among many other things) why there are fallen angels, why believers achieve a status higher than angels after death, the events in Revelation, the steps that Satan has taken to try to assert himself over the creation of God, and that he has taken to try to prove God false, fallible, or devoid of the character and integrity that God himself claims that He has.

      As for Satan knowing that he is defeated, I think that you possibly know on an academic level the kind of power and intelligence that Satan has, however you seem to think that he posesses pride in quantities greater than either, to the point of shortcircuting his power and intelligence. It is easy to see how someone like a human could deny the character of God, however, if you had sat in the presence of God, posessed the knowledge of the Bible and an intimate knowledge of the Divine it is a different story. Your analogy tries to imply that a being with vastly greater understanding will behave like a being with lesser understanding, that a better perspective will lead to the same behavior that a poor perspective will. Not a strong argument.

      "He doesn't, he knows hes defeted, he knows what he has coming, the only thing he does is try to mess up God's creation and turn mankind against God

      Actually, Satan wants what is best for mankind, only he wants it apart from God himself. In this respect he does not see that there this is a differnce withut a distinction. Satan wats to achieve the goals listed in Isaiah. To do this he needs to achieve the goals that God set out to do that He says only He can accomplish. Like the establishment of the Millenium on Earth (1000 years of peace for the unitiated and thus Christ's promise that there will be literally large wars and small wars until he returns). Similarly, Satan used angels to try to pollute the genetic heritage of Christ in order to destroy the ability of Christ to achieve the position of High Priest and mediator from God toward mankind. If you understand priesthood you will know that to represent mankind to God the Father Christ Christ to be fully human, and to represent God to mankind he had to be fully God. The introduction of angelic ancestry into the history of mankind was a direct frontal asault on the incarnation of Christ and the work He was going to accomplish on the Cross.

      There is quite a bit more ont eh subject, however I think that you might benefit from the reference I noted on Bible.com, if on

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    240. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by ezeri · · Score: 1

      Why recreate the free will play again when you had not dealt witht he first one? Of course the reason is above.

      I think this is the fundamental misunderstanding that you are basing the rest of you doctrine on. God created free will because with out free will we could never truely love him and bring him glory. The absolute basis for everything God does is for his glory. There could be no love our relationship if we did not posess the ability to reject God and hurt him.

      Actually, Satan wants what is best for mankind, only he wants it apart from God himself. In this respect he does not see that there this is a differnce withut a distinction. Satan wats to achieve the goals listed in Isaiah.

      Your sounding like a satanist here, only mildy seperating yourself with the middle sentence. Satan does not in any way want what is best for mankind, he would love to destroy mankind. He wanted the same things as God, to be glorified above all, something that only God is deserving of. And knowing that he is defeated he seeks to derail Gods works, primarily relaiting to humans, to keep us from our rightful (though undeserved) place in relationship with God.
      Also, I don't see your reference to bible.com anywhere in you post.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
    241. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "God created free will because..."

      The angels had free will as well and ALL of them were created to bring God glory. The question you have to ask yourself is this...with a third of the angels in rebellion, promised to the lake of fire, why create mankind at that time. Sure it is impossible to know the mind of God, however, it is easy to realize that there is a connection between the promise to Satan of the lake of fire(which was never intended for mankind) and the fact that people who do not believe in Jesus will inhabit it with Satan and his angels.

      Sure, free will is important, it is a fantastic gift and singular demonstration of Grace. However, I take issue with your mentioning that we can hurt God. God is completely self sufficient. He posesses happiness as an intrinsic resulting from His integrity. The fact that mankind does not choose Him does not hurt him in the way that mankind would be hurt by rejection. Please consider also that God, being omniscient, understood all of the actions, motivations, thoughts, antecedents and factors involved in every decision ever made in Creation before it was ever made. Also consider that omniscience contains all of the possibilities that could have been and holds them in immediate frame of reference with those things that have and will occur. Based on this, and the fact that God is eternally happy by his own description, I think that it is anthropopathism to say that humans hurt God by rejecting Jesus Christ.

      As for my sounding like a Satanist I will just say that I am definitely not, and that my understanding of the history (and future history) of the universe as described in the Bible is probably fundamentally different than yours with respect to motivations and development of repercussions in interaction of Satan and his angels and God and his angels.

      Sorry about the link, I may have inadvertently edited it out, I definitely forgot that it was .org! Check out this page on Satanology for some info on the thoughts and motivations of Satan . The five "I will" statements are in themselves enough to refute the idea of Satan as merely a spoiling influence with only the motivation of harming God's plan. There is a deeper agenda there and this page might clue you in to some of it. There is more, however, and the info is available, but you might need to read a little systematic theological study of the subject and digest that first, even see if you want to believe what is presented before exploring further.

      "Satan does not in any way want what is best for mankind, he would love to destroy mankind. He wanted the same things as God, to be glorified above all,

      This sentence combo is contradictory. If mankind was created to give glory to God, and Santan wants to be glorified above all, he therefore seeks the glorification that mankind will give to God for himself. Destroying the creation of God does nothing for Satan, he wants to rule over it and receive all the glory and worship (remember when Satan offerd Christ all the kingdoms of the world if He would worship him?) that God the Father should receive.

      From the perspective of God, of course Satan is defeated. He was defeated before he ever sinned because of who and what God is. This, however, does not stop God from allowing him to carry out his plans. Why? Because the failure of Satan and the glorification of mere humans above the angels through the inheritance of Christ is an example of the character of God that all the angels need to see. That among other things, but to consider Satan defeated in his own mind, to think that he has no other goal than to disrupt God's plan for mankind, is in direct conflict with the scripture as well as logic. If you consider that God's plan for mankind also is intertwined with Satan being deposited into the lake of fire then I guess your statement if technically correct, however there is more going on than just obstructionism.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    242. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by naasking · · Score: 1
      What part of "or will [exist]" contradicting "must exist before V can be said to exist" is it that you don't understand?

      The part that causes a contradiction expressible within the theory. "Or will be" is a statement from our human perspective. Sets and logic are time invariant. Where is the notion of time codified in the axioms of the propositional calculus or set theory? The notion of a subset is a very well defined concept within the theory, and V is simply defined as the universal superset, ie. the union of all possible sets. The contradiction you are inventing is a consequence of your informal reasoning (see Zeno's paradox), and does not exist within the theory itself.

      Now, if you are saying that in our current state of being, reality (as defined in the proof) cannot be said to "exist" because phenomena have yet to occur, then I agree. Until the end of existence, "reality" cannot be said to "exist" in the set theoretic sense of the word. There is no contradiction in this conclusion, and it does not negate our own "existence" in the colloquial sense of the word.

      V has a well-defined "existence" expressible within the theory, and that's all that matters here.

      It is? Why? Self-caused phenomena necessarily imvolves a temporal paradox, since it involves a phenomenon having an effect before it exists. (Unless you're postulating that G has always existed. But since G el V, that would mean V has always existed, and you specificially rejected that.)

      And if time itself was caused by G? Here we fall in the trap of informal reasoning. All the proof asserts is that G contains within itself sufficient reason for its own existence. This further does not mean V always existed as G is merely a component of V.

      In other words, causality may apply within the universe but not to the universe.

      What is this mystical character you ascribe to "the universe"? What is the universe but the sum of its parts? If causality does not apply to the universe, then it similarly does not apply to all of its parts. It's certainly possible, but it's an extremely extraordinary claim; you'll have to take it up with Occam.

      Certainly I'd quibble over that. More generally, I'd quiver over the existence of the limitation in the postulate. Why is it specified that P1 applies only to composite phenomena? What essential characteristic does composite phenomena have that non-composite phenomena lacks which leads to the distinction? What we have is an attempt to specificially define the postulates such that they lead to the conclusion we seek. This is commonly called "begging the quesion."

      To eliminate all possible misunderstandings from 4-year old hasty notes, I found an online chapter from Hatcher's book containing the original proof, so you may peruse it at your leisure. Notice in particular:

      This means that A contains a sufficient reason for the existence of B. More generally, everything B that exists must either be preceded by a cause A different from B (A -> B and A != B), or else contain within itself a sufficient reason for its existence (B -> B)

      Which answers your previous question of "uncaused" phenomena vs. "self-caused" phenomena, ie. my notes were incorrect as Hatcher draws no distinction between the two; he must not have been very clear on this during the lecture. The argument still necessitates causality to hold however.

      I also just realized that your apparent contradiction (first proposed here) is actually incorrect. Here is the relevant section:

      There are other problems as well. Let us say that g is the set of all things which are self caused. g contains one element - G. Thus we have, by definition, G el g. Since V is the superset of all things, it follows that g el V.
      Since G->V, t

    243. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      I can also gather that you have virtually no understanding of the word "context" or anything else you're talking about.

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    244. Re:Of course there will be lots of comments! by bani · · Score: 1

      If god is omnipotent, then god is cruel via inaction to allow needless suffering to occur.

      If god can't act, then god isn't omnipotent.

  153. Re:Atheism also a religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aside from, you know, the lack of churches, holy books, priests, and fanatics who kill people because of their god's commandments.

    Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, Franco, Pol Pot, Mao Zedong ... you Atheists have proud company.

  154. You're being dumb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I'm sorry. I'm a firm evolutionist and not an ID proponent, but your example was completely meaningless.

    1. It's random, but it was still created by an "intelligent" designer - you - using an already existing set of complex rules and mechanisms.

    2. It is not complex compared to DNA.

    3. It doesn't do anything.

    You need to read up on DNA, chaos theory and maybe a good basic logic book.

  155. It is called Genetic Engineering by ugmoe · · Score: 1
    Intelligent design exists today - it is called genetic engineering which produces genetically modified organisms. http://www.safe-food.org/-issue/ge.html

    Genetic engineering is a laboratory technique used by scientists to change the DNA of living organisms.

    DNA is the blueprint for the individuality of an organism. The organism relies upon the information stored in its DNA for the management of every biochemical process. The life, growth and unique features of the organism depend on its DNA. The segments of DNA which have been associated with specific features or functions of an organism are called genes.

    Molecular biologists have discovered many enzymes which change the structure of DNA in living organisms. Some of these enzymes can cut and join strands of DNA. Using such enzymes, scientists learned to cut specific genes from DNA and to build customized DNA using these genes. They also learned about vectors, strands of DNA such as viruses, which can infect a cell and insert themselves into its DNA.

    With this knowledge, scientists started to build vectors which incorporated genes of their choosing and used the new vectors to insert these genes into the DNA of living organisms. Genetic engineers believe they can improve the foods we eat by doing this. For example, tomatoes are sensitive to frost. This shortens their growing season. Fish, on the other hand, survive in very cold water. Scientists identified a particular gene which enables a flounder to resist cold and used the technology of genetic engineering to insert this 'anti-freeze' gene into a tomato. This makes it possible to extend the growing season of the tomato.

  156. The Fundamentalists Got It Wrong by RagingChipmunk · · Score: 0, Troll

    The fundamentalists got it all wrong, and so do the evolutionists. It is absolutely clear in the Rig-Veda that the world was created by Purusha.

    This 2000yr old documented view of creation is more consistent than the bullshit "evolution" that has been around for 50 years, and has changed its story every decade or so.

    Lets see how the fable of 'evolution' holds up over centuries, or millenia. 100 years from now, evolutionists will be written up as a minor blip of humanist phillosophy that went zealously wrong.

    --
    The only PT Boat Journal on the web: http://www.PT171.org
  157. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by 2marcus · · Score: 1


    The problem is that Intelligent Design _is_ junk science, the same way that Uri Geller claiming to bend spoons with his mind is junk science. With the difference that Intelligent Design has a scary consortium of religious freaks pushing it so hard that it makes people who don't really understand biology think that there is reasonable grounds for disagreement.

    And just one note: why is it so hard for you to believe that the human species originated from a single celled organism when you yourself were once a single cell?

    Now, go learn something about molecular biology. Then spend some time comparing amino acid sequences for a given protein between animals that are closely related (say two mammals) and animals that are distantly related (say a mammal and a fish). Just this one exercise done properly will show you how ridiculous it is to believe that current species don't have common ancestors.

    -Marcus

  158. String theory... by Goonie · · Score: 1
    If I recall the pop-science summary of string theory in a PBS doco on the subject, the fact that it isn't possible to test it right now is a major concern with the theory (frankly, it sounds like it's more accurately described as "the string theory hypothesis" or "string theory hypotheses"). The scientific nature of the enterprise has therefore been questioned.

    However, there is still a reasonable hope that some time in the future that it will be possible to test string theory. ID is fundamentally untestable.

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    1. Re:String theory... by DavidTC · · Score: 3, Informative
      The problem is that 'string theory' isn't a theory in competition with, say, quantum mechanics.

      Right now, it's mathmatically identical to quantum mechanics , or at least 99.999999% identical, and no one is sure where it's not.

      The only reason string theory exists is we know quantum mechanics can't explain the universe, because it falls apart at macroscopic levels.

      And we have no useful theory of what's actually going on in QM...or, rather, we have too many of them. Transactional and Many Worlds are the best two quantum theories.

      We have the math, and nothing behind it, we have no idea what it means. Hence calling it quantum 'mechanics' instead of quantum 'theory'. Quantum mechanics is not hard, we had that like 60 years ago. Quantum theory is some crazy shit, and working on it makes no sense when we don't know why QM breaks at the macroscopic scale. (Aka, collapsing the wave function, which we don't understand at all.)

      So we need a theory that works exactly, or almost exactly, like quantum mechanics. Except it needs to stop working like that at a certain scale for an explicably reason.

      So someone realized that, hey, you can explain that if particles are actually strings...

      String theory is a theory that needs to exist and be testable, but really isn't all the way there yet. They've got some math that matches QM, but that's it.

      In fact, I think they've basically turned that into m-brane theory, where these 'strings' are actually two n-dimensional plains that intersect with each other...

      And if they were teaching string theory in schools, scientists would probably have a problem with that, too. ;)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  159. Why is the US is falling behind in the sciences? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could it be we prefer to replace science and technology with ill conceived human mysticism?

    We are racing to be equal with the idiots that promote terrorism as the work of God/Allah.

  160. Biblical Correctness and Science by tjstork · · Score: 0

    Evolution should not be placed in the same category of theory as hard physics, say, relativity. It is a model that cannot be tested, whereas hard physics, such as the standard model, can.

    That said, any levels of inference drawn from "creationism" is far less valid than evolution.

    The bible contradicts itself. For example, how did Cain, after killing his brother, ostensibly the first children of humanity, go and live in another city?

    Inference rules are more of a stretch in evolution. Creationists criticize sedimentary dating while at the same time accepting a "lineage" based on the ages of biblical descendants. Creationists ignore radioactive dating.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Biblical Correctness and Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Evolution should not be placed in the same category of theory as hard physics, say, relativity. It is a model that cannot be tested, whereas hard physics, such as the standard model, can.

      Evolution can be tested and has been tested. It's also changed a lot from Darwin's time because of this testing. I agree it's not the same a physics, but physics is pretty much always show to be wrong, in that it is always an over simplification and a later theory replaces earlier ones.

    2. Re:Biblical Correctness and Science by tjstork · · Score: 1

      I can test Einstein's relativity by measuring the gravitational disruption of a beam of a light. Einstein will predict for me exactly how much that beam should deflect.

      There is a mathematical equation, a measurable prediction given initial inputs, a means of measuring the outputs of that system. Evolution has none of those characteristics.

      Does Evolution make any predictions that we can test in isolation? Can I put a species on an island with some exact constraints and predict -when- the new species will arrive? Does it make any predictions about human evolution? We've sequenced the Humane Genome and so it ought to be reasonable to calculate down the road which links in our molecules are most likely to disrupt and what sort of evolution we can have and when. Or, for any other species for that matter.

      Evolution is certainly more reasonable than creationism, but it is still pretty crappy as a science and people who defend it should not be misrepresenting it as something that it is not.

      --
      This is my sig.
    3. Re:Biblical Correctness and Science by demachina · · Score: 1


      "Can I put a species on an island with some exact constraints and predict -when- the new species will arrive?"

      You are trying to place ridiculous constraints on the proof. There is absolutely no requirement to predict when mutations arrive or what they will look like to prove evolution. All that is necessary is to observe that mutations do appear over time, some of them are propagated, and some of them are improvements.

      "We've sequenced the Humane Genome and so it ought to be reasonable to calculate down the road which links in our molecules are most likely to disrupt and what sort of evolution we can have and when."

      Dude, you apparently lack the most basic understanding of the theory behind evolution. The mutations at the heart of evolution are semi random and triggered by a myriad of possible sources, exposure to natural radiation and accidents of biochemistry being the leading contenders. Most of them are bad and decrease the chances for the organism's survival but some are either neutral or positive for survival and are propagated. Over the immense time span of earth's history this mechanism almost certainly leads to diversification of species.

      Sequencing of human, animal and plant genomes has supported evolution to an extent already and probably will more so over time, not by allowing us to predict evolution but by illuminating how extensively we share our genome with our near cousins, especially the apes, how much commonality there is among all species, and exactly where the commonality and divergence in our genome is. As more genomes are sequenced and our understanding of them improves, we can compare them and most probably see all the places where mutations and evolutionary breaks occurred.

      The one obvious element of predictability we gain in studying genomes is that we have already developed the ability to create artificial evolution through genetic engineering. In so doing man is already exploiting the mechanisms of evolution, but removing most of the randomness that nature is forced to rely on. Through generic engineering we have pretty much proved the mechanics of evolution it just takes nature a whole lot longer to exploit them sucessfully.

      All of this doesn't prove anything about the origin of life, maybe these mechanisms were designed by an intelligence of one form or another whether it be divine, or extraterrestrial or maybe they were an accident but the case is really strong that evolution is a key mechanism by which life diversifies.

      --
      @de_machina
  161. Re:Evolutionary Naturalism Vs Intelligent Design by kindbud · · Score: 1

    It takes just as much faith to believe in evolution as it does Intelligent design, more in many people's estimation (Drs Plantinga, Creamer et al).

    No it doesn't.

    One of the primary reasons is that the very act of evolution requires certain assumptions and that the probability of evolution creating cognative ability approaches null.

    What was your control group for this experiment?

    It is a very sound argument which as yet the best of natural philisophers have yet to overturn.

    Can you name some of the philosophers who have failed? I'd be interested to read them.

    --
    Edith Keeler Must Die
  162. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +5, Underrated Insightful Troll

  163. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by ajs · · Score: 1

    "Don't forget theses other great scientific theories.
    Eugenics.
    "

    You're way off base here. Eugenics is not a theory, it is a set of methods, conclusions and practices. The theory on which it is based is natural selection. That theory combined with plant and animal breeding practices pointed scientists in the late 1800s (especially Sir Francis Galton) toward the idea that human development could be refined and controled by controling the process of reproduction (esentially breeding humans).

    The THEORY here is rock-solid. The PRACTICE would require an unquestionably rational, unbiased and fair nexus of control (for example, one that would not select a racial group for exclusion because they happen to include disproportionate numbers of bankers). As evidenced by eugenics programs from sterilization programs to Nazi Germany, there is simply no way to apply the theories behind eugentics safely in the large, and probably not on a small scale either.

    "That all stomach ulcers are caused by stress and no way bacteria could cause it."

    Ah, good example! It is, however, a myopic one. The amount of information learned about the human gastric system between 1800 and 1950 is frankly stunning, and nearly all of it has been proven sound time and time again.

    Of course, there are areas in which any theory breaks down, and while the system should resist capricious change, it must allow established theories to be modified (or it's not science). This is exactly what happened in the case you cite, and we now not only accept the modified theory, but apply it successfuly to treating disease.

    This is one of the problems with I.D. It chooses certain areas in which the theory of the evolution of species is weak, and assumes that that weakness can be generalized to the whole theory. It cannot.

    "Even that the earth stands still and the Sun moves around it. That was the scientific thinking for over 2000 years"

    The scientific method has not been in use for 2000 years, so there was no "scientific thinking" for most of that period. You meant to say, "popular philosophical theory."

    "and watch out what would happen to you if you disagreed with that scientific theory."

    Actually, what would happen to you if you disagreed with most established philosophical theories was simple: the CHURCH would attack you. Remember that the sole word on knowledge in the western world between the fall of the Roman Empire and the Renaissance WAS the church.

  164. micro vs. macro evolution. by FatSean · · Score: 0, Interesting

    I was raised in a 'Church of Christ'. These people were better than your usual fundie...they did analyze the bible and often used multiple translations/languages to get subtle nuances. They readilly admitted that they had to choose what to believe and that it was a matter of faith. You just had to read it and see what fell together in your mind. There wasn't a dogma for the church...there often was disagreement about the meanings of passages and what god meant about hot topics.

    The general feeling, even among these 'enlightened' christians was that micro-evolution (changes in a species like what Darwin saw) is true because it is aobservable. They could not accept the idea that humans evolved from fish, calling it Macro evolution.

    I thought that was an interesting position to hold .

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:micro vs. macro evolution. by corngrower · · Score: 1
      Well, the thing is that macro evolution comes about over a very long period of time (millions, tens of millions of years) by a series of very small changes, micro-evolution.

      Suppose you take a car, and make a small change every 10 years. over 1000 years you'ld have made just 100 changes. Over a million years you'ld have made 100,000 changes. Over 10 million years you'ld have made 1 million changes. What are the chances you'ld recognize this car as having 'evolved' from the original after so many changes?

      Having pairs of genes, and the concept of 'dominant' and 'recessive' genes also facilitates more substantial, but less frequent evolutionary changes.

  165. I have to wonder... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    Just how balanced the article is.
    "The Dover, Pennsylvania school board recently adopted a policy requiring that high school science teachers teaching evolution tell their students that evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again, is flawed, and that intelligent design is a valid alternative."
    That statement is without a doubt inflamitory. The theory of evolution is still just a theory. It has been changed time and time again as new evidence has been unearthed and our understanding of biology has increased, as all good science should. There are still huge debates about punctuated vs gradual evolution. All sorts of theories about the role that reto virus may play and lets not even get into the whole earth as god/goddess theory that some like to spout. Intelligent design is a huge term that can mean anything from traditional creationism to the very abstract "God made the laws of the Universe so life could evolve."
    All to often I hear people making statements about science that are every bit as absolute as fundamentalist make about God.
    You will see many people here making statements about how evolution has been proven time and time again. A true scientific statement would be closer to this. "Evolution is currently the best theoretical model we have for life developing on the Earth. There is even observational evidence of life adapting to new environments through natural selection within a species." I have no problem with them teaching that the Theory of evolution is still got some questions that need to be answered. That is what science is all about. I will have issues if they try to teach "fake" science like I have seen some fundie meetings I have been too. Right up with had to be that statement that the speed of light is NOT a constant in a vacuum over none quantum distances!
    I would say that it is possible to teach intelligent design as a science. The only problem I see is that would have to be a cosmology class, not a biology class.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  166. ID is just a fancy way to say 'punt!' by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

    its giving up. its not rational thought. its the lack of any real idea - to keep people cozy at night, thinking they have a real answer to a troubling problem (ie, where did we come from).

    fear is such a strong motivator. it causes people to synthsize answers when real ones can't be easily found.

    the fact that you have no acceptable answer to a question is NOT a justification to make one up (synthesize one) yourself.

    in a nutshell, ID is just a synthetic proposition. in its simplest form, it says "because we don't have a complete explanation for our creation, and creation seems awefully complicated for us humans to undersand right now, lets just say that some smarter thing figured it out and is pulling the strings. yeah, lets say that. then we can sleep well at night.

    imagine if I tried that crap on a school test. I don't know the answer, so I say 'I don't know, but god knows, ask him!'. do you think that would fly well on any of my math or science tests?

    deferring the problem is not a solution to a problem. saying that 'god made us' simply just defers the problem. pushes it out there, but makes no real attempt to understand it solve it.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  167. Nah by FhnuZoag · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Nah. ID parallels creationism's key flaws - it moves the action from that which can be examined to that which can not. Philosophically, and scientifically, we don't know what intelligence is. The definition of it shifts from person to person. There is no way we can test for it, no way we can measure it, no way we can explain it. In fact, there is no way we can even prove that intelligence by any definition actually exists. (especially not in other people) What ID does is to assume that certain aspects of life are tied up in the big black box of 'intelligent designer', and so can never be questioned. That's when the whole nontheory loses all scientific credibility.

    1. Re:Nah by Luveno · · Score: 1
      we don't know what intelligence is. The definition of it shifts from person to person.

      As does the presence of it.

    2. Re:Nah by Sheepdot · · Score: 1

      I agree. Which is why I find evolution being purported as "fact" as a problem. Students should be aware of both evolution and ID and the FLAWS inherent in both of them. For example, let's take your argument, "examination" and apply it to evolution:

      1) Where in animal evolution did the eye develop? All "animals" have eyes, despite their functionality (deep sea fish, bats). Why such a rigid system?

      2) Where are the fossils of non-vertebrate to vertebrate creatures? We don't have any conclusive evidence that a living organism ever evolved a vertebrate.

      3) Where did gender come into play? What species first developed both male and female reproductive systems and then spawned off creatures with only one or the other?

      4) When did we evolve from chemicals to bacteria? More importantly, why hasn't this been observed in a lab?

      Micro-evolution is what is commonly accepted and should be taught, but where did macro-evolution come from, and why shouldn't valid alternatives be proposed with the condition that NONE currently meet the requirement of being proven scientifically?

    3. Re:Nah by EllisDees · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >Where in animal evolution did the eye develop?

      It has developed many times, maybe originally in something like this.

      >Where are the fossils of non-vertebrate to vertebrate creatures

      right here.

      >Where did gender come into play?

      Possibly 2.5 to 3.5 billion years ago.

      >When did we evolve from chemicals to bacteria?

      We don't know, but this has nothing to do with evolution. It deals with what has happened to life since it began.

      >Micro-evolution is what is commonly accepted and should be taught, but where did macro-evolution come from

      There is absolutely no difference between 'micro-evolution' and 'macro-evolution'. They are exactly the same process, just on different timescales.

      >and why shouldn't valid alternatives be proposed with the condition that NONE currently meet the requirement of being proven scientifically?

      Maybe because there is no such thing as 'proven scientifically'. There is one theory that has so much supporting evidence behind it that nothing else even comes close to being in the same standing. ID is not a valid alternative, since it has *no* supporting evidence unless you consider incomprehension to be evidence.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
  168. No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by pbhj · · Score: 1

    >>> "Thats always something that has bugged me a little about religion [I'm atheist]. People prefer to be able to blame/pass the buck of onto something/somebody else rather than just say 'I don't know'. But then again, thats their choice)"

    I prefer a logically consistent scientific explanation. But unfortunately my empirical data goes against that.

    Also, what's your proof that a god does not exist. Why not agnostic??

    Indulge me in a short story: when I was 10 years old I decided god didn't exist due to 'Natural Disasters'. Then I grew up and realised I didn't have that much evidence; I determined that agnosticism was the only scientific viewpoint.

    Later I found faith in God through Jesus Christ, from a personal experience. But I still think agnosticism is the only _scientific_ position.

    1. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by haluness · · Score: 1

      Also, what's your proof that a god does not exist

      I have none. The reason for my stance, is that I don't see a need for a god. Yes, there are unknowns. I just prefer to mark them as unknowns and wait for answers to come.

      Certainly, if some God entity was shown to exist then I would have to change my stance.

      My point is, its not that I'm not sure about the existence of God, its that I don't see a need for a god.

    2. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by Fiver- · · Score: 1
      Are you a Santa Claus agnostic, or a Santa Claus atheist? You don't need proof to not believe in preposterous shit, or apparently, to believe in preposterous shit.

      Hey, did you know there's a dragon in my garage?

    3. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by pbhj · · Score: 1

      >>>" Are you a Santa Claus agnostic, or a Santa Claus atheist?"

      I have strong evidence to suggest that Santa Claus is a legend based on a real human being. There's also strong evidence to suggest that Santa Claus (the fat present-delivering dude) is a story used by parents to stop their children from getting the wintertime blues. So I believe in Santa Claus (the person) but not in Santa Claus the legend. HTH.

      Tell me about your dragon, I suspect you are lying. Circumstantial evidence is against the existence of dragons (though there appearance on the Welsh flag and in oriental art is intriguing), perhaps you could bolster your position with a photograph.

      Thanks. :0)>

    4. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by Fiver- · · Score: 1

      It's an invisible dragon.

    5. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by technothrasher · · Score: 1
      Also, what's your proof that a god does not exist. Why not agnostic??


      You are confusing atheism with dogma. Atheism and agnosticism are not mutually exclusive. Atheism is the lack of belief in a god. Agnosticism is the position that one cannot know if a god exists.

      In otherwords, I can be an atheist but hold open the possibility that some future evidence may change my belief. This is what most people who describe themselves as atheist mean; what you are incorrectly calling 'agnostic'.

    6. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by alienw · · Score: 1

      Also, what's your proof that a god does not exist.

      You can't prove that something doesn't exist; therefore, the burden of proof is on you, to prove that god DOES exist. So far, nobody has been able to accomplish that, or even show evidence that supports the hypothesis that god exists.

    7. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by mooingyak · · Score: 1

      I call that position "Apatheism", as in I don't care if there's a god.

      --
      William of Ockham had no beard. The most likely explanation is that it was chewed off by squirrels every morning.
    8. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My dictionary calls atheism "denial of the existence of God or gods and of any supernatural existence, to be distinguished from agnosticism, which holds that the existence cannot be proved".

    9. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by pbhj · · Score: 1

      Presumably you have /some/ basis for your belief?

    10. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      There are little green men who live under my bed. They are magical men and only I can see them. They will not show themselves to most other people.

      --

      I am an atheist and I do not believe god exists until there is an actual proof that he/she/it exists. When there is scientific proof or very strong empirical evidence of his/it/her existance.

      At the point that you can provide that scientific proof and show me the empirical evidence that can be verified by independent observers I will not believe in his/her/it existance.

      I don't consider myself to be an agnostic.

    11. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by Fiver- · · Score: 1

      Not really. Just this 2000 year-old book I found.

      I think he used to live at Carl Sagan's place, but recently he's just been travelling around the country doing odd-jobs, igniting lighthouse beacons, etc.

    12. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      Not only is it invisible, but if you question the existence of the dragon, it will condemn you to an eternity of suffering.

      So be quiet and do what the dragon tells you.

    13. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by pbhj · · Score: 1

      And presumably a burning sensation whenever you enter your garage?

    14. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by pbhj · · Score: 1

      that's about what I thought!

    15. Re:No evidence for God |- Atheism ?? by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      I think there needs to be a distinction between weak atheism, strong atheism and agnosticism.

      I was agnostic for a long time till I realized what weak athesim was. Basically, as I've seen:
      Agnostic isn't sure if there is a god, and thinks about it.

      Strong Atheist is sure there is NOT a god, and takes this on "Faith" if you will.

      A Weak Atheist just lacks faith in a god. This is a subtle distinction. It's not anti-god like Strong Atheists are, it's not confused like agnostics are. There's just nothing there at all.

      To clarify a little, you wouldn't expect it to be a matter of faith that there isn't an invisible pink elephant in your room. You just lack belief in it, it's not that you go around proclaiming to anyone that it doesn't exist, it's just there's no reason for you independantly to even think about the possibility.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
  169. Old Testament by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a christian who believes that god was the first scientist and created us via evolution. However, I reject the old testament as it has nothing to do with my faith, it is the jewish holy book and contradicts almost everything Jesus taught in the new testament, I fail to understand how this decrepit, women hating, bigotted, wealth supporting book has anything to do with the teachings of Jesus Christ who taught tolerance and love to all.

    1. Re:Old Testament by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 1

      Rejecting the Old Testament is rejecting the prophecies that let us know that Jesus was who He claimed to be.

      It's rejecting the Ten Commandments, whereas Jesus said "If you love me, you will keep my commandments." Sure He clarified the commandments into the 2 Great Commandments, but He never suggested that we weren't bound by them.

      It's rejecting the history of the Jewish people that lead up to the situation where Jesus was born.

      The only thing that the New Testament is clear on that we should reject is the Jewish Ceremonial Law, because that defines sacrifices and behaviors that were necessary before the sacrifice of Jesus.

      Rejecting the rest is ignoring 6000ish years of divinely inspired writings and history, to include some prophecies (Daniel) which according to some perspectives have not been fulfilled yet.

    2. Re:Old Testament by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All commandments are made null and void by the one commandment "Treat others as you would wish to be treated yourself". The prophecies are also null and void as they described a triumphant son of david, not a humble carpenter who was not only reluctant to perform his duties as the "son of god" but also extremely reluctant to die for mans sins. The old testament describes a vengeful and powerful god, the new describes a forgiving, understanding god, both describe miracles, however the miracles in the new testament are a little more believeable than talking bushes, splitting seas, woman being created from a spare rib and talking snakes with apple obsessions.

      "The only thing that the New Testament is clear on that we should reject is the Jewish Ceremonial Law, because that defines sacrifices and behaviors that were necessary before the sacrifice of Jesus."

      Change it to "were never necessary" and I'd agree.

      The jewish faith has nothing to do with christianity, the God isn't even the same, so how can the religions be connected. Jews aren't prepared to accept christ, I'm not prepared to accept them and their blinkered and incorrect view of "history". The old testament is a book of control not of religion and I'm not prepared to accept that level of interference in my life.

  170. problem with the educational system by spiritraveller · · Score: 1
    You teach the fact, with respect for dissenting viewpoints, just like any other topic.

    No. You teach with respect for dissenting viewpoints that have some evidence of truth. You don't just go out and teach whatever people want to hear.

    "Respect for dissenting viewpoints" is code for "pretend that everyone is right, regardless of what the facts indicate."

    If you are discussing the birth place of a famous person, and there exists some doubt about the location, most decent textbooks discuss the question.

    Sure, if there is some valid doubt. But not just because someone out there disagrees. A lot of people believe that Elvis is still alive. Our textbooks don't discuss that hypothesis.

    Evolution and counter-evolutionists should work the same way. There are holes in the most complete theory of evolution. They should be addressed. You can point out it is a theory that is not able to entirely proven, like a mathematical equation might be.

    The problem with pointing out that it's a theory is that 5th graders, and apparently a lot of adults, do not understand what the word "theory" means in a scientific context.

    Fundamentalists have been very successful with using that word to indicate to their followers that there exists no more evidence for evolution than for creationism, because heck! It's just a theory.

    I am all for teaching kids about the scientific process and THEN teaching that evolution is a theory. But if you don't teach them how science really works, and you teach them that evolution is "just a theory" you're really just establishing Christian Fundamentalism as the religion of the state.

    I think there might be something about that in our constitution.

  171. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by jag7720 · · Score: 0

    So u attack sumthin else wen u kant pruve me rong... speling erors or not Im stil write. du - hu

  172. If you're really interested by andydiditagain · · Score: 1

    If you're really interested in hearing both sides of this subject I would recommend the following: www.drdino.com, The Case for series by Lee Strobel and of course C.S. Lewis. You may be surprised if you give it a chance.

    1. Re:If you're really interested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well...back to the past...

      before you know it, they start claiming that the earth is flat..
      the scary thing is that these fundamentalist stop accepted WOW in other ways too. Recentley, under their influence the US (more or less blackmailed) dropped support for 'standard medication' on a WHO list of WW available cheap medicins and drugs.
      It affected an anti-conception drug and a safe abortion drug. (WW accepted as known and safe drugs) these drugs are now 'banned', with the motivation 'unwanted side effects', and this undoubtley will cause more deaths due to unsafe abortion practices in poor countries caused by the absence of a safe drug.

      a small group of religious fundamentalist (conservative Christians) is able to impose their thinking and methods on the whole world.

      Welcome to the good 'ol -medieval- US of A...

      obi

    2. Re:If you're really interested by 2marcus · · Score: 1
      Have you _read_ the website you want me to look at?

      It supports the 6000 year old Universe theory!

      The only way in which I was surprised was how blatantly stupid this website is. I would hope that most middle schoolers could pick this page apart. At least Intelligent Design has _some_ infintesimal philosophical merit, your drdino site is just absurd.

    3. Re:If you're really interested by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Drdino is run by Kent Hovind, who is a known crackpot. Please try better next time.

  173. Re:Atheism also a religion by hahiss · · Score: 1

    I wish you'd read what I'd written more carefully, since I didn't say that there was proof that all religions are wrong---I said there is no reason to endorse them. Moreover, it doesn't say that we ought to choose atheism because of our faith---i.e. for no reason---but rather because of the preponderance of evidence. So, let me put this simply so that you won't quote me out of context again (feel free to read this slowly and out loud if you're having trouble following this):

    Atheism is not a religion because it eschews supernatural explanations; it has no articles of faith, as all of its claims are open for challenge. The openness to challenge doesn't mean that EVERY challenge is a good one. The challenge that, for example, god created the world in six days six thousand years ago is a bad one.

    The false presupposition in your comment---in addition to an almost willful misreading of what I've written---here is that all views are equally good, have equal evidence, are equally plausible, etc. Since the preponderance of evidence is in favor of a scientific explanations---one which denies that faith has any epistemic value---one ought to choose that over supernaturalistic explanations. Indeed, it is awfully difficult to see what role reason even plays in religious thought, given that faith is always a trump card.

    --
    "Every decent man is ashamed of the government he lives under." - H.L. Mencken
  174. Darwin was at least half right by brian6string · · Score: 1

    Darwin looked at ecosystems and organisms and, in essence, realized they have many things in common. One explanation for this, his, is that all of these organisms evolved from a single source.

    Another explanation for the commonality is that they were designed/created by the same Source. This is a reasonable and logical possibility.

    No question that adaptation and natural selection are present in our world. Whether this explains *everything* in our world is really the crux of the question.

    Now, here's where it gets interesting for those of you who contend that evolution has been "proven time and time again." Can you explain any of the following:

    1. Just how did organisms go from asexual to sexual reproduction? For sexual reproduction you need two asexual creatures to mutate, one mutating as a male and the other as a female. You also need splitting and recombining of chromosomes, etc. To say that natural selection and mutation is responsible for this requires some plausible explanation. Any takers?

    2. What about going from single-celled to multi-celled organisms? This raises similar questions. It might be easy to imagine that a single-celled creature evolved (thru mutation) to a multi-celled creature. But, then, can we really argue that, for example, respiration and circulation (independent, and, yet interdependent systems) evolved thru mutation? All of the systems of vertabrates are both independent and interdependent. This creates a bit of a problem for evolutionary theory that talks about incremental mutations. How is it that all vertabrates evolved digestive, endocrin, respiratory, circulatory, excretory, metabolic, nervous, etc. systems that are all interdependent on one another?

  175. Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by tjstork · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Intelligence does not contradict the Bible, far from it. The best characters in the Bible are those that used moxie and intelligence to accomplish his or her goals through the will of God. In fact, if anything, the Bible encourages intelligent people to press on in the face of ignorance.

    Noah knew about the Flood and built the boat despite being mocked by his ignorant neighbors, who all died.

    David slew Goliath with a sling, when Goliath should have kicked his rear.

    Solomon was famous for his wisdom more than his military prowess. He wrote psalms, he made a beautiful temple. He did that cut the baby in half trick to get the true mother to reveal herself.

    Christ wasn't even concerned with brute force at all. His whole life was an example of sticking to your guns even if you know you are going to get crucified. In a sense, our Martin Luther King Jrs, etc, followed very literally in his footsteps - stick to what is right, even if they kill you for it.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      the Bible encourages intelligent people to press on in the face of ignorance.
      Noah knew about the Flood and built the boat despite being mocked by his ignorant neighbors, who all died.


      That's not "intelligence": That's "doing what you're told".

      --

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

    2. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Yeah... God tells you to do something ... Intelligence *IS* doing what you're told.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    3. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Intelligence *IS* doing what you're told.

      No, that is subservience.

      --

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

    4. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by stanmann · · Score: 1

      NO, It is intelligence... Just like when your aircraft spotter sees bombers incoming and sounds the air raid siren INTELLIGENCE means you get in the shelter. Because the spotter knows something you don't. If God is then doing what s/he/it says is intelligence.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    5. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Just like when your aircraft spotter sees bombers incoming and sounds the air raid siren INTELLIGENCE means you get in the shelter.

      Are you posting this from a small south-pacific island in 1943???

      --

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

    6. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, on a lesser scale perhaps. I mean, Christ did demonstrate his power in the garden before the crucifixion. He knocked all the soldiers on their rears with a thought and then let them take him and kill them anyway. (This is why I hate those "The Jews Killed Jesus!" rants as well as the "No, we killed Jesus!" rants. Jesus died because he chose to die.)

    7. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by Degrees · · Score: 1
      Not to be too harsh here, but I couldn't help reading your 'subservience' post and think to myself "because defiance is so much more intelligent?" ;-)

      I'm reminded of the classic lesson every two year old goes through. The first time they see fire up close and in real life, intense curiosity kicks in (birthday cake candle / fireplace / campfire, whatever). They reach for the flame. Mommy or Daddy or Grandma grabs their finger and says "No - don't touch the fire. It will hurt you." Child doesn't listen, wants proof for his/her self. It is a natural part of the "terrible two's."

      Queue up listening for the hiss of fire versus finger, because as soon as Mommy or Daddy or Grandma aren't looking, the child will test it his/herself*.

      Of course, the parent then gets to say "I told you so. I told you 'no' because I knew it would hurt you. I don't want you hurt. Will you listen to me next time? Who can you trust?"

      So which takes more intelligence? Deciding to give credence to those wiser than you? Or adopting defiance, and learning things the hard way?

      Learned wisdom versus the school of hard knocks. Which requires more intellect? Hmmmm.


      *The parent does have the option of dousing the flame before the child touches it. Better hide all the matches and lighters too. And prevent the kid from all unsupervised play with neighbor kids. And start saving up for the psychiatry bills.... Total domination can prevent this lesson, but at what price?

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    8. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      "because defiance is so much more intelligent?"

      No, because defiance is justified when subservience will result in something morally wrong.

      A god that would order me to kill a loved one is not a god that deserves loyalty.

    9. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by swillden · · Score: 1

      A god that would order me to kill a loved one is not a god that deserves loyalty.

      I always find this sort of statement amusing, because the speaker presumes that God should follow the speaker's morality instead of vice versa. Given that the God that the speaker claims to be analyzing is presumed to be omnisicent, to have a full understanding of the outcome of every decision, including implications in realms that are beyond your ken, that's a rather presumptuous position. It's also rather simpleminded, because it's very easy to construct any number of scenarios in which killing a loved one *is* the moral thing to do, even within the limited worldview available to a single human decisionmaker.

      Regardless of your religious beliefs, death is not always bad, and killing is not always wrong. Yes, that is an understanding that can be, has been, and will be abused, in horrific and terrible ways, but it doesn't make it any less true.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    10. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by duffahtolla · · Score: 1

      Strange, I've always considered it simple minded to think an omniscent, all powerful god would automatically be a good one.

      Or is it truely beyond your ken to imagine a god that perhaps was petty, egotistical, ruthless, and vengeful.

      Try it. What would such a god be like. Would he get upset one day and decide to wipe out a city because they weren't listening to him? Would he force a people to wander for 40 years and waste their lives because they did something he didn't like. Or maybe slaughter the males of a city so that the women and children to be sold into slavery for the profit of his "chosen" people? Maybe he would order a father to kill his own child just to see if he would do it, even though he was omnicent and already knew anyways (haha, always a kidder that god). Or maybe he would wipe out every living thing except for a lucky few, just because he didn't like the way things turned out.

      Amusingly enough, the bible would seem to support that description.

      Just because such a god need not follow our moral tenents does not mean we wouldn't have the words to describe him.

      True, killing is not always wrong. God allows for the killing of slaves and children as long as they are your own. So god does seem to have a sense of property. I guess thats a plus.

    11. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by swillden · · Score: 1

      Strange, I've always considered it simple minded to think an omniscent, all powerful god would automatically be a good one.

      There certainly could be an evil one. I believe that the God of the old testament was merely being harsh where needed. Other interpretations are reasonable, if you read only the words.

      Would he get upset one day and decide to wipe out a city because they weren't listening to him?

      I can see you think of this as an evil, and petty, action, but consider it from another perspective. If you assume that to God, death is not a bad thing, but merely a transition from one form to another and life is merely a brief but important period of testing then if the people in that city had already proven (to themselves) their own lack of righteousness, what's the problem with terminating their test a bit earlier?

      Would he force a people to wander for 40 years and waste their lives because they did something he didn't like.

      "Waste" their lives? How was it a waste? Certainly they had less comfortable lives than they might have, otherwise. School is not always comfortable.

      Or maybe slaughter the males of a city so that the women and children to be sold into slavery for the profit of his "chosen" people?

      Hmm. I don't recognize that allusion.

      Maybe he would order a father to kill his own child just to see if he would do it, even though he was omnicent and already knew anyways (haha, always a kidder that god).

      Not kidding, testing, for the benefit of the testee.

      Or maybe he would wipe out every living thing except for a lucky few, just because he didn't like the way things turned out.

      This is just the same story as the city, except for the scale.

      Amusingly enough, the bible would seem to support that description.

      Most of it, anyway. Why is it amusing?

      True, killing is not always wrong. God allows for the killing of slaves and children as long as they are your own.

      Reference?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    12. Re:Being intelligent does NOT contradict the Bible by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      I could answer each point but it wouldn't mean anything. Suffice it to say that you are right in your assessment that I think god is evil and petty.

      If you read a story were a human being did all these things, you would think him psychopathic, egomaniacle, etc. BUT because its God, he gets to be interpreted, his actions must have a deeper purpose.

      Thats what I think is amusing. It's like a murderers devoted mother on TV. He is such a good boy, you misunderstand. him. He was only trying to help those people. Besides, they probably deserved it, they were only hookers.

      right..

  176. Um... by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1
    Disclaimer: I am not an ID proponent.

    if you can't test it, then it doesn't belong in science.

    Have you not just kicked all of string theory out of the Science dorm? ;-)

    1. Re:Um... by Rallion · · Score: 1

      Have you not just kicked all of string theory out of the Science dorm? ;-)

      Yes. String theory, as it stands, does not belong in science. It's philosophy, until it starts making some kind of prediction. I'm not saying its wrong, not at all. Nor am I saying that it's not a worthy field of study -- but it's basically metaphysics with some math at this point.

  177. It's all for show, people by lphil69 · · Score: 1

    Intelligent Design people are all for the Show. It doesn't matter if they win or lose a debate. Their goal is simply to debate it to create free advertisement across the country. Since most people aren't able to think on their own, they will believe the guy who attacks the most and who seems to make more sense.

    Since the Evolution people are put on the defensive, they don't attack. ID people then try to appeal to the population by saying things like : "Galileo's ideas weren't accepted at first" and that we are "close-minded".

    Anyone who thinks about it for a second will know that Galileo had proof that the Church decided to disregard whereas the ID people have no proof at all. We also agree to debate, but somehow, that makes us close-minded.

    Those are all stunts designed to make simple people believe in ID. Can't you see they are playing the victim and that this tactic wins them the heart of most of the population?

    Debating will make us loose the fight. Here's what we should do: whenever we are in front of a creationist in public, we should say only one thing. "Show me the proof you have." That's it. Stick with it. Never say anything about evolution. It's all for show and we can use the same techniques. Attack, attack, attack, and never defend your point of view.

    If you are in private and no cameras are looking at you, then please debate. There is no show, as the common people are not watching.

    I can't help but see a similarity in their "debating" techniques with those used by the Republicans. They attack and lie, but they make sense to people who can't think, and they play the victims.

    Let's play the game with the same rules.

    1. Re:It's all for show, people by brian6string · · Score: 1

      OK, so, taking you up on your suggestion: "show me what proof you have" for evolution.

      Please be sure to explain interdependent systems (circulation, respiration, digestion, etc.) of complex creatures evolving thru incremental adaptations.

      While you're at it, please explain how organisms evolved from asexual to sexual reproduction? What adaptation or mutation can explain splitting and recombining of DNA that we see in sexual reproduction?

      Hey, if you can figure out how RNA became DNA, that would be great too.

      Thanks for playing...

    2. Re:It's all for show, people by ate50eggs · · Score: 1

      saying that you don't understand something isn't the same as proving it false. 'sayin

      --
      not everything is a science experiment!
  178. Re:The deal with these fundamentalists by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

    The reason outspoken Christians are common as dirt is that the absolute affirmation of the existence of something which has not, cannot, and will not be shown to exist is easy to defend when one has no knowledge of anything at all and declares such a state to be a virtue. Just make up so much random crap that the people debunking it can't keep up.

    --
    Dyolf Knip
  179. Separation Of "Church" And State! by cannuck · · Score: 0

    Happily I live in Canada - where most people are now smart enough to understand the difference between beliefs versus reality. The notion of a big guy running around in the sky controlling the earth - is a stretch to begin with. But when "big guy in the sky" people - start to actually tell us that science doesn't exist - well...... Now a days Canada has reached a point where religious institutions and relgious fanatics have almost zero impact on politicians and on out cultural institutions. Three cheeers.

  180. If you believe in God, why Jesus? by theolein · · Score: 1

    Something that bothers me about ID or Christian, Judaic or Islamic belief is that those beliefs base their beliefs on the written word. In other words, it's something that you read somewhere. I beg all of those who are Christians to tell me what makes their particular brand better than the next one. Why is Jesus right for a Christian but not for a Jew? What makes a Muslim a heretic and a Christian holy?

    Those are all things you either heard in your particular culture, group, family, church or mosque or read in your particular holy book.

    Please tell me, and I don't mean this as a way to bait you, how you experience "God and his son Jesus" as one person put it further down. Do you mean that the two of them chat to you personally?

    Why can't my particular idea of religion be right? I believe in a light that shines inside all things. That is the way I experience a God like experience, except that I don't give it a name or try to explain it in terms of some previous religion, book or science.

    Am I in your eyes somehow unholy because I don't believe in your particular book or your physical place of worship? Am I a sinner because I am not interested in your religious rites?

    Explain all of that to me in terms of THINGS YOU HAVE EXPERIENCED, and not in terms of things that you have read or heard from others.

    1. Re:If you believe in God, why Jesus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you knew anything about Christianity, you would understand.

      The Bible teaches Jesus is the only way to God, through His sacrifice, and any other attempts to reach Him are futile. The Bible leaves no room for other religions, no other way. That is alright, because everyone has the opportunity to be saved, so no one is left out.

      Jesus was a Jew, but did away with Jewish Law by His teaching.

      I 'experience' God through the written word, no faces in a hospital window, no magical dreams, through understanding and a desire to change i experience God and what He wants from me.

      Maybe that helps answer your questions

    2. Re:If you believe in God, why Jesus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you know it's through being a good person instead? Don't tell me it's in the Bible or your minister said so. Use nature, which, afterall, Deity's only true revelation to us.

    3. Re:If you believe in God, why Jesus? by brian6string · · Score: 1

      Let me first say I appreciate the honesty of your question. I am a Christian. It seems that there are some misconceptions that are peeking thru in your question. Let me talk to those first:

      Judgement. The Bible is crystal-clear that we are not to be in judgement of others. Jesus tells this story of noticing a spec in your neighbors eye, while ignoring the log in your own. People who judge others to be (your words here) "heretic" "sinner" "unholy" are wrong to do so. That is not my judgement of them, it is what Jesus and others in the Bible teach. Yes, I know you can point to plenty of examples of Christians judging others. Even "famous" Christians. I'm simply saying they are wrong to do so.

      The trick is we are to use good judgement in living our lives. But (and this is where many people slip up) putting someone else down is really just a way of trying to prop myself up. Its really that transparent when you think about it. If you want to understand this without reading the whole dag-gone Bible, read the book of James (about 5 pages in most Bibles).

      So your question is how have I experienced God in my own life. In truth, my experience is much like yours: I experience the God-like in everyday things and experience. The Bible and religious teaching help me learn more about it, and to be more "in touch" with how I can experience God. And it helps me figure out how to live my life.

      You didn't say, but I hope that in your life and experience, you have a place to turn to reach deeper understandings, to keep growing, and to figure out how to live. Even if you don't choose Christianity, I suggest the book of James to you as a place to start.

    4. Re:If you believe in God, why Jesus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nature teaches us to understand there is a God.

      God taught us specifically what He wanted through various men throughout the ages; confirming they were from Him by miracles and prophecy...

      their testamony has been written down and saved, unaltered, for generations.

    5. Re:If you believe in God, why Jesus? by theolein · · Score: 1

      " The Bible leaves no room for other religions, no other way."

      But the Koran basically also says it's the only way, and the Jews don't think they're wrong either. So who's right?

      You say you experience the bible through the written word, but it wasn't even written in a language you understand, and you can only read it through a series of many, many translations (Greek, Hebrew, Aramaic->latin->old english->middle english->modern english(King James)->modern american version). At least the Koran is still in Classical Arabic and the Torah in Hebrew. What about their experience of the written word.

      I'm sorry, but your explanation has about as much meaning as someone who is inspired by a poem or a song, even though it might be a good song or poem. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

    6. Re:If you believe in God, why Jesus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First let me say that I appreciate your candor. However, I disagree with you that the modern English translation of the Bible is a thrid-, fourth-, or fifth-hand translation. In fact, there are many, many, many translations of the Bible. As our understanding of ancient culture and linguistics has progressed, Biblical scholars continue to painstakingly fine-tune the English translations of the Bible to more accurately reflect what is written in the original Greek texts (which by the way outdate the Koran by hundreds of years). Modern translations of the Bible fall into two categories: those that try to translate the original texts thought-by-thought (i.e. the NIV), and those that try to capture the general concept of the original text (i.e. the NLT). The one I use is the New International Version, because I feel that translations that try to use contemporary language to increase readability (such as the NLT) often lose some concepts in the translation. For example, compare the NIV and the New Living Translation translations of John chapter 8, verses 48-59. Pay special attention to verses 58 and 59. FYI, the phrase "I am" was used by God to identify himself to Moses when he manifested Himself as a burning bush, and again by Jesus when he walked across the stormy sea and identified Himself to his understandably terrified disciples in the boat. The phrase "I am" carried deep meaning for ancient Jews. You can compare several translations at www.biblegateway.org. Good luck to you. May I suggest that you read the book of John and ask yourself who Jesus says he is and what he asks of you? If you sincerely ask God to reveal Himself to you, you won't be disappointed.

  181. The definition of theory by Skt+Haldi · · Score: 2, Informative

    I am a Ph.D. Molecular Biologist. I am also a Christian. I've studied both sides, and the ID argument (as stated) is generally deranged and foolish. However, the opposed side is equally stupid, mainly because we have non-scientists mucking about with things they don't understand. What many people seem to miss in all of this is the definition of theory. Scientific method calls for hypotheses to be proposed, which are intended to be disproven. If you can't disprove the hypothesis, it eventually becomes a theory. This does not mean the theory is fact. It just means it hasn't been disproven yet! If our schools taught students the definition of theory, we wouldn't have this problem to begin with. The theory of evolution is a theory. At this point, we have no reason to say it is false. That doesn't make it fact. Just not-disproven-so-far. As a biology teacher, an annoying quote often in the news (by school boards and biology teachers) is "I refuse to teach students anything but FACTS." Hahaha! What a joke! And this is what we have teaching our students science? No wonder America is so far behind the curve. Our science teachers don't understand the BASIS of science! On the other hand, the theory of intelligent design is NOT a scientific theory. If your hypothesis is un-disprovable, it is not a hypothesis. As said above, faith can't disprove a theory of science. It's like refuting trigonometry by quoting Shakespeare. These ID folks give us more educated Christians a bad name.

    1. Re:The definition of theory by jim_deane · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I have grown so tired of responding to the obvious ignorance of what a "scientific theory" is and how it differs from "some idea someone had one time" that I often just skip the argument.

      Jim

    2. Re:The definition of theory by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Now, why couldn't you have posted this earlier! It sure would have saved a lot of typing and reading of stupid comments.

      It seems that the education system in the US (maybe elsewhere) has been very successful at turning out graduates who have no capability for critical thought and analysis.

      Good post! I hope you get modded up.

  182. Intelligent Design is like writng Computer Program by SpecialAgentXXX · · Score: 1

    I've read up on I.D. and their thesis is interesting. Why all the fuss over religion?

    The most interesting part of I.D. is that the randomness (genetic mutations) in evolution which has created all of the diverse life we see today is not possible. Each form of life on earth is quite complex and has to have the right sequence of DNA to be formed. Randomly changing DNA won't result in different life forms.

    The analogy that all of us on /. can understand is that randomly changing bits in an executable (or image or HTML, etc.) will not change that application to be something else. There is absolutely no way to change/add/delete bits to, say, a J2EE EAR file for a B2B business app and get, say, Half-Life 2.

    In any case, I.D. is an interesting concept and leads to higher questions such as how/what/who created the universe, etc. Why are some people so afraid to discuss this topic without spewing forth their religious/non-religious bias?

  183. Mistranslations? by gr8_phk · · Score: 1
    If you look at the original Hebrew, the word translated "day"...

    Is there a place that collects these common mistranslations? I recall Wikipedia addressing the ten commandments and claiming that "Thou shall not kill" would be more accurately translated as "Thou shall not murder". This is also more consistent, since killing is not considerd bad in certain cases - like punishment. I've often wondered if there are a lot of mistranslated statements in there that could make the whole book more sensible if they were corrected.

    If the earth was created in 6 time periods of more than a day, they should not use the word "day". Use "phase" or "period" or "era". I've also wondered if the people who lived to 900 years actually lived for 900 lunar cycles. When one reads about amazing stuff, he should question the sources or at least the translation in the case of this book.

    1. Re:Mistranslations? by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Thou shall not kill is possibly the most idiotic mistranslation possible. It's the the same book, probably in the same chapter, as verses telling you to stone people!

      Hello. Bit of a logically inconsistency there. Don't kill people. Kill people if they do X. Um, okay.

      You have to wonder how that translation slipped past quality control. Yes, it's actually 'murder' that you are forbidden to do, not 'kill'.

      Speaking of mistranslations, a fake mistranslation is the often-heard claim that 'witches' should be 'poisoners'. In some places, yes, the word used there can mean that, but when it condemns witches to death, it explictly is the word meaning 'supernatural women', although that connoted more than just 'spell casting', like seeing the future and whatnot.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    2. Re:Mistranslations? by captshad · · Score: 1
      --
      --- Shad's Fiction and Such http://shadgregory.net
    3. Re:Mistranslations? by Politburo · · Score: 1

      I recall Wikipedia addressing the ten commandments and claiming that "Thou shall not kill" would be more accurately translated as "Thou shall not murder".

      IMO, this "explanation" was created by apologists to justify starting wars, the death penalty, etc. Of course, it is also conveniently used to justify anti-abortion positions.

      If it really was meant to be "Thou shalt not murder" you'd think it would have been corrected at least by the KJV..

    4. Re:Mistranslations? by gr8_phk · · Score: 1
      "IMO, this "explanation" was created by apologists..."

      That's one problem right there. Your (and my) opinion is irrelevant. I want to know what the original said, and the wiki article claims that the original hebrew word means "murder" and is definitely distinct from the word for "kill". Of all people, religious folks should know best that truth exists independant of what someone may believe. In this case, the original text is available in the original language - which is understood by some people (not me). I just wanted to know if anyone has collected the facts for cases like this.

    5. Re:Mistranslations? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      The original was written in a very ambiguous language that could just as well mean either one. To give an analogy to english, consider the two phrases:
      "We walked for miles and then turned north"
      "we walked four miles and then turned north".

      In enlgish you can tell them apart because of the spellings, but imagine if english was completely phonetic - then they'd be spelled the exact same. Hebrew is kind of like that, but then take an additional step - remove the vowels and try to guess them out by context:
      "W wlkd fr mls nd thn trnd nrth"
      That's kind of what written hebrew is like.

      The problem, from what I've heard (I don't actually know hebrew) is that the word for just "kill" and the word for "murder" render down into the same spelling in hebrew (although they are different words when pronounced). Can someone who actually knows hebrew confirm or deny this?

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    6. Re:Mistranslations? by dublin · · Score: 1
      If it really was meant to be "Thou shalt not murder" you'd think it would have been corrected at least by the KJV..

      I'm told by friends who are Hebrew scolars (I'm not one), that the language is fairly clearly a prohibition of murder, not simply killing. It's also quite clear that the death penalty was acceptable and in fact requird in some ciscumstances under Mosaic law.

      The KJV is a great work, and quite possibly one of the finest peices of English writing and translation ever produced (particularly in its effectiveness at preserving the poetic aspects of the original languages through the transition to English), but it is not inerrant - although Christians believe the original autographs are inerrant. In fact, this was clearly recognized at the time - if you really want to understand how the Bible was and should be interpreted, I'd suggest getting a copy of the Westminster Confession of Faith (one with all the scripture references printed out save a whole lot of lookup!) This confession was assembled by what was quite possibly the greatest assemblage of human minds ever convened anywher, at any time in human history. It's not perfect either (no human endeavour is), but it's exceptionally well-reasoned. There is a discussion of this very issue in their discussion of the Ten Commandments:

      If you actually want to attempt to understand Christian thinking and thought processes, this is a great starting point. It is quite prescient in many ways, and since it was a reaction to the brokenness of the Roman Catholic church at the time, the wording and phraseology is unbelieveably precise, in an attempt to avoid every potential point of misunderstanding. The wording from the early 1600's clearly defines marriage:
      Marriage is to be between one man and one woman: neither is it lawful for any man to have more than one wife, nor for any woman to have more than one husband, at the same time
      This shows there really is nothing new under the sun (another Biblical phrase, this time from Ecclesiates) - if you were to entirely eliminate biblical allusions from your speech, you'd have a hard time communicating...
      --
      "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
    7. Re:Mistranslations? by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      Why yes, there is a place where all the mistranslations are put into one place, it's called the King James Version.

      Kinda menat to be a joke, however, it is not far from the truth. If you study where the King James Version came from and what manuscript evidence was used in its creation vs. what has been discovered since then you would be stunned. Textural criticism combined with tons of older manuscript evidence means that today we have orders of magnitude more detail about the original scriptures.

      If you want a good place to learn about the Bible from an acclaimed Hebrew and Greek scholar that taught (he is retired now) at a non-denominational church I recommend http://www.rbthieme.org/. They will mail you mp3 CDs made from your choice of thousands of hours of collegiate lecture type material at no charge, free, gratis. Throughout the lessons there is constant revision of the English versions of the Bible through a sentence-diagram-like approach to the original languages. In the process of hearing the lessons you can even develop a good feel for the syntax of ancient Greek and Hebrew, if you are dilligent.

      The lesson catalog is here http://www.rbthieme.org/LessonListingForWeb.PDF/. Each lesson is about 1 hour long and there is no silly singing or speaking in tongues, or AMENS from the congregation. It is like an academic classroom in a military school.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    8. Re:Mistranslations? by lstep · · Score: 1

      It is indeed apparent that you don't know Hebrew, because your anology above is wrong.

      Not only is Hebrew not "completely phonetic", but the difference between the root R.Z.H (to murder, as is used in the 10 commandments) and the root H.R.G (to kill) is by no means a phonetic one - these roots have nothing in common, and their use throughout the Bible is consistantly different. There is nothing "ambiguous" about the distinction between to murder and to kill in Hebrew, and there is no way to interpret the commandment as referring to mere killing.

    9. Re:Mistranslations? by Salis · · Score: 1

      You should read the history instead of blindly justifying your own opinion:

      After Moses brought down the Ten Commandments from Mount Sinai, he set up a system of courts and judges to rule over the some 40,000 Jewish people traveling over the desert. One of the punishments was, yes indeed, the death penalty. If someone commits murder, you can't give them life in prison when there are no prisons, no guards, and no time or resources enough for either.

      You can subjectively argue about the modern interpretation of the Ten Commandments, but the fact is: Killing was an acceptable punishment for murder, adultery, treason, and other extreme felonies in the ancient era. And, depending on where you live, it continues to be one in modern times.

      --
      Favorite /. tagline: "On the eighth day, God created FORTRAN." And it was good.
    10. Re:Mistranslations? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      If this is true (that the word kill and murder are distinguishable in writing), then I'd like to see a reference about it so I don't spread that falsehood any longer. But given the nature of the topic it's going to take more than a single post by one person I don't know to make me accept that what I've been told many times by others is wrong.


      Not only is Hebrew not "completely phonetic"

      I didn't say it was. I said it's written form doesn't record the vowel sounds. Is this not true?

      Now, of course, if it does unambiguously say "thou shalt not murder" then it opens up another problem - being that the defintion of murder as unlawful killing, and the 10 commandments as being the law of god according to the mytholgy, renders that commandment into a useless tautology - "What does god's law say about killing? Don't kill in ways god says are unlawful. Great, that really helps. Thanks."

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    11. Re:Mistranslations? by lstep · · Score: 1

      if it does unambiguously say "thou shalt not murder" then it opens up another problem - being that the defintion of murder as unlawful killing, and the 10 commandments as being the law of god according to the mytholgy, renders that commandment into a useless tautology

      While the 10 commandments don't define what killing is lawful and what killing is unlawful, the Bible goes into great detail in defining murder (RZH). Since you are wise enough not to take a stranger's word for it, I can give you a concrete example - Numbers 35 - I quote from the Revised, Standard version, but feel free to look up the original Hebrew or the translation of your choice:
      [11] then you shall select cities to be cities of refuge for you, that the manslayer who kills any person without intent may flee there.
      [12] The cities shall be for you a refuge from the avenger, that the manslayer may not die until he stands before the congregation for judgment.
      ...
      [16] But if he struck him down with an instrument of iron, so that he died, he is a murderer; the murderer shall be put to death.
      [17] And if he struck him down with a stone in the hand, by which a man may die, and he died, he is a murderer; the murderer shall be put to death.

      I said it's written form doesn't record the vowel sounds. Is this not true?

      Yes, it is true that short vowels (and some of the long vowels) are not recorded in the original scrolls and were added later on, and there are cases where there is dispute about whether or not the choice of vowels is correct. A famous example is the second word of Genesis: Is it the past tense: "bara" yielding: "In the beginning God created..." or is it the infinitive "bro", yielding "In the begining of the creation of..." The commandment in question is not such a case, since the root itself is different.
    12. Re:Mistranslations? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      The more I learn of the bible (I was not brought up Christian and only know of it from an outsider's perspective), the sillier it seems. The distinction between murder and acceptable killing is based on what the weapon was made of??? WTF? What about intent? What about defensive versus offensive killing?

      Thanks for the bit about the hebrew language, though.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    13. Re:Mistranslations? by lstep · · Score: 1

      The distinction between murder and acceptable killing is based on what the weapon was made of???

      Um, no.

      That particular passage (did you look it up?) happens to be about distinguishing between a case where the killing was an accident and a case where the killing was deliberate - so it's about intent. You can't say "I struck him with a sword, but I didn't mean for him to die". but you can say "I was working on the roof and dropped that hammer" or "I struck him with this soft object, I didn't expect him to die".

      This is not the only passage that deals with defining unlawful killing, it's just one example.

      To your more general point: Yeah, the Bible was written thousands of years ago, it is addressing a society far less sophisticated than the one we live in today. Religions that follow the Bible as if it was addressed to 21st century society are rare. The idea of providing a safe place for killers to hide in until the circumstances of the killing is determined was revolutionary for that time, but it would have been unfortunate if modern day judicial systems had not evolved in that spirit into somehting more sophisticated and refined.

    14. Re:Mistranslations? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      You can't say "I struck him with a sword, but I didn't mean for him to die". but you can say "I was working on the roof and dropped that hammer" or "I struck him with this soft object, I didn't expect him to die".

      The problem is that all these old laws attack the symptoms and not the root problem. If the root problem is whether the attack was intentional, then talking about the type of weapon used is not relevant to the issue. It might be harder to have a circumstance in which a sword kills accidentally rather than a hammer, but it is still possible. Also, a hammer can be a deliberate weapon too. In fact, that's pretty much what a mace is. The only difference between a wood handle with a hammer head on it and a wood handle with a round mace head on it is the shape of the head - they're made from the exact same materials.

      The bible is an interesting study to see what weird things people used to believe, and to see how people used to live - in exactly the same way that studying the classic greek myths is. it's too bad people today don't realize that that's ALL it's good for.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    15. Re:Mistranslations? by lstep · · Score: 1

      "all these old laws attack the symptoms and not the root problem."

      "it's too bad people today don't realize that that's ALL it's good for."

      Your first sweeping statement could have been avoided had you taken the time to read the passage instead of speculating about its contents. This is a passage about intent. The only role the instrument plays in the passage is when it can help shed light on the intent. This is still true today in contemporary courtrooms. I gave both sword and hammer as instances of "metal instrument" but the distinction I was demonstrating was between accidentally dropping and deliberately striking.

      Your 2nd sweeping statement is beyond the scope of the assistance I'm offering you here, but suffice to say that you have yet to display sufficient knowledge of the Bible and its heritage to be qualified to make that statement.

    16. Re:Mistranslations? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      The only role the instrument plays in the passage is when it can help shed light on the intent.

      Which it can't.

      suffice to say that you have yet to display sufficient knowledge of the Bible and its heritage to be qualified to make that statement.

      The people who spend the most time studying the bible are the ones who aren't turned off by it when they start and see the first few problems with it. Thus insisting that people need to be well versed in every aspecrt of it acts as a filter against disbelievers who stopped well before that point.

      Checking the veracity of the Bible is like stringing together boolean terms with "AND". It's a waste of time to continue calculating after you've hit the first false term. Some people will continue a little bit further for curiosity, but it starts to become an excercise in pointlessness very fast.

      If I was a historian, I'd be more interested in it for that purpose. As a guide to life, however, it's useless.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    17. Re:Mistranslations? by lstep · · Score: 1

      You are revising your statement from pretending to know ALL(sic) that the Bible is good for, to observing that the Bible includes false terms. I would not have challenged your competence to make that revised statement.

      Moreover, finding false terms in the Bible is straightforward and does not require anything as far fetched as saying that the weapon of the crime plays no role when determining guilt in a murder trial.

  184. Dear God, Not Again by Dasch · · Score: 1

    This is why science and religion shouldn't be mixed. One seeks to explain the world through evidence, the other seeks to explain the world through faith.

  185. They are both flawed.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact is that both evolution and intelligent design are flawed. It's easy to say that one must be right over the other when you have made that one into your religion.

    If you are willing to admit that either could be wrong, then you should be able to admit that either one is a viable alternative for the other.

  186. Absolutely teach it in schools by gosand · · Score: 1
    Indeed, the Bible ought to be taught in schools-- as literature and (with caution) history.

    Nope, not with caution. In all its glory. Teach about all the frickin nutball snake handlers, all the pedophile, wife-beating Southern Baptists. All the missionaries, all the nuns, priests, and preachers who follow Christianity. Teach people what it means to be "God-fearing". Teach about the Crusades. Tell the good and the bad about the Bible and all those who use it as a tool to get what they want. Also teach that there are those who try to follow its teachings, and explain how contradictory the entire book is.

    If you are going to teach them about it, tell them the truth.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:Absolutely teach it in schools by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 1

      I'll bite.

      We should make a whole class out of it called "Characterizing Groups by Their Extremes: Stereotypes in the New Millenium."

      Here are some possible lessons:

      "Muslim Beliefs From the Writings of Bin Laden"
      "Liberalism With a Focus on Josef Stalin"
      "Conservativism as Presented by Fox News"

    2. Re:Absolutely teach it in schools by gosand · · Score: 1
      We should make a whole class out of it called "Characterizing Groups by Their Extremes: Stereotypes in the New Millenium."

      I'll bite back. Who are the "keepers" of Christianity then? Who represents it best? Apply that to all other religions as well.

      My point is that you can't just teach part of it. You can't just teach "the Bible". There are way too many contradictions and interpretations. While I may call those snake handlers crazy, they are following the bible the way they have interpreted it. That's the whole point. But maybe that is too far above kids heads. It is certainly above most adults.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  187. MOD PARENT UP! by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is a very important point that seems to have been neglected. I'm as strong as a Darwinian as they come but I've never seen it demonstrated that evolution is "shown to explain the origins of life" even once, let alone time and time again. The sad thing is that for someone to say this means that they clearly don't understand what evolution is about and the fact that they need to make this claim means that they are one of these people who has adopted Evolution as a religion rather than as a rational belief. We could use fewer of these people posting stories to /. not more, they're a bit of an embarassment.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by salemnic · · Score: 1

      Hah - very well put. It's interesting to see people lash out blindly at one concept, while believing blindly in another.

    2. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by Morosoph · · Score: 1
      The "initial spark" can easily be seen as evolutionary advantage over inorganic matter. Accidental self-replicating forms don't need a separate theory: they are in themselves a successful adaptation of dead stuff, naturally selected for propensity to replicate.

      After a quick Google search, it appears that initial spark is suprisingly apt! Accident, it appears, was helped along...

  188. Ship 'em to Golgafrincham by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about we round up all these ID types and tell 'em that there's a huge flood coming, just like that last one they read about, and that they're going to need a great ark to survive.

    Build the thing as a spacecraft in orbit rather than a boat (can't be too sure what's going to happen to the surface of the earth), label it the "B" ark, in honour of their favourite textbook, and well, you know the rest...

  189. Re:Atheism also a religion by readin · · Score: 1

    You're right. I should have taken time to read your whole post to see that you had re-defined atheism away from the traditional meaning. " a : a disbelief in the existence of deity b : the doctrine that there is no deity" (from www.m-w.com). It would have been easier to understand had you changed the definition at the beginning of your statement rather than at the end which I never reached, having given up after the apparant problems found early in the statement.

    --
    I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
  190. Origins of Life by Micah · · Score: 1

    At work, so no time to read most posts right now, but I do want to point out that there are numerous problems with the naturalistic model for origins of life. If you want to learn about them, there is a book called Origins of Life, by Fazale Rana and Hugh Ross. This is not your daddy's creationist material. It is a recent book (published last year) with a lot of references to recent scientific discoveries.

    Intelligent Design should be mentioned as a valid model, because there really is evidence for it. I'm not saying it should be taught as a science, but it certainly has its place.

  191. Root of the Problem by mbrod · · Score: 2, Insightful

    a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again

    The theory does not explain the origins of life. It is an observation of life interacting with its environment and the environmnet interacting with it.

  192. Re:Atheism also a religion by qyiet · · Score: 0

    ..the atheistic view of evolution ..

    I agree that atheism is a valid religion in terms of the seperation of church and state, but the theory of evolution makes no statment on the existance or not of any religous deity and is compatible with several religions. Islam for example.

  193. Evolution is Pseduoscience too! by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Richard Dawkins has falsified research and not followed the scientific method, and has been basied and let his Atheism show in his works. Evolution, has turned into an Atheist basied story. Science has become the New Atheism. If there is to be a seperation of church and state, why is the Atheist church/religion allowed to teach their religion in public schools in the form of Evolution? I mean Evolution supports and promotes Atheism by saying "God does not exist". This makes Atheists hypocrits.

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    1. Re:Evolution is Pseduoscience too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd prefer atheists over a Christian Taliban anyday.

    2. Re:Evolution is Pseduoscience too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That Dawkins may falsify research or missionaries may resort to parlor tricks to gain converts are not not near the norm in science or religion.

      The evolutionary model is not at odds with faith based religion. The evolutionary model does not discount the existance of GOD. It is merely as consistant a framework for describing and predicting observation with regard to life, as has been built. The concept of refining models to describe and predict observation is the realm of science. I suppose one might apply this concept to religion and the existance of GOD. The problem is that one can not then turn and apply the resultant as a meta-model to evolution. There is no scientific proof of GODS existance, just as there is no proof of evolution. However, the model, built within the scientific framework, for evolution has as foundation a much more consistant framework of observation and prediction. There is no faith in science beyond that which is built upon constants of observation while religious faith leaves no room for doubt. Arguing one in the context of the other is apples and oranges.

      I've no problem with teaching religion. However, the fact that there are many different realms of religious faith requires that within a scientific framework, they all be taught. Outside of this, one might promote ones own faith through teaching, but because there is no consistant model that any one faith is the only one and true faith it can not be presented as a scientific master model for such concepts as evolution

    3. Re:Evolution is Pseduoscience too! by Cable · · Score: 1

      Dawkins did falsify his findings. He was not objective and he got the results he wanted by fudging the test results. I've talked with scientists who were not able to recreate Dawkin's results under the same conditions. The Fossils, Dawkns claims to have used, are not allowed to be tested or looked at. We are to take his word, and have faith that his results are true. Dawkins has poisoned Evolution with his unscientific process, and we shall never know the truth because of his falsehoods.

    4. Re:Evolution is Pseduoscience too! by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      In which this shows the Atheist bias in modern science today. So much so, that they are even willing to hide behind the ACLU to throw out alternatives to Evolution, and change text books to no longer say that Evolution is a theory, but now they must say that Evolution is a fact. That has nothing to do with science at all, and hence is pseduo-science. The only reason the ACLU is involved because they take the side of Atheists, and the like, and try to push their agenda.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    5. Re:Evolution is Pseduoscience too! by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      The actions of people in courts of law or the political arena does not determine whether their theories are scientific or pseudo-scientific. Their rules for determining what is or is not legitimate evidence and what is or is not an acceptable explanation or experimental technique determine whether a theory is scientific.

      The fact that the people who want to re-introduce school-sponsored prayer and the people who what to introduce "intelligent design" into science curricula BOTH stir up opposition from athiests does not mean this opposition is based on the same philosophical foundation.

      Also, atheism is the *lack* of a belief. How this can be a bias is mysterious.

    6. Re:Evolution is Pseduoscience too! by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      Correct, a court of law is not a science lab, yet people are using court findings to prove that Evolution is a fact. Hence the pseduo-science reference in that regard.

      Atheism, is not lack of a belief, it is the belief that there is no God. Strong Atheists have faith that there is no God, weak Atheists state that they have faith that there is no God because they don't see evidence of God and act accordingly. Since Atheism is a recognized religion by the US government, it is a belief system. Hence your bias, but then you are biased anyway, aren't you? Evolution is used as a tool by Atheists to try and prove that there is no God, and forcing Atheism into public schools. That is why the Atheists support it that are filing the law suits.

      I say prove it in a science lab, not a court room. Until then, it is only a theory.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  194. Intelligent design... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    postulates...
    there is no framework of supporting evidence of intelligent design beyond oral and written tradition and it's not even clear that 'intelligent' components are metaphorical or direct observation.
    absent an repeatability, Occam suggests metaphor.

    other origin postulates include various animistic, some intelligent, some anthropromorphized, and some pure animal-plant-geophysical.
    we also have alien seeding, planned or accidental and many others

    sure, evolution is a theory, it's led to a model built on observation, that is pretty darn consistant

    Cookbooks?
    Social engineering recipes?
    Guide to cultural mores?
    Philosphy of life?
    Talmud, Koran, Bible, Mao's book...

    Ask yourself this.
    What intelligent design would ever dream up the cockroach, recividus bugs, hookworm, guinea worm, cannibalism, Mars Rovers, dog meat juice, GOATSE!

  195. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

    The theory of evolution meets Occam's Razor. But is it falsifiable?

    Give me a test that would conclusively falsify the theory that single-celled organisms evolved into humans.

    The problem with evolution is that if you did have such a test, the proponents of evolution would simply claim that they needed a bigger petri dish or a few more million years. Keep increasing the size or adding years. Where's the falsifiability in that?

  196. The bible can't be taken literally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I think we can safely assume that the bible is not literally orrect since: 1) it was written long after the purported events took place, and 2) there are many statements that contradict themselves (multiple creation stories anyone?)

    I can't see even the more extreme believers talk their way out of that one.

  197. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by slartibart · · Score: 1
    You people crack me up. So unimaginative and lazy.

    "God did it" is a sufficient explanation for you. Men of science are not satisfied with 3 word answers. That's why they make observations, experiment, and study - and write everything down. You are just too lazy to even read it. Or maybe you're not lazy - you're scared to allow any challenges to your simplistic god-based worldview.

  198. Re:Atheism also a religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saying atheism is a religion is like saying "no ice cream cone" is a flavor of ice cream.

    Next you will be telling me that the theory of gravity is a state mandated religion. Science is religion *neutral*, as evidenced by the innumerable scientists who are both religious and not.

    Why, on /., do I have to explain the difference between "0", "1" and "NULL"?

  199. i have the book by ate50eggs · · Score: 2, Interesting
    My mom gave me a copy of Darwin's Black Box and I've read the first 100 or so pages. It isn't at all what I was expecting. The tone is rational, thorough and intelligent, not knee-jerk apologetics.

    So far the basic argument is that it's easy to conceptualize step wise changes in a macroscopic level, like: light sensor -> cluster of light sensors -> eye

    or

    beele -> beetle with poison -> beetle with concentrated poisen sack -> bombardeir beetle

    But actually the changes are so profound on a molecular level that they'd never occur by chance (or at least we'd have some evidence of intermediates)

    The most obvious problem to me is that this argument could also be used to prove that poodles and mastifs and bulldogs are not derived from the same common ancestor. They are so different and there are so many molecular changes separating them that they cannot be thought to be related. Even a creationist would have to agree that theese animals are all from a common dog ancestor since the divergence has happened while humans have been on the planet.

    Another argument he uses is "irreducable complexity." Some systems depend on every component to function so they can't have arisen by chance - in incomplete system would not function at all. The example he uses is a mouse trap which relies on every part to kill mice.

    The problem I see with this is that it ignores changes of function during evolution. Evoltion is not directional, it can take circuitous routes.

    an example he uses is a bicycle factory. The analogy to mutation is errors in bicycle production. Each mutation can cause a part of the bike to be duplicated or put in the wrong place or some similar transposition, but that's it. So how, he asks, can you evolve to bike to a motorcycle by making small stepwise changes? A caveat is that the changes must be improvements to the bicycle.

    there are several problems with this analogy. The most glaring is the restriction that changes must all be beneficial. If resources are abundant enough, neutral and even harmful mutations will likely be tolerated. to go back to te analogy, if bikes are in high demand, many people will buy bikes with slight manufacturing defects. changes in production that alter wheel size or gear ratio might be more preffered by some customers and less preferred by others.

    Another big problem is the lack of flexibility in this analogy. There is some validity in comparing a mutation to a slight error in bicycle assembly instructions, but bicycles are not organisms. In an organism, a small change can cause a big difference. This is especially apparent with mutations in developmental genes which can cause radical changes to the appearance of an organism as well as its overall gene expression.

    Some mutations can also be completely silent and may not be noticed until another mutation exposes them. if two genes are functionally redundant, one may be mutated randomly without affecting the organism. eventually it could be deleted, or even assume some new function.

    anyway, that's what I've gotten out of the book so far. maybe I'll even finish it.

    --
    not everything is a science experiment!
  200. Re:The deal with these fundamentalists by TufelKinder · · Score: 1

    To assume that God does not exist because his existence cannot be proven is no less flawed.

    Unless you have proven that he does not exist, in which case I'd be fascinated to hear how you arrived at that conclusion.

    Agnosticism -- or an acknowledgement of ignorance -- is the most realistic position for the skeptic to adopt.

    Perhaps there are those who believe that proponents of evolution are simply making up so much grap that the people debunking it can hardly keep up.

    There are many brilliant people on both sides of this issue; unfortunately, not very many of them are posting on this discussion.

    --
    If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. -- George Orwell
  201. Evolution is religion as much as ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolution is a belief propagated by the religion of secular humanism. It is no different from creationism in this respect. You have both groups coming into the question with presuppositions that will shape how they view the data. That's why you have ID scientists (yes they do exist) and evolutionists looking at the same data and coming up with different conclusions.

    I find it amusing that those who believe that people should be educated will not let something like ID be taught in a school, only their theory. That's not education, that's indoctrination.

  202. "Just a theory" vs. "a theory" by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

    I've noticed a subtle issue with the I.D. vs. Evolutionists article. The press, and *maybe* the school boards, are saying that teachers are to present evolutions as "just a theory".

    The word "just" is badly equivocal in this debate. Does "just a theory" mean:

    (A) Evolution is a theory, but is definitely not true, or...

    (B) Evolution is a theory, but like all theories that explain observations, is subject to later discovery that the theory is wrong. (I.e., The Underdetermination of Theory by Evidence.)

    It's possible that the school boards mean one of {A, B}, but the press / critics are taking the school board to mean the other of {A, B}.

    Unfortunately, confusing (A) and (B) is tragic for this debate, because this is partly a debate on epistemic warrant: "What's a good enough reason for a person to believe a particular proposition?"

    We might say that the school boards have insufficient warrant for claiming evolution to be false. OTOH, many calm, intelligent people consider the epistemic warrany for macro evolution to be less than a perfectly shut case.

    It seems to me that the ACLU isn't merely arguing that the school board shouldn't teach only a Christian world view. Rather, the ACLU is arguing that the school board cannot question the ACLU's world view. And that smacks of both:
    - religious intollerance (of creationist religious views) AND
    - of actually imposing religious views on students: the view that creationist religious views are so wrong that they shouldn't be taught on equal footing as The True Belief (evolution).

    1. Re:"Just a theory" vs. "a theory" by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Scientific "theory" vs dictionary meaning of "theory"

      In science, nothing becomes a theory until it has a mountain of evidence, both observable and experimental back it up. Not until predicted events or phenomena are actually observed in nature, following the predicted pattern. Other scientific "theories" wtih equal and at time less evidence than Evolution: Gravity, Relativity, Quantum Mechanics. If any of these were not "true" or were less than "facts" you could not have entered your miss-informed post via the internet to /., let alone just sit in your chair to do it. Science call s these facts "theories" because science and scientist do not have the hubris to think they have the final answer. They realize that new, better theories may come along and supplant the old ones, that better observations or new experimental facts may cause the theory to be changed or "tweaked" to better explain things.

      The dictionary definition of "theory" you seem to be talking about, is called a hypothesis in science. It may be an intriguing idea but does not yet have any or enough supporting evidence. All theories were once hypothesese. Newtonian physics was the theory when relativity was the hypothesis, for example, but is now well proven. Something else may come along to change even this (M-theory or String Theory, for instance). All that is required is evidence and proof.

      ID and creationism are wrong because they lack any evidence and proof. They do not use the scientific method and assume a conclusion and look for evidence to support it rather than observing and experimenting and drawing the conclusions from that - Go where the evidence takes you, even if you don't like where that is.

      Therefore, ID and creation ism are not science and should not be taught in a science classroom. If the evidence ever appears that will change.

      The ACLU is right. By teaching ID as fact it is not only bad science, but an endorsment of a particular religion, since not all religions support an creation myth as depicted in ID.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    2. Re:"Just a theory" vs. "a theory" by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      IIRC, the school boards in Kansas, etc. aren't saying that ID is a fact where as evolution is a theory. Rather, they're presenting both as theories .

      It sounds like what the ACLU and perhaps you object to is letting the students weigh the evidence themselves.

      BTW, there's an important issue this raises: exactly who gets to decide which observations are qualified as "evidence"?

      I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that you don't consider various evidences for Christianity's truth to be valid evidence for anything, except perhaps as evidence for the idiocy of Christians. So be it.

      However, I think you'll find that ultimately your rejection of the validity of such sources of evidence are rather axiomatic. Or, that they don't cohere very well with the web of beliefs you hold. In that light, you might be able to see your own ideas about evidence as being on equally dubious grounds as those of the creationists.

      I also suspect you have an unrealistically idealized notion of how the scientific process works. You seem to think that the scientific process is basically an inductive one. If you have the time, Google for "retroduction". I think that's probably a better explanation of how people (including scientists) come to hold or discard certain beliefs, and it's rather at odds with your post.

    3. Re:"Just a theory" vs. "a theory" by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      You miss the point.

      Evolution is a "theory" in the scientific sense - plenty of evidence from multiple disciplines that support it. Observable evidence and experimental evidence. Evolution is a fact. It is observable. It is falsifiable. It is real and factual. Think "Theory of Gravity" - gravity can be observed and measured. It is real. It is a fact. How gravity works may be up for discussion but Gravity fact.

      ID is not a "theory" in this same sense. There is no evidence supporting it. It is an idea. A great deal of available observations and experimental evidence actually contradict ID. It is a "theory" in a sense of the dictionary - "I think it works like this" without supporting evidence.

      In this sense school boards in Kansas are wrong. They are not the same, they are not even in the same league.

      There is no evidence for the "truth" of Christianity. If you have some I'd be happy to see it (NOTE: The Bible is a book written by Middle Eastern Mystics 2500 to 1700 years ago. It is evidence of nothing more than the ability to write and bind books during this time period). But that is beside the point.

      ID is not science. It is a naked attempt by certain fundementalist Christians to push their beliefs on everyone. 19 years ago it was called "Young Earth" and before that simply Creationism - the belief that the book of Genesis is true and that we were created by "God". There are about 3 to 4 Billion people on this planet that do not subscribe to that myth.

      If you wish to teach ID in Philosophy, Religion, Myth and Folklore or other similar courses, knock yourself out. But it is not science and not on par with evolution and should not be taught as such in a science class.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    4. Re:"Just a theory" vs. "a theory" by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I don't think I actually am missing your point. I think you're drawing a distinction in degrees: a hypothesis is a belief with little/moderate epistemic warrant, and a theory is a belief with much more epistemic warrant.

      What I'm saying is, your belief about the relative degree of supporting evidence is subjective: you have a certain set of rules by which you consider something to be evidence, and some Christians have other rules. Those Christians may have much more evidence than you think they do, because they're using different rules than you are regarding what's to be considered evidence. I'm conjecting that they may have enough evidence for their beliefs to be called "theory" rather than "hypothesis".

      When you say ID has no evidence supporting it, I think that's a hard claim to defend. I admit it may have no evidence that you accept, but I think you're saying that no one has sufficient evidence for calling it a theory. If that's what you're saying, then here's why I think you're possibly mistaken:

      1. You don't know what observations other people have made. You know that observations that you've directly experienced and the ones you've been told about / read about. But it's a big leap frmo there to thinking that no one else has observed better evidence than you have.

      2. I think there are some common experiences that many of us have, that can be interpreted differently regarding what beliefs they support. You see a beautiful sunset and while you think it's nice to look at, I'm going to guess that you think, "How lucky my brain is constructed to feel pleasure right now." Some theists would say, "Wow, God rocks. What a beautiful universe [s]he has made."

      Do you agree with me so far that two people can draw different conclussions about the implications of a beautiful sunset? I'm not asking you to agree that the theist's conclussion is correct, just that two different conclussions were drawn.

      If so, then what I want to zoom in on here is the question of exactly why you consider your physical reductionistic interpretation to be more valid than the theists. I suspect that when you reflect on it you'll find that in the background you a priori ruled out the theistic explanation.

      Where I'm going with this is that no one (or almost no one) builds his beliefs like a proof-tree, with inscrutible axiomatic beliefs at the leaves of the tree. Rather, even things that we'd like to consider raw evidence typically gets assessed in a way that's compatible with beliefs we already hold at the time we're given the new evidence. This is what I meant by "retroduction" in an earlier post.

      SO... sorry for the long-winded argument, but here's where I'm going with this: When you say there's no evidence for I.D., consider the possibility that when you're considering an experience / observation, you've got presuppositions that guarantee you couldn't take that observation that supports I.D. *even if I.D. were actually true*.

      ---

      This is important, because what it means is that you're very like a careful-thinking Christian, agnostic, Buddhist, etc. in the following regard: You're "scientific" conclussion regarding evolution might be no more free of metaphysical presuppositions than their conclussions are.

      Now, when you say, "ID is not science. It is a naked attempt by certain fundementalist Christians to push their beliefs on everyone." I think you're confusing two (partially overlapping) groups of people:

      Group A) They believe I.D. because it makes the most sense given the rest of what they believe about the universe and about God. Your beef with these people is on scientific / logical grounds. You'd probably think some of these people are smart, and some of them are stupid, after talking with them.

      Group B) They believe that I.D. should be taught in schools. In some ways they're just like you: They hate for children to be taught beliefs that they consider incorrect and mentally / socially damaging. But some of these people might j

  203. What happened to all-knowing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, God created them, and didn't know what they were goign to do, because of free will?

    That makes no sense, it really doesn't. You can't create something, and give it something it did not have, calculate out what it's going to do, and be surprised when it does it.

    You're also bound by the very matter of the tree: Knowledge of Good and Evil. That means, that Adam and Eve didn't KNOW what good and evil was before eating from it, which means how are they supposed ot know they are disobeying God?

    Why didn't God KNOW what they did? Notice how he comes back and goes "Uh.. Why are you covering yourself? Who told you that you were naked?" And where's the Tree of Life that's guarded by the flaming sword??

    Don't you dare claim that it's Christ on the Cross - You can't choose to use vague symbolism where it's convinent, and then animately deny a "Period" of time in Ancient Hebrew can only be a Day.

    And what kind of entity would create something who's only sole purpose is supposed to be to worship them? I find the whole idea rather offensive.

    Not to mention the gradual change - first God walks among garden of eden - then God can't be seen nor touched - only talked to. Then God comes down and wrestles with Jacob... and then God can't be seen nor heard again, until he comes from a mountain and storm. It all changes - which to me is the watermark of People changing, and an ancient culture changing and debating there own view points.

    1. Re:What happened to all-knowing? by bflong · · Score: 1

      You're also bound by the very matter of the tree: Knowledge of Good and Evil. That means, that Adam and Eve didn't KNOW what good and evil was before eating from it, which means how are they supposed ot know they are disobeying God?

      I made several other posts explaining the meaning of the tree.

      Why didn't God KNOW what they did? Notice how he comes back and goes "Uh.. Why are you covering yourself? Who told you that you were naked?"

      Simple. The instant that they ate from that tree and started making decisions for themselves, they pulled away from God and became sinful, flawed, imperfect (btw, the word translated "sin" means "to miss the mark" that being the mark of perfection). When they became imperfect, they became ashamed of their own thoughts and covered themselves. Notice that when they were kicked out, God made "long garments of skin for them" (Genesis 3:21). So he even saw the need for it, now that they were sinful.

      And where's the Tree of Life that's guarded by the flaming sword??

      What about it? The Cherubs and the spinning sword were at the entrance to the garden, not at the "tree of life". By having a tree called the tree of life, and barring their access too it, God was showing that he was rejecting them from having eternal life, and like a fan's power cord pulled from the wall, they would slowly grow old and die just like the fan would eventually stop spinning.

      It all changes

      No, it doesn't. John 1:18 says that "No man has seen God at any time". This would include Adam. Genesis 3:8 says that humans "heard" Gods "voice" as if he was walking around in the garden. No one has ever Touched him. The person that Jacob was wrestling with was an angel. That angel could have easily beat him, but it was Jacobs persistence that was being tested. At the end of it, the angel merely touched him and damaged a ligament in his hip. As for the mountain, how else would you address a few million people in the middle of nowhere, and at the same time show your presence? Other similar things were displays of presence and power to strengthen the faith of his followers. And they were all recorded for our benefit.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    2. Re:What happened to all-knowing? by bflong · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I missed this...
      Why didn't God KNOW what they did?
      Of course he did. You've never seen a parent of a child who just broke a window or something come to that child and ask "What did you do?". He was allowing Adam and Eve to expain themselves, even if thier excuse was feeble.
      Adam: "It's the womans fault"
      Nice one Adam... way to set an example for all us Men.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    3. Re:What happened to all-knowing? by Bedouin+X · · Score: 1

      And what kind of entity would create something who's only sole purpose is supposed to be to worship them?

      A human would.

      --
      Dissolve... Resolve... Evolve...
  204. Re:Atheism also a religion by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

    It is incumbant on the religions to prove they are right, not on anyone else to prove they are wrong. It is the religions that are making the fantastic, extra-ordinary claim. Extra-ordinary claims require extra-ordinary evidence.

    Religions ask you to have "faith" and beleive in things that have no evidence or even evidence to the contrary. Atheism simply says "I don't believe that". It is an act of examining the evidence and drawing conclusions. It says that "Don't believe without compelling evidence". It doesn't say "You must believe this".

    For example, Christianity says "Jesus was born of a virging, died and came back from the dead and accended into heaven. He is the Son of the Omnipotent Creator God, so if you don't beleive this, your soul will burn in Hell for ever, you better believe it!"

    An Atheist would say "Jesus? Ok that's pretty fantastic, and violates the known, observable laws of physic, biology and chemistry. So do you have some very hard evidence that theis Jesus actually lived? Do you have evidence that, if he existed, that all of the fantastic things happened? And even if he existed and these things happened, do you have evidence that this God he is supposed to be the son of existed? And do you have evidence that I have a soul? And where is this Hell place? Evidence? None of that fits in with the observed world around us. I'll be happy to believe if you can prove it"

    Now none of that says the the Atheist must believe a certain thing. Some Atheists believe in karma and non-stop cyclical existance. We call the Buddhists. Some believe in nothing. We call them nihilst. Some believe we were created by Aliens. We call thm Kooks.

    The only thing they have in common is that in their cosmology and world view, they do not believe in or see the need for supreme beings like God(s) or Godess(es).

    No faith. Not a religion.

    --
    Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  205. Intelligent Design is a Science by REDSECTOR1 · · Score: 1

    Intelligent Design is based on science, not theology (like many claim), although there are theological implications none the less with an intelligent designer being involved. The Intelligent Design movement makes a great case based on good scientific evidence only, and have shown the glaring flaws in Darwin's theory of Natural Selection. Evolution and Natural Selection are riddled with holes, they've always been a theory ... so please don't teach us as if it is fact. Don't make this a theological issue when it doesn't have to be! Intelligent Design is making a good case for itself and challenging other theories like they never have been before. It should be taught in school science along with all the other theories. Wake up and smell the coffee people, nothing doesn't become something out of shear randomness. Anyone with a clue can figure that out. Want the truth? Keep an open mind and follow where the evidence takes you. Implications? Yeah. Isn't it worth finding out the truth though?

    1. Re:Intelligent Design is a Science by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      Intelligent Design is based on science, not theology (like many claim), although there are theological implications none the less with an intelligent designer being involved. The Intelligent Design movement makes a great case based on good scientific evidence only, and have shown the glaring flaws in Darwin's theory of Natural Selection. Evolution and Natural Selection are riddled with holes, they've always been a theory

      There's the difference. Evolution is a theory: a set of hypotheses explaining the material world which have repeatedly withstood scientific testing. Intelligent design is not. Intelligent design is a political movement against a scientific theory, it's an anti-theory, the "None of the Above" option, not a real answer. Who or what was the designer? Where does he come from? How does he design things? Why does he design things? When did all this happen? The 'Intelligent Design' answer is "Well, shit, I dunno... but it sure as hell ain't evolution, dammit!"

      In this sense, "Intelligent Design" is a massive step backward from traditional seven-day creationism. Seven-day creationism at least provided testable hypotheses: the world was created in seven days, 6000 years ago. Geologists can go out and test that, and they've found that it's just not the case. Intelligent Design "Theory" has learned from that: if you have predictions and hypotheses, scientists can prove you wrong. So they've gone out of their way to avoid any predictions whatsoever. It's a scientific "Theory" whose main strength is the total absence of any actual theory for scientists to test. It's a rhetorical device, not serious science.

      Wake up and smell the coffee people, nothing doesn't become something out of shear randomness.

      The entire point of Natural Selection is that it's a nonrandom force: some variants have a better-than-average chance of survival and reproduction.

  206. We know where you stand? by Augusto · · Score: 1

    The largest Christian body in the world is not fundamentalist, and doesn't require that followers believe in the literal interpretation of the Genesis story.

    So how can you say "I'm Christian so you know where I stand"?

    --

    - sigs are for wimps.
  207. Re:lack of imagination by CdXiminez · · Score: 1

    OK, let me explain, since moderation has downgraded my insightful remark >-)

    It requires quite a lot of imagination to build a picture in your mind of how the jaw-bones of a fish became the little sound-conductors in our inner ears. Or how the dolphins moved from land to sea. Or how flowers are specialized leaves.
    It is much easier to state that someone has just made all that up.

    However, that statement is _far more complicated_ than explaining what we see by traits of the things we see.
    Because the traits of this transcendental someone must be at least as complex as the world we see. Doubling our problem of explaining the world in stead of reducing it.

  208. yee-frickity-haw! by subtropolis · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A cogent argument sir (or madam). Now where are those mod points i threw away yesterday.

    And if you're not a religious nutcase but you are in the U.S., don't fucking apologise. DO SOMETHING. You are to blame for letting these rabid fundamentalists take over. YOU have to stop them.

    I agree absolutely with this. Hey intelligent Americans - TAKE BACK YOUR FUCKING COUNTRY! We are sick of this shit and many of us are tiring of NOT lumping you all in the same bunch. You are burning serious karma.

    --
    "Our interests are to see if we can't scale it up to something more exciting," he said.
    1. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by sbenj · · Score: 5, Funny
      I agree absolutely with this. Hey intelligent Americans - TAKE BACK YOUR FUCKING COUNTRY! We are sick of this shit and many of us are tiring of NOT lumping you all in the same bunch. You are burning serious karma.

      Sorry, I was watching "Desperate Housewives". What was that again?

    2. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by Arhat · · Score: 2, Informative

      And how do you propose we do this? In case you hadn't noticed, we are seriously outnumbered.

    3. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by Dan+D. · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Dude! We came out in record numbers last time... there's just *less* of us. You think *you've* lost faith in our country... try being here *sure*, absolutely *sure*, there was no way Bush would win twice and then having to face up to that the next morning.

      Anyway what do you expect of people who's motto is "Be Rational" ... a coup d'etat? Ha ... I know its stupid and yet I *still* try to focus on logical arguments with the people who complained to me about Kerry killing Vets and trying to force us to buy his *five* million dollar homes. The "Be Rational!" group is going to run in fear and hide in your backyard before we *fix* anything. I mean come on... we've got Hilary Clinton coming... I don't see her converting masses...

      Back to the topic, (and just because its popular to try to "curb your expectations") I'm a Christian who does insert faith into his logic, but thinks that notion of Evolution *as* intelligent design (i.e. evolution is an intelligent process by kolmogorov complexity) is the coolest thing I've heard this week! :)

      --
      People who quote themselves bug the crap out of me -- Me.
    4. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by magefile · · Score: 1

      We're trying, damn it. But there's only so much we can do. Here's an idea - we'll move to Canada, then you can deal with the US as you please.

    5. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by mbbac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We are fighting it. It's a slow process. We appeciate any assistance.

      Oh, and don't make us bring up The Crusades!

      --

      mbbac

    6. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 0, Troll

      We are a democracy.
      One of the failings of democracies is that when 51% of the people decide something, it can be hard to stop. We do require 60% for some things but they are currently trying to repeal that in the senate. I hope the Dem's hold them back.
      OTH, it's better than the countries where 5% of the people can do this.
      This really all revolves around abortion. It is what has irritated the religious types enough to do this. They don't care of the corporations take over the country as long as abortion is outlawed. Lately gay marriage has them going too.
      My point is... there is not much you can do. The left is pretty discredited and irrational. They went so hard to the left that most of the "center" allied with the republicans. I would go so far as to say most the the left actually hates america which is kinda sad since it is their own country. It's hard to ally yourself with people who hates their own country.
      So we have the religious right + corporations + center vs the center + socialists + communists. The corporations have the money and the religious right have the feet. What I do seriously prepare for is moving from the country if it looks like it is truly going religio fascist.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    7. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by Agripa · · Score: 1

      If only it were so easy.

      The ones who understand the situation learn fast that the nail that sticks up is the one to get hammered. It is a prisoners dilemma in large. Most citizens stand to benefit from rational government but only those who attempt to change it will pay the price.

      As I have posted before, a lot of this is the result of plurality in U.S. elections. Only Republicans or Democrats can realistically be elected and if you disagree with both you are not represented. One party would lead us down the road of religious fundamentalism and the other of socialism. The compromise we have now is worse then a lot of the alternatives but at least we are traveling more slowly because of it.

    8. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by Jonas+the+Bold · · Score: 3, Informative

      Can't. War's over, sanity lost.

      This is a lesson America will only learn the hard way, or not at all. But don't worry, rest of the world: It will directly lead to America no longer being the lone superpower, economically or otherwise. Another bush brand Republican or two, and our economy will no longer be anything to be feared, and the government will be so massively in debt it can no longer afford its military superiority, or waging pointless wars.

      Meanwhile, I've moved to Canada, and don't really feel any need to go back.

      --
      Everything seemed to be going so nice
      'till the end of all beings punched right through the ice
    9. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by pyro_dude · · Score: 1

      Hey, I'm pretty intelligent but I'm also a religious nutcase. Which side do you suppose I should now take? (I'm not Christian)

      --
      --pyro_dude
    10. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by homebrewmike · · Score: 1

      Easy for you to say. I'd LOVE to, really, I would, but the Freemarket Fundamentalists seem to be sleeping withe the the Biblical kind. I'd welcome any suggestions you have on how to >PEACEFULLY< take back the government.

    11. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I will never understand the modding logic here at /. This seems to be a well reasoned post instead of a troll but whatever.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    12. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey intelligent Americans - TAKE BACK YOUR FUCKING COUNTRY!

      The problem is that the dumb ones own all of the guns. Literacy is nice, but it won't stop a bullet.

    13. Re:yee-frickity-haw! by sjudd · · Score: 1

      As the saying goes, dont teach religion in our schools and we wont teach science in your church. so... go stand out front of your local church next sunday and teach some basic scientific priciples.

      --
      All women want is honesty, if you can fake that, you're in.
  209. FFS be fair by SkyLeach · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Evolution and Creation are BOTH THEORIES.

    Christ haven't any of you even tried to discover how to get from a simple amino acid to DNA? That's a whole hell of a lot further leap than some stupid missing link between a fish and a cammel.

    Go and read the work by Michael Behe about the problem of Irreducible Complexity. If you are smart enough to prove him wrong, publish a paper on it.

    I'm sick to death of people claiming that it's just the right wing christians who want fairness to our kids. Some people think aliens made us. Some people believe in God. Hell some people believe that the anthropomorphic principle is responsible for the creation of man (the more we think about ourselves, the more we create ourselves.)

    I don't fit into any camp or ride on any bandwagons but the THEORY of evolution has a whole lot of gaps, has never been PROVEN and as such is a fucking THEORY. Only a tiny percentage of mankind even believes in evolution if you include everyone in the world instead of just a few "learned" men in the US and the European nations.

    Stop making this a fucking issue of religion and thereby insulting those of us who refuse to be bullied into believing a half-finished theory.

    --
    My $0.02 will always be worth more than your â0.02, so :-p
    1. Re:FFS be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      All scientific theories are half-finished.

      Even gravity is only a theory.

      When someone disproves it, it'll be amended to deal with it -- in the same manner that classical newtonian physics (F=ma and that sort of thing) isn't good for very small or very fast bodies since Quantum Mechanics and Relativity were postulated.

      The sciences are in a constant state of revision and experimentation and improvement, in an attempt to explain the world as accurately as is possible -- that's the nature and the goal of science.

      Creationism and ID are simply not even the same thing -- they are rejections of that process. They are resignations to the idea that not only do we not know, we should never even try to know, because it's obviously so complex that only God could do it.

      (Furthermore, there a difference between the term "theorem" in the context of the scientific community and the term "theory" in common usage. While they are both based on observable evidence, the latter does not require any amount of experiment and validation to be done.)

  210. Politics by k-zed · · Score: 1

    The whole question, argument, the bickering and all is completely and ruthlessly pointless. There is exactly one reason why this philosophical standpoint is pushed in the schools: to make those children be honest, reliable voters for the Republican Party and believers of their agenda. It doesn't matter much who created this overcomplicated, but sometimes rather fun mess we live in; what does matter is who gets all the money one can get while being in office. It's not an idealistic world.
    On the other hand, thinking on a regular basis is a good thing. Education, literacy and science are good things. The creationist world view discourages people of all these (its main point being the acceptance of the Bible, a well-written collection of thousand year old truths (as they were), word by word).

    Sigh, people just don't read any more..

    --
    we discovered a new way to think.
  211. A problem by shawng · · Score: 0

    From the article: Behe believes that the vertebrate eye, along with several other biological functions, is irreducibly complex. He tries to show that this is a fatal flaw in evolution because there would be no selection pressure for the intermediate steps in the construction of an irreducibly complex function. While this may seem reasonable, there is a clear way around this problem. Behe completely neglects the possibility that the eye, and other irreducibly complex systems evolved in steps in which the function of the system changed. In fact, Darwin anticipated this challenge in Origin of Species and gave a reasonable explanation of how this very thing could have happened with the eye (217).

    A problem I have seen regarding the ID discussion is that many people writing/commenting on the debate don't know either side very well. The above quote is quite misleading. Darwin's explanation of how an eye evolved presumed that a light-sensitive structure already existed, and then the eye evolved from that. This idea is perhaps not unreasonable. But Behe starts with the light-sensitive structure and demonstates that it in itself is so complex that it could not have evolved on its own, ie. it is "irreducibly complex". Now of course, this claim has been debated, but I think Behe makes a pretty convincing argument in his book "Darwin's Black Box". It would be nice to see people read the book and give it a chance before attacking all of the ID proponents.

  212. Closed minds on both sides it seems... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sorry, can't remember my login right now, and I don't want to make a new account.

    Anyway I notice people becomming insulting towards anyone who proposes a theory (regardless of religion) that is different from the Accepted Knowlege. The response is out of proportion and resembles the response of the fundementalist when religious dogma is challanged.

    I'd highly suggest that folks take a deep breath and try thinking with their brains rather than emotions. I listen to both sides of the arguement and I'll wait for God to answer when I die. But in the time we're waiting I'd suggest reading Kicking the Sacred Cow by James P. Hogan.

  213. God and Evo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    If I'm wrong about God I goto hell.

    If I'm wrong about evolution I gotta listen to people whine about it on slashdot.

    I'm not sure which sucks more.

  214. Yes and no by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 1

    True athiesm is not a religion. As for how we and the rest of the universe got here, we know that we don't know.

    The problem is that most people are wired for religion (it makes for a workable way to organize civilized societies), so when you take away their traditional religion they go find substitutes. Radical environmentalism, One World-ism, Communism, National Socialism, Political Correctness, you name it. They'd have been better off staying Christians.

    Real athiests don't preach, and we're very, very rare. If you're one of us, cool, if not, that's nice. Freedom of religion does not mean eradication of religion.

    As for ID, I don't see the harm in mentioning it and clarifying the distinction between science and religion, then moving on. This refusal to acknowledge that there are other opinions out there smacks at least as much of religious argument as any of the "fundamentalists". Where the ID people are messing up is thinking that winning this argument will do them any good. At best, ID gets a derisive mention in science class.

  215. Belief lies at the fringes of science by pbhj · · Score: 1

    In my view (which I reckon you think is baloney!!) it's important to know the limitations of scientific theory.

    Take the statement: "Everyone knows the Earth revolves around the Sun".

    Do they, surely that's just a simplification based on how the math[s] works. One could couch things in terms of a fixed Earth (isn't that what Einsteins inertial frames of reference lead us to) but it makes the maths harder. How does that make it 'true'?

    Evolution may be falsifiable, and as yet un-falsified. But does that make it true. What about brane theory. Is that true, a theory, a belief? Should brane theory be taught to students, or should you instead teach the 'truth' of the superstrings.

    Then there's particle physics, do electrons exist as point particles? Does any physicist actually believe the electron conforms to current standard models. Sure, it's a useful description, but whether you think it describes our reality or not - that's belief.

    You get the jist ...?

    PS: Apollo's chariot may be the mechanism for solar movement, but no-one has ever seen it -- of course we prefer to believe in gravity now-a-days ... mediated by particles that no-one has ever seen.

    PPS: Sorry I've used physics examples as I'm most comfortable with them. They still serve for the purposes of the discussion, I feel.

    1. Re:Belief lies at the fringes of science by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      "Everyone knows the Earth revolves around the Sun" is not a theory, it's a statement. A statement that indicates the speaker knows what everyone else thinks, which would require some very weighty proof.

      We can assert that the earth (and other planets) revolve around the sun based on observation. More exactly, observation that supports the statement and NO observation that refutes it.

      See, you toss around the term "falsifiable", but I don't think you really understand what it means. It means, in essence, that you can come up with a test of some sort (even if only a hypothetical test) that will either support or refute the claim. If the claim is true, then the result of the test will support it. However, this does NOT guarantee that the claim is 100% true! It has simply been reinforced with evidence and withstood a test. It is very difficult to absolutely prove something is 100% true. Such things are called "theorems".

      If you have an idea, that is a hypothesis. When the hypothesis has been tested and demonstrated to be true at least in context of the test, then it is a theory. A theory that has survived many tests just becomes a stronger theory.

      Then there's particle physics, do electrons exist as point particles?

      According to one theory, yes. And there have been many tests to support it. It is a good model that can be used to predict, correctly, the behavior of the natural world... it is not a belief because there is proof, and not just some crackpot "well this is why" proof but actual, verifiable, testable proof.

      I am not familiar enough with "brane theory" to make any kind of comment on it, but if the rest of your post is any indication... neither are you.
      =Smidge=

  216. WWCD? by Otto · · Score: 1

    I think really what we disagree about is who is a Christian. A Christian in demographic terms is a person who says he believes in Jesus as more than historical figure. For me, that's not a Christian.

    You don't get to pick and choose here. A person who says he is a Christian is a Christian. Simple as that. You may disagree with his beliefs, but lots of Christians disagree with each other. There's many, many factions there. For example, Catholics claim that they're the only ones, but then so do Southern Baptists.

    Well, from a non-Christian point of view, you're all Christians. You all get lumped in the same category. And that's just how it is. You do the same to Islam, after all. I mean, there's just as much diversity there too you know, but you lump it all together under one broad category.

    My point is that you don't get to say who is a true Christian when you're generalizing about them as a whole. That's like me saying that all black people like chicken and then defining "black people" as "that guy over there standing in line at the KFC (points)".

    --
    - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:WWCD? by danheskett · · Score: 1

      And that's just how it is. You do the same to Islam, after all.
      I don't agree with that view at all! I know a fair about Isalm, and I know a bit about it's history, and it's practice.

      I hardly equate Wahabbists with Shites.

      Next, you assume I am a Christian. Which is interesting.

      All I was pointing out is that many people say they are Christian, because of whatever reason, when in fact they have no idea for what they signed up for! If you were baptized at birth, and then never had any association with the faith for the rest of your life, I hardly think that qualifies you as a Christian!

    2. Re:WWCD? by Otto · · Score: 1

      Next, you assume I am a Christian. Which is interesting.

      I was using the royal "you". ;)

      All I was pointing out is that many people say they are Christian, because of whatever reason, when in fact they have no idea for what they signed up for! If you were baptized at birth, and then never had any association with the faith for the rest of your life, I hardly think that qualifies you as a Christian!

      Agreed, but that's not what you actually said. You were basically generally complaining about people who claim to be Christian and then don't know their own stories or only have a minimal knowledge of them, calling them, essentially, not "true" Christians.

      I was only pointing out that from an outsider point of view, Christians are Christians. You don't get to pick and choose. I lump all Christians in the same category in exactly the same way that I lump all Islam in the same category. I'm aware that they have subdivisions, but not being a member of that faith, I really don't much care what it is that they believe. Not really. They call themselves Christian, then as far as I'm concerned, they're Christian. That's the way it works.

      I hardly equate Wahabbists with Shites.

      I most certainly do. They're insane, like all religious people everywhere. Simple. Easy. :)

      Next, you assume I am a Christian. Which is interesting.

      Generally, those who claim that some Christian group aren't *really* Christians are those claiming to be the only *true* Christians themselves. It's semantically null, but still a pretty good indicator, all in all.

      All I was pointing out is that many people say they are Christian, because of whatever reason, when in fact they have no idea for what they signed up for! If you were baptized at birth, and then never had any association with the faith for the rest of your life, I hardly think that qualifies you as a Christian!

      As a non-Christian, the only qualifier that I care about is what that person says. If they say they're Christian, then I'm going to take that at face value. What you say is irrelevant. You see, you're claiming that they're not really Christians because of X. However, I don't believe in X or in what the other Christian believes in either. Both of them are equally ridiculous to me.

      You stating that they somehow don't qualify carries no more weight than them claiming that they do. As far as I care, neither one of you is anywhere close to correct, so WTF does it matter? That's my point.

      If you (assuming you're Christian) don't like being lumped in with them, well, tough. Change the name of your particular cult then. Make it distinctive. Because a Christian is a Christian is a Christian, and they're all nuts.

      --
      - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    3. Re:WWCD? by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Because a Christian is a Christian is a Christian, and they're all nuts.

      Well that's really the essence of the argument, I suppose. Anyone who associates themselves as "Christian" is nuts. That actually clears things up nicely.

      I am not going to criticize you very much on this topic, but I will say this. It may be worth your time to understand the finer points of how this all fits into the "big picture". Walking about thinking all Christians are nuts is easy, but it doesn't help much when going through life. By all means believe what you will, but grouping all Christians together into one big pot is going to make a mess of how you view politics, the world, human events, and all manner of big things.

      The difference between, say, Catholics and Baptists is so huge that even though the "Christian" label fits both, treating them as following the same religion is bound to disappoint.

    4. Re:WWCD? by Otto · · Score: 1

      It may be worth your time to understand the finer points of how this all fits into the "big picture". Walking about thinking all Christians are nuts is easy, but it doesn't help much when going through life.

      On the contrary, I've found that this simple adjustment in perspective has helped tremendously. It explains an extraordinary amount, and it is very helpful when you have to deal with such irrational people. You tend to speak slowly and not shout at them, for one thing. Wonderfully useful, I've always found.

      By all means believe what you will, but grouping all Christians together into one big pot is going to make a mess of how you view politics, the world, human events, and all manner of big things.

      Oh, don't get me wrong. I don't limit myself to Christians. All religious people, of any kind, are nuts. Since I admit this is the majority of the population, it actually makes things easier to explain. You stop looking for rational behavior for one thing, since rationality is clearly not a prerequisite. When people can believe in anything so clearly insane, then they can do anything for essentially no reason whatsoever. You don't have to wonder why anymore, and the background becomes irrelevant.

      If you've ever actually dealt with a crazy person, you'd probably understand. Each and every one of these crazy people has their own particular worldview that nobody else shares, and while things they do make no sense to you, they always make perfect sense to them. So it becomes a matter of trying to see the particular type of sense that it makes to the other guy. Once you understand that, you understand them.

      But the important thing here is that every crazy person is different. You cannot generalize them, like you were doing with various religious peoples.

      The difference between, say, Catholics and Baptists is so huge that even though the "Christian" label fits both, treating them as following the same religion is bound to disappoint.

      Again, you missed the point. The difference between, say, any person and any other person is so huge that even though you could come up with some label to fit us both, treating us in the same way will *never* work.

      You can lump religious people together, unless you consider them all crazy. Then you have to actually deal with them as the individual crazy people they are. It's a matter of perspective, perhaps, but the point is that *what* they believe is irrelevant, as the belief is not the person. You never have dealt with a belief, but you have dealt with people.

      --
      - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    5. Re:WWCD? by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1
      A person who says he is a Christian is a Christian. Simple as that.

      Not all those who claim to be Christians put their faith into practice. The word "Christian" has a very specific meaning, and refers to followers of the teachings of Christ. These teachings are not incomprehensible or hidden; they are written out clearly in the first four books of the New Testament, along with additional history and commentary by those who knew Christ personally.[1]

      I would suggest that you judge for yourself whether a given person is living according to Christian teachings rather than simply taking their word for it. Christianity isn't about the Christians; it's about the Christ.

      [1] The Old Testament is also a very valuable resource. There are many cross-references between the New and Old Testament teachings, and much of Christ's instructions regarding personal behavior are a clarification of what the Old Testament law (ten commandments, et al.) was intended to be, and would have been had it been understood and implemented properly.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  217. Take two by niiler · · Score: 1
    Yes, you missed my point.

    Before ascribing all complicated behavior to a creator, understand that complicated behavior often happens *in spite of a creator* or without a creator. This becomes an argument for behavior being independent of intent - something understood by most people who program computers.

    Indeed, the thing least understood by creationists is such self-organizing behavior. Such non-intelligent behavior is seen by storms that are subject to coriolis forces, gravity, solar-heating, and some atmospheric chemistry. When one looks deeply enough, one can determine the root cause of such behavior (e.g. the eye of the storm), and although the consituent parts may be quite simple, the interactions may be incredibly complex.

    Humans have long attributed behavior they can't explain to divinity or spirituality. Before Luigi Galvani touched different types of metal to the dead muscle of a frog making it twitch, it was thought that some spiritual essense was responsible for the movement of muscles. Yet now we understand that it is an action potential - a voltage change that makes the muscles work. We understand about how this action potential propagates, and we can even construct low level computer models that take certain action potential trains as inputs to actin and myosin filaments and create large scale muscle movement.

    If I, as a product of self-organizing complex behavior, am capable of building something that has its own self-organizing complex behavior, then a divine creator/intelligent designer is not required.

    What it all boils down to is this a chicken or the egg argument. If a creator is needed to create life, the Universe, and everything, then who created the creator? On the other hand, maybe everthing just is. In which case, no creator is necessary.

  218. The 6k Light-Year Limit by rdmiller3 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Here's a bit of Creationist cosmology that gets skipped over a lot by the fundamentalists...

    The "Young Earth" (more accurately, "young universe") viewpoint supposes that the universe was created about 6000 years ago. Okay, okay, quit laughing. That viewpoint HAS managed to turn up some interesting cases of rapid rock formation and "instant fossilization" which should really be examined with a more open mind. ANYway, they say that nothing is more than 6000 years old.

    Then these same people go on and on about how huge the universe is, with all those stars so far away... star clusters, nebulae, galaxies, galactic clusters, etc. The problem is, most astronomically observed objects are more than 6000 light-years away. So if the universe is only 6000 years old, how did the light from those objects get here?

    I've seen a couple ways to talk around this problem. The least idiotic one is, "God created everything in its finished form". They say that animals and people were created as adult creatures, and so the universe was created all-grown-up. Quit giggling and wait for the real obvious problem that they skip.

    Okay, so even if you buy into all that about creation, you still have a really, really big problem with measuring distances to the stars. The whole idea is based on the assumption that the light which we see actually came all the way from the star in a more-or-less straight line at the speed of light. We measure angles and we measure parallax to get even more accuracy but it's still based on the assumption that the light actually came from the distant object in the normal way. The problem is, according to the creation doctrine, no light could have been going anywhere for more than 6000 years because that would have been before the pronouncement of "Let ther be light."

    What that means is that according to creationist doctrine anything which appears to be more than 6000 light-years away is actually "faked" by God to look that way.

    So make a dot on a chalkboard. That's us. Now draw a circle around it. That's the 6k light-year limit of what we can really see and measure by what we know about light. Everything outside of that may or may not really exist because it had to be "faked" by God at creation for us to see it at all. Now for the real fun... Stellar events. Every supernova that we see, since it's more than 6k light-years away, never really happened! It's just a light show that God puts on just to make the universe look old. All those most-distant quasars and pulsars, high-energy signals from the beginning of the universe... none of it is real. It's a gazillion-year-long history falsified, for what purpose?

    The heavens declare that the god of these "Creationists" is a liar.

    1. Re:The 6k Light-Year Limit by SenorChuck · · Score: 1

      The main problem with your argument is that you're not arguing against the topic at hand. Was the story about creationists, or was it about intelligent design?

      I wanted to spend a little time educating you about the difference between the two, but get this! It's the really fun part! It's not good form to tell other people how right you are by insulting the people you're arguing against.

      Of course, maybe I'm wrong, and you're not trying to actually convince anyone of your views. Maybe you're just trying to get people who already feel the same way you do to bob their heads in support.

      --
      A wise person makes his own decisions, a weak one obeys public opinion. -- Chinese proverb
    2. Re:The 6k Light-Year Limit by blikksem · · Score: 1

      Plenty of interesting issues regarding this. Take a read here http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs2002/0809_cdk_ davies.asp

    3. Re:The 6k Light-Year Limit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er, or they could just respond that it's only Earth that is 6k years old. In fact, it's hardly contrary to the Bible to say that Earth was even here, it just had no suitable living conditions and God started with that.

    4. Re:The 6k Light-Year Limit by rdmiller3 · · Score: 1
      :-) Point taken.

      My main intent was to show that the folks who are supporting the notion of "intelligent design" also support other ideas which deserve ridicule.

      Pardon me if I indulged in a little of that ridicule myself.

    5. Re:The 6k Light-Year Limit by rdmiller3 · · Score: 1
      The idea that the speed of light may have changed or decayed is countered by this particular example: http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/dave_matson /young-earth/additional_topics/supernova.html

      Nevertheless, it doesn't affect what I was trying to get across in the first place. My point was that we estimate the distance to stars based upon the assumption that we know how light behaves. As soon as you claim that we don't know how fast light may have been going, you have only succeded in making our little bubble of reliably-observable space smaller than before.

      Oh, and that article you linked to... sorry, but that didn't look like real science to me. Digging through old measurment data is not how an experiment is done. Set up an apparatus specifically for that purpose, then take measurements of the speed of light over an extended period of time. Whichever direction you orient the device, whenever you take the measurements, you'd be guaranteed a place in scientific history if you could manage to demonstrate any change in the measured speed of light in correlation with time.

  219. Microbial Noosphere by gobbo · · Score: 1

    Well, some of us conjecture that there is ID in the global system, and that it is under the direction of itself -- Gaia, mother nature, Terra, what-have-you. The design is carried out by microbes, including bacteria and viruses. The overall design is based on some geologically long-term growth & homeostatic cycles, is expressed in some system-wide synergy that is analagous to slow intelligence, and we're a stage in the design. Think of yourself as a specialized cell in a large body.

    Just conjecture, mind you, completely unprovable at this point, much like ID in general. At least as much fun a conjecture, I think--unless you have an inflated view of your own importance.

  220. It weren't the Apple he was worried about... by Direwraithe · · Score: 1

    To all who think Adam and Eve were kicked out for eating of the 'Tree of Knowledge'... that's incorrect... look at Genesis 3:22...

    And the LORD God said, "The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever."

    He was more worried about Man becoming immortal. He was worried about competition... not teaching a lesson. Or so the book says...

    -G.

  221. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by will_die · · Score: 1

    Eugenics was considered the science of the day, and was right up there as being a theory. it had been proven as was accepted by the general scietific community as being true. Granted it had only been truly proven on animals and plants but reading the lectures of that day and even the political discussions of the 1910s when various eugenic laws were being past and you have a repeat of what of the conversation between I.D. and evelution
    The thinking about uclers was not fully accepted until 1994, and did not really start until 1982.
    The earth moving around the Sun is based totally on work by Aristotle, he also went around killing off the theory that it was the other way around because that did not comply with his theories. While ARistotle did do alot of philosophical and political work it is hard to say that this falls under that.

  222. Our "excuse" for that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "neo conservatives" believe in a theory called catastrophism, inside which is contained the idea that a worldwide catastrophe, like a worldwide flood *cough* Noah's Flood *cough* could form the fossils instantly, without needing millions of years to slowly turn the bones into stone.

    Thus, since we believe Noah's Global Flood did occur, it explains all of the supposedly millions of years old fossils - as well as the layers they exist in - without requiring an earth older than, say, a few thousand years.

    1. Re:Our "excuse" for that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, right before Noah's Global Flood, there were velociraptors running amok and no one thought it important to write this shit down?!?!?!

      What the hell were these prophets smoking?

    2. Re:Our "excuse" for that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even better is the fact that, if you believe the bible, Noah apparently invited two of every animal onboard, including your velociraptors, a pair of Tyranosaurus Rex, and even a pair of Apatosaurus (aka Brontosaurus) and a couple of Diplodocus.

      Essentially, Noah's ship was the size of the Titanic. Even bigger, I would imagine.

      Why does common sense flee the scene when faith enters the picture?

    3. Re:Our "excuse" for that... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Well, for common sense.. if you are collecting animals do you collect BIG ones? or little ones... little ones can be fed and cleaned up after much more easily than big ones.. so you collect young bears and young elephants and young raptors... etc... and of course if you assume GOD then if GOD could shut the door, he could put the animals into an un-natural hybernation.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    4. Re:Our "excuse" for that... by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      I would imagine you collect ones of mature, mating age. There are too many chances for them to die before they get there if they're just chillens. You'll want to get them off the boat and get them checked into a motel asap so they can get back to the job of making babies. If they're not even going to make it to the age of reproduction, why the hell even bring them on in the first place?

  223. A comment from a Jew on this Issue by tezza · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I've seen a lot of Christians posting comments on this subject. I am Jewish, and have a different take.
    I would say that very few Jews are literalists. Many more Christians are literalists with the Old Testament than Jews are. This is absolute and also by percentage figures.

    Most Jews have accepted some of the wisdom from the teaching of Moses Maimonides, the Baal Shem Tov, et alia. I will focus on Maimonides.
    He argues against literalism ["Finger of G-d" was a literal finger, Monty Python styley]. Most Jews are the same.

    Jews think most stories in the Bible are allegories. Jews are certain to consider the creationist literal 7 days as an allegory. Many, including myself believe that G-d guided evolution.

    Who decided that Homo-Erectus wasn't erradicated by influenza? Evolutionary theorists would say luck. I would say G-d.

    Both would have a hard time proving it.

    --
    [% slash_sig_val.text %]
    1. Re:A comment from a Jew on this Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who decided that Homo-Erectus wasn't erradicated by influenza? Evolutionary theorists would say luck. I would say G-d.
      Both would have a hard time proving it.

      There is no proof to a god's existence or doings. Leave us, scientists, worry about facts; you can worry about your god, santa claus, tooth fairy or whatever.

    2. Re:A comment from a Jew on this Issue by tezza · · Score: 1
      Leave us, scientists, worry about facts;

      Wow, I'm totally convinced by your water tight argument. You sound like the intellectual giant who can sort out ALL of science. If only you didn't post as an Anonyomous Coward, I could know to look for your sage teachings in future.

      --
      [% slash_sig_val.text %]
    3. Re:A comment from a Jew on this Issue by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      Who decided that Homo-Erectus wasn't erradicated by influenza? Evolutionary theorists would say luck. I would say G-d

      Both would have a hard time proving it.

      First of all, science doesn't prove things. It's the falsification that counts. Second of all, say Goddidit would fit any evidence, and thus has no explanatory power at all. Thirdly, at least some H. erectus's survived, because we're there descendants. Now the ones that left Africa, at least by the OoA model (as opposed to the multiregional theory), did in the end die out. It's not likely that they simply were unable to compete with the modern humans that left Africa some 50,000 years ago. Claiming influenza did it probably isn't falsifiable, but is it even necessary to bring up that sort of hypothesis?

      As to Biblical literalism, that isn't even the norm of Christianity. None of the larger churches advocate it, and in the case of the Roman Catholic Church, literalism has never been part of the basic theology. In fact, it's really utterly foreign to Catholicism (as well as major Protestant sects like Anglicanism/Episcopalianism and Lutheranism). Biblical literalism really came into being in the 19th century, and has damn little to do with historical views of the Bible among Christians. In fact, some Christians who I have talked to over the years consider Biblical literalism a heretical belief, Bibliolatry.

      The Catholic Church's view is that any interpretation of the Bible that runs counter to the observed world is, by its very nature, a false doctrine.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:A comment from a Jew on this Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Jews think most stories in the Bible are allegories.

      Apparently, some Christians think differently too.

      In 1978, I was an 8th grade student in a Christian school in New Delhi, India. (I am not a Christian). The school was run by a Christian missionary couple, Mrs. and Mr. "D" from Baltimore, USA.

      We used to have a moral education class in which Mrs. D imparted ME to us with Bible as the source. One time we had a discussion on Creationism versus Evolution.

      I asked how could God create Universe in 7 days. She replied how did I know whether the length of the day was same then as now.

  224. Evolutionary *theory* by giantsfan89 · · Score: 0

    Evolution and Intelligent Design are both theories and should equally be explained as such. To dismiss Intelligent Design as an impossibility is to deny the fact that goal of true science is learning and experimenting to find the truth. Rather than work toward true science, these evolutionists work to prove things which only further their ideology. I can't remember the quote, but one naturalist evolutionist was quoted as saying that even if Intelligent Design were proven to be correct, he could not accept it and would still work to disprove it. Such bias is much worse than fundamentalism! Evolutionists are not trying to lay all the evidence out and ask people to judge for themselves which is true, but they are shutting out another viewpoint to further their own.

    Now, if this was Microsoft...

    --
    Don't ping my cheese with your bandwidth!
    1. Re:Evolutionary *theory* by Wubby · · Score: 1

      Try talking about the theory of the sub-ether to a physic group sometime. You'll learn quickly why some theories are supported and some aren't. The thoery of aliens seeding earth is just as probable, so why not teach that is school?

      Evolution (and science) is about discovering new things, ID is about maintaining the old.

      --
      Sig
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars
  225. A good read by BabyPanther · · Score: 1

    Scientific America Article giving up on evolution. [www.sciam.com]

    This one is called the Fossil Fallacy [www.sciam.com] and has a very interesting viewpoint on the debate.

  226. Hopefully this is not redundant... by Froze · · Score: 1

    The way I see it, there are is a subtle but important distinction that needs to be made. Evolution claims that there is interspecies developement, the evidence shows *only* intraspecies developement. Evolution as a theory extrapolates from intraspecies evolution to interspecies evolution. There is not one single instance in the fossil record (that I am aware of) that shows a complete change from one species to another! In fact, it is statistically significant that in the abundance of the fossil record that no complete change exists. This implies that there is some other effect causing new species to form, ID or not, I don't know.

    I don't doubt that within a species the pressures of natural selection act to create new capabilities. However, until there is solid evidence that the pressure of natural selection can cause one species to develop into another I will not accept evolution as a theory. For what its worth I don't accept intelligent design either. Neither side has enough evidence to be accepted by any rational person, this is the true scientific viewpoint.

    --
    -- The morphemes of your disquisition are ascertainable, but they have eschewed an ambit of transpicuous exposition.
  227. What's The Problem? by johnos · · Score: 1

    The Muslims have no problem with evolution. Neither do the Bhuddists, the Hindus or 95% of the Christians. There is one sub-set of Christians that have a problem. But why? The Catholic Church accepts evolution, and they aint exactly an enlightened or scientific organization. Their position is that evolution is to the human soul as a recipe is to a banquet. Try to eat a recipe. It's God's purpose that's important, not His methods.

  228. This isn't about science by Kohath · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Why don't you all just say it:

    You hate religious people, especially Christians.

    Even though you'll allow them to vote (for now) and pay taxes, you don't want them to have any say in the education those taxes buy.

    Is the truth so hard to say?

    1. Re:This isn't about science by Wubby · · Score: 1

      Wrong.

      We hate PEOPLE who try and ram thier personal belief system down other peoples throats and then whine when people start objecting to being told that they are somehow inferior and worthless as people if they don't agree.

      I love Christians. Of all the people I know and care about, about 5% are non-christians, which is likely true for a lot of people.

      But SOME "Christian" these days are making it a "crusade" to ensure that not only do they get special treatment in every sphere (public, private, corporate, political) and then cry "persecution" when other don't bow down and clear the path, that Christians get a bad reputation.

      Forcing a bad imitation of science upon kids who are trying to learn how to think is evil! Giving kids facts and showing the true connections that lead to a real theory is helping them become people, not serfs and mindless little clones of your warped version of the great Christian faith.

      And the word "theory" is special. As in atomic thoery, electron theory, theory of electricity. Where are the "alternate" theories for those? The same science that came up with those came up with evolution. Science is a process, not an answer. "Intelligent Design" is an answer looking for a process.

      Oh man... I just fed a troll, didn't I.

      --
      Sig
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars
    2. Re:This isn't about science by Kohath · · Score: 1

      We hate PEOPLE... [goes on to describe who he hates]

      Ok.

      Oh man... I just fed a troll, didn't I.

      No, I genuinely think that hatred is more and more of the motivation for the policies and the preferences of the left. Regardless of whether they're correct or incorrect, policies shouldn't be motivated by hate.

    3. Re:This isn't about science by Wubby · · Score: 1

      Talk about context mining.

      No, I genuinely think that hatred is more and more of the motivation for the policies and the preferences of the left. Regardless of whether they're correct or incorrect, policies shouldn't be motivated by hate.

      1) (sarcasm: on) 'Cause religion has never had a problem with hate among it's followers. Hate never motivates religious people to kill or conquer or oppress. (sarcasm: off)

      2) As for left and right: why do you assume it's science on the left and religious on the right? Who do you see in current politics looking to subvert common goals for an extreme agenda? The "right". The "right" is using fear, hate and divisivness to force others do as they want them to do, not do what may be best and agreeable for all. As wonderful as the Christian religion is, Liberty for all is not one of it's values. Freedom to choose and speak and disent in not among the 10 Commandments. Amercan values and Christian values to not have to conflict, but the right seem to want them to.

      3) This is not about hate, this is about what is best and honest. ID pushers are NOT honest people. They are knowingly using psuedo-science concepts and language to push a religious agenda. I thought lying was not allowed in the Christian religion.

      --
      Sig
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars
    4. Re:This isn't about science by Kohath · · Score: 1

      1) (sarcasm: on) 'Cause religion has never had a problem with hate among it's followers. Hate never motivates religious people to kill or conquer or oppress. (sarcasm: off)

      So someone else did it first. So what? Clearly, that doesn't make it Ok. What's your point?

      2) As for left and right: why do you assume it's science on the left and religious on the right? Who do you see in current politics looking to subvert common goals for an extreme agenda?

      George Soros, Micheal Moore, trial lawyers, unions, the ELF and the rest of the humans-last environmental crowd, AUSCS, the ACLU, and people who use hate as their political motivation. That's a list to start with.

      The "right". The "right" is using fear, hate and divisivness to force others do as they want them to do,

      You can't use "fear, hate and divisivness to force others". You can only use force to force others.

      not do what may be best and agreeable for all. As wonderful as the Christian religion is, Liberty for all is not one of it's values. Freedom to choose and speak and disent in not among the 10 Commandments. Amercan values and Christian values to not have to conflict, but the right seem to want them to.

      Jesus didn't write the 10 Commandments. He popularized the golden rule though.

      The "right" wants liberty more than the left does. I'm on the right, and that's what I want. But maybe you disagree about who wants it more. So both sides want liberty. I don't get what the conflict is about if both sides want the same thing.

      Also, anything in the public schools isn't a liberty issue. It's just a question of who wins politically. If you don't want the cirriculum determined politically, then the schools need to be privatized so the customers can choose the cirriculum.

      3) This is not about hate, this is about what is best and honest. ID pushers are NOT honest people. They are knowingly using psuedo-science concepts and language to push a religious agenda. I thought lying was not allowed in the Christian religion.

      Someone can believe something to be the truth without your agreement or approval. They don't even need the approval of scientists or slashdot or the news media. They're not lying. Are you lying about them?

  229. Of Flew and Atheist Scientists by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    Two things show the Intelligent Design movement has momentum and should be taken seriously:

    1) Science has led famed atheist Anthony Flew to become a theist. This would be the equivalent of the pope become an agnostic. While not proof for anything it is significant.

    2) I've seen articles about scientists postulating about multiple universes. Inevitably this is the argument: this universe is incredibly well-tuned for life. We can't allow for a Designer. So we are going to speculate that there are multiple universes.

    In regards to 2), I have appreciated the honesty. Atheists don't want to have accountablity for actions. But admitting that psychology is driving their scientific speculations is very refreshing.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    1. Re:Of Flew and Atheist Scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call BS on this.

      Does the concentration of Christians in the US, and the number of atheists in China prove that God is more real in the US than China?

      The many worlds' hypothesis predated ID. It's creation had absolutely nothing to do with ID, but as a separate interpretation of quantum theory. The idea of multiple universes to explain physical constants is still further removed - such an explanation occured precisely due to a failure to find the 'God factor' in the various physical equations, and because there was correspondingly no reason why multiple universes can be present.

    2. Re:Of Flew and Atheist Scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe because Flew is 81 years old and losing his mind. More seriously, his reasons for believing in some god would fail to convince most non-believers.

  230. Separation is not a ban by FullCircle · · Score: 1

    Why is it that lately separation is viewed as a ban?

    If you look at it as the founding fathers wrote it, separation means that there can't be laws written to either enforce OR ban a religion.

    So how can you take a religious view to court?

    As long as a majority of the taxpayers in that schools community are happy and a resonable attempt at fairness is shown, what is the problem?

    Just like the vocal minority of prudes are trying to censor radio and TV, a vocal minority of Athiests are trying to stomp out freedom of religion.

    BTW, I'm not a religous nut, I'm a freedom nut.

    --
    If tyranny and oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. - James Madison
  231. Anger monkeys! by SenorChuck · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Holy mineral replacement, Batman! What's with all of the anger monkeys here?

    I'm a bit annoyed by the stupid moderation on subjects like this, which amounts to a bunch of "YES MAN". Someone thinks evolution is great? +5 Insightful! Someone else says that people who think ID is cool are a bunch of retards? +5 Insightful! Someone who thinks ID offers an alternative viewpoint to something that cannot be observed? -5 Troll!

    Seriously, this place needs a rectal craniotomy. All of you left-wing and right-wing nutjobs need to give your dogmas a rest and have some civilised discussion.

    Oh, wait. I forgot where I'm posting this to.

    --
    A wise person makes his own decisions, a weak one obeys public opinion. -- Chinese proverb
  232. Learn Before You Speak by RU4HIM · · Score: 0

    I have read many of the comments here. Many of them I find revealing as to the amount of knowledge the poster has on the subject. I do not claim to be an expert, but I do claim to have studied this topic from both sides of the fence. I can assure you that many of the posters do not understand this subject. 1. There are scientific explanations for creationism. Every last morsel has an undisputable argument saying creationism can be true, literally as the Bible says it is. 2. There are no transitional forms between species. None have been found that all scientists agree are real. There have been many hoaxes in this area, but no undisputable transitional forms. Again, if you read up on this topic you would get the truth. If you really want to give this topic a fair shake, then take some time to hear out some Christian scientists arguments on this topic. These guys are SCIENTISTS that adhere to any and all scientific truths (but not all theories). The following websites will give you the truth, not myths and half-truths of which you will find many on this page. You want the truth? If so, check out these sites. If not, keep arguing with the uninformed. Excellent site on this topic: http://www.answersingenesis.org/ Another one: http://www.christiananswers.net/creation/home.html My intentions are not to offend anyone, just to make a point without writing for an hour. If you want the truth, seek it. It is there. Thank you, Joe

  233. ID Attempts the Ludicrous by Frobozz0 · · Score: 1

    Intelligent Design (ID) is called pseudo-science for a reason. ID proponents do the same thing with Science that they do with the interpretation of religious texts- throw out certain parts. There are a thousand little reasons why ID is not to be taught in science classes. The first, and most obviously wrong concept is that ID proponents use a supreme and intelligent being to support a scientific process. There is not a single piece of scientific evidence to support the existence of a supreme being. And, yet, ID proponents START (problem one) with the grand assumption (problem two) that a supreme being (problem three) is the main driving force behind an otherwise perfectly scientific system (problem four.)

    Intelligent Design proponents lack a fundamental understanding of the scientific process. They start with the conclusion and work backwards to the evidence. This is contradictory from the scientific process and, as such, is not scientific. You can't claim something is Science unless you follow it's basic principals. Hence the term Pseudo-Science.

    Scientists came to the conclusion that evolution is the basis of all biological development by observation. These observations continue constantly and have strengthened the mountain of evidence for Evolution the same way we keep falling back to Earth in support of Gravity. (I use gravity because it's REALLY hard to deny that one.) While both theories get fine tuned and modified over time to support the evidence, there is not a single shred of evidence to refute either one.

    Proponents of ID would argue that the evidence is so vast and complex that it could not have occured through natural means. Well, through scientific process we can say with certainty that evolution is as strong a theory as gravity. ID proponents will argue we can only say this as it applies to micro-evolution, which is a ID made up word to make evolution sound trivial on a grand scale. This attempt is to imply that the rules governing the evolution of fruit flies, pigeons (amongst hundreds of others observed within a couple human life times) can't evolve enough to be genetically incompatible. Except they do. And Scientists observe these effects all the time and add it to the pile of evidence that supports Evolution.

    Also, let's not forget that the most simple answer is usually the correct one. Evolution is simple. Yes, the results are seemingly complex and varied (they are) but the basic principle of Evolution is as simple as it gets: you start with a soup of ingredients and the biology of living things that result from that soup will grow with complexity over time to better compete for resources (the soup.) Simple. Part of that process includes the basic idea that, if all living things were identical that they would be susceptible to the same evolutionary problems. Aside from things outside it's control (the end of the soup, Earth) evolution accounts for variety because it allows some living things to be diverse enough to survive events that will wipe out others. Again, this is pretty simple.

    At the end of the day, people who irrationally hold an opinion dear will do irrational things to support it.

    --
    "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
  234. Type of philosophy by Tony · · Score: 1

    ...what is the philosophy of science, more than applied metaphysics?

    Epistomology?

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Type of philosophy by Potor · · Score: 1
      No. The philosophy of science is the study of what science assumes (i.e. the unstated view of reality which underlies various scientific projects).

      Epistemology, on the other hand, is the study of our ability to know, but not what we know, nor the reasons why we think we know it. These are metaphysical questions.

      Thus, I think metaphysics is more fundamental to the philosophy of science than epistemology.

      I realise, however, that most American philosophers consider epistemology to be prima philosophia, and I understand their reasoning. I simply disagree.

  235. Taking bets... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... on how many variants of the spelling of "intelligent" the posters can come up with.

    I'll refrain from pointing out that not only is the word spelled corrected in the article summary (for those of you that don't RTFA), but is also spelled correctly in its title as well.

    I'd say that pretty much disproves the whole idea of Intelligent Design, wouldn't you?

  236. Re:Atheism also a religion by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, Franco, Pol Pot, Mao Zedong ... you Atheists have proud company.

    lol! Yeah, they were killing people out of atheism, and not, you know, thirst for power.

    Good one! It's not a coincidence, it's a cause! Hihihi!

    --

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

  237. Re:Atheism also a religion by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
    It is in character design screens on video games :-)

    As atheist is a religion on census forms...

  238. My Take on Things by warmgun · · Score: 2, Interesting
    An astronomer turned creationist named Hugh Ross (http://reasons.org/index.shtml) came to speak at my university and I went to see it, curious to see what his arguments were and eager to ask some questions. The gist of his spiel is that anything that science can't explain can be explained by God or the Bible. He also touted things like Mitochondrial Eve and the anthropic principle, perfectly legitimate scientifically secular ideas but twisted so that they are evidence that God exists.

    In the end, it was rather ridiculous. There were many people there and over 90% of them were over 50. Apparently, he was trying to start a chapter of his group in the city. Anyway, he wouldn't answer any questions from us youngsters, which left me feeling like I just wasted 2 hours of my time. In the end I was really offended by the man. He was a published astronomer, so as a man of science he must know how ridiculous these arguments are. He's abusing the public's ignorance of science and a yearning for proof of God's existence to advance his beliefs.

    Here's how he started his talk:

    "Who came up with the big bang theory: Einstein, Hawking, Araham, or Moses? Actually, there's some debate over whether Moses or Abraham was first, so both of those are correct." The man was saying that the big bang theory is in the Bible! If you need proof of twisting an idea, this is it. The school board in Dover is no different. Espousing a scientific theory that hasn't passed muster through the well-established journal peer-review system is an affront to science. I don't mind them believing in it or teaching it to their own children, but don't force it on me and mine.

  239. Occam's Razor by mangu · · Score: 3, Insightful
    If you can postulate that the Creator exists without cause, then you can postulate that the universe exists without cause.


    Exactly. The only logical alternative to infinite recursion is to accept the existence of an universe without a creator.


    And the same goes for free will also. If you postulate the existence of some decision process inside your mind that isn't based purely on the interaction between material particles obeying the laws of physics you also fall into the infinite recursion paradox. If I have a soul inside me that governs my feelings, shouldn't this soul have a meta-soul inside it?

    Fortunately this last question will be solved someday, if Moore's "law" holds on for a few more decades. We already have a rather good understanding of the basic interactions between neurons and of some of the basic structures in the brain. To make a good simulation of an entire human brain would need something like one million computers and we still don't know what is the overall structure of the brain, so we aren't there yet. But someday in the next fifty years we will probably have a personal computer that mimics so closely a human being that people will assume naturally that it's as conscious of itself as we assume our fellow humans are conscious of themselves.

    1. Re:Occam's Razor by GreyPoopon · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Exactly. The only logical alternative to infinite recursion is to accept the existence of an universe without a creator.

      Which brings up the question that I never got answererd when in school, and I'm hoping someone here with an advanced degree can answer... Where did all the matter and energy in the Universe come from?

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    2. Re:Occam's Razor by carlos_benj · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. The only logical alternative to infinite recursion is to accept the existence of an universe without a creator.

      Or an uncreated creator. Either way there has to be someone/something that does not owe its existence to someone/something else.

      --

      --

      As a matter of fact, I am a lawyer. But I play an actor on TV.

    3. Re:Occam's Razor by Viking+Coder · · Score: 3, Insightful

      42. [1]

      But seriously...

      Un+1 = P(Un)

      The universe at one time is equal to the laws of physics applied to the universe at some ridiculously small amount of time before then. Or something like that.

      We have some pretty good information about Un for really, really small values of n. What the universe was like at almost the very beginning. But we *can not* know anything at all about Un for values of n less than 0 - earlier than the beginning of the universe. That's essentially what you're asking for.

      In order to do that, you'd have to do two things - have a very accurate measurement of Un - understand what the universe is like now, and a very, very good understanding of P - the laws of physics. But there are two flaws - first, P does not preserve information - it gets lost as heat. As time goes on you can know less and less about what came before. Second, you have to use P in order to measure Un. You can't gain any knowledge about the universe except by using things allowed by the laws of physics. The laws of physics do not allow you to measure anything before the beginning of the universe.

      Therefore, we'll never know where all the matter and energy in the Universe come from.

      So, now what? I kind of view U0 as "God." It's the ultimate question, and we'll never know the answer. U0 is unknowable, in my belief.

      Some people posit a Creator, which I would call U-1. But the laws of physics don't allow us to gain any information about U-1. I don't know why those people are happier positing U-1, since it doesn't add any value. But I suppose it makes them happy. You try to ask about U-2, and they get all pissy - but all of their arguments about why U-1 exists apply *exactly* to U0, in my mind. U-1 and U0 (the Creator, and the Creation) are almost identical in my mind. I know for sure U0 exists (otherwise U1, and all the other Un wouldn't exist - and I believe in the Big Bang, rather than an infinite universe), but I don't really see the point in imagining a U-1.

      But maybe that's just me. [2]

      [1] Thanks, Douglas Adams. :)

      [2] I have no advanced degree in this stuff, but I'm guessing that's the kind of stuff those people would tell you.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    4. Re:Occam's Razor by duane_robertson · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I seem to recall Stephen Hawking came to the conclusion that the universe had no singularity at zero time because of an imaginary time (?) component that became dominant at the beginning. I don't have a problem picturing the universe as having no beginning, and it short-circuits this sort of mystery.

    5. Re:Occam's Razor by drumsetdrummer · · Score: 1

      Ultimately what you are saying is that you cannot prove or disprove the existence of God. On the flip side, you also cannot prove or disprove the evolutionary theory. Hence the debate. (If you could prove evolution it would no longer be a scientific theory -- would then be a scientific law.)

      One's opinion on the issue ultimately depends on how the individual views the world and little else -- no matter how in depth you study the issue.

    6. Re:Occam's Razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you are saying is that evolution is as much a worldview... a philosophy... a religion... as is intelligent design? why then is evolution dogmaticallly forced down the throats of impressionable children in public schools? isn't this what seperation of church and state is all about? preventing a certain worldview, whether it be christianity or naturalism from being force fed to a captive audience?

    7. Re:Occam's Razor by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Stephen Hawking did indeed say something close to that. However I have read it many times and managed to make no sense of it at all. Why a sphere (imaginary+real time) can exist in nothingless but a circle/line (real time line) can't I do not understand.

      I know it's more likely that I'm wrong than him, but I do think Hawking is a bit off base at times.

    8. Re:Occam's Razor by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      If you could prove evolution it would no longer be a scientific theory -- would then be a scientific law.

      Horsefeathers. People talk about both the law of gravity and the theory of gravity. The law is the attraction between masses. The theory is the precise description of how that law works. A theory doesn't somehow become a law when it gains sufficient proof. The two are related but distinct terms.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    9. Re:Occam's Razor by sploxx · · Score: 1

      Your post is really insightful, even funny :-)
      But instead of moderating, I have to point out one assumption you make:
      That there exists an entity called "universe" outside of yourself, independently of your existance.

      For many, this philosophical premise is clear, although for me it is not. I generally tend to think like you, though.

      But what exactly defines oneself is another question that leads to another heap of questions... :-)

    10. Re:Occam's Razor by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1
      If you could prove evolution it would no longer be a scientific theory -- would then be a scientific law. Let's do some science. Let's test your assertion, that theories are replaced by laws. Consider Einstein's Theory of General Relativity, and Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation. Your assertion is that Laws replace Theories. If you were correct, we would see how Einstein's Theory of General Relativity has been replaced by Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation.

      Oh, wait. It happened the other way around. And there was actual evidence that the Law couldn't explain, and the Theory could. Your assertion is disproven.

      You can demonstrate intelligence, by learning and showing that you've learned something, or you may continue to be a twit.

      And the Theory of Evolution has been tested time and time again. On occasion, particular details of the theory of evolution have been updated to take into account results of clever new experiments.

      Creationism, on the other hand, keeps on repeating the same old tired excuses; excuses that have been refuted so many times in the past that they can now only be described as lies.

      Odd, then, that people are surprised when they catch American Theocrats telling more lies. Lies seem to be their stock in trade.

    11. Re:Occam's Razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The universe at one time is equal to the laws of physics applied to the universe at some ridiculously small amount of time before then. Or something like that.

      Near as I can tell a deterministic universe is the popular view, but there is disagreement among physicists. Roger Penrose for one disagreed.

      The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics is non-deterministic. (In the Copenhagen interpretation, when a quantum system is observed, it's wavefunction collapses randomly into one of of a number of states, the probability of each being determined by the wavefunction.) Einstein didn't like this ("God doesn't play dice with the universe"). So do many other physicists. (What the h*ll is an observation anyway?) Unfortunately, while experiments haven't proved the Copenhagen interpretation or non-determinism, they have ruled out nice alternatives. Whatever is going on is darn weird.

      There is also a flip side to derminism: Un = P^-1(Un+1). That is: you can run the laws of physics backwards to find out what the universe was like earlier. Black holes are a problem for this, being voracious information-eaters. But there is work in theoretical physics that suggest that black holes don't eat information. (It's actually a bit more subtle; whether black holes eat information is relative to your viewpoint. Theoretical physics tends to be darn weird).

      In order to do that, you'd have to do two things - have a very accurate measurement of Un - understand what the universe is like now, and a very, very good understanding of P - the laws of physics. But there are two flaws - first, P does not preserve information - it gets lost as heat.

      The information is actually still there; it's just not as accessible. But that amounts to much the same thing. We don't know the positions of all the comets ejected out of the solar system, we don't know the positions of the planets exactly, and because the motions of the planets are chaotic over the long term, this means there is a limit on how far back in time we can recreate the motions of our solar system.

      For this reason, what's often done in cosmology, is to guess what the early universe is like, and to crank through the laws of physics to see if you get something that looks like the current universe. The reason this works and applying the laws of physics backwards to the current universe doesn't are fairly subtle, and have to do with the third law of thermodynamics.

      Take a more everyday example: a smashing glass. If you have a (very) good physics simulator, and you input a glass hurtling towards the floor, the simulator will give you a bunch of glass shards on the floor. But if you input a bunch of glass shards on the floor, and run the simulator backwards you won't get a glass hurtling up from the floor. Why not? Because to get that, you need to feed in a very precise pattern of glass shards, of the motion of molecules in the floor and in the air. If you feed in exactly the right inputs the simulator will in fact retrodict an intact glass. But you need exactly the right inputs, and for the universe, we can't observe it accurately enough. The third law of thermodynamics isn't found in the microscopic laws of physics. It's a statistical consequence of having low-entropy inputs to a chaotic system (such as the universe). Run it forwards, backwards, it doesn't matter; if you feed it low-entropy input, on average you should expect a higher-entropy output.

      That the early universe was low entropy is an assumpution on our part. There are far more ways the current universe could have arisen as the chance interactions of a very disorganized foam of gravitational waves and fundamental particles nothing like what we think the early universe was like. Such a thing happening would be extremely unlikely, a miracle you might call it. As far as the microscopic laws of physics are concerned, a low-entropy, ordered early universe is extremely unlikely too, whereas physicists wi

    12. Re:Occam's Razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. The only logical alternative to infinite recursion is to accept the existence of an universe without a creator.

      Another logical alternative: the universe is the creator. Kudos to Benedict S.

    13. Re:Occam's Razor by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Yes, strong belief in existentialism pretty much precludes any discussion of the universe as an entity outside of you.

      Nihilism would pretty much truncate the discussion, too.

      Walter Sobchak: "Nihilists! Fuck me. I mean, say what you like about the tenets of National Socialism, Dude, at least it's an ethos."

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    14. Re:Occam's Razor by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Evolution is *absolutely* disprovable.

      The fact that it hasn't been disproven should mean something to you.

      Hint: it's a good theory.

      The additional fact that it makes strong predictions which time and time again have bourne out should mean something to you, too.

      Hint: you're an idiot if you don't believe in it.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    15. Re:Occam's Razor by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      But this it getting more in the realm of philosophy.

      Of course it is.

      Philosophy: The critical analysis of fundamental assumptions or beliefs.

      Since we can not know anything about U0, all we can do is assume or believe in things. Some people assume or believe in U-1. I think that's kind of pointless.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    16. Re:Occam's Razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting that you have no problem grasping on to an evidenceless belief as long as it doesn't include God and silences any discussion about his existence.

    17. Re:Occam's Razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Which brings up the question that I never got answererd when in school, and I'm hoping someone here with an advanced degree can answer... Where did all the matter and energy in the Universe come from?
      Short answer: It is postulated that under the proper conditions, a particle and its (twin) anti-particle can come to exist out of literally "nothing."
    18. Re:Occam's Razor by mutterc · · Score: 1
      If you could prove evolution it would no longer be a scientific theory -- would then be a scientific law.
      No, no, no. Laws are not promoted theories. (A link to an explanation of this should be posted with every story referencing evolution).

      Theories predict a "why", and use experiments to try to prove or disprove the theory. For example, we theorize that electricity affects the heart's function. To test, we grab a bunch of people, subject some but not others to electric shocks, then measure the rates of heart defibrillations in each group.

      Laws are simply observational statements. The Law of Gravity states that any two objects attract each other with a force proportional to the product of their masses, and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers-of-mass.

      Note that the Law of Gravity does not make any attempt to explain "why" the objects attract each other (though there are theories attempting to explain it). All it means is that nobody has ever seen any two objects that did not attract one another in this way.

    19. Re:Occam's Razor by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      To use your reasoning of a soul having a meta-soul, how about your body? Shouldn't it have a meta-body inside it? And shouldn't that meta-body have a meta-meta-body, etc., etc.

      I think that you must misunderstand Occam's Razor to postulate what you have.

    20. Re:Occam's Razor by noda132 · · Score: 1

      But someday in the next fifty years we will probably have a personal computer that mimics so closely a human being that people will assume naturally that it's as conscious of itself as we assume our fellow humans are conscious of themselves.

      But will it be conscious? You see, fast computers don't solve the question at all: they only makes it all the more obvious and unanswerable.

    21. Re:Occam's Razor by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Or an uncreated creator. Either way there has to be someone/something that does not owe its existence to someone/something else.

      You are missing the point, what do you contribute by positing the existance of an uncreated creator? What logical gap is filled by assuming the creator who was not himself created? Nothing. Hence we invoke Occam's Razor and assume there is no creator until we find something that can't be explained without it.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    22. Re:Occam's Razor by duane_robertson · · Score: 1
      Interesting that you have no problem grasping on to an evidenceless belief as long as it doesn't include God and silences any discussion about his existence.

      I think Hawking was proposing a trick of mathematics to try to produce a big bang theory that didn't have the problem of a singularity at the beginning. The big bang theory is based on observable evidence. This addition simply creates a theory where mathematics doesn't break down at any point.

      To the best of my knowledge, there is very little observable, repeatable evidence of a creator. The question is whether you take the existance of the universe as such.

    23. Re:Occam's Razor by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Prove to me you're conscious.

    24. Re:Occam's Razor by starworks5 · · Score: 1

      "Which brings up the question that I never got answererd when in school, and I'm hoping someone here with an advanced degree can answer... Where did all the matter and energy in the Universe come from?"

      who says that its neccessary to know where all the matter and energy in the universe came from? not having an explination doesnt increase the validity of creationism.

      say i locked all my windows, and doors, and im alone in my house. and say if i come downstairs christmas morning, and i discover gifts under the tree, and without any explination to how they could have gotten there. should i say that santa clause had put them there?

    25. Re:Occam's Razor by Pooua · · Score: 1
      The only logical alternative to infinite recursion is to accept the existence of an universe without a creator.

      That is insufficient. You could (and should) ask, "Where did our Universe originate?" This question could also become infinitely recursive, and just as beyond our capacity to answer. We may postulate that there was some metauniverse, of which a tiny bubble spawned into our Universe. What, then, of the origin of that metauniverse?

      And the same goes for free will also. If you postulate the existence of some decision process inside your mind that isn't based purely on the interaction between material particles obeying the laws of physics you also fall into the infinite recursion paradox. If I have a soul inside me that governs my feelings, shouldn't this soul have a meta-soul inside it?

      You are assuming that the soul works no better than the physical elements of the brain. That may not be a valid assumption.

      Fortunately this last question will be solved someday, if Moore's "law" holds on for a few more decades.

      You seem very sure of yourself.

      We already have a rather good understanding of the basic interactions between neurons and of some of the basic structures in the brain. To make a good simulation of an entire human brain would need something like one million computers and we still don't know what is the overall structure of the brain, so we aren't there yet. But someday in the next fifty years we will probably have a personal computer that mimics so closely a human being that people will assume naturally that it's as conscious of itself as we assume our fellow humans are conscious of themselves.

      I note that our society has heard this story for 60 years, and yet it still hasn't happened. Of course, you have the advantage of possessing a theory that cannot be proved wrong, because you can always claim that we simply haven't learned enough or advanced enough to make these kind of circuits. But, a theory that cannot be disproved is not a scientific theory.

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
    26. Re:Occam's Razor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      logic implies its possible. if you believe everything the brain does is measurable in terms of energy and matter, a computer can simulate it. It seems instead, YOU have to prove the existence of a soul :)

    27. Re:Occam's Razor by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1

      The only logical alternative to infinite recursion is to accept the existence of an universe without a creator.

      What's wrong with infinite recursion? Why can't the intelligent creator be a part of the randomly occurring spontaneous-intelligence-generating universe?

      If I have a soul inside me that governs my feelings, shouldn't this soul have a meta-soul inside it?

      Why can't the soul be the sum effect of your thoughts and actions on the universe? The idea that the "soul is eternal" could merely mean that the actions and effects that you have had on the universe last forever. Our actions, choices, experiences and effects on others define who we are as much as our DNA. Those abstract notions constitute our "soul".

      But someday in the next fifty years we will probably have a personal computer that mimics so closely a human being that people will assume naturally that it's as conscious of itself as we assume our fellow humans are conscious of themselves.

      This sounds as much like pseudo-science to me as this ID stuff does.

      --
      My other first post is car post.
    28. Re:Occam's Razor by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Nothing guarantees that science comes up with the correct answers. But the scientific method is a heuristic that comes up with extremely good theories over time.

      Everything in your modern life is based on the progress of science. You can doubt it all you want to, but calling it a religion in an attempt to demonstrate that children would somehow be "better off" not understanding how the world works is kind of sick.

      All knowledge is relative. Would you rather that we not teach children anything? Or are you more of an advocate that whatever parents think, they should be allowed to teach their children - and to stop their children from learning anything else?

      Not that modern technology is its own justification, but would you rather be one of the prehistoric men who mastered fire, or one of the ones who was worried that teaching the use of fire in cave-man-school was dogmatically forcing combustive thinking down the throats of impressionable cave-children?

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    29. Re:Occam's Razor by Pooua · · Score: 1
      if you believe everything the brain does is measurable in terms of energy and matter, a computer can simulate it.

      What if the human brain is not the source of thought?

      I heard an interesting conjecture several years ago, that perhaps our thought processes require computation in a higher-order Universe. So, information is put into this arena with more dimensions, and an answer is extracted into our world.

      Consciousness seems to be an elusive property.

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
    30. Re:Occam's Razor by clonan · · Score: 1

      It is more than that...

      Current string theory/quantum mechanics/essentially all cutting edge physics predicts the existence of negative energy.

      Negative energy also includes negative time/ FTL particles/ space warp/ all the interesting Sci Fi possibilities you can think of. We know negative energy exists in small doses in lasers and gravity waves.
      Extrapolating from proven theories if you put enough of this negative energy in one place a bubble will form that seperates itself from the universe.

      Hawkings was trying to show (I don't have the math background to decide if he succeded or not) that our current universe started in the same way.

  240. Call me ignorant... by engineer_uhg · · Score: 1

    ...but what indisputable evidence do we have for the hypothesis of evolution? I was under the impression that the scientific community held to it only because there are no other "scientific" answers out there. Give me a break, people. We've figured out next to nothing about the origin of life--the best we can do is to keep open minds and maintain an open dialouge. That includes the flaws in evolution. Even in schools.

  241. The South has nothing to do with it this time! by william.gunn · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Kansas board of education is the one that made the famous ill-fated decision. The article we're discussing is about a decision made in Pennsylvania.

    Fundamentalism is not limited to the deep south!

    It's well-established that the chance to vote on gay marriage and abortion amendments is what brought out the midwestern voters, who are the ones responsible for this second, ill-fated term.

    So don't try to pin this on the south! We might be called the "bible belt", but fundamentalism runs strong throughout this country.

    1. Re:The South has nothing to do with it this time! by Golias · · Score: 1

      Heh. I live in Minnesota. To me, Kansas is "Deep South."

      I've been to Topeka. The accents there sound Southern to me.

      Also, anti-gay marriage is not exclusively a Fundamentalist position. I know many non-Christians, marginal Christians, and even thiests who vehemently oppose it. (Personally, I'm fine with it. Do what you like, just leave me out of it.) Catholics who observe their church's teachings will typically vote against allowing it as well.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  242. Here we go again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I, for one, am getting tired of the whole debate. Evolution is a theory that (to this point) has not been proven at all (zip zero nada). Intelligent design will only make sense to those with spiritual discernment.

    I wish these would stay off of /.

  243. Science for the simple minded by cparisi · · Score: 1

    Real science is too complex for "people of little brain". Intelligent Design is much easier to comprehend with it's default answer: "God did it".

  244. Richard Dawkins by Tarindel · · Score: 4, Interesting
    was just featured in an article on Salon.com, and had an interesting reductionist argument to make:

    For a long time it seemed clear to just about everybody that the beauty and elegance of the world seemed to be prima facie evidence for a divine creator. But the philosopher David Hume already realized three centuries ago that this was a bad argument. It leads to an infinite regression. You can't statistically explain improbable things like living creatures by saying that they must have been designed because you're still left to explain the designer, who must be, if anything, an even more statistically improbable and elegant thing. Design can never be an ultimate explanation for anything. It can only be a proximate explanation. A plane or a car is explained by a designer but that's because the designer himself, the engineer, is explained by natural selection.
    1. Re:Richard Dawkins by kencurry · · Score: 1

      My eight year old daughter got this concept on her own:

      she: " dad, if God made us, then who made God?"

      Why more people don't understand this logical flaw with ID is beyond me.

      --
      sigs are for losers (except to point out that sigs are for losers)
    2. Re:Richard Dawkins by raeler · · Score: 1

      I was that eight year old once. I asked the same question and my dad told me to walk up and ask our minister (Presbyterian) after the service. So I did. He said that god had always been there and that having faith meant believing that god was there, even without knowing it for a fact. I believe I suggested that god probably got bored without any stuff to play with.

      I wish I knew then what I know now, so I could have asked something like, "If god is perfect and all that, then why is he allowed to sin (do not worship false idols, for I am a jealous god)?. Is that like do-as-I-say-but-not-as-I-do? and where are all the talking snakes? And if god loves all his creations, how much did he love the dinosaurs? He sure created his way out of that one, cuz Noah would probably have been hard pressed to round them all up".

      --
      This is my post. See sig above ^
  245. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by Meumeu · · Score: 1

    Actually you forgot:
    exp(0)=1
    cos(0)=1
    ln(0)=-infinity

    Ah ah! so you can get something from nothing...

  246. Scary stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As an European, I find it almost impossible to believe that some people would push such "theories" as ID and creationism. I would gladly brush the whole thing aside as a silly joke, if it wasn't for the fact that it seems to be true, and comes from the only remaining superpower that has shown that it can and will use its military power for questionable reasons.

  247. Lets Conjugate ID'ist by protolith · · Score: 1, Funny

    IDium
    IDius
    IDiot

    Hey, IDiot,
    Idiot, Hmmmm, "They all, believe in Intelligent Design" -- "Idiot"
    So thats where that term comes from!

    I know its kinda trollish, and I'm going to hell and such, Oh wait, the very fact that this discussion still plagues the school system suggests that we are already there, so I guess I have nothing to worry about....

  248. Re:If they're laughing you they're not your friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Well if a bunch of european highschool
    >kids laugh at it, then intelligent design
    >must be wrong.

    Just for the record, elementary and secondary school education in europe is min. ten times better than US. Children actually learn there instead of being continously praised for their egos even if they are dumb and homicidal. Lil' yanks don't even learn history. Great shame!

  249. creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1, Informative

    WHAT IS THE CREDIBILITY OF THE EVIDENCE?

    Is creation or evolution more credible? In order for an opinion about something to be credible, it must adequately explain the existing evidence. This is especially true for ideas about the long ago past.

    Who saw it? Let's keep in mind that no one saw the origin's events; there are no living eyewitnesses. (Actually, there is one Eyewitness, and He wrote a Book about it, but this Testimony has been ruled inadmissible by opponents of His view.) We must try as honestly as we can to reconstruct the past by studying the evidence in the present and the results of past events.

    Living organisms. We can look at living organisms and see that they are incredibly complex, with well-designed, interdependent parts, each aspect far beyond our own human ability to understand fully, let alone duplicate. Each living thing is governed and energized by the information-loaded DNA molecule, consisting of myriads of genes and proteins of intense precision, each doing its job and each depending on the other to do its job. Evolutionists say it all happened in a step-by-step sequence by a totally random process. Creationists say it was designed.

    Mutations. Never has a truly beneficial mutation been observed, a random alteration which produces a new and better gene. Creation teaches that there shouldn't be, evolutionists assure us there have been billions and billions, but they are still looking for an example. What is needed is new and increased information in the DNA information code, but all science can show is that over time information is lost in such a system. Creationists point to the never-violated Second Law of Thermodynamics--the scientific law of increasing disorder over time--while evolutionists continue to maintain that certain chemical reactions produce order that changes ameba-to-man. This spontaneous generation has long ago been disproved, but evolutionists say it happened at least once. (But they were not there.)

    Transitional links. The fossil record is overflowing with "gaps"--no organisms bridging the span between basic categories have ever been found. Creationists say such organisms never existed, and there shouldn't be any transitional fossils. Evolutionists explain this lack of transitional links away by punctuated equilibrium (evolution happened faster at different times during these transitional link periods) and hope to find them someday.

    Evolutionists spend great effort to propose mathematical models for the Big Bang. The evidence consists of varied points of light that don't move, that change only when they destroy themselves. Never do we see stars evolving from gas. Evolutionists, in order to save their mathematical models, propose imaginary cold, dark matter comprising 90% of the mass of the universe. The search for black holes continues. Millions are spent in a vain attempt to find extraterrestrial life for which there is no clue. But the evidence can much more easily be understood within the context of a created universe, with each star differing from the other.

    Neither the evolutionary or creationist view of life can be proved in a concrete sense with mountains of hard evidence. But when the two competing historical views are looked at--creation is far more credible.

    II. TWO BASIC WORLDVIEWS

    The creationist worldview says that God made the universe about six thousand years ago. The evolutionist worldview teaches that the universe made itself from nothing about twenty billion years ago. One of these opposing worldviews obviously is wrong.

    The entire theory of evolution is built upon the faulty assumption that the origin of the universe was "billions of years ago"
    Questions to ask evolutionists:
    1. In the Big Bang, what exploded? And where did it come from? When they admit they don't know, ask, "Which is easier to believe: 'In the beginning God,' or 'In the beginning Dirt'?"
    2. Do you believe in spontaneous generation (life coming from nonliving matter)?

    --
    shanegrant.com
    1. Re:creation + flood = today's world by Mistah+Blue · · Score: 1

      Are you a Switchfoot fan? Awesome group!

    2. Re:creation + flood = today's world by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1
      Where to begin? Well how about just the highlights:

      Living organisms. We can look at living organisms and see that they are incredibly complex, with well-designed, interdependent parts, each aspect far beyond our own human ability to understand fully, let alone duplicate. Each living thing is governed and energized by the information-loaded DNA molecule, consisting of myriads of genes and proteins of intense precision, each doing its job and each depending on the other to do its job. Evolutionists say it all happened in a step-by-step sequence by a totally random process. Creationists say it was designed.

      Well, this is the whole arguement. What is your point? Evolution has a great deal of observed evidence on how this happened over billions of years. You think it looks designed, but provide no evidence for a designer. Ironically, you think that way because humans evolved tha ability to recognize patterns as a survival technique. Sometimes they see patterns where none exist (think "Backward masking" on records...). Creationist have an idea without supporting evidence.

      Mutations. Never has a truly beneficial mutation been observed, a random alteration which produces a new and better gene. Creation teaches that there shouldn't be, evolutionists assure us there have been billions and billions, but they are still looking for an example. What is needed is new and increased information in the DNA information code, but all science can show is that over time information is lost in such a system. Creationists point to the never-violated Second Law of Thermodynamics--the scientific law of increasing disorder over time--while evolutionists continue to maintain that certain chemical reactions produce order that changes ameba-to-man. This spontaneous generation has long ago been disproved, but evolutionists say it happened at least once. (But they were not there.)

      I suggest next time you are sick, that you go to a hospital in Montreal. You will experience mutation first hand by the name of C. defacile, a bacterium that has mutated to become anti-boitic resistant. This has happened within the last 80 years. That's about as closed to observed as one can get. All the others can be see in the fossil record. For more info check here
      or here for the debunking of the other miss-information in this one.

      Transitional links. The fossil record is overflowing with "gaps"--no organisms bridging the span between basic categories have ever been found. Creationists say such organisms never existed, and there shouldn't be any transitional fossils. Evolutionists explain this lack of transitional links away by punctuated equilibrium (evolution happened faster at different times during these transitional link periods) and hope to find them someday.

      Ah yes the old "God of the Gaps" argument. Seems no matter how many times transitional fossils are found, creationist always revert to the "what about the transition between those?" recursive argument. Like this:

      1980: Early Fossil ----->Transitional -------> Later Fossil

      What about between the first and the transition?

      1990: Early Fossil ---> Trans 1 ----> Trans2 -----> Later Fossil

      What about between trans1 and trans2?

      Thanks to Calculus, this arguement can go on forever. God is always in the gaps, not matter how small the gaps are. It still isn't evidence.

      Evolutionists spend great effort to propose mathematical models for the Big Bang. The evidence consists of varied points of light that don't move, that change only when they destroy themselves. Never do we see stars evolving from gas. Evolutionists, in order to save their mathematical models, propose imaginary cold, dark matter comprising 90% of the mass of

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    3. Re:creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

      "Evolution has a great deal of observed evidence on how this happened over billions of years. "

      A great deal of evidence? Then how come I've never seen any? Please some me some evidence of it. I'd love to see it. Observed evidence? Who observed it?

      "I suggest next time you are sick, that you go to a hospital in Montreal. You will experience mutation first hand by the name of C. defacile, a bacterium that has mutated to become anti-boitic resistant."

      A bacterium cell that's become resistant isn't a mutation. Why do you think that people get a shot for the chicken pox? So that they will become resistant to it. That's not a mutation...it's resistance. It's like saying that our cells mutated after we got the shot from the dr.'s office for the chicken pox.

      "Ah yes the old "God of the Gaps" argument. Seems no matter how many times transitional fossils are found, creationist always revert to the "what about the transition between those?""

      Show me an ape-man. That's a reallly important link...yet has anyone seen one? No. There's been loads of fake and people really trying to pretend that they've found it, but they've all come out as a farse.

      "But to indugle your strawman attack, just because we don't yet have the evidence or the explaination doesn't mean that its God."

      Back to the evidence. You just contradicted yourself. And I quote you:

      "Evolution has a great deal of observed evidence on how this happened over billions of years."

      "There is a great deal of evidence for evolution and none for creationism."

      and later in this same comment you say:

      ""But to indugle your strawman attack, just because we don't yet have the evidence or the explaination doesn't mean that its God.""

      It sounds to me that you are trying to convice yourself that there isn't a God.

      "I give credibility to the observed fact rather than one religion's particular creation myth."

      Observed fact? Who was there 10 billion years ago, or whenever you believe evolution took place? Where you there? Did you see it?

      "Sorry, but based on available, measurable evidence, creationism is wrong."

      "Evolution is something people choose to believe based on evidence. Evolution is provable and the evidence is appearing all the time."

      This elusive evidence is talked about so often in this comment, yet hasn't been shown.

      "People choose to believe in Creationism becasue they want it to be true, because they psychologically need there to be a god to take care of them. Wishing it doesn't make it so. Proving it does."

      It takes more faith to believe that we came from some dust and gravity than to believe that there is a God that made us. You seem to be denying God an awful lot...are you mad at God for something? Or are you just an atheist who doesn't believe in God so that you can do whatever you want without consequences?

      "Creationism will become science when it has evidence and can be proven. Until then it is myth and should not be taught in scienc calssrooms because it is not true."

      Evidence? How about the way that your eyes and ears are made? They can't evolve. They need everything the way that it is right now for them to be able to work. If they evolved you couldn't read this right now.

      "BTW, try reading things other than Yancey and Josh Mac Dowell."

      Do you have something against those books? Even though they are good authors, I do read more than just them.

      --
      shanegrant.com
    4. Re:creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

      yes I love Switchfoot and yes...they are awesome.

      --
      shanegrant.com
    5. Re:creation + flood = today's world by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1
      How old are you, 13?

      Please try reading Richard Dawkins' "The Blind Watchmaker" or "The Demon Haunted World" by Carl Sagan

      Here are some other links you might be interested in, if you are courageous enough to be openminded:

      1.PBS series about Evolution and its basis
      2.Talk Origins refuting the whole "eye can't evolve" myth.
      3.The Ape-men you requested
      4. Observed Speciation
      5.A handy FAQ for all those other silly assertions you make over and over again.

      A bacterium cell that's become resistant isn't a mutation. Why do you think that people get a shot for the chicken pox? So that they will become resistant to it. That's not a mutation...it's resistance. It's like saying that our cells mutated after we got the shot from the dr.'s office for the chicken pox.

      My goodness, if you think human resistance to disease and bacterium restistance to anti-biotics are the same, then you are truly need an education.

      Bacteria becomes resistant to anti-biotics because of two independant, yet interrelated things. First, some bacteria, through random mutations, develop the trait that makes anti-biotics inneffective on them. Now, this trait, as long as it doesn't prevent the bacteria from reproducing, will remain dormant. The numbers of this bacteria will remain small, perhaps miniscule, because of the vast numbers of "normal" bacteria. The trait may or may not get passed on. Now, when anti-biotics are miss-used, those bacteria without the mutation are wiped out. Only those with the mutation, however small, survive and reproduce. With no other normal bacteria to compete with, this mutant reproduces at will and becomes dominant. Suddenly there are strains of bacteria for which anti-biotics are useless. And if this doesn't happen, the species goe extinct.

      That, my friend, is the process of evolution. It works at the microscopic and macroscopic levels (otherwise you might be a homo erectus rather than a neanderthal). This example is somewhat simplistic but you see the elegance process. Random mutation+change in the environment will stir evolution - only those able to adapt to the new environment will survive to reproduce and thus propgate the mutant genes. After a few million years, you fit your environment so perfectly, you'd swear the environment was designed for you...;-)

      It takes more faith to believe that we came from some dust and gravity than to believe that there is a God that made us. You seem to be denying God an awful lot...are you mad at God for something? Or are you just an atheist who doesn't believe in God so that you can do whatever you want without consequences?

      I guess it would be easier for you to believe that, wouldn't it. I go where the evidence takes me. I don't need faith to believe "we came from dust and gravity" because that is where the evidence points. There is no evidence for God. I'm not "mad at God"...I can't be mad at something that, as far as I am concerned, doesn't exist. I am "one of those atheists" who doesn't believe in God because there is no evidence. I believe in cooperation, altruism and the ethics and philosophy that spring from them because it has been shown to provide an evolutionary advantage and is thus, the best survival strategy. Doing what I want want without regard fo the conse

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    6. Re:creation + flood = today's world by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      First, which creationist website did you crib this from?

      (Actually, there is one Eyewitness, and He wrote a Book about it, but this Testimony has been ruled inadmissible by opponents of His view.)

      That's cos we don't *know* that He wrote it.

      We can look at living organisms and see that they are incredibly complex,

      Provide a definition of "complex". Is a snowflake complex? Are all snowflakes designed, or does their shape arise from a few simple rules of chemistry and physics?

      Never has a truly beneficial mutation been observed

      Actually, we see them every year. Almost wvery day even. Otherwise, we wouldn't need new flu vaccines, and we wouldn't have insects becoming resistant to pesticides.

      The fossil record is overflowing with "gaps"--no organisms bridging the span between basic categories have ever been found.

      First, fossilization is a very rare event. Second, the fossil record is the weakest of the evidences for evolution. If we didn't have a single fossil, evolution would still be well-supported. And asking for transitionals is a never-ending process. If we eventually find fossil B between A and C, then creationists just ask for one between A and B; and between B and C. You won't be satisfied until a fossil of every single thing that ever lived is found.

      Evolutionists spend great effort to propose mathematical models for the Big Bang.

      Evolution hasn't got a goddamned thing to do with the Big Bang. You're starting to look like an idiot.

      List
      The first 6 have nothing to do with evolution.

      Number 7: We don't know yet.

      Number 8: What the hell? Things "want" to produce more things so that the species as a whole has a greater chance of survival.

      Number 9: Natural selection.

      Number 10: Sure. But why would an omnipotent Creator do that? And why did he do such a botched job with some things... human eyes for example?

      Number 11: Increasing complexity of the genetic code is not necessary for evolution to take place, so your entire question is moot.

      Numbers 12 through 15: You seen to be assuming that evolution only does one thing at a time. "OK guys, we've got the gills, now lets work on the fins." It doesn't happen like that.

      Number 16: Examples, please.

      Number 17, 19: How do you know they never could have evolved?

      Number 18: Except we know for a fact that it's taken millions of years for the continents to separate.

      Number 20: Read a science book.

      Number 21, 22: What?

      Number 23: No, fool.

      Flood list

      Number 1: Except that A) all those legends don't agree on the date and B) there is no geologic evidence of a worldwide flood.

      Number 2: Doesn't matter if it was only designed to float, it wouldn't. It is physically impossible to build a wooden boat that size that will not leak like a sieve and capsize in the first decent-sized wave. Sorry, but them's the facts.

      Number 3: Wrong. Please post the list of all the creatures that were in the Ark and discuss how much room they would need. (Hint: You can't stack them up like crates and expect them to survive.) Bear in mind that you need food for one year, you need ventilation (the Ark only had one window, according to Scripture), and you need to be able to clean out the manure. Also, you need to explain how Noah and his family had enough time to feed them all.

      Number 4-6: What? The Ark *may* have had an outboard motor or hoverpods as well. I can speculate wildly too.

      Number 7: Prove it. Also, please show an example of one of your 11-foot skeletons. I'll settle for a 10-footer is that's too hard.

      Number 8: So you argue against evolution, and then postulate a rate of evolution after the Flood that would make any evolutionary scientist laugh. gg

      Number 9: If God was going to do all that, why bother with an old man in a boat in the first place?

      Number 10

    7. Re:creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

      "Evolutionists spend great effort to propose mathematical models for the Big Bang.

      Evolution hasn't got a goddamned thing to do with the Big Bang. You're starting to look like an idiot."

      if you don't believe in the big bang theory then where did the matter and gravitiy come from? aliens???

      "23. Do you honestly believe that everything came from nothing?"
      "Number 23: No, fool."

      then where did it come from?

      I could fill out an answer to all your questions but these ones should finished off the thread.

      --
      shanegrant.com
    8. Re:creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

      good job avoiding the questions that would prove your point wrong. alright just one question then:

      1. Where did the matter that evolved come from?

      Answer that.

      --
      shanegrant.com
    9. Re:creation + flood = today's world by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      if you don't believe in the big bang theory then where did the matter and gravitiy come from? aliens???

      I repeat: Evolution doesn't have a goddamned thing to do with the Big Bang. Why would you think it does? Oh, and I do think the Big Bang theory is broadly true, because it has evidence behind it.

      then where did it come from?

      We don't know. Yet.

      I could fill out an answer to all your questions but these ones should finished off the thread.

      Ah, so you don't *have* any answers then. That's OK, I understand.

    10. Re:creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

      we don't know yet...well u've had quite the time to work on it... "Ah, so you don't *have* any answers then. That's OK, I understand." i'll get right on it... o wait if you don't know where it came from...then you have no begining... good job working out the middle though...

      --
      shanegrant.com
    11. Re:creation + flood = today's world by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Please some me some evidence of it. I'd love to see it. Observed evidence?

      http://talkorigins.org/

      A bacterium cell that's become resistant isn't a mutation

      Um, yes it is. You can start with a single non-resistant bacterium and grow a culture. Some of the resulting culture will be resistant and some won't.

      It takes more faith to believe that we came from some dust and gravity than to believe that there is a God that made us.

      No, it doesn't. It just brings up more unanswered questions, like, where did God come from then?

      How about this: In my kitchen, I have a container full of sodium and chlorine atoms. They are joined into pairs and are all arranged in a crystalline pattern such that they are grouped into tiny cubes. Did some entity produce all that order or is it simply the natural result of some simple rules?

      Or are you just an atheist who doesn't believe in God so that you can do whatever you want without consequences?

      Look out, he comes another rampaging mob of atheists, raping and pillaging across the countryside!

      How about the way that your eyes and ears are made? They can't evolve. They need everything the way that it is right now for them to be able to work.

      Prove it, and you will win the Nobel Prize. If you're going to use our eyes as an example of perfection, please answer this: All of our eyes have a blind spot because they are wired backwards. Other organisms aren't hampered by this mistake. Why did an omnipotent creator do such a botched job?

    12. Re:creation + flood = today's world by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      1. Where did the matter that evolved come from?


      You can't seem to get this through your head. It doesn't matter whether it came from. It could have been the Big Bang or the literal Genesis account or it could have come out of the nose of the Great Green Arkleseizure. It's not relevant to evolution. At all.

    13. Re:creation + flood = today's world by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      well u've had quite the time to work on it...

      Not really. But we're still working on it. Science doesn't claim to know everything. Quantum mechanics does offer some insights on how things can come from nothing, and string theory has some promising lines of inquiry into the very very very very very early universe.

      o wait if you don't know where it came from...then you have no begining...

      Hmm? I thought you were going to give rebuttals to all my responses to your questions. But all you can come up with are incoherent sentence fragments?

    14. Re:creation + flood = today's world by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Well, even though it is completely irrelavant to evolution, I'll answer anyway.

      I don't know. Science doesn't know.

      Yet.

      There are some hypothesis, but nothing concrete. The investigation continues. There is no evidence to point definitively. The Large Hadron Collider may provide experimental evidence to help clear the air, but we may not know for years, perhaps hundreds of years.

      Oh well, the quest continues. Searching for knowledge and ansers is the rasion d'etre of science.

      Now, if you have verifiable evidence that points to your "God" then feel free to present it. Please not aht a 2500 year old passage in a book does not constitute evidence of anything (since the two contradiction stories of creation presented in it are BOTH provably incorrect).

      Oh and one other thing. If by your question you seem to imply that God created such matter out of nothing.

      Let me ask

      Where did the God that created said matter come from?

      (PS If God can be always existing with no begining, so can the matter)

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    15. Re:creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure this is going to be my last post on this topic. It's pretty much because I don't have the time to continue posting. All i want is whoever is reading this to go here and read this article. It explains how the length of evolution can't be as long as some scientists say.

      http://www.icr.org/pubs/imp/imp-082.htm

      --
      shanegrant.com
    16. Re:creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure this is going to be my last post on this topic. It's pretty much because I don't have the time to continue posting. All i want is whoever is reading this to go here and read this article. It explains how the length of evolution can't be as long as some scientists say.

      http://www.icr.org/pubs/imp/imp-082.htm

      and this site rebuttals most of the statements that have been made about evolving bacteria and the such.

      http://www.icr.org/faqs/

      --
      shanegrant.com
    17. Re:creation + flood = today's world by switchfutguy · · Score: 1

      also check this site for the rebuttals to your points.

      http://www.icr.org/faqs/

      Sorry it took so long for me to post.

      --
      shanegrant.com
    18. Re:creation + flood = today's world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alright, here's one leading theory as to where the matter to explode came from, even though, as others have said, big bang theory is absolutely nothing to do with evolutionary theory (hint: one is physics, the other is biology).

      Scientists have good reason to think that the universe is permeated with something known as a Higgs field. An enormous particle smasher known as the Large Hadron Collider, which is nearing completion, should be able to provide solid evidence for this in the next couple of years. If the Higgs field exists, then in a certain state that would happen by chance (and for all we know has happened again and again outside our lightsphere) a Higgs field becomes an "inflaton" field which expands at an astronomical rate for a tiny, tiny fraction of a second, before settling down to a more reasonable rate of expansion. Earlier you said that stars are "varied points of light that don't move". This is nonsense. Every star in the universe is rushing away from earth at the same speed - in fact they are accelerating away from us at the same rate. That is because space itself is expanding, kind of like the surface of a balloon when you inflate it. This is all backed up with astronomical observations accurate to hundreds of decimal points. This is key evidence for the big bang, as is the background radiation which is nearly uniform in temperature wherever you look in the universe. What is your explanation for these data?

      Anyway, back to the inflaton field. You are right that explosion needs something to work on. Luckily, we have a mechanism already, called quantum fluctuation. When you get down to scales below the size of an atom, space gets very strange. Things pop in and out of existence constantly. Spacetime itself twists itself into knots and thrashes about. Again, this is backed up by decades of highly detailed observation. If you don't believe it, you will have to come up with some other explanation for the data. The point is that combination of an inflaton field and quantum fluctuations means that it only takes the spontaneous appearance of a tiny amount of matter and a tiny amount of space, something well within the bounds of probability given known mechanisms, for the entire observed mass of the universe (including dark matter, which although we cannot explain, does exist - again what other explanation for the data do you have?) to be created by the big bang. The predictions made using this model are remarkably accurate when we compare them to observed data about the universe.

      Ginger Yellow

  250. The issue is so simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Teach religion at church, and science in school. Let the kids decide for themselves. After all, they have free will too, right?

    State funded schools are secular. If you want your kid to have a religious education, send him/her to a private school. If you can't afford a private school, well golly, maybe you should think about spending time with your kid, and explaining that evolution is one theory...rather than trying to force secular teachers to espouse a religious view point.

    Your kids will listen to you. Try it...you will like it...

    1. Re:The issue is so simple by Plankt0n · · Score: 1

      You are right. This is how it works at my home. And the kids DO get exposed to stuff we don't agree with, but we talk it all over and then they can make informed conclusions based on our religious convictions, coupled with an understnading of the opposing viewpoints.

  251. Over-evolution by War+Geese · · Score: 1

    I have a question. While I think ID is silly, there is a problem with evolution or the simple theory we learned in school? Why are we so complex? Shouldn't evolution have, by the process of natural selection ,distilled life to its simplest formsuited for survival

    1. Re:Over-evolution by Wyrd01 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Shouldn't evolution have, by the process of natural selection ,distilled life to its simplest formsuited for survival
      It would have, except those lifeforms live in a closed environment.

      All those simple lifeforms, that wanted to survive, were competing with each other for limited resources. If one lifeform gets a mutation or ability (Thought, planning, tool-use, etc...) that gives it an advantage over the others, then it gets more resources and is more successful.

      It is this constant oneupsmanship over millions and millions of years that results in the insanely complex creatures we have roaming all over this planet.

      Wyrd One
  252. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by PhysicsPhil · · Score: 1
    It is totally unimaginable that we came from something with no intelligence. It makes no logical sense. If you choose to believe that you came from an amoeba, that's fine. I think we should be able to disagree without flaming each other and calling each other's belief "junk science."

    Here's the problem: your belief is junk science. As a matter of fact, it's not science at all, it's your faith .

    It's fine if you believe that we did not evolve from single-celled amoebas, but don't pass that off as a science. For your belief to be a valid scientific theory, it must account for the current facts in evidence, e.g. fossil records, and demonstrated lab-based evolution in fruit flies, etc. It must explain how we interact with our world, and offer hypotheses and experiments by which we can test those predictions.

    Intelligent design does none of these. It "explains" how things started off, but offers no understanding of how we currently interact within our world. It provides no predictive valid and cannot be validated by experiment. Accordingly, intelligent design is not useful science. It is a perfectly valid belief system, but it doesn't belong in a science class.

  253. Event simpler than that by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    Living forever sucks. So god knew it because it/he/she always existed and he is so miserable that he needed to impose the same shit onto others. So he creates universes and populates them with humans knowing well that he cannot create something that will last forever unchanged. So humans live in that awfull place forever and ever and decide that they had enough and it's time to kill themselves, so they eat the apple. The god only wishes he had the same opportunity but he does not.

    --
    I am an atheist of-course.
    --

    1. Re:Event simpler than that by bflong · · Score: 3, Insightful

      1'st John 4:8: "God is love". I'm sorry, but your reasoning is flawed. You assume that living forever is miserable becouse this world full of evil and imperfect humans is miserable. You also assume that God is miserable, and created humans (and as extention all life, including angels) to share his misery. The fact is, that God is complete in himself. He does not need anyone else around to make him happy. His modivation for creating is love. He wishes to share existance with others out of love.
      You could spend a current lifetime studing one species of flower and still not know everything about it. Living forever we would be able to learn about Gods creation and never run out of new things. And, if after a few billon years we do learn everything there is to know about our world, or our plane of existance, God would undoubtedly create more things for us to learn about. Why would he do that for us? Simple. "God is love". The oportunities are endless.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    2. Re:Event simpler than that by qkslvrwolf · · Score: 1

      See, to me, if he was "complete in himself", he wouldn't have this need to go out and create something. Creativity happens because you're filling a need. If you have no needs, than you are aren't creative.

      Of course, this is imposing human emotions and facts onto a supposedly inhuman being, but then, so does everyone else who seems to think that god gives a shit whether we believe in him, whether we do what he says, what happens to his stuff, etc etc ad nauseum.

      Actually, I think the best theory if you want to believe in supreme beings is that one got bored floating out there in nothingness. That would explain the creativity.

      --
      Or have you only comfort...that stealthy thing that enters the house and guest then becomes host, then master - KG
    3. Re:Event simpler than that by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So, he created humans out of love, but, being omnipotent, he knew how miserable their lives would be after 'the fall'? Not sure I see much love here...

    4. Re:Event simpler than that by bflong · · Score: 2, Insightful

      God did not create humans to suffer. You're blaming the wrong sprit creature. Being omnipotent does not mean he fixes our destiny. That conflicts with free will.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    5. Re:Event simpler than that by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      Wrong. Since, when he created humans, he already knew they would suffer (and had known all along), then he did indeed create them to suffer.

      By the way, what is it about the 'wrong creature'? Wasn't it God's angel who, according to the Bible, cast Adam and Eve out from Heaven?

    6. Re:Event simpler than that by bflong · · Score: 1

      First, no, he did not look into the future to see adam and eve fail. Thier failure was their choice.
      When humans were created, there were already untold millons of angels in the heavens.
      The creature you should be blaming is the one who was named Satan. He was a high ranking angel who cultivated desires for worship that belonged only to God. He is the one who used the serpent as a puppet in the garden of eden. That is why he is called "the original serpent" in Revelation 12:9. Also, that prophacy has already come to pass.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    7. Re:Event simpler than that by ashayh · · Score: 1

      You assume that living forever is miserable becouse this world full of evil and imperfect humans is miserable. You also assume that God is miserable, and created humans (and as extention all life, including angels) to share his misery. The fact is, that God is complete in himself. He does not need anyone else around to make him happy. His modivation for creating is love.

      That's a not fact Thats your assumption. And btw if god is so complete then why does he need love? If god is not vain then why does he want you to worship him? Why does he want anything?

      And btw WHICH god ? And WHOSE god ? Why is the god depicted in the bible the ONE true god while the eskimo god or the hindu god(s) are false ?

    8. Re:Event simpler than that by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      "His motivation for creating is love."

      Sunamis? Volcanoes? Hurricanes? Cancer? AIDS?

      Are you talking about the same angry, full-of-wrath God that destroyed the planet with a flood?

      The loving God the fire-and-brimstoned entire cities merely because the ticked him off?

      Would this be the same God who killed the first-born in all of Egypt?

      The very same God who came up with the 10 plagues?

      Is this the same loving caring creator that sits idly by while millions suffer and die across the globe?

      You must be talking about someone else.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
    9. Re:Event simpler than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1 Samuel 15:3 God is hate.

    10. Re:Event simpler than that by dcam · · Score: 1

      Being omnipotent does not mean he fixes our destiny. That conflicts with free will.

      God does clearly fix our destiny. Eph 1. Note the frequent use of the word predestined. God is soveriegn over our destiny also.

      This is not to say that we do not have free will, merely that somehow they both work hand in hand. This is one of the great mysteries of the world.

      --
      meh
    11. Re:Event simpler than that by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 1

      1'st John 4:8: "God is love".

      Your God, according to your Bible, is a study in contradiction if nothing else. A short snippet from a longer list:

      GE 4:15, DT 32:19-27, IS 34:8 God is a vengeful god.
      EX 15:3, IS 42:13, HE 12:29 God is a warrior. God is a consuming fire.
      EX 20:5, 34:14, DT 4:24, 5:9, 6:15, 29:20, 32:21 God is a jealous god.
      LE 26:7-8, NU 31:17-18, DT 20:16-17, JS 10:40, JG 14:19, EZ 9:5-7 The Spirit of God is (sometimes) murder and killing.
      NU 25:3-4, DT 6:15, 9:7-8, 29:20, 32:21, PS 7:11, 78:49, JE 4:8, 17:4, 32:30-31, ZP 2:2 God is angry. His anger is sometimes fierce.
      2SA 22:7-8 (KJV) "I called to the Lord; ... he heard my voice; ... The earth trembled and quaked, ... because he was angry. Smoke came from his nostrils. Consuming fire came from his mouth, burning coals blazed out of it."
      EZ 6:12,

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    12. Re:Event simpler than that by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      First, God cannot 'not look' into the future - if he's omnipotent, he knows it all - present, future, and past - at any given moment of time, without need to 'look'. So, even if their failure was their choice, he still knew it'd happen.

      Nothing in Genesis makes one believe that Serpent was indeed Satan. Not a single word. If you believe otherwise, prove it with a citation (and no, not from Revelation - from Genesis, or at least elsewhere from the Old Testament).

  254. Theocrats of Scientism by Baldrson · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This whole issue arises because the central government presumes to dictate to parents what is best for their children to learn. So parents have to fight each other to get control of their own childrens' educations!

    Sure there are would-be JudeoChristian theocrats. But there are would-be Political Correctness theocrats. Finally, there are the Theocrats of Scientism -- the belief that Science should dictate how children are taught and how public officals should render policy.

    Now I happen to be in the Scientism camp but the thing that separates me from the theocrats of all stripes is that I don't insist that others have my religious beliefs crammed down their throats.

    Indeed, anyone who believes themselves to be scientific has a conundrum when it comes to applying state power to others:

    How dare they?

    Science starts and ends with humility toward our knowledge and its own limitations.

    The best we can ask of others is to allow us to pursue a scientific mode of living our lives -- we can never presume to tell them how to live theirs so long as they do not present a clear and present danger to our own scientific society.

    We can however, and indeed must if we are truly scientific, request that we be allowed to watch the process of their lives so we may learn from their experiments in living. However internally unscientific those experiments are, they are nevertheless scientifically valuable when brought to contrast with other such experiments.

    1. Re:Theocrats of Scientism by praxis · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Although I philosophically agree with you, I have reservations when it comes to certain areas of societal life. What you are espousing is that the government stay out of the idividual life. There are areas where I feel the government has a duty to apply its values on others. The first that comes to mind is the environment. According to current economic theory (which ingores the societal aspect), each will do what is best for them. Many effects on the environment do not present a "clear and present danger" with long term and slow environmental changes. Its the government's job to study such changes and invoke a policy that permits a long term sustainability of this society of individuals free to persue their own happiness.

  255. Religion by marshac · · Score: 2, Interesting

    News for nerds indeed. Why is it that every 6mo or so, yet ANOTHER 'news' story on religion is posted to slashdot? Does Taco like watching someone thrust a stick in the beehive? Seriously, the same debates get played out over and over and over. Give it a rest. The only religious battles that should take place on here should be MSFT vs. Open Source, SCO vs Reason, etc.

    1. Re:Religion by Wiseazz · · Score: 1

      But we nerds like to argue.

      Case in point!

      - g

      --
      My sig sucks.
  256. Re:Thermodynamics by SenorChuck · · Score: 1

    What I'd like to know is.. why was the parent modded "Flamebait"? There was nothing inflammatory in the question; it was at worst a troll, and seemed more likely to be a legitimate question.

    --
    A wise person makes his own decisions, a weak one obeys public opinion. -- Chinese proverb
  257. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Aeternal · · Score: 1
    Please explain how 'Intelligent Design' functions. Does 'God' reach in and tweak some DNA?

    And why.

    Maybe 'He' could reach in and correct some of the flawed DNA before creating any new stuff.

    And why wouldn't an atheist wish to argue a rational case for there not being a God?

  258. Evolution and the scientific method by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the problems with evolution is it can not be fit into the normal scientific method.

    Observation: There is no problem here Evolution is indeed based on observation.

    Hypothesis: Once again, no problem, that is what a theory is

    Prediction: This is where problems begin. Evolution makes many predictions but none of them are quantitifiable. That is the predictions dont give us any sort of clue as to when and what the evolutionary process will produce.

    Expiermentation: Oops this is where major problems occur. We simply can not devise any sort of expierment that will actually demonstrate the truth or fallicy of the hypothisis. Failing this step places evolution into the same class as religion. In this case, evolutionists have extreme faith that they will someday have the expiermental proof they don't have today.

    What I want to know is why evolution is touted as fact when it is only one of many theories each equally unprovable.

  259. Intelligent Design vs Evolution. by brandre · · Score: 1, Informative

    By the people who have posted in this thread I am a neocon, a fundamentalist christian and a lot of other things they detest. Their venom in this points out clearly the lack of objectivity. As a 61 year old born again christian who holds a college degree in Math with a lot of science including Biology and Geology I clearly see holes in BOTH the theories of intelligent design and evolution! They are there. They are clear. And in both. But let me clarify this. The origin of things like the end of the age are complex subjects. To think our finite minds can grasp them totally is just plain arrogance and pride. This has been the flawed reasoning of the intelligent design and evolution theorists as well as the ent time theorists. I believe the basic story of creation in the scripture is true. But most if not all of the sideboards that the creationists have placed on the biblical account just don't wash. I believe much of Darwin's theory has credibility. But there is some of it that has never been proven that is being taught in schools. Please, I have sat in hundreds of hours of class. I know what was taught. I have held fossils. I have looked a rock strata. I know what I see. But I have also looked at the scriptures. And I know what I see there. We must remember that the bible is a book about God and his love for man - not a science book. We must remember that Darwins theory is just that, AN UNPROVEN THEORY, and it is a finite picture of something that is close to infinite. We are trying to place the work of the God of the ages in a small box that has a size of less than 1/4 of a cubic foot, our minds. He doesn't fit. Ironically I just threw out the last two sentences in another forum yesterday, the prayer time before our Sunday Morning Church Service and it was as appropriate there as here! We try to put God in the box.

    1. Re:Intelligent Design vs Evolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But yet you claim to understand that ID is THE PROVEN THEORY, with your *finite* mind! You sound like you're senile, quite frankly. I can find a dozen astrologers with "college degrees in math". So what?

  260. ouch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again

    If that's not a troll, I don't know what is. Hitting new lows once again.

  261. Evolution insults my intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm supposed to believe that the world came about through complete chance over billions of years by impossible odds. Everything that is ordered in the world was not ordered by anything, it just happened somehow. I have a hard time having enough faith to believe this.

    If I drove up to your house in a car I claimed fell together in my backyard over millions of years in such a way as to have the word "Honda" on the back and "Goodyear" on all 4 tires and ran perfectly fine you'd be upset. Rightfully so, because I've just insulted your intelligence.

    Evolution is much more far-fetched than that scenario yet you tell me it's right and I should believe it. Sorry, I'm not that gullible.

    1. Re:Evolution insults my intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's because you're stupid. That's all. Why should I believe that a magical being waved his magic wand and all the shit I see came into existence? Have you LOOKED at the world recently?

  262. Intelligent??? what??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First of all i refuse to call it Inte******* Design. This is just marketing bull-sh*t. The only reason i see here to call it Intelligent anything is because it is being preached to the stupid.

    So i vote to call it IRRATIONAL DISCOURSE.
    Anyone have any better definitions?

  263. The Pseudoscience of Intelligent Design by getting+by · · Score: 1

    by Robert Locke I AM NOT A CREATIONIST, and must confess that until recently, I treated people who questioned evolution with polite dismissal. But there has recently emerged a major trend in biology that has been suppressed in the mainstream media: evolution is in trouble. More importantly, this has absolutely nothing to do with religion but is due to the fact that the ongoing growth of biological knowledge keeps producing facts that contradict rather than confirm evolution. These two books - Michael Denton's Evolution: A Theory in Crisis and Michael J. Behe's Darwin's Black Box - describe this phenomenon. The first surprising thing Denton points out is that there has always been a dissident faction of highly distinguished scientists, of impeccable credentials and no religious motivations, who have declined to concede that evolution has been proved. This is inconvenient for evolutionists who would like to dismiss their opponents as Bible-thumping hicks and claim that questioning evolution is tantamount to questioning the value or validity of science. He also points out biologists like Richard Owen, who were prepared to allow that evolution had taken place but thought that other causes were involved in bringing about the origin of species. The first big problem with evolution is that the fossil record increasingly does not, honestly viewed, support it, a fact that famous Prof. Steven Jay Gould of Harvard has described as "the trade secret of paleontology." Evolutionary theory claims that there once existed a whole series of successive forms of the various organisms alive today. These supposedly changed by infinitesimal amounts with each generation as they evolved into the present varieties, so the fossil record should show these gradual changes. But it doesn't. Instead, it shows the sudden emergence of new species out of nowhere, fully complete with all their characteristics and not changing over time. It is almost entirely devoid of forms that can plausibly be identified as intermediates between older and newer ones. This is popularly known as the "missing link" problem, and it is massively systematic across different species and time periods. Worse, this problem is getting worse, not better, as more fossils are discovered, as the new fossils just resemble those already found and don't fill in the gaps. In Darwin's day, it was easy to claim that the fossils were there but had not been discovered. Problem is, we now have hundreds of thousands of well-catalogued fossils, from all continents and geologic eras, and we still haven't found these intermediate forms. As Denton puts it, "Despite the tremendous increase in geological activity in every corner of the globe and despite the discovery of many strange and hitherto unknown forms, the infinitude of connecting links has still not been discovered and the fossil record is about as discontinuous as it was when Darwin was writing the Origin." The quantity, quality, and range of the recovered fossils is impeccable. But the more we dig, the more we keep finding the same forms over and over again, never the intermediates. Various ad hoc explanations for the gaps in the fossil record, like a temporary dearth in the environment of the chemicals needed for organisms to produce the hard body parts that fossilize well, do not stand scrutiny. The usual response of evolutionists at this stage in the argument is a theory they call punctuated equilibrium, Gould's great contribution, which basically says that evolution occurs not gradually but in spurts. This would explain why there are gaps and not continuity in the fossil record. The problem with this theory, which is too complex to go into in detail here, is that while it explains away the non-existence of small gradations, it still requires there to be large ones (the individual spurts) and even these aren't in the record. Furthermore, for punctuated equilibrium to have occurred, a very precise set of conditions have to have obtained throughout the entire past period represented in the fossils, and this is unlikely. Another deve

  264. A look behind the curtain by jnd3 · · Score: 1

    Let's take a look at the underlying assumptions of evolution and intelligent design. Yes, it is grossly oversimplified. It's a comment. Want more? Read a book.

    Evolution is based on a system of thought that says the material world is all there is, so questions of origins must have a materialist answer. Apparent design has some sort of explanation that excludes design because it has to -- nothing else would fit in the system.

    Intelligent design is based on the assumption that design implies a designer. It does not mandate a designer (at least not from what I've read), but rather it lays the foundation that says, "If we see something that looks designed, we can posit a designer."

    From what I can see, intelligent design is actually a bigger scientific tent than evolution -- it allows for random mutation and change over time (because in many cases that has been observed) while at the same time allowing for some sort of intelligence behind it all (because there's some stuff that just looks too well-designed to be otherwise). Evolution is a material theory and as such can make no room for someone who says, "In the beginning, God."

  265. Re:Atheism also a religion by cat_jesus · · Score: 1

    The problem here is that ID is not science. If anything it's anti-science since it is non falsifiable and requires that you stop asking questions.

    The thing people seem to misunderstand is that evolution is an observed fact and the theory of evolution is a description of the process of evolution. ID really isn't even a hypothesis so it has no place in a science class.

    There is no "atheistic view of evolution" that's just rhetoric created by fanatical religious people who find the modern world to be a threat to their antiquated religious viewpoint. They recognize that their religious views cannot compete in the marketplace of ideas and so they try to use the force of law to prop up their idiotic ideas.

    They even go so far as to try to destroy the judiciary in an attempt to push their illegal agenda. The US fought this battle over 200 years ago and now these cretins spit on the constitution and the sacrifice of thousands of honorable men and women in order to push their religion on others.

    Religious freedom means that you can put up billboards and print all the material you want, on your dime. Don't expect to use the public money to push your religion. If you manage to succeed, in a few decades time it could be a different religion that is promoted by the government.

  266. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by PenguinBoyDave · · Score: 1

    You hit the nail on the head...it IS my faith. Please note I did NOT call Evolution Junk Science. I didn't flame anyone. I don't buy off on everything that Christians say about science. I have some real issues with a lof of it. I just don't buy off on Evolution. If you don't share my faith, that is your choice, and I'll not bash you or call you ignorant for that. But I am getting a little tired of being bashed for be belief. I don't call creationism science, because I know it isn't science. I just wish that people would not result to bashing one's faith when I don't believe I have (purposly) bashed anyone for not sharing my faith. I respect everyone's belief or non-belief as their personal choice. I was taught Evolution in school AND Creationism. I made up my own mind for what worked for me. If that makes me ignorant, intollerant, etc. then I am going to have to live with that.

    --
    I'm not a troll, but I play one on Slashdot.
  267. Good point by Gene77 · · Score: 1

    From Augustine to Aquinas to Descartes to C.S.Lewis, this has been a valid Christian question. In Lewis' terms, the question of Christ was phrased in aliteration as the question "Was Jesus a Liar, Lord, or Lunatic?"

    It's a great question not because of the open-endedness of it, but because it gets to the nature of God, revelation, and the human condition. These are all central concerns for Christians and should be embraced by them.

    --
    "Man has always been his own most vexing problem." --Reinhold Niebuhr, "The Nature and Destiny of Man"
  268. I used to live in the Bible Belt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...one day a colleague mentioned that she was going to substitute teach bible school that night. She was an intelligent person, on the fast track up the company ladder. I asked her about creationism, if it all took place over seven days. She said "yes, it's true". I then asked "on which day did he create the dinosaurs?". She said, "well, it was the same day he crated all the other animals...". My jaw dropped considerably, and the conversation got awkward at that point. Don't tell me that these people don't believe a literal interpretation of the bible...

  269. Re:Evolution does not disprove the existence of Go by DavidTC · · Score: 1
    That's what I've been saying about ID.

    If you have a theory that someone did it...let's see either evidence of this person, or a hypothesis about them, who they are, what they want, why they did this.

    You can't just assert things exist and stop. If you want to pull God into science, you're going to have to...pull God into science.

    And if it become acceptable to look at religion critially, through science, religion is..in trouble. At least the currently popular ones. I point to Mithra. I point to Sumerian stories. Some of Christianity clearly was...well...made up, to put it bluntly. As was Judism.

    There's some nice stuff in Christianity, but put it under the magnifying glass of science and it will just wither and die. Which is sad, because if you remove the distortion of the church, I actually think it's a great philosophy.

    But if people with crazy beliefs pull them into science, science is going to look at them. People advocating ID need to think long and hard about what they are doing.

    And the last time science looked long and hard at religion (Also about evolution.) was the end of the 1800s, and we got all sorts of crazies coming out of the woodwork who claimed they could talk to the dead and whatnot, and a general increase in religious looniness.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  270. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by jag7720 · · Score: 0

    IANAM (mathematician) No, you can't....if you get something then there was always something there. Split an atom... now split that... then split that... there will always be something. Try to make some dirt...but you can't use any element/compound/atom/molecule or anything known in our world/solar system/universe/galaxy/etc... You can't do it. Thus you can't get something from nothing.

  271. The creationist story on fossils by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    The official word on fossils from the "creation science" folks is that they're the remains of species wiped out in the Flood. The Flood is their universal explanation for fossil fish on mountaintops, for places where you can plainly see more than six thousand years worth of erosion, and so on.

    This is a testable hypothesis, actually. Just check whether there's a layer of sea salt at the 6000-year mark in sediments around the world.

  272. Re:The deal with these fundamentalists by registro · · Score: 1

    >Can you see my point The deal with these fundamentalists is that people that actually have a brain don't dare to speak up anymore.

    moded 2 x troll. It sucks to be right on this one. Oh well...

  273. Explanation for Fossils by everphilski · · Score: 0

    Actually there is a relatively good explanation that Christians have for fossils that is often overlooked - the flood. That much hydraulic pressure on the surface of the earth could very well have caused fossils to look as old as our technology claims it to be. It also explains fairly well the formation of oil fields.
    My two cents worth, as a creationist and a Christian, is that Faith is being sure of what you hope for and certain of what you do not see. It is a belief not a science. I don't have to prove my belief to you to make it right. Evolution on a large scale is also a belief. We cannot observe it on a time domain large enough to prove its existance. We see bits and pieces and stick it together and think we know it all. Even Darwin towards the end of his life admitted he was just trying to shake things up. So instead of us scientists trying to be know-it-alls maybe we should try humbling ourselves before this great world of ours, and admitting that it's bigger than any one of us, and admitting there's more to know than any one of us will know, and present the facts as we see them, present the theories that exist, and let the students run with it. Give them an open field instead of a dark hallway. Just an idea. -philski-

    1. Re:Explanation for Fossils by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, uhm, where did the water come from, and where is it now?

  274. Christian in what sense? by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1
    In the first part of Matthew 19, some Pharisees come to Jesus to test him out. They ask about the legality of divorce. His answer rests on the creation account -- the precedent of Adam and Eve. Now I suppose that it's possible to assert that Jesus didn't actually believe the creation account was a historical truth, but I've seen no evidence to back that view. Jewish orthodoxy is that the creation account is literal, not metaphoric, or a fabrication. Consequently, I think Jesus would roundly contradict your view of history -- he would point to the scriptures (the "Old Testament" in our parlance) as the ultimate source of information on the matter, not the stars, stones, or bones.

    This observation prompts me to ask why you describe yourself as "Christian". Actually, I could ask many people that, because there are many like you who call themselves "Christian" who do not follow Christ. Christ's teaching rests very squarely on the Old Testament. If you reject the veracity of the Old Testament, you have departed from the teaching of Jesus at a very fundamental level.

    Surely there are more appropriate things to call yourself? What is it about Christianity that you believe, accept, or affirm? Given that information, maybe we can find a better religion for you -- one whose leading figure is not a fundamentalist like Jesus.

    --
    proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    1. Re:Christian in what sense? by trixillion · · Score: 1

      Given that Fundementalists, such as yourself, are in the extreme minority of christians world-wide. Perhaps, it would be more sensible to find another name for your religion. Really, why bother renaming the religion of over 2 billion people on the whims a 100 million. Face it, you are a radical at odds with the majority of the people of your own faith. If you want to divorce yourself from the majority, then pick a new name for yourself. I suggest the name, Jews for Christ, that way you can stick to the doctrine of the Old Testament and still have Christ as your Messiah.

    2. Re:Christian in what sense? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, clearly I've offended you. Sorry. I didn't mean to suggest that you're a bad person or anything -- I imagine that you're not. I'm just puzzled as to how Jesus fits into your view of things, since all the evidence I've seen points to him being quite the fundamentalist himself, citing scriptures as authoritative for this, that, and the other.

      On the matter of what I call myself, I usually opt for "a Nutter".

    3. Re:Christian in what sense? by trixillion · · Score: 1

      As an aetheist, I'm not offended by the absurdities of your religious dogmas. What do I care what your imaginary friend thinks of me. Tonight you may pray that all infidels burn in your imaginary hell - makes no difference. Some day you will die and then guess what, nothing will happen. You have no soul, I'm sorry to inform you. I'm sorry that that is just more than you can bare. So by all means believe in Christ or the Easter Bunny or whatever, if it makes accepting mortality easier for you. Just don't force that bullshit down the throats of others; some of us haven't the stomache for it.

      Anyway, what of this evidence. You must be referring to your Bible. Do you have any idea how rediculous you sound offering the Bible as evidence for anything. I should offer you the story of Hansel and Grettel as proof that witches live in candy houses. It would make as much sense. My friend, wake up, you live in a fairy tale. Do you not see what passes for logic and reason to you.

    4. Re:Christian in what sense? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see I've made a mistake. My original comment was directed to the original poster, "rknop". I wasn't expecting a third party such as yourself to reply. In any case, if you're going to be an atheist, be a reasonable atheist. You've accused me of doing all sorts of things I simply haven't done. I haven't rammed anything down anyone's throat, and I haven't presented the bible as evidence for anything more than the fact that there was this Jewish guy called "Jesus" a couple of thousand years ago who took the Jewish scriptures seriously. It's not unreasonable to believe that such a person existed.

    5. Re:Christian in what sense? by trixillion · · Score: 1

      Yes, you are mistaken. But why follow the first mistake with a second mistake? Are you seriously begrudging me for taking your reply in context. You have only yourself to blame for replying to the wrong individual. Your follow up is a fine specimine of Deist logic.

  275. The consequences for the future of the USA by theolein · · Score: 1

    While obviously not all Americans are religious fundamentalist Christians, reports in the news during the last election indicate that a good 40% or so are and that the number is climbing. Apart from rabidly theocratic nations like Saudi Arabia, Iran and a few others, there is nowhere else on ths planet where there is such a growth of dogmatic religious beliefs along with the resulting intolerance of other faiths and the scientific worldview. For these people, the enlightenment never happened.

    I have no idea what it is that causes the historic episodes of religious sects, religions and ideologies. My personal theory is that it starts off with a certain part of the culture that has these specific beliefs, and that in times of financial and social despair, people turn to extremism as a crutch in their fear and uncertainty. That was the case in Europe in the dark ages and that was the case in Nazi Germany, and that is the case in many Islamic countries governed by tyrannical heretics.

    I don't know if the current resurgence of dogmatic christianity in the USA is a result of the vietnam years liberalism and humiliation, a feeling of being lost in the world (very often a reason, I think) or 9/11 and the realisation that there is indeed a world beyond the borders of the USA. Probably a combination.

    But the consequences of forcing the teaching of nonsensical dogmas as science in schools, coupled with the already extremely poor US education system and the fact that foreign students are no longer bolstering the US' scientific institutions due to the security paranoia is likely to be the cause of the US becoming an overpopulated poor backwards country in the future. It won't happen overnight, but it might happen in 50 years.

  276. A couple of distinctions by FuroTheRed · · Score: 1
    I find it funny that many of my fellow slashdotters seem to be under the impression that proponents of ID are really, really desparate to prove themselves right. Many- perhaps most- proponents of ID proper are former disciples of macroevolutionary theory that changed their minds because they didn't think the evidence added up.

    Many of you also seem to think that ID and "fundamentalists" are one in the same. This is far from the case. Most "fundamentalists" see ID as heresy- albeit extremely helpful heresy. ID is not a Christian idea- it's a deist idea.

    Let's suppose archaeologists dig up primitive tools in an excavation. An arrowhead and the wooden part of a bow are found- but too deep. At this depth, the scientists estimate that the tools had to have been created at least three or four million years before the first humans are thought to have appeared on earth.

    Scientifically, does it make more sense to say "Well, perhaps humans were around earlier than we thought they were, or perhaps this layer of rock is not as old as we thought it was," or does it make more sense to say, "Since complexity can rise from simplicity, and since humanity wasn't around during this time period, obviously wind, water, and other natural elements must have created these tools."?

    This is what ID proponents (many of them actual, degree-holding, practicing scientists) are seeing in this debate. It seems scientifically sound to assume that such a well-made universe was created by an intelligent being- rather than assuming it arose by chance.

    Granted, my example does present problems. We know already that humans exist, and that they create bows and arrowheads. We can prove humanity did exist, and that creating arrowheads is the kind of thing that they do. With God, one may point out, we can't do that. He is not empirically provable.

    I'd like to point out, though, that no event in the past is empirically provable beyond all doubt.

    Most especially macroevolution.

    --
    "Sometimes it takes more than an axe and a busload of strangers to work through your anger." -Rikk Estoban
  277. My thoughts by Eric119 · · Score: 1

    I am a Christian, and I am just horrified that people would assert that fossils etc., were deliberately placed in the Earth by God to test our faith. While God does test Christians, this claim essentially says that God is trying to trick us.

    It also demands that we can't trust any evidence we find about anything, because maybe that evidence is a trick too. In the past we didn't have this made up "science vs. religion" conflict.

    I'm still not certain about the exact nature of the act of Creation, though I am dubious about the fossil evidence. The essential point is that God created the Universe and created all life on Earth. That's not to say how he did it is unimportant or that we shouldn't discuss such issues, just not as important to the Christian faith. (I might add that "faith" does not imply believing something without any evidence or in the face of contrary evidence).

  278. My comment by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 0, Redundant

    One, the evolutionary theory is a theory, not a fact. It is based in science if I understand it correctly.

    When they teach things in school, specifically theories, they need to make sure students understand a theory is not a fact. Also, the theory they teach needs to be backed up by the scientific community.

    1. Re:My comment by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      One, the evolutionary theory is a theory, not a fact.

      Yawn. This "argument" is soooo tired...

      A scientific theory is a model based on facts from observations and experiments. The studied phenomenon we know takes place in nature is evolution. Our model that tries to explain this is the theory of evolution. Please, please never use this argument again, it just shows your ignorance of the subject.

    2. Re:My comment by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

      Sorry, maybe I should have said theory versus law.

    3. Re:My comment by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      No prob. I'd still like to point out that in science, there is no gradual process of factual validity that starts with a hypothesis and ends with a law. Laws are not absolutes, and can be refuted if exceptions to them are found. Actually, when we go to the domain of quantum physics, some classic physical laws do not apply anymore. However, they are still true and applicable in practice since they work on our scale here on Earth. You can build a working car relying on the laws of classical mechanics, but you can't build it with the help of quantum physics.

      Here's a Google search on "scientific law". It also provides more info on the differences between hypotheses, theories and laws.

    4. Re:My comment by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but perhaps once we better understand quantum physics, we will no longer be building the cars of today.

  279. Intelligent Design == we are machines by GodWasAnAlien · · Score: 1

    It is interesting that Creationists are adopting this Intelligent Design philosophy, as it could not prove what they think it could.

    Let us assume they are correct, and that we are very complex. They often use a watch as an example, stating that we do not assume that metatillic compounds joined together, by chance, to form a watch. But note that we do not assume that the watch was created by a single, all powerful, all knowing, eternal being either. Really, the conclusion of intelligent design would only imply the following:

    - We are complex, non-magical machines
    - We were designed/created by intelligent beings
    - Those beings were likely as complex or more complex than ourselves, therefore, they were created by other beings.

    We are on the verge of creating intelligent machines ourselves (biological/genetic or silicon), so intelligent design should not be a crazy idea to us. Though to assume that we are a god-like creature would be somewhat crazy depending on what god means.

  280. Let's be fair, then by anomaly · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Evolution as scientific theory of the emergence of species is reasonable and testable.

    Evolution does not speak to origins. By defintion, speculation about origins is philosophy.

    We cannot use science to speak of origins, because we cannot observe the event, document it and repeat it. Science can collect evidence and propose theories about it, but since these theories are untestable, it is not scientific to draw conclusions about origins in the guide of science!

    Get your naturalistic philosophy out of my science classroom, and I'll stop trying to get my theistic phiolosophy IN!

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Let's be fair, then by Hast · · Score: 1

      We cannot use science to speak of origins, because we cannot observe the event, document it and repeat it. Science can collect evidence and propose theories about it, but since these theories are untestable, it is not scientific to draw conclusions about origins in the guide of science!
      Incorrect.

      It is possible to make scientific hypothesis and theories about the origin of life and test there. Naturally it's hard to prove that this is the exact way it happened but if it can be demonstrated that it is in fact possible to "make" life from non-life then that is a big step.

      AFAIK quite a bit of progress has been made in this area as well lately.

      BTW, Newton was never able to demonstrate what caused the apple that hit him on the head to fall. He could only demonstrate that he could explain it and reproduce it. That is science.

    2. Re:Let's be fair, then by WinDoze · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Evolution does not, and never did, attempt to explain the origin of life. It explains how it progressed once it appeared. That's it. If you're going to argue against the theory you should probably try to understand what the theory is all about first.

  281. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your point would have been a good one.

    Except that you failed at posting Way to use HTML.

    Proved me right.

    Asshole

    1. Re:Wow by carlos_benj · · Score: 1

      Ah. I see. So, we can learn here that a statement is either valid or invalid based solely upon whether or not it was properly formatted in HTML. We can also learn many other things from you. People from the midwest are stupid. People who teach sunday school are stupid. People who vote Republican (or is it just for Bush?) are stupid. I suppose that an intelligent person would be someone like yourself. Someone who puts others down in order to feel better about themselves? Someone who can't see nuances and must tar entire populations, geographical areas and ideologies with the same broad brush.

      Perhaps you failed at logging in, oh, and either punctuation or capitalization.

      Not sure what that "proves".

      --

      --

      As a matter of fact, I am a lawyer. But I play an actor on TV.

    2. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, no... he's right. Midwesterners are incredibly stupid. Luckily, I'm a non-midwesterner who was born, raised, and currently resides in the midwest...

  282. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by enjo13 · · Score: 1

    Your response really says it all. 'Please accept that those of us who like the idea and the hypothesis...'

    That's in a nutshell. I.D'ers are simply uncomfortable (generally based on religious dogma) with the entire concept of evolution. Putting your stock in a theory simply because you LIKE it more is not science. That statement shows, unfortunately, that you really do not grasp the basic principles of science. A solid, testable theory compells Scientists to accept it based on the observable outcomes it predicts. Even if I.D. met the valid criteria of scientific theory (it doesn't), it fails on many levels to explain what the facts show to be the case.

    I beleive we SHOULD mention I.D. in science class, but not as a valid alternative to evolution (scientifically, it's not) but as a golden example of the difference between science and non-science.

    --
    Turn s60 photos into awesome videos with mScrapbook for all S60 3rd edition phones!
  283. In favor of intelligent design... by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

    While I don't agree with the religious component of ID, I do believe that there's more to genetic diversity than "random variation" and the ID argument that genetic diversity is not the result of purely random variation may have some merit.

    There's a sort of neo-lamarkism going around among legitamate scientists and I've been wanting to pick up a book for a while and get deeper into it. So pardon my poor explanation.

    Animals have been shown to change far faster than evolution would predict and then pass on their changes to their children. i.e. they seem to be able to rapidly revert to previous evolutionary states because 'the genes are still there' and then to pass on these changes, even though 'natural selection' may not have had time to play its part.

    Some areas of the genetic code are more likely to vary than others, and are more likely to vary under stress.

    Immune cells can be passed from parent to child. Possibly this allows acquired changes to be inheritied. (can't elaborate too much here as I'm not familiar with immunology)

    I don't know all the mechanisms which could contribute to this, but each suggests sources of genetic diversity which are not totally random, and which may involve the inheretance of some acquired changes (lamarckism)

    --

    ___
    It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    1. Re:In favor of intelligent design... by bhima · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that immunities came from mother milk... could wrong though.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    2. Re:In favor of intelligent design... by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Milk does help a little but not much. A baby's immunity mostly comes from the fact that they share their bloodstream with their mother's in the womb, and thus benefit from the mother's antibodies.

      When babies are born their immune system has yet to produce antibodies. The mother's antibodies are slowly elimitated in the first 3-6 months of the life of the baby.

      Then the young child starts becoming sick. Most new parents witness their baby's first cold, flu, ear infection etc at between 3 to 6 months of age.

      Over the next year or so babies are often sick a lot, especially if they are in day care, and thus exposed to a lot of bugs. As they fall prey to a variety of illnesses they start developing their immune system, which doesn't fully mature until young adulthood.

  284. We don't know. by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Which brings up the question that I never got answererd when in school, and I'm hoping someone here with an advanced degree can answer... Where did all the matter and energy in the Universe come from?
    We don't know where it came from.

    And since we cannot travel back in time, we will never know, for sure, where it came from.

    The most we can do is to work on various theories and try to test them to see if we can increase our understanding.
    1. Re:We don't know. by B'Trey · · Score: 2, Informative

      I suspect you're trolling, and I probably shouldn't feed you, but there may be those who fail to see the fallacies in your arguments. I'll respond for their sakes.

      True, we do not know where time and matter came from. That doesn't mean it's unknowable. There are lots of clues about the origin of the universe in the way the universe behaves and the form it currently has. To put it simply, all of them indicate a universe that begain in an explosion at a single point and expanded to its present size and consistency. As our knowledge expands, we gain the ability to interpret the existing clues and evidence more accurately. We may never know the exact origin of the universe, or we may someday develop a theory that convincingly explains it. But to say that we don't currently know a detailed explanation isn't the same as saying that the knowledge is unknowable, or "outside the realm of possible study."

      But lets suppose that you're correct. Let's suppose that both the origin of matter and the origin of a Creator are unknowable and "outside the realm of possible study." Where does that leave us? It leaves us with one of two possible unanswerable questions. The first possiblity is "There exists a universe which consists of energy in various forms, including matter. This universe follows basic, fundamental rules, and the application of those rules to the energy and matter is capable of explaining life and human intelligence. We have no explanation for how that universe originated." The second possiblity is "There exists a universe with energy in various forms, including matter. It follows fundamental rules but those rules are incapable of explaining the presence of life and human intelligence. We therefore assume that there exists a greater intelligence of unimaginable and unknowable complexity who authored this universe. We have no idea where this greater intelligence originated. Indeed, we claim that we cannot know it because it is too grand and complicated for the human mind to comprehend." Which possibility is simpler? Which better fits with the scientific process? What, exactly, does the believing in the second possibility buy you in terms of scientific knowledge?

      Creation is pseudosciene because it is not science, but merely religion dressed up in scientific-sounding clothing. What makes it not science is not any bias or prejudice on my part. What makes it not science is that it does not follow the principles of science. Despite all of the posturing and blustering by creationist, there is no scientific evidence for creationism. None. Furthermore, even if most of the creationist claims were true, there would be precious little evidence for creationism. Creationist seem to think that challenging evolution somehow strengthens the evidence for creationism. It doesn't. The origin of species isn't an "either/or" proposition. It is not the case that either evolution is true or creationism is true. Both could be false, with the true explanation some third alternative. Disproving that the sun revolves around the earth didn't make the theory of epicycles any more true. If creationism were a theory, it would have to stand on its own merits, without reference to evolution. It doesn't. (Of course, it is extremely unlikely that evolution is false. The "problems" that creationsist bring up to challenge it are generally either complete misunderstandings of the theory, such as attacking the claim that "men came from monkeys," or they're assertions that real questions about the details of the mechanisms of evolution somehow challenge the validity of the overall theory.)

      Scientists generally don't bother challenging the "evidence" that creationsist present for two reasons. One, doing so grants creationism a respectability that it doesn't merit as a scientific theory. The general public tends to see debates of that sort as comparing two equally tenable alternatives. Creationist would love to see scientists debate them in public because it gives the perception that creationi

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    2. Re:We don't know. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And since we cannot travel back in time, we will never know, for sure, where it came from.

      ... as opposed to being able to back in time and knowing? Heh, I'd like to see you staring at the Big Bang and explaining "ah-ha! so THAT's where the stuff came from! Now that's settled once and for all!"

      On a related note, there was a pretty neat article on SciAm about Big Bang and related misconceptions regarding expansions of space-time, how people (even highly educated natural scientits) often misunderstand how the universe is expanding (or rather, space itself is, not universes) etc.

    3. Re:We don't know. by Catskul · · Score: 1

      See thats the beauty of creationism. Of course we know where it came from. God put it there.

      Actually in all seriousness. Even if God put everything where it is, it does no good to use this as an explanation. I could claim that the universe started 7 days ago, and the reason everything is where it is, and why you have memories is because God started the Universe that way. And there is nothing that could prove me wrong.

      However, there seems to be a pattern to it all, and that pattern shows it self in the rules of science. Therefore even if God made everything, and put it exactly where it is, God did it in a way that allows the pattern to be revealed through science.

      All of nature shows this pattern, and if Nature is made by God, I would say that Nature is more a manifistation of God's will than a book of writings by fallible human beings.

      Regardless of the metaphysical truth, the value in teaching evolution in school lies within the fact that understanding the patterns in Nature is what will serve students in understanding more of the world, and prepareing for higer education.

      Even the Catholic Church acknoledges that evolution is more than just a hypothesis, and that there is value in the story of Genesis as an interpretation and a parable.

      --

      Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
    4. Re:We don't know. by Starcub · · Score: 1
      Where did all the matter and energy in the Universe come from?
      We don't know where it came from.

      Tell me where the chicken came from, and I'll tell you where the Universe came from.
    5. Re:We don't know. by Zareste · · Score: 1

      And 'we' refers to you and who else?

      Existence exists because that's what it does. People only say 'nobody will ever know' when they don't want to accept their shortcoming as an individual.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
  285. Fined Tuned Universe Argument by dwpro · · Score: 1

    I find the rebuttal of the fine-tuned universe to be quite weak, if I am interpreting it correctly (probably not.)

    Does it suggest that simply because we are here to observe this seemingly fragile universe nullify the fact that it is incredibly improbable for all of these (possibly) random varibles to align?

    Someone please expound upon this reasoning.

    --
    Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    1. Re:Fined Tuned Universe Argument by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Your premise is based on the assumption that there is only one universe. Had things turned out different in this one then they'd be, well, different. And a differnt version of us would be wondering that it must be designed, since "we" fit "perfectly" into that slightly different universe. The universe was not designed to fit us, we evloved the way we are because the universe is the way it is. No other reason.

      Qunatum theory and other discipline in physics postulate that there may be an infinite number of universes that come into existance. Our universe is not impossible, just improbable. But when you have an infinite number of universes coming into existance, then one like ours it is going to happen. And here we are.

      There are probably universe with no life. Or with nothing by helium. or with totally differnt life. Universes that lasted seconds and ones that lasted billions of years.

      The universe wasn't fine tuned for us, we were fine tuned (via evolution) for it. if it had been different so would we, and we'd be wondering the same thing.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    2. Re:Fined Tuned Universe Argument by dwpro · · Score: 1

      That makes sense, and would be a logical explanation if a random universe generator does exist (I certainly have no idea.)

      I re-read that portion of the article, though, and found no mention of more than one universe, and if this was the basis for their conclusion, they should have at least mentioned it.

      Would you, by chance, know of a good place to read up on this universe creation idea?

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    3. Re:Fined Tuned Universe Argument by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Google for Michio Kaku. He has lots of good stuff, and a few books on this.

      Also, listen to this programme from CBC radio. It combines many worlds idea with Evolution in a very intriguing way.

      By the way, there is no "random universe generator". The randomness is at the quantum level - Hisenberg's Uncertainy principle at work.

      Facinating stuff really.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  286. Proof? by TheCrig · · Score: 1

    What experiment has proved either ID or evolution? I don't mean "proved well enough for someone to believe it." I mean proved in the rigorous sense of "reproducible experiments that have removed all other variables and shown no other possibility exists."

    None.

    And I can state with reasonable certainty that none ever will. (Kindly note that I am not claiming absolute certainty.)

    ID is a much, much bigger claim than "evolution is wrong." It's the claim that matter, energy, time and chance are insufficient to produce a cosmologically organized system.

    This is not something that can be proved by experiment. But neither is the counterclaim, namely, that matter, energy, time and chance are sufficient to produce a cosmologically organized system.

    (Aside: "Chance" isn't really anything, ontologically.)

    In the end, it comes down to two questions:

    1. What do you want to believe?
    2. What evidence would be sufficient to get you to change your mind?

    If your answer to the latter question is "nothing," then your mind is closed unless you are lying or something outside you pries your mind open to see itself.

    Anthony Flew's argument about falsifiability applies to both sides at the level of cosmology.

    This also has vast implications for teleology, but that's probably straying too far away from the subject.

    --
    -- Jim Crigler In 1937, I began, like Lazarus, the impossible return. -- Whittaker Chambers
  287. The Garden of Eden was a test, and they PASSED by The+Other+White+Meat · · Score: 3, Interesting


    The general belief is that Adam and Eve chose to disobey God and eat of the fruit from the Tree of Knowledge. God smote them, and banished them from Eden and made Eve feel pain during childbirth as punishment, etc.

    I believe that this common belief is all wrong.

    In this parable, God gave Adam and Eve a choice. They could remain in Eden for all of Eternity, so long as they denied themselves knowledge. Eve chose Knowledge, and shared it with Adam. As _REWARD_, God set them free from Eden, and allowed them the to explore the world around them.

    If God really wanted to punish Adam and Eve, he would have struck them dead and started over. He didn't, and instead all of humanity has the opportunity to explore the Universe He created.

    Doesn't sound like punishment to me...

    --

    --- Generation X: The first generation to have SIG lines inferior to their parents... ---
  288. New compuatational technique discovered! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And in recent news, scientist who have been using Evolutionary Computational techniques have recently switched over in droves to an upcoming technique called Bible Solve.

    In what has been seen as a generational leap in computation understanding, this technique involves using specially encoded passages from the bible inplace of complex algorithms within the code. In fact a recent study has shown that an archaic IBM 386 machine recently achieved 300 Frames per second while playing DOOM 3 using full screen mode with a simple code change and recompile.

    Try it today and take the next step forward.

  289. are you sure? by sheldon · · Score: 1

    http://carnegieinstitution.org/news_releases/news_ 040913.html

    You should keep a more open mind... Science is all about theories, and we're not completely certain that oil comes from fossils...

    It may, in fact be created by Intelligent Design. Well, that or some complex process of pressure turning carbon into oil, sort of like how diamonds come from pressurized carbon but yet completely different. :-)

    1. Re:are you sure? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      It may, in fact be created by Intelligent Design.

      It may be, but religious dogma has no place in a scientific inquiry.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  290. Clippy loves you?? by pbhj · · Score: 1

    Just wondering!

    The cult of Clippy lives on ....

  291. Separation of Church and State? by bazio · · Score: 0

    OK, just so you know where I stand, I am by no means a "fundamentalist" or a "neo-conservative" or a "right-wing nut" or any of that. I am personally of the belief that whatever religious beliefs (or lack thereof) you happen to hold are your own damn business, and don't, in my eyes, make a bit of difference regarding your value as a human being. I am staunchly against the preference of one religion over any other in government and business, and think the government should keep its nose out of that particular arena. However, without RTFA (and IANAL, and all that), I can say that I don't think this Intelligent Design teaching strictly violates the constitutional requirement of separation of church and state. The Constitution merely states that the government cannot give preference to one religion over another. In this case, the school is simply teaching a spiritual subject. It's not even a Judeo-Christian topic, since Intelligent Design does not strictly mean the Biblical God, or even technically a God at all, was involved in the design process.

    Now, as to Intelligent Design being a "viable alternative" to the "flawed" theory of evolution, I do disagree with that. I don't believe the theory of evolution to be flawed, just incomplete (as most theories are). I also don't see how a state institution can feel that Intelligent Design is a viable alternative. Next thing you know, we'll be teaching how the moon landings were faked by the space aliens that assassinated Kennedy and replaced Richard Nixon with a clone/cyborg hybrid bent on world domination. Or something.

    I'm sure there are those who will disagree, which is fine, and I'm sure if I RTFA I'll see that they are specifying some sort of Christianity-based version of the topic, but I don't care. In short, the school board needs to wise up, and the ACLU needs to chill out and re-read the Constitution.

    --
    Set the bar high, then bring a tall ladder.
  292. Wanna test for evolution? by icejai · · Score: 1
    1. Re:Wanna test for evolution? by getting+by · · Score: 1

      There has recently emerged a major trend in biology that has been suppressed in the mainstream media: evolution is in trouble. More importantly, this has absolutely nothing to do with religion but is due to the fact that the ongoing growth of biological knowledge keeps producing facts that contradict rather than confirm evolution. These two books - Michael Denton's Evolution: A Theory in Crisis and Michael J. Behe's Darwin's Black Box - describe this phenomenon.

      The first surprising thing Denton points out is that there has always been a dissident faction of highly distinguished scientists, of impeccable credentials and no religious motivations, who have declined to concede that evolution has been proved. This is inconvenient for evolutionists who would like to dismiss their opponents as Bible-thumping hicks and claim that questioning evolution is tantamount to questioning the value or validity of science. He also points out biologists like Richard Owen, who were prepared to allow that evolution had taken place but thought that other causes were involved in bringing about the origin of species.

      The first big problem with evolution is that the fossil record increasingly does not, honestly viewed, support it, a fact that famous Prof. Steven Jay Gould of Harvard has described as "the trade secret of paleontology." Evolutionary theory claims that there once existed a whole series of successive forms of the various organisms alive today. These supposedly changed by infinitesimal amounts with each generation as they evolved into the present varieties, so the fossil record should show these gradual changes. But it doesn't. Instead, it shows the sudden emergence of new species out of nowhere, fully complete with all their characteristics and not changing over time. It is almost entirely devoid of forms that can plausibly be identified as intermediates between older and newer ones. This is popularly known as the "missing link" problem, and it is massively systematic across different species and time periods. Worse, this problem is getting worse, not better, as more fossils are discovered, as the new fossils just resemble those already found and don't fill in the gaps. In Darwin's day, it was easy to claim that the fossils were there but had not been discovered. Problem is, we now have hundreds of thousands of well-catalogued fossils, from all continents and geologic eras, and we still haven't found these intermediate forms. As Denton puts it,

      "Despite the tremendous increase in geological activity in every corner of the globe and despite the discovery of many strange and hitherto unknown forms, the infinitude of connecting links has still not been discovered and the fossil record is about as discontinuous as it was when Darwin was writing the Origin."

      The quantity, quality, and range of the recovered fossils is impeccable. But the more we dig, the more we keep finding the same forms over and over again, never the intermediates. Various ad hoc explanations for the gaps in the fossil record, like a temporary dearth in the environment of the chemicals needed for organisms to produce the hard body parts that fossilize well, do not stand scrutiny.

      The usual response of evolutionists at this stage in the argument is a theory they call punctuated equilibrium, Gould's great contribution, which basically says that evolution occurs not gradually but in spurts. This would explain why there are gaps and not continuity in the fossil record. The problem with this theory, which is too complex to go into in detail here, is that while it explains away the non-existence of small gradations, it still requires there to be large ones (the individual spurts) and even these aren't in the record. Furthermore, for punctuated equilibrium to have occurred, a very precise set of conditions have to have obtained throughout the entire past period represented in the fossils, and this is unlikely.

      Another development that has undermined evolution is the spread of computers into evolutionary biology. Basically, com

  293. Infinity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen. "

    Clearly someone's been getting his logic from Douglas Adams. Adams was joking.

    Take the number 0. Add 2 to it. Add 2 to it again. Do this an infinite number of times.

    You'll only ever have even numbers. Just because a set is infinite does not mean it includes all possibilities. There's a whole branch of mathematics called transfinite mathematics that deals with this.

    Particularly, in the real world, doing some things changes the world so that other things can't be done. If Adam and Eve had said "Ok, we're not supposed to eat from this tree... let's chop it down to make sure we can't" then no matter how infinite the amount of time they lived, they couldn't have eaten from it.

    That said, this is the bible. There's about as much point apply proper transfinite mathematics to it as there is teaching a fish to whistle.

    1. Re:Infinity by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Clearly someone's been getting his logic from Douglas Adams. Adams was joking.

      Adams was always joking. And yet, very often he was serious too.

      You're talking about the "population of the universe is zero" bit, which I *have* been thinking about lately. I've been thinking that, in fact, that bit has dodgy math (and I'm not even a mathematician folks), but I won't get into that. It's still funny.

      Take the number 0. Add 2 to it. Add 2 to it again. Do this an infinite number of times.

      You'll only ever have even numbers. Just because a set is infinite does not mean it includes all possibilities.


      If its probability is zero then I don't see what the problem is; we're talking about non-zero probabilities here. Things with non-zero probability are certain; things with zero probability are merely undefined.

      If you think someone can set their mind so that a thing will forever be unthinkable to them, then I'd say you are either a dogmatic idiot (I'll give you the benefit of the doubt), or you have a touching faith in the inability of the universe, given infinity to work with, to devise contexts that can change people's minds.

    2. Re:Infinity by The+Creator · · Score: 1
      Take the number 0. Add 2 to it. Add 2 to it again. Do this an infinite number of times.

      You'll only ever have even numbers. Just because a set is infinite does not mean it includes all possibilities

      It does, in the set of zero and all positive even numbers, zero and positive numbers are _all_ of the possibilities.

      "But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen. "

      Notice how it does'nt say "everything" happens.

      --

      FRA: STFU GTFO
    3. Re:Infinity by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Argh, missed these bits:

      Particularly, in the real world, doing some things changes the world so that other things can't be done. If Adam and Eve had said "Ok, we're not supposed to eat from this tree... let's chop it down to make sure we can't" then no matter how infinite the amount of time they lived, they couldn't have eaten from it.

      Well this can be handled three ways:

      1. God's commandment is final and eternal, meaning it always will hold meaning. Thus, there will always be a danger from the fruit, Because He Said So, no matter what Adam and Eve do. I prefer this one, since it means God is talking about the universal and not the temporary.

      2. The tree is immortal too, as is everything else in the garden. It'll grow back and grow new fruit eventually.

      3. If the tree is the only member of its species, and killing it makes it extinct, then the issue becomes a competition between how likely it is that Adam will eat the fruit and how likely he'll devise the means to chop the tree down, then do so. Simple, and it possibly gets Adam out of his fix... unless God makes a new tree. Keeping number one in mind above, plus adding in that God had to have put the tree in the garden for a reason, one that cutting it down probably wouldn't fix, and it makes it harder to extract Adam from his mess.

      That said, this is the bible. There's about as much point apply proper transfinite mathematics to it as there is teaching a fish to whistle.

      Not true. All mathematics is related, so the seeds of all of it are, in essence, contained in the simple order of the integers, and I'd say that counting matters in the Bible. And since the Bible refers to the infinite, it certainly isn't asking too much to bring maths that deal with the infinite into the picture.

    4. Re:Infinity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would disagree: The infinite group of even integers under addition is isomorphic to the infinite group of integers (and in fact to the group of real numbers): each element in one group may be mapped onto one and only one element in the other (and they consequently obey the same 'multiplication' table).

      Indeed mathematics is not a good foundation for religious discourse :-)

    5. Re:Infinity by eggnet · · Score: 1

      Not everything that is possible can happen. You might die in less than 20 years, or more. But not both.

    6. Re:Infinity by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      Uh, that's because doing both would be impossible.

    7. Re:Infinity by The+Creator · · Score: 1

      Ah, you fail to realize that as a GOD i am bimortal.

      --

      FRA: STFU GTFO
    8. Re:Infinity by UlfGabe · · Score: 1

      "

      "But it *would* have happened eventually, because in infinity, all possible things happen. " ...
      Particularly, in the real world, doing some things changes the world so that other things can't be done. If Adam and Eve had said "Ok, we're not supposed to eat from this tree... let's chop it down to make sure we can't" then no matter how infinite the amount of time they lived, they couldn't have eaten from it.

      "

      You have got a good point, but let me counter with some QM that I learned.

      Let us say you hit your head on a wall, you are immortal, the wall is immortal(assume proton and neutron decay does not occur), and both the wall and you are made up of regular atoms.

      Now, let T approach infinity, and the chance for any atom in the wall to not impact any atoms in your body when hitting the wall with your head is represented by P.

      If P is non-zero, (and by definition, the wall and you being a collection of normal atoms minus proton neutron decay) as T->inf the chance of a successful pass through the wall approaches 1.

      Your arguement is wrong because you attempt to push a mathematical reason into the Physical and Quantum Mechanical Fields where that kind of math may not always apply at fringe situations.

      Since Adam and Eve were regular immortal human beings, eventually they would have done EVERYTHING. They would have been platypus'es after
      (10^10^10^10^10^10^10^10^10^10!)! seconds maybe, I don't know what/when they would have been, but I DO know they would have done everything physically possibly and impossible with an infinite amount of time.

      --
      Check journal for info on Anti-TextBook, an idea by me.
    9. Re:Infinity by msebast · · Score: 1

      No instruction required. They'll learn on their own.

    10. Re:Infinity by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      You're assuming that the actions of Adam and Eve are not somehow random, but rather a fixed and determinate function of time. We generally believe that humans are unpredictable, and fiendishly clever.

      Besides, if God is omniscient, then by definition he knows what we're thinking, and the outcome of any situation. So he put the tree there KNOWING that they'd take the bait, and that the snake would talk em into it. But yea, I don't think anybody wants to mix transfinite mathematics with creation stories; its like mixing salmon and ice cream.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

    11. Re:Infinity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're still wrong. If Psuccess !=0, as the number of trials approaches infinity, the probability of a success becomes 1, no matter how small Psuccess is, so long as Psuccess is not zero.

      This is established probability theory. Your example isn't a counter-example because Psuccess = 0.

    12. Re:Infinity by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      Uh, and that is because not everything that is possible can happen.

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
    13. Re:Infinity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only given that you know Psuccess will remain above zero. What is the result of Pfailure? Does it affect future tries?

      If you have as many tries as you like through infinite lifetimes to defuse a bomb, you're still screwed as soon as you set the bomb off.

      We're not talking about some rarified ideal example here. We're talking about, potentially, billions and billions of lifetimes in which Adam and Eve are doing all sorts of shit. To assume Psuccess will remain above 0 is naive at best.

    14. Re:Infinity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given infinitely long I will be born and reborn often enough that I will die before, after, and *exactly when* I turn 20.

      I can die once per life, therefore the probibility of dieing twice in the same life is 0, and does not break the postulate being discussed.

  294. From the annals of You are Dumb dot Net... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are Dumb dot Net was just talking about this very issue...albeit in a slightly more profane way.

    5/2: Yes, It's These Bast***s Again

  295. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Arakonfap · · Score: 1

    I can see where you are coming from, but the parent you replying to has some valid points.

    Basically, ID does not predict anything.

    You probably are familiar with Behe, and the whole idea of Irreducable Complexity, and claim that it is a testable thing - the problem is with the definition.

    Behe does NOT allow a part to change usages. Evolution basically requires a part to change use. That is the whole idea. Behe also says certain chemical cascades and structures are not reducable - but if you actually look at each of his claims (Clot system, eyeball, flagellums, etc), you find that they ARE reducable - even he admits in interviews (post-book) that he cannot test, for certain, if something is irreducable complex.

    He even admits that the examples he gave ARE reducable, when actually confronted with evidence (Some creatures being found without a given gene or protein).

    The biggest thing is that a gene can't change functions though - that happens quite a lot through gene copying incidents, and then mutations to a gene copy.

    Remember - Scientific theory means it must be testable - even though some people with high IQ's believe, it does not mean it is a true scientific theory.

  296. Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1

    IF everyone who is responding to this with som much "everyone knows that..." flavored smugness would like to actually learn a bit about the vast scientific evidence in support of the "Creation" theory, check out the video seminar series (free downloads) at http://www.drdino.com/Downloads/Seminar/vids/index .jsp. Be forewarned that the commentary in these is heavily biased toward Christianity. But that doesn't invalidate the science, so just expect it, and just ignore that part if you're not interested. Also note that Dr. Hovind is willing to debate anyone, anytime, anywhere on the topic. There are downloads available of previous debates of that sort.

    1. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      The only problem is that "Dr." Hovind is a fraud. He isn't even a real doctor, just another dishonest, lying creationist flapping his mouth about. But hey, he makes a pretty penny selling his "informative" videos to gullible people like you. So since he's probably richer than me he can't be all that dumb. But dishonesty is something I can't tolerate. It's actually quite fascinating how lying is such a favored strategy among these so-called People of God.

    2. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1
      Interesting that the link you provided to demonstrate that Hovind is a "fraud" says nothing about the current topic, but bashes him because of some trouble with the IRS. Horrors! He apparently takes issue with our tyrannical tax laws, so naturally he must be a fraud in every respect, right?

      And he hasn't sold me anything. As I pointed out in my original post, the video downloads are free. Additionally, his site explains clearly that, if one does choose to purchase the videos on DVD, the materials are not copyrighted, nor copy protected, so anyone can freely duplicate and distribute them.

      So tell us; when you examined the evidence he presents, where did you find fault with it? Can you point to any specific "lies" anywhere in his presentations?

      Oh, and one more thing about the linked site; the author asserts, "I dare say the vast majority of adversarial scholars, who are mocked by brother Hovind during his lectures, pay their taxes, including on 'gifts' which total more than $10,000." Well, he may be right, but if so, the joke's on him - and those who paid taxes on those gifts. You see, according to the IRS code, gifts of up to $11,000 are not taxable.

    3. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      When everything else fails, talk.origins prevails - at least as far as creationist arguments are concerned: http://talkorigins.org/faqs/hovind/

      Geology and paleontology being my specific field of study, it's not hard to see that the faults in Hovind's arguments are countless. One of these is the tired old "polystrate trees" argument. Hovind claims that "The evolutionist has only two choices to solve this dilemma: 1.The trees stood upright for millions of years while the sediment layers formed around them. 2.The trees grew through hundreds of feet of solid sedimentary rock looking for sunlight." After this he says the only plausible explanation is a huge flood.
      What the heck? There are no fossil trees growing through sedimentary layers hundreds of feet thick. And I definitely haven't heard any "evolutionist" claiming something like that. A flood is a very bad explanation for this. A huge single-event flood wouldn't form several delicate, separate layers of sediments. Instead we'd get a mishmash of all kinds of stuff. Even right now there are millions of tree trunks getting buried in sediments in rivers, lakes and dry-land sedimentation basins etc. And it doesn't even take that long. At different times (seasonal fluctuation etc.) the rate of deposition is slower, at times faster, and this, among with other processes like changes in flow speed, causes the layered structure and the varying thickness of the strata. The tree gets buried in the process. Poof, the mystery is gone!

      When somebody like Hovind the Fraud still uses old, refuted arguments to back up his case, what else can you think that either 1) the man is a loonie or 2) he's lying. That he isn't a real doctor even though he claims to be one doesn't make him much more trustworthy.

      For some reason you're concentrating on the tax issue. Any comments on the fact that Hovind isn't actually a doctor?

      I might adopt this as my sig:
      "In all of these efforts, the creationists make abundant use of a simple tactic: They lie. They lie continually, they lie prodigiously, and they lie because they must." -William J. Bennetta

    4. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1
      >>And it doesn't even take that long...The tree gets buried in the process. Poof, the mystery is gone!

      So it doesn't take "millions of years?" OK. Whether your explanation is correct, or Hovind's, the key point is that the generally accepted line that these layers built up over a "millions of years" is not necessarily correct.

      I gave significant attention to the tax issue only because the site you linked led off with that as a basis upon which to marginalize the man and his position. Frankly, I couldn't care less whether he pays taxes or not. Well actually, I like him better if he doesn't.

      As to whether he's a "real" doctor or not, that same site quotes Dr. Hovind's response to this very question. It's interesting to note that this site is indulging in the very sort of ad hominem attack that he discusses in his response.

    5. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      But that doesn't invalidate the science

      It doesn't invalidate the science because Kent Hovind doesn't have any science to offer.

    6. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      As to whether he's a "real" doctor or not, that same site quotes Dr. Hovind's response to this very question. It's interesting to note that this site is indulging in the very sort of ad hominem attack that he discusses in his response.

      Are you choosing to ignore the parts that demonstrate that he's a liar?

      Also, read the talkorigins page for a complete refutation of his "arguments". For example: http://talkorigins.org/faqs/hovind/howgood-gc.html #G4

    7. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1

      It's pretty obvious then that you haven't watched any of the video seminars available for FREE download at his Web site.

    8. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1
      >>Are you choosing to ignore the parts that demonstrate that he's a liar?

      Not necessarily. And I would point out to you, and anyone else "listening" in, that one may make mistakes, and take a position that might not be correct, without being a "liar." I haven't bothered to wade through all the mud being slung on the previously linked site - and frankly don't intend to spend the time to do so. If you have some specific "demonstration" that you'd like to point out and/or discuss, then I'd be happy to take a look at it.

      RE: Poly-strata fossils - this must be a favorite point with the anti-Creation crowd; I've had two references to it in one day. The discussion that you point to is pretty obviously not what Dr. Hovind is taking issue with. Almost universally, when he takes issue with some position in the Evolution/old Earth camp, it has to do specifically with the claim that took "millions of years." If one concedes that whatever the specific point of contention is happened over a relatively short time (i.e. 6500 years or less), then I doubt that Dr. Hovind would take issue with that. If you would take the time to listen to even one of the video seminars available for FREE download at his We site, I think you'd discover that he's far from the inflexible fanatic that you and others here seem to think.

    9. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      "Whether your explanation is correct, or Hovind's, the key point is that the generally accepted line that these layers built up over a "millions of years" is not necessarily correct."

      This isn't the key point. The key point is there's nothing in these polystrate trees that is contradictory with known geological processes, which is what Hovind is claiming. He's putting words into the mouths of geologists and paleontologists. You are also wrong with stating that it's a generally accepted line that sediment layers "build up over millions of years" (they actually build up in both millions of years and even in days). This isn't used as evidence of an old Earth. Hovind's simply slaying straw men here.

      If a person fakes a doctoral degree, it isn't an ad hominem to point this out. It's simply stating a fact.

    10. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1
      The site you originally linked quotes Hovind addressing the issue of his PhD.

      Incidentally, I went back and read a bit more on that site. The author really must have a lot of spare time to be able to devote that much to the singular pursuit of discrediting Dr. Hovind. I wonder why someone would think it so important to discredit a single individual that they would invest that much time and energy to do so.

    11. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      The most interesting thing about the site (the first one I linked to, not talk.origins) is that the author seems to be a Christian.

    12. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1

      I hadn't read enough to pick up on that. I agree - it is interesting. If that's the case, then I wonder (even more) why he chooses to bash Hovind so. Perhaps he's one of those "Christians" who doesn't believe the Bible.

    13. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      And the reason that makes Hovind a better or truer Christian is..?

      Self-proclaimed True Believers(tm) are quite funny when they start bickering about in a "I'm more punk than you" style. They cherry-pick the Bible apart and end up in a holier-than-thou delirium. How noble.

    14. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1

      I didn't intend to imply that Hovind was a "better or truer" Christian, or anything else. He does take the side of the foundational book of his faith. Does is not seem odd that one would claim to be of a certain faith, and yet refute the foundations of that faith?

    15. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      He could still be wrong, and actually is. Some Creationist think tank (might be the Center of Creation Research or something like that) has a list of arguments Creationists shouldn't use because the arguments in question are wrong. Unfortunately Hovind is very effective at recycling these arguments.

      And I'd like to add that there are countless Christians who have no problems with the scientific fact of evolution.

    16. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1

      I don't thik you ever said whether or not you had actually watched any of Hovind's seminars. If you have, you must have missed where he explains that, in his view, there are six distinct "definitions" of evolution. Some, he has no argument with at all; some are just plain silly.

    17. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      In *his* view? How about sticking to valid science instead of views which include something like polystrate trees being used as arguments for the Biblical Flood. And which are brought forth by a man who claims to have a doctor's degree even though he really doesn't have one.

      To answer your question - no, I haven't watched the videos. Reading his website ought to be enough. Let me guess, one of those definitions is microevolution?

    18. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by hscoggin · · Score: 1
      The issue of his PhD has been addressed multiple times now. He explains the circumstances under which he acquired it, and you and others aren't satisfied with it, so of course that settles that: he's a liar.

      I don't remember the labels he used for the various "flavors" of evolution. They're covered numerous times in the aforementioned seminars.

      And I'm really getting bored with a discussion in which one side insists on proceeding from the basis that the person whose views are being discussed believes differently than I do, so he's wrong, period, end of discussion. There isn't really much discussion possible in that climate. I've remained civil in the course of this exchange, and I appreciate that you have, as well. But this is going in circles, at this point, so I'm pretty much done, unless there's something new you (or anyone else) would like to offer up.

    19. Re:Ignorance is amazingly arrogant by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      It's not that Hovind believes what makes him wrong. He just haven't got his facts straight. But you're right, these discussions are rarely fruitful.

  297. Evolution is an intelligent design by GrEp · · Score: 1

    If you look that the first few passages of Genesis, the whole story is about evolution.

    In the beginning when God created the heavens and the earth, 2the earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from God swept over the face of the waters.

    Hmm. Sounds like our universe before the big bang.

    Then God said, 'Let there be light'; and there was light. And God saw that the light was good; and God separated the light from the darkness. God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And there was evening and there was morning, the first day.

    Cool. Big bang and the formation of solar systems.

    And God said, 'Let there be a dome in the midst of the waters, and let it separate the waters from the waters.' So God made the dome and separated the waters that were under the dome from the waters that were above the dome. And it was so. God called the dome Sky. And there was evening and there was morning, the second day.

    Awesome, the formation of a atmosphere suitable for life.

    And God said, 'Let the waters under the sky be gathered together into one place, and let the dry land appear.' And it was so. God called the dry land Earth, and the waters that were gathered together he called Seas.

    Great, we developed oceans.

    And God saw that it was good. Then God said, 'Let the earth put forth vegetation: plants yielding seed, and fruit trees of every kind on earth that bear fruit with the seed in it.' And it was so. The earth brought forth vegetation: plants yielding seed of every kind, and trees of every kind bearing fruit with the seed in it. And God saw that it was good. And there was evening and there was morning, the third day.

    Photosynthetic bacteria, alge, and plants.


    And God said, 'Let there be lights in the dome of the sky to separate the day from the night; and let them be for signs and for seasons and for days and years, and let them be lights in the dome of the sky to give light upon the earth.' And it was so. God made the two great lights--the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night--and the stars. God set them in the dome of the sky to give light upon the earth, to rule over the day and over the night, and to separate the light from the darkness. And God saw that it was good. And there was evening and there was morning, the fourth day.


    Ok, I have to admit this passage doesn't fit to well. We have to remember that the story of Genesis was an oral history for thousands of years. This passage could be chalked up to editorial flurish, or maybe a scribe got his notes mixed up.

    And God said, 'Let the waters bring forth swarms of living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth across the dome of the sky.' So God created the great sea monsters and every living creature that moves, of every kind, with which the waters swarm, and every winged bird of every kind. And God saw that it was good. God blessed them, saying, 'Be fruitful and multiply and fill the waters in the seas, and let birds multiply on the earth.' And there was evening and there was morning, the fifth day.

    Plants evolved into critters and birds. Modern paleontologists have found a close link between birds and dinosaurs, so this passage is acurate.


    And God said, 'Let the earth bring forth living creatures of every kind: cattle and creeping things and wild animals of the earth of every kind.' And it was so. God made the wild animals of the earth of every kind, and the cattle of every kind, and everything that creeps upon the ground of every kind. And God saw that it was good.


    Evolution of mammals, not to shabby.


    Then God said, 'Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the air, and over the

    --

    bash-2.04$
    bash-2.04$yes "Don't you hate dialup connections?"| write USERNAME
    1. Re:Evolution is an intelligent design by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but hang on, aren't you missing something?

      What about the two contradictory creation accounts in Genesis?

      If you think for one second that the Bible can somehow be accepted as not clashing horribly with science, I suggest you look at this

      Oh, I'm sorry.. I just noticed this This passage could be chalked up to editorial flurish, or maybe a scribe got his notes

      For a moment I thought you were trying to pretend the bible had some credibility. My bad.
      Remember, when it says "There is a god", it's just an editorial flourish, or a notes mixup, and what it actually means is "Don't eat hotdog buns on a Tuesday"

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  298. No, not fair enough by Jay9333 · · Score: 1

    The type of "macro evolution" taught in the public classroom cannot be tested wholly. Due simply to the time spans involved you cannot replicate it in an experiment. You must look at evidence from long ago and infer.

    Everyone here is saying, "Science is repeatable... hence ID isn't science." Hello? Much of evolutionary theory then is not science also. Sure, the fact that natural selection can modify existing features within established species is repeatable. But textbooks are teaching our children that natural selection can modify features outside established species, that is, create new species. That is a theory, ladies and gentlemen.

    Therefore, the best way to present it to young students is *as a theory*. If the student is interested in a deeper understanding let him pursue further study as he/she advances in his academic career.

    Intelligent Design is also theory. It proposes some arguments against certain parts of natural selection/"macro evolution". For instance, some proponents may show that some things we find in nature are too complex to be explained by the theory of evolution... that logic would prevail against such complexity occuring "by chance".

    Either teach both theories, or teach only fact and don't teach theory. I personally think the theories are important, so teach them both and let young students have open minds as they seek to better understand life and origins. Teach the theories and the evidences for both, and let the students duke it out with their own minds and (if they choose) with their own academic careers.

    The "religious right" are always accused of having closed minds... but often the left can't see the spec in the rights eye for the plank in their own.

    jay

    1. Re:No, not fair enough by synx · · Score: 1

      The reason why ID is not science is because it does not make falsifiable statements. You can never "prove" any statement to be true, but you can always prove it to be false. Thus a scientific theory has several components:
      - predictions
      - falsifiable statements

      Now when we talk about ID it provides 'predictions' - ones like "you will see humans", etc. Not really anything amazing. It also does not provide falsifiable statements.

      This has nothing to do with 'repeatable' and 'experiments'. ID doesn't even get that far along the scientific track before it gets derailed.

    2. Re:No, not fair enough by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 0

      The definition of "species" is an arbitrarily made-up part of the zoology taxonimy, just the the other levels of definition, like Phylum, genus, and so on. Those levels are human inventions. In reality it's just one big jumbled tree of interconnectedness. The difference between a mutation creating some small variation like a new race and a mutation producing a new species is not a difference of type. It's just a difference of magnitude.


      Teach the theories and the evidences for both

      That's what already happens. But the ID supporters don't get painted in a good light when you do that. They want their theory to be taught in a noncritical, nonjudgemental way - which is because it doesn't hold up to scrutiny.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    3. Re: No, not fair enough by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > The type of "macro evolution" taught in the public classroom cannot be tested wholly. Due simply to the time spans involved you cannot replicate it in an experiment. You must look at evidence from long ago and infer.

      Ah, but then you can go out and look at the world, to see if your inferences conform to reality.

      The classic example is the paleontologist who inferred when an intermediate in the whale ancestry should have lived and what it should look like, and then went out and found it.

      > Therefore, the best way to present it to young students is *as a theory*.

      If our teachers are doing a good job, they're teaching all science as a theory. Theories are the currency science deals in.

      > Intelligent Design is also theory.

      FYI, nitpicking a real theory doesn't mean the nitpickers have a theory.

      > Either teach both theories, or teach only fact and don't teach theory.

      It appears that your science education was remiss in telling you what theories are.

      > personally think the theories are important, so teach them both and let young students have open minds as they seek to better understand life and origins.

      Do you think we should teach them all the competing claims, or just the ones you think support your own religious beliefs?

      > The "religious right" are always accused of having closed minds... but often the left can't see the spec in the rights eye for the plank in their own.

      So... is science some kind of leftist propaganda in your universe?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    4. Re:No, not fair enough by Darby · · Score: 1

      But textbooks are teaching our children that natural selection can modify features outside established species, that is, create new species. That is a theory, ladies and gentlemen.

      Therefore, the best way to present it to young students is *as a theory*. If the student is interested in a deeper understanding let him pursue further study as he/she advances in his academic career.


      This is exactly what has happened in the past, what happens now, and what will continue happening in the future provided the fundies do not succeed in shoving their wholely religious beliefs down people's throats at gunpoint. I fail to see where you have an issue since what you say should happen is what is happening.

      Intelligent Design is also theory.

      Here's the problem.
      ID is not a theory. Is it testable? Is it falsifiable? Does it add anything at all to the discussion? Does it provide any new answers, or even any new questions?

      The answer to all of these questions is absolutely not.

      All ID says is that since Evolutionary theory is currently incomplete that therefore, it never will be and therefore god did it. This is not a theory, it is not science. The best any of the proponents of this have done is point out where evolutionary theory is incomplete. That's all well and good, but they don't add anything useful, or even propose another actual theory to explain the facts. All they do is claim that since the theory isn't perfect, that it is crap and we must throw god into it rather than continuing to actually look for answers.

      Either teach both theories, or teach only fact and don't teach theory. I personally think the theories are important, so teach them both and let young students have open minds as they seek to better understand life and origins. Teach the theories and the evidences for both, and let the students duke it out with their own minds and (if they choose) with their own academic careers.

      Which, hopefully now you understand is a completely ridiculous idea. Evolution is a 100% absolutely beyond the shadow of a doubt proven *fact*. Look at dogs, seedless watermelons etc. for absolute proof of this.
      The Theory of evolution, which is the theory that seeks to explain the hows whys wheres etc. of this well-documented and universally observed fact, is a theory, it is taught as one, and is is the only thing we currently have which does any sort of a job of explaining the facts.

      Additionally, teaching the evidence for ID is already done all the time. There is no evidence for it whatsoever. That is the nature of an omnipotent being who chose for whatever reasons to give no evidence of his existence.
      I'm really sorry that you don't like it, but it is your belief, not mine.

      ID, or creationism does nothing of the sort. It doesn't even attempt to. What it does is pretend to in the interest of shoving religious beliefs into an arena where they have no place.

      So attempting to give creationism some sort of scientific legitimacy in this manner doesn't teach students anything. It actually does a great deal of harm by blurring the line between scientific methods and logical thinking skills on the one side, and blind faith on the other.
      The fact is that America got where it is today largely through scientific and technological achievements. Destroying scientific education by replacing it with fairy tales (regardless of whether or not there actually is a god, the only evidence for it is fairy tales, so don't take this as a statement that there is no god) is not good science.


      The "religious right" are always accused of having closed minds... but often the left can't see the spec in the rights eye for the plank in their own.


      This is certainly true in some circumstances, but not this one.
      On the one hand you have a theory that does a fairly decent job of explaining the facts while oin the other you have blind faith masquerading as science in the interest of damaging our educational system and thereby causing horrific long-term damage to our nation's ability to compete in the world.

    5. Re:No, not fair enough by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      We'll, I agree about the phylum, genus thingy. But species is verifiable.

      Species. Biology a. A fundamental category of taxonomic classification, ranking below a genus or subgenus and consisting of related organisms capable of interbreeding

      ie. One can screw a sheep, but one can't get it pregnant. This is because humans and sheep are different "species".

    6. Re:No, not fair enough by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      (So, by that definition, is every individual ameoba, that reproduces by splitting itself, it's own independant species, or all all asexual splitting-type creatures in on giant species together?) That definition of species breaks down for asexual critters that don't "mate" in the first place.

      That's still an arbitrary defintion. Just as much of one as say, 'has different kind of hair (feathers versus fur)" or "gives live birth versus lays eggs" any other such arbitrary decision as to which properties are important to distinguish on. It's just that biologists decided they thought ability to breed was an important factor to differentiate on.

      Another problem is that IDiots are claiming that for evolution to be correct, a mutation must create a new species in JUST one generation. Obviously that's not predicted at all by evolution. If only one child in a new species exists so far because it's a mutation, it won't have anyone to reproduce with, by the definition of species, and thus the species would die out right away (unless it reproduces asexually, in which case the entire defintion of "species" can't work in the first place). What is predicted by evolution is that a slow drift can eventually produce a POPULATION of many offspring that no longer could breed with another large population of "cousins", thousands of times removed.

      Evolution doesn't claim "one species gives birth to a new one". It claims "one species eventually splits into two over enough generations."

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    7. Re:No, not fair enough by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      Even with exceptions, the definition of species does cover the core of the issues.

      Give me an airtight definition of "Human" or "self aware". How about the basic "Alive".

      Just because a virus isn't technically 'alive' by some definitions and 'is alive' by others doesn't mean that we have no concrete definition of 'alive'. Or would you now consider 'alive' to be arbitrary term with no meaning.

      Since 'dead' is usually interpreted to mean 'no longer alive'. It to now becomes an arbitrary term with no meaning?

      Nit picking aside, 'It's alive' or even 'It's dead, Jim' are both clear in their meaning and intent.

      ps. I'm not defending ID, I was just commenting on the term 'species'.

  299. Spellcheck by mazarin5 · · Score: 1

    Yes, it's versy controverial.

    --
    Fnord.
  300. What's threatening about evolution by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >What Christian fundamentalists find so threatening about evolution is that a literal interpretation of the bible forbids it.

    There's much more to it. The Christian fundamentalist idea of morality is that it comes from our creation by God. Turtles and turtledoves, wombats and housecats can't be moral or immoral because they're "just animals".

    When Christian fundamentalists hear that humans are animals descended from apes, they think they hear that humans are "just animals". Right and wrong don't apply to animals. They fear that the only basis they can imagine for morality is being destroyed.

    Remember that often-quoted Senator who blamed Columbine on the teaching of evolution? That's what he meant. I thought it was a hilarous non sequitur at first but it wasn't.

    You can't reason with creationists because reason doesn't work against fear. Try pointing out that you find humans to be awe-inspiring ("What a piece of work is a man!") and that you can believe in morals and even ethics if the universe is thirteen billion years old instead of six thousand.

    1. Re:What's threatening about evolution by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      When Christian fundamentalists hear that humans are animals descended from apes, they think they hear that humans are "just animals". Right and wrong don't apply to animals. They fear that the only basis they can imagine for morality is being destroyed.

      I don't think that you've quite captured the issue, at least as I see it. The Bible teaches that God exists and created mankind in a special act of creation. Evolution attacks that position by saying that man arose by a purely natural process, no God required. In essence, evolution practically attacks the idea of God, the special creation of man, and the special nature of man. (Man made in God's image.) Now, you can still have moral codes without God, that is obvious. What you have a much more difficult time doing, if you can do it at all, is to arrive at a univeral moral law external to us. If there is no God, why should I consider your moral code better than mine, or Bob's? Your code may say men should be angels, but mine says nothing is forbidden to me. If there is no established moral order to the uinverse, no God, how do you choose? Force? Vote? Luck of the draw? First call? City rules? It is really moral chaos. There are also some basic questions about the nature of man that come out of the issue as well. The traditional Christian view is that mankind is born with a corrupted nature that is drawn to do wrong, a sin nature, that only God can remedy. Many other religions or philosophies belive that man is basically good at heart without that corruption.

      As to your view that, "You can't reason with creationists because reason doesn't work against fear" is silly. Being a creationist doesn't make you insane, irrational, or stupid. (I know that chair of a Physics department who is a creationist, last I knew.) It does mean that you approach the universe, or dare I say, creation, with a very different set of assumptions about life, the universe, and everything. Some of those assumptions will have little to no impact on day to day life, others will have a profound influence.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  301. Ob. New Family Guy!. by RipTides9x · · Score: 1

    Evolution is a theory, and not a fact. Much in the same way that 'gravity' is a theory and not a fact. It's true!

    Lois: Why did Mel Gibson just run off the edge (of the cliff)?
    Peter: Silly Christians, they don't believe in gravity.


  302. No need to postulate: by The+Creator · · Score: 1

    My parents "created" me back in the seventies.

    --

    FRA: STFU GTFO
    1. Re:No need to postulate: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly no intelligence required. There ya go. Case closed.

  303. Evolution of the alians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's elephants all the way down.

  304. Copernicus and Gallileo must be a' spinnin'! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Dismissing Intelligent Design as not being science is the same as dismissing theories of a round world revolving around the sun as heresy.

    It is, in fact, the EXACT OPPOSITE of that:

    Dismissing darwinist biology is the same as dismissing copernician cosmology.

    Filling up a schoolboard with fundies to force "intelligent design" on science teachers is the same as using the all-powerfull church to censor natural philosophers. They both used bible-based pseudoscience and political power to drown out the voice of reason.

    --

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

  305. Why stop at evolution? by geekwithsoul · · Score: 1

    The thing I find most fascinating about the fight against evolution, including the push of "intelligent design," is why they stop at evolution. I mean, all science is theory, replaceable when a better theory comes along. So where are those who wish to teach alchemy along side chemistry? Astrology along side astronomy? Psychic surgery and witch-doctoring along side medicine?

    The most troublesome part of this is the basic misunderstanding of science that is evidenced in the the debate on this issue. To be "science," a postulate must be able to be proved or disproved. There is nothing about "intelligent design" that can be tested, thus relegating it to where it belongs: faith."

    Every piece of evidence we have shows us that we are the mostly hairless, slightly intelligent descendants of lower primates. And that everything currently alive on the planet is also the descendant of other species. There is not one piece of evidence ANYWHERE that says there is a Creator, that the world is only six thousand and something year old, or that there is a "plan" at work in the universe.

    If you want to have faith that any of this is true, be my guest. But don't try to pass your faith off as science, as it diminishes both.

  306. ID not scientific theory but Darwin is broken by Inari · · Score: 1
    Clearly ID isn't a scientific theory as it doesn't provide a basis upon which whon can make predictions.

    Theory: 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.


    But Darwinism, while it is a scientific theory, and is useful, is broken in interesting ways too. It only makes predictions about how the number of species is reduced. How the less fit are eliminated. But it doesnt address at all the rampent diversity observed, in fact it is counter to diversity.

    Science is exploration. I don't think an ID provided the initial diversity, but I don't have any problem them mentioning widely held beliefs, even if they are not scientific, as long as the science gets tought as well. It's part of the exploration. Consider ID and eliminate it.
    1. Re:ID not scientific theory but Darwin is broken by RichardX · · Score: 1

      I'm not surprised your theory of evolution doesn't work there.. you've only got half a theory ;)

      Evolution comprises two parts. One is selection (the reduction part you already identified), the other is mutation - that provides the changes and diversity you're looking for.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  307. Why Are Evolutionists so Zealous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'd think they were denying some sort of faith with the vigour that this scientific community attacks ID.

    The article was really good, but I hate to break this to them: The fish example doesn't really disprove anything. I hate it when people give examples to prove things, we all know examples are analogies to actual proofs and they are intended for a idiot audience.

    The argument is essentially: We are here, therefore probability 1. This is a terribly fatalist view for non-fatalists.

    Also the falsifiability argument is just crap. It's entirely falsifiable, you simply prove it wrong by showing a flaw in the proof or a counter-example. Woopedy-doo. The evidence isn't falsifiable, but they aren't trying to prove the evidence. The entirety of ID seems to be arguments, which you are always able to disprove.

    It consistently amazes me to see the ACLU fight over the most unworthwhile causes. I can't possibly understand how a theory refuting evolution which endorses no religion can possibly be considered an "establishment of religion." There's just no connection here. Establishment of a religion is talking about, well, establishing something real. A organizational body, a group, not letting in an idea. The closed-mindedness of atheists... *sigh*.

  308. Mouse trap example by G.+W.+Bush+Junior · · Score: 1

    Nice article, but I'm not too fond of the explanation of the mouse trap example.
    The suggest that maybe the mousetrap had another function before gaining it's mouse trapping ability.

    A much neater way of demonstrating the flaw in Behe's reasoning is to look at the Venus flytrap (carnivorous plant). It has the same elements as the mousetrap, spring mechanism, jaws for catching the fly, a frame (stem) that everything is mounted on, bait (red colour and possibly a scent).
    While Behe is correct in stating that no part of the Venus flytrap can be removed without the plant failing, he doesn't consider the possiblity that maybe the plant lost an element in the last evolutionary step (not gained, as his simplistic view of evolution would have us believe).
    And indeed that is what biologists know happened: the venus fly trap used to be sticky, so the interlocking jaw wasn't strictly necessary before, but merely improved on the fairly efficient method of catching flies on a sticky surface.

    --
    "I don't know that Atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots." -George H.W. Bush
  309. Not the Origin of Life... by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 1

    Evolution explains the origin of species, hence the title of the book. Nor does Evolution have anything to do with the age of the Earth or the formation of the Moon or anything else (though I doubt evolution would really have much noticeable effect in 6,000 years or however old these whackjobs think the Earth is). Regardless, there's no reason the theory of evolution needs to contradict with their narrowminded biblical worldview, or any other creation myth they choose to believe in. Evolution != biogenesis and has little to do with it ultimately. They can still believe that genetics and the evolutionary process were all started by some invisible intelligent force. What's wrong with that? Oh, right, the whole man from ape thing contradicting the belief that humans are divine creatures designed to look God, right? Well, there goes any scientific credibility for "intelligent design"--it's just another way that this dying breed of biblical fundamentalists are grasping for straws as their beliefs crumble under 21st century scrutiny. Sorry, this is becoming a rant. I haven't had my coffee yet.

  310. Cobb Co. Georgia... by Tmack · · Score: 1
    Has been in a battle over this same subject for quite some time now. Most recently about Informative stickers the schoolboard put in all Science books that contained anything about evolution ruled unconstitutional by a federal court judge. Google returns many articles on the on-going debate/lawsuits that have been brought on this subject. Its quite amusing, given that Cobb is the ultra-conservative (somewhat wealthy) county around the north-west corner of the moderately liberal Atlanta (at least for Georgia, look at last year's election results for an idea), stuck in the middle of the bible belt.

    Tm

    --
    Support TBI Research: http://www.raisinhope.org
  311. points by supernova87a · · Score: 1

    I heard an excellent talk about the strategies of anti-evolutionists from the director of the center for science education recently. Two of her major points were that: (1)creationists seek to circumvent the usual curriculum review process and insert themselves directly into school board decisions politically, because they have come to realize that on careful examination, their ideas are untenable; and (2) the fundamental misunderstanding about the words behind the debate.

    More specifically, in order for an idea to become incorporated in to a scientific education curriculum, it first must be proposed, examined by scientists, published, reviewed, tested for flaws and counterexamples, and then it becomes accepted as a theory (which by the way, means an idea that ties together consistently all aspects of the evidence, NOT just a "theory", or guess). Creationists, or intelligent design advocates, simply come up with an idea, and go right to the school board. Where are the checks and balances? The testing? The oversight?

    And secondly, about the language. Normal people commonly feel that at the top of the hierarchy of importance are Facts. To them, facts are facts, immutable. You can't debate fact, as in "evolution is not a fact, so it doesn't occur." Observations are next, things that you see with your own eyes. And Theories? Theories are at the bottom of the scale, almost comparable to hopeful guesses. This is in part the fault of the language, that "theory" has come to mean "I, crackpot, have a theory about that."

    But in fact, in science, Theory is at the top of the scale -- an idea that has consistently shown to uphold all the observations, and has been tested. At the bottom is just the opposite from what is commonly believed -- facts. Facts are things that you see every day, and carry no unifying meaning in themselves.

    If we are to succeed in educating the population about the process of science, and *especially* why it is valuable to us a country, we need to get involved in the debate about the language and politics. Other countries, who don't have the luxury to squander valuable resources, are beginning to capture and exploit the wonders of science much more than we are -- and it is showing.

  312. Re:Atheism also a religion by m50d · · Score: 1

    What you say about atheism is true. However, evolution does not imply atheism. It is perfectly possible to be theistic and believe in evolution; I know many people who believe just this. By contrast ID implies the existence of a god and is thus incompatible with atheism. Believing in evolution does not restrict your choice of religion. Believing in ID does, because you then cannot be atheistic. That is why ID violates separation of church and state and evolution doesn't.

    --
    I am trolling
  313. Unfalsifiable... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolution is scientifically unfalsifiable. There is no test we can run to prove or disprove evolution. Similarly, Intelligent Design is unfalsifiable. It is very possible that evolution is merely the mechanism of Intelligent Design and, if making the jump to belief in a God is possible, it answers a lot of questions that sheer randomness has difficulty explaining.

    Evolution is a satisfactory answer but is by no means complete.

  314. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by bobetov · · Score: 1

    To think that a person that believes in ID or creationism is incapable of understanding basic scientific philosophy or even incapable of being true scientists themselves is ignorant and offensive.

    Sorry, but that's contradicted by every word out of the ID movement's mouths. A man may be a great scientist, but in taking up ID as a cause, he turns his back on a rigorous intellectual tradition and replaces it with desire and self-delusion. There's nothing saying that a belief in ID is a priori an indicator of lack of intelligence generally, but it is a lack of rigorous thinking with regards to science vs. belief.

    Being dismissed as a lunatic for raging against mainstream science has plauged true scientists for centuries.

    True, but in this case, ID proponents are raging against science itself, rather than a particular idea, and are advancing beliefs, rather than falsifiable hypotheses, in its place. I'm glad you believe in an all-powerful deity, but such belief does not make you a plucky outsider fighting conventional scientific dogma.

    After all, for every maverick scientist who's bucked the conventional wisdom and been branded a lunatic, there are thousands of actual lunatics.

    --
    Looking for a Rails developer in Chapel Hill?
  315. Pfft. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is incorrect. First, mutation is not "random." The driving force is genetic diversity within a population, filtered through natural selection. The process of genetic diversification is not fully understood, and this leads a *lot* of otherwise-intelligent people to assume there is something fundamentally wrong with the theory of evolution through natural selection.

    I'd say the original poster has a better handle on evolution than you do.

    Yes, mutation is random. By any sane definition of the term. The genetic diversity within a breeding population is a function of the accumulation of randomly occurring genetic changes.

    Claiming that the process of genetic diversity isn't fully understood is misleading, at best. We understand it fairly well - which is what allows us to do things like use the genetic variation in mitochondrial DNA to work out the spread of homo sapiens across the planet, or to understand that at one time in the (geologically) recent past, cheetahs almost went extinct - which we know because modern cheetahs are almost genetically identical to each other.

    1. Re:Pfft. by Tony · · Score: 1

      Yes, mutation is random.

      Not in the sense described by the grandparent, it's not. First, most mutations never result in a viable cell. So, right there, you have a selection filter, reducing the randomness of mutations.

      The genetic diversity within a breeding population is a function of the accumulation of randomly occurring genetic changes.

      Again, changes are not strictly random; they are selected for or against based on phenotypic viability, which vastly reduces the mathematical randomness. And genetic drift is itself also not completely random.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  316. Ignorance abounds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't to claim to be an expert on Evolution, but I think that a lot of people on this tread don't really understand ID. ID is not equivalent to Creationism. Widipedia defines ID as a controversial set of arguments which assert that empirical evidence supports the conclusion that life on Earth was deliberately designed by one or more intelligent agents. There are at least 5 major schools of thought within the "Christian" school of thought. 1. God doesn't really exisit but the idea is good for society. Evolution is how we got to be. 2. God created the system of evolution as creator and has been hands off ever since, 3. God created the systems and has been working in the process of evolution to bring the universe to it's present state. 4. God created the world as we know it in a longer than a literal 6 days but all creatures were created as is. 5. God created the world as it is now in 6 literal days. ID would technically encompass 2-5.

  317. Magic by gCGBD · · Score: 1

    There is the old quote that a sufficiently advanced technology might appears as "magic" to those not literate in the technology.

    In this case we have: "Here is a complicated and logical explanation for the way things work, or you could think of it as 'magic'".

    It seems there are a lot of people who not only believe in magic, but want to make sure that everyone else's kids have the brain-dead option of believing it is all magic too.

    --

    O=='=++
  318. That origin of life thing by J.R.+Random · · Score: 1
    "...evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again ..."

    Evolutionary theory does a good job of explaining how life has changed, adapted, and speciated over millions of years. It does *not* explain the "origins of life". You need a reproducing organism before you can even apply evolutionary theory.

    The truth is that there is not at present any sort of good theory for the origins of life. The more you delve into the literature on that subject the more you realize that nobody has a clue. In some sense the poster was correct when he said the the origins of life have been explained "time and time again.." -- a host of origin-of-life theories have been proposed, because none of them are any good.

    It is known that under certain circumstances you can generate amino acids abiotically. But the yields are very low, and generate lots of random hydrocarbons ("tars") that would poison any useful reactions. And you don't get the exclusively left- or right-handed isomers that are used in living organisms -- you get a racemic mixture of each chemical.

    Then of course you can't get a living organism with just amino acids. You need lipids, carbohydrates, and nucleotides. The conditions needed to create each of these chemicals are different and in contradiction with each other.

    But suppose, by some miracle, you had all the right parts, and with the right isomers, and with no poisoning tars to botch up the system. What are the odds of throwing them together in a way that creates a reproducing organism? Sufficiently low that a galaxy of earths, each with an ocean to try zillions of these combinations every second, would still not come up with a bacterium after 10 billion years.

    None of this of course gives any comfort to a silly biblical literalism. But we shouldn't pretend we have a scientific explanation for a problem when we don't.

  319. Turtles all the way down... by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Isn't that the same argument postulated by the Big Bang?

    Where did the Big Bang come from? If it came from some bubble in the quantum foam, where did the foam come from?

    The truth is that while science has a great track record in describing the universe, questions like those are still in the realm of philosophy.

    1. Re:Turtles all the way down... by Ill_Omen · · Score: 1

      Sure, but that's an entirely different question. Evolution isn't an attempt to explain the origin of the universe, it's an attempt to explain the process by which life arrived at its current level of complexity and diversity.

      I haven't spent a lot of time researching Intelligent Design, but since it presents itself as an alternative to Evolution, I assume it's attempting to explain a similar process.

      So my "turtles" comment wasn't really intended as a "where did the Universe come from?" snip, but more of a "given the Universe, where did the Intelligent Designers come from?" After all, given current trends in biological sciences, I expect humans to be taking on the role of Intelligent Designers in the not-to-distance future.

      As for the question of "where did the Big Bang come from?", yeah, I'll leave that to the Philosophers for now.

  320. We wag our fingers at the Muslim world... by aquarian · · Score: 1

    ...and then allow ourselves to be jerked around by the same wack-jobs in our own society.

  321. No Predictions - Not a science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For an activity to be called a "science" it must be able to make testable predictions.

    Can anyone NAME ONE PREDICTION of "Intelligent Design"?

    Don't confuse science wth non-science.

  322. Why don't they mention the Intelligent Designers? by eunos94 · · Score: 1

    Hey, why don't they also reference that the Intelligent Designer as possibly the Christian, Hindu, or Bhuddist dieties, a tiny Green Martians, Vulcans, Goa'ulds, Gary The Mighty Sorcerer from the Days of Yore, Large Tenticled Aliens from Outerspace, and that all of these and many many more are equally valid designers under this theory, not matter how fictional the character is, there is absolutely no way to prove that they aren't the creator. Ahem...nice theory guys, very useful.

  323. Provable != Science. THINK Godel, Aristotle... by fygment · · Score: 1

    What are all these comments about 'science' being demonstrated by provable theories/laws/etc? A quick search of the posts revealed not one mention of Godel's Incompleteness Theorem. If that theorem does not give one pause for thought, then one is profoundly ignorant. It's impact? Well:

    a) NOT everything that is true is provable. There might be a God and that God may well have designed the universe. A scientist might poo-poo the concept as a religious loop hole. But a scientist should also know that there will be non-God related truths that will not be provable. Will those be poo-poo'ed as well? Or are those acceptable because there aren't religious overtones?

    b) Arguments that we get unforeseen complexity without design are flawed. The complexity is unforeseen, but simple experiments suggest that there is design i.e. the simple intial rules. There have to be some rules and where did those come from? The source may be undeterminable from within this system (universe).

    Most posts seem to be a knee-jerk reaction against religion. But religion, philosophy, and science cannot help but be profoundly intertwined. Anyone who has excelled in any of those fields knows this.

    Rather than condemn Intelligent Design off-hand, read about it. Think about it. (Can you see where it's roots are? Maybe Aristotle , Aristotle
    .) Then at least you can condemn it intelligently.

    --
    "Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
  324. A scientist's "Clear and present danger" by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    You bring up a good point. Scientific societies must carefully define the conditions for intervention. Perhaps "clear and present danger" is a poor choice of words but the scientific definition of these terms may be adequate. Here's a stab at such a definition:

    Scientific clarity means neither the model nor the conditions to which it applies are vague. Present means the conditions under which the model predicts danger exist. Danger means there is a product, probability * damage, that is above some threshold. Below that threshold either you are dealing with a probability that is too low or you are dealing with a level of damage that is, for that level of society (federal, state, county, local,...) too low to be concerned with.

    This is basically what actuarial science is about.

  325. Anyone read the article? by operagost · · Score: 2, Insightful
    It's always amusing to start a flame war over the crazy Christian fundamentalists again, but did anyone read the article?
    To understand the problems with Intelligent Design, first it is important to understand the theory it is attempting to oppose, evolution by natural selection.
    This is one tenet of evolution which is NOT disputed! Intelligent design only takes issue with macroevolution! The extinction of many species or variants of species within our lifetimes is proof enough of natural selection! This whole article is a pseudoscientific rant against a straw man.
    --

    Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  326. Unintelligent Design by rewinn · · Score: 2, Funny

    The Theory Of UnIntelligent Design (THUID) is a scientific alternative to the discreditted theory of "evolution".

    THUID postulates that the development of intelligent life on earth cannot have occurred by blind chance, but only by the direct intervention of an Outside Direct Designer (codenamed "ODD"). This ODD being discloses its very nature in the details of the human structure.

    For example, would an intelligent Designer include the appendix - an organ whose sole function is to burst, causing inconvenience and painful death?

    What of dental caries: a phenomenon unknown before the development of human intelligence, yet almost inevitable when our human desire for sweets is coupled to the brainpower that ensures a steady, unhealthy supply?

    And let us not even BEGIN to talk about the humorous side of human reproduction ...

    ... suffice it to say that ALL EVIDENCE shows that the marvelous human being has CLEARLY been designed by a GREAT DESIGNER that is unfortunately lacking in INTELLIGENCE!!!

    Please support this SCIENTIFIC study as it battles the twin unscientific principles of EVOLUTION and of INTELLIGENT DESIGN.

    Our School Children Must Learn The Truth!

    For more information on this TRUTH that I have undercovered, see http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THUID

  327. Pseudo Science by rillbee · · Score: 1

    "Intelligent Design" is an attempt to subvert the scientific method with pseudo science. It does not adhere to the core principle of the scientific method, namely disprovability. That is the telltale sign of any "faith based" method of knowing, the inability to admid falsehood in the face of countervailing evidence. I believe the following quote sums up the contributions made by these purveyors of sterile "truth":

    "We have already compared the benefits of theology and science. When the theologian governed the world, it was covered with huts and hovels for the many, palaces and cathedrals for the few. To nearly all the children of men, reading and writing were unknown arts. The poor were clad in rags and skins -- they devoured crusts, and gnawed bones. The day of Science dawned, and the luxuries of a century ago are the necessities of to-day. Men in the middle ranks of life have more of the conveniences and elegancies than the princes and kings of the theological times. But above and over all this, is the development of mind. There is more of value in the brain of an average man of to-day -- of a master-mechanic, of a chemist, of a naturalist, of an inventor, than there was in the brain of the world four hundred years ago.
    These blessings did not fall from the skies. These benefits did not drop from the outstretched hands of priests. They were not found in cathedrals or behind altars -- neither were they searched for with holy candles. They were not discovered by the closed eyes of prayer, nor did they come in answer to superstitious supplication. They are the children of freedom, the gifts of reason, observation and experience -- and for them all, man is indebted to man."
    -- Robert Green Ingersoll, "God In The Constitution

  328. Understand before you reply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before you attack him for claiming to be a Christian even though he does not read everything in the Bible literally, you need to examine what Christianity means. In fact, the majority of Christians worldwide believe that the Bible is the inspired Word of God, but cannot be taken literally, and needs to be interpreted in light of Sacred Tradition (passed down teaching). Therefore, if he did not believe as he does, he would be in the minority as a Christian.

    (BTW, if you wish to dispute these statistics, the Catholic Church alone is sufficient to support my claims.)

  329. what's the issue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    evolution is a theory. if you believe it, fine. there are other theories that contradict evolution. why is there suddenly an issue when one of these alternatives is associated with a particular belief system (aka Christianity)? a true scientist needs to consider alternatives and respond to them. it's in doing this, that their "theory" can become more solid.
    and by the way, "the separation of church and state" is not found in the Constitution

    --just my 2 cents

  330. Why can't we take a step forward. by RipTides9x · · Score: 1

    Is it time for a new Re-interpertation of the bible? Merging what science knows about creation and evolution with more proper and understood translations of the orginal books. Perhaps maybe spin off a more forward-looking and agreeable type.

    It could just very well start with;

    In the beginning there was nothing. God said, "Let there be light!", and the Universe was born. Many years passed where order was brought from chaos, this was the first age.

  331. Look At Boobies for Proof of Evolution by Petersko · · Score: 2, Funny

    When I went to high school, the girls were NOT built like they are today.

    Evolution HAS to be right.

    1. Re:Look At Boobies for Proof of Evolution by jswalter9 · · Score: 1

      While I realize your intent was humor, I think humans are eating better as knowledge about nutrition increases. The result is earlier puberty; previous generations would reproduce more rapidly when food was plentiful and people were better nourished.

      I don't believe the human species has evolved at all during the last 50,000 years.

      --
      Retired from software... maybe. Sort of.
  332. here's a better article by poiu · · Score: 1


    http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/

    29+ Evidences for Macroevolution

    Split up into several key parts (by scientific discipline)
    Part I. A unique, historical phylogenetic tree
    Part 2. Past history (anatomical vestiges, etc.)
    Part 3. Evolutionary opportunism
    Part 4. Molecular evidence
    Part 5. Change

    What is Meant by "Scientific Evidence" for Common Descent?

    Scientific theories are validated by empirical testing against physical observations. Theories are not judged simply by their logical compatibility with the available data. Independent empirical testability is the hallmark of science--in science, an explanation must not only be compatible with the observed data, it must also be testable. By "testable" we mean that the hypothesis makes predictions about what observable evidence would be consistent and what would be incompatible with the hypothesis. Simple compatibility, in itself, is insufficient as scientific evidence, because all physical observations are consistent with an infinite number of unscientific conjectures. Furthermore, a scientific explanation must make risky predictions-- the predictions should be necessary if the theory is correct, and few other theories should make the same necessary predictions.

    Are There Other Scientifically Valid Explanations?

    The worldwide scientific research community from over the past 140 years has discovered that no known hypothesis other than universal common descent can account scientifically for the unity, diversity, and patterns of terrestrial life. This hypothesis has been verified and corroborated so extensively that it is currently accepted as fact by the overwhelming majority of professional researchers in the biological and geological sciences (AAAS 1990; NAS 2003; NCSE 2003; Working Group 2001). No alternate explanations compete scientifically with common descent, primarily for four main reasons: (1) so many of the predictions of common descent have been confirmed from independent areas of science, (2) no significant contradictory evidence has yet been found, (3) competing possibilities have been contradicted by enormous amounts of scientific data, and (4) many other explanations are untestable, though they may be trivially consistent with biological data.

    --

    ---
    "Don't anthropomorphize computers. They hate that."
  333. -1: Troll for summary by llamaluvr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again

    Evolution != origins. That's abiogenesis. Evolution doesn't care about the origins of life AT ALL.

    --
    Insightful: 76, Off-Topic: 379, Flamebait: 24, Funny: 152, Interesting: 201, Underrated: 55, Troll: 9, Total: 896
  334. Worth repeating by planetfinder · · Score: 1

    Like every other theory about the real world the theory of evolution can not be proven. Mathematical theorems can be proven but the relationship of mathematical theories to the real world cannot be proven. The usefullness of a theory may be obvious but that usefullness never constitutes proof. When scientist start talking about proving their theories or about understanding the "true" nature of the real world then they have wandered into the domain of religion. This is exactly the problem that Gallileo had with the pope. The pope told Gallileo to shut up about "proof" and Gallileo refused. Gallileo refused to distinguish between the simplicity and usefullness of his theory, and the proof of his theory. On the other hand, when theologians attempt to rationalize or prove things about the physical world they are in the domain of science.

    1. Re:Worth repeating by Zareste · · Score: 1

      By that logic, nothing can be proven, which makes no sense. Evolutionism is unproven because it's flawed, not because nothing can be proven.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    2. Re:Worth repeating by planetfinder · · Score: 1

      Mathematical theorems can be proven and thats about it. Newtonian physics is flawed but still very useful. It was replaced by the theory of General Relativity which is better but doesn't encompass or full under Quantum Theory. If you believe that you can prove something about the real world then that is a religious belief.

    3. Re:Worth repeating by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      "By that logic, nothing can be proven, which makes no sense."

      It makes plenty of sense. Consider the following thought experiment.

      Theory: This ball is red.

      I say this, because I'm looking at the ball, and it looks pretty red to me. So I suppose, it's proven? No.

      Because maybe my eyes are bad. Maybe the light was wrong, for a moment. Maybe I'm drunk. For in a moment, a hundred other people all come in, and conclude that this ball is blue. You don't trust me more than the rest of them, so you suppose it's proven that the ball is blue.

      And then, a thousand more people come in, and testify that the ball is in fact orange...

      All theories, all evidence, are like that. There is always possibility of future contradictory evidence. That's why nothing can be absolutely proven.

    4. Re:Worth repeating by Zareste · · Score: 1

      "Theory: This ball is red."

      You just proved that theory wrong. See, if you were to say "the overall light given off by the ball is between X and Y wavelengths" then a simple lab experiment would show that it's right or wrong.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    5. Re:Worth repeating by Zareste · · Score: 1

      What you're saying is that you have to be religious to be right. Dunno if I like your dogma here.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    6. Re:Worth repeating by planetfinder · · Score: 1

      No. Some religious feel absolutely sure that they are right but being religious doesn't require that feeling.

    7. Re:Worth repeating by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      Your equipment would be imperfect. There would be a strong possibility that it is giving an anomalous reading. By repeating the experiment, and with different equipment, you can reduce this possibility, but there is always a definite, finite chance that your theory is wrong.

    8. Re:Worth repeating by planetfinder · · Score: 1

      The unprovability of physical theories is not a new or even a philosophical idea hence the title "Worth repeating". Its more of a logical fact. If you want to understand what scientists and statisticians say about this point then Google "Null Hypothesis" and keep going from there. Its not uncommon for scientists to talk about proof but what they mean is that the data supports rather than disproves their theory and/or that they can prove that their theory is logically self consistent. Its impossible to test every implication of a theory and/or to test it in every instance where there is or will be a testable implication. Using a theory as though it were true in order to predict what will happen involves belief. It is uncomfortable for most of us to deal with everything that way so we don't usually talk about it that way. The Quantum theory makes this situation even more explicit because its predictions are explicitly statistical predictions.

    9. Re:Worth repeating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Didn't you forget to reject solipsism in first year philosophy?

    10. Re:Worth repeating by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      By that logic, nothing can be proven, which makes no sense.

      Nope, the original poster is entirely right. Nothing is ever proven in science. Relativity has passed every test thrown at it so far, but we still call it a theory. Note that if it hadn't passed the tests it would have had to be changed or tdiscarded. Same for the theory of quantum dynamics. Or for that matter, the germ theory of disease.

      Einstein himself said, "No amount of experimentation can ever prove me right; a single experiment can prove me wrong."

    11. Re:Worth repeating by Zareste · · Score: 1

      Still don't like your dogma. Come up with something better

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    12. Re:Worth repeating by Zareste · · Score: 1

      What you're saying is that science is too dumb to figure anything out. I really don't buy that

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    13. Re:Worth repeating by Zareste · · Score: 1

      Reality doesn't have much regard for chance. It's either right or wrong

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    14. Re:Worth repeating by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      What you're saying is that science is too dumb to figure anything out.

      No. I'm saying that there is no way to prove absolutely 100% that any theory is true. If I drop an apple one million times and it falls to the ground every time, the best I can say on the million-and-first drop is that past experience suggests that it is likely to fall to the ground.

      General Relativity appears to hold in all the cases it's been tested. That doesn't mean it's guaranteed to be true, it just means we haven't found a case yet where it fails.

  335. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by m50d · · Score: 1

    There's a simple reason for that paragraph: the cries of "evolution is just a theory" that are heard from advocates of ID so much. There may be people in your movement who aren't that ignorant - but the vocal ones are.

    --
    I am trolling
  336. intelegant design != science by willCode4Beer.com · · Score: 1

    This seems more like a debate about philosophy vs science.
    Philosophers tried to reason out things without experimentation. This is how we ended up with flawed *facts* like heavier bodies fall faster than lighter ones.
    Later scientists came along and said there are no absolute facts. There are theories, and theories should be challenged by experimentation.
    ID looks like a lot of postulating without even coming up with "thought experiments" that could be validated by observation. Or making predictions, that could be validated by research.
    Evolution, on the other hand, may not be exactly what Darwin put out but, the *theory* has been rewritten when inconsistencies are found. Experiments are conducted upon the theory. Predictions based upon the theory are tested. There is some actual science being done.

    ID may have a place in a philosophy class, I would have nothing against this. However, science classes should teach *science*.

    As for religion's involvement. The idea that something should be blindly believed has no place in science. That is the opposite of science. Teaching the opposite of science as science is called lying. And according to the bible, liars go to hell.

    --
    ----- If communism is a system where the government owns business, what do you call a system where business owns govern
  337. Something like a phenomena by shani · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not all phenomena that cannot be falsified are necessarily supernatural.

    As an example, consider that Belgians serve their beer in glasses designed to enhance their flavour. Presumably this is because the way the liquid warms up, and the way it makes your mouth change shape, and the way that the smell comes out through the neck, and so on. Each type of beer has its own glass, designed for that particular brand.

    How can you test this scientifically? I don't think it can be done. You cannot ask someone to rate the test of differently shaped glasses without bias, because you cannot prevent them from knowing the shape of the glass that they are drinking out of.

    OTOH, this does not necessarily mean that the shape of the glass has no effect. Nor does it mean that it is supernatural. Rather, it means that there are things that fall outside of science.

    1. Re:Something like a phenomena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell me then: How were the glasses designed? Either the various breweries did extensive testing to find the best shaped glass, or it is all marketing hype and there really is no difference. One or the other.

      It is either testable, or it is marketing.

    2. Re:Something like a phenomena by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Bad reasoning. One could recreate the shape of a beer glass inside a generic cylinder. One would not know how the inside of each cylinder is shaped. Secondly, taste and aroma are linked chemically to substances. If people described a certain beer as having a certain flavor, one could then chemically analyze the beer to find the concentration of that "flavor" or "smell". You could then test differently shaped glasses and measure the chemical composition of vapors and the liquid over time.

      You are correct that there is a problem with experimentation in sociology due to the participents knowledge of the experiment, but that doesn't apply to beer testing. However, neither area falls outside of science, it just means the epistimology is more difficult to describe.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    3. Re:Something like a phenomena by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Three glasses of beer. Two types of glasses, Two-three different almost-identical beers. In some trials, trials, two differently-shaped glasses contain the same beer. In other trials, the same beer is in the two identically-shaped glasses, and in other trials, the beer in the three glasses is different. Participant is required to identify which, if any glasses have the same beer.

      If the glass's shape has an effect on the taste, then people would guess three different beers when it was really two different beers more often than they should.

  338. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Stormcrow309 · · Score: 1

    Why don't you ask him? It is a mystery. Of course if you can explain how organic chemicals formed into DNA by shear luck, go right ahead.

    Why would an atheist? Someone who 'believes' that there is no 'God' and that when we die, we die should be worried about more important things, like how to prolong thier life.

    --

    In God we trust, all others require data.

  339. CTHULU by rewinn · · Score: 1

    >Large Tenticled Aliens from Outerspace

    Were we mere humans to learn the truth behind the Design of the Universe, we might gladly flee to the safety of ignorance or madness.

    As we learned at Miskatonic University, "Ex Luce Ad Tenebras".

  340. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by ajs · · Score: 1

    "Eugenics [...] had been proven"

    You can't prove eugenics, any more than you can "prove" chicken soup. First off, let's avoid weighted words like "prove" since that's used only in mainstream media and formal sciences where you can reduce problems to axioms. If you cannot reduce problems to axioms, you must perorm expeiments that support or disprove your theory, but you can never prove it.

    You can perform experiments that support the theory that chicken soup, administered orally during illness has certain effects on the immune system, and thus the duration of illness, but that's a seperate thing entirely from "proving chicken soup".

    Same deal with eugenics. Eugenics is a science that deals with the application of controled breeding to humans. It is an umbrella for many theories, some of which are well supported and some of which were disproved.

    "The earth moving around the Sun is based totally on work by Aristotle"

    I assume you mean the sum moving around the earth... and you are correct there. It was Copernicus who contradicted him in the 14th century, and whose theory was accepted in the 15th century.

    And Aristotle was a brilliant natural philosopher (arguably the first) and logician, but he was not a scientist in the sense that he did not apply the scientific method (but he was the first to suggest that experimentation should be a requirement of investigation into natural laws... an important first step to be sure).

    Thus your claim that science held that the Sun revolved around the Earth for 2000 years is simply wrong. It was the CHURCH and enforced adherence to Aristotle, and the CHURCH that attacked Copernicus and Gallileo for their theories that contradicted Aristotle (and thus church doctrine). The establishment of the scientific method in the 15th century culminated in the general acceptance of its application in the 19th century (with the onset of the industrial revolution).

    That period, between the 15th and 19th centuries, was the birth of science, and had its roots in inquiries such as the debate surrounding the Copernican System and church doctrine which it contradicted.

  341. _____ by Zareste · · Score: 1

    Meh. Same thing happened to Galileo. The cult of pseudo-science just happens to enforce evolutionism these days.

    --
    I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    1. Re:_____ by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      Galileo had evidence for the copernican system, not just a todo list of 'problems' that scientists are actively working on.

    2. Re:_____ by Zareste · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the evolutionist todo list will surely be solved in a million years or so, since it pretty much works by constructing nonsensical ideas and adding billions of years to prove whatever some guy makes up.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    3. Re:_____ by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      Ok, then. Justify that.

      Give me an example of a nonsensical idea in evolutionary theory, or of evolutionary theory influencing geological dating systems. (Instead of the other way round.)

    4. Re:_____ by Zareste · · Score: 1

      Well, it's already common knowledge that evolutionism effects dating systems. A few people set up an elaborate timeline displaying years with a bunch of zeroes added to the end, saying "here's the fish and here's the monkeys and here's the humans" and that's used as a map for dating. X form of carbon deterioration goes on year B of the made-up timeline, and so forth.

      The whole thing is not necessarily untrue, but appallingly unlikely. Were it not heavily enforced by the school system, I'd wonder why in the world anyone would give it much credit at all.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    5. Re:_____ by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      Ah. Contextual dating. But that isn't used as evidence for evolution, but to relate different species to each other. If we found multiple fossils of different species close by in rock layers, then geology suggest that in most cases, this means they are close by temporally. This isn't an unreasonable assumption, given what we know about how sedimentary layers are built up - which again, has nothing to do with evolution. Now, if we find another fossil near a copy of the other, then we can assume transitivity. Ie. A lived in the same time as B, and B lived in the same time as C, implies that A lived in the same time as C. In fact, this doesn't need evolution at all. Evolution helps explain why this gives us useful results however - why species are actually separated temporally, that we cannot join up all the fossils into a single time era as an instantaneous creation would suggest. The raw data for evolution, however, come from carbon dating. This, now, comes from our knowledge of radioactive decay, which comes from fundamental physics. Evolutionary theory neccessitates the assumption that decay rates are essentially constant - again, this is not an unreasonable assumption. From physics, and chemistry, we know that systems tend to remain in equilibrium, unless perturbed. Without evidence of perturbation, we have every reason to assume that the principles of carbon dating are valid. In fact, we have evidence to back up carbon dating (and other more fundamental dating) interpretations, to reasonable accuracies. Eg. we can get samples of atmosphere from polar drillings, and check against our models of carbon decay. Because we can see the yearly cycles in these columns, this gives us a secondary source of data to confirm our primary. The information we get is consistent, and backed up by independent, correlating data sources. The probability of this occuring by a series of coincidental systematic errors, and just happening to correspond to an incorrect theory, is very, very unlikely.

    6. Re:_____ by TufelKinder · · Score: 1

      From physics, and chemistry, we know that systems tend to remain in equilibrium, unless perturbed.

      So in an evolutionary system, what does the "perturbing" that causes the evolving?

      --
      If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. -- George Orwell
    7. Re:_____ by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      Either (a) we haven't reached an equilibrium, or (b) external factors, e.g. changes in climate, environment.

      Evolution is very unstable. Because multiple factors have to be balanced, a small change can require a huge genetic change, or even change the landscape of ecology completely. Because organisms affect each other, influences are amplified instead of dampened. The original 'Darwinian' assumption was that evolution *never* reaches equilibrium - this is natural, if we assume perfect competition. But now, we do see that evolution can slow down, and speed up, because competition is not perfect. Small advantages become eventually less significant, causing periods of stagnation.

      Yes, yes, tending to remain in an equlibrium is somewhat of a generalisation. Systems tend to remain in an equilibrium, or tend to infinity, generally. Most things don't tend to infinity, because they have to be driven by something finite. Evolution *might*, because of the way it affects itself, and because there is no physical law that states that 'complexity' must be conserved.

    8. Re:_____ by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Well, it's already common knowledge that evolutionism effects dating systems.

      Really? Can you please cite a paper demonstrating that well-known fact?

      X form of carbon deterioration goes on year B of the made-up timeline, and so forth.

      Um, you don't use carbon dating to date fossils. You use some other form of radiometric dating.

      Were it not heavily enforced by the school system, I'd wonder why in the world anyone would give it much credit at all.

      Were creationism not heavily enforced by fundamentalists, I'd wonder why in the world anyone would give it much credit at all.

    9. Re:_____ by Zareste · · Score: 1

      Frankly, you're a moron if you're not aware of the evolutionist-created timeline. There's no way to reason with you and your dogma.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    10. Re:_____ by Zareste · · Score: 1

      Thanks for being the first person on this board to list facts instead telling everyone else to fetch them for him.

      Problem with this form of dating is that it's measuring years in carbon and geological layers. You understand that the only conclusions reached by this are assumptions, as the link between time and layers of land is abstract. I'm a big fan of theories, but the idea of humanity evolving from the first Earthly life forms is stacked on way too many assumptions for me.

      Also I'm not trying to defend the 6-day creation idea. My favored theory is that life though our galaxy - and a few others - has been organized for quite a long time now, and because of evolutionary factors, we've able to move between star systems by default. I think the life forms on the planets involved get a 'boost' now and then when the timing seems right - a 'boost' being when advancements from this group of star systems are circulated - and that humans and a lot of the current species are either the result of DNA toying, or were once foreign to Earth entirely.

      This involves a lot of evolution on a much greater scale, but since it doesn't involve Earth life starting on its own, it's technically creationism.

      It's pretty elaborate, yeah, but I could bore you with page upon page of actual thinking that goes into this. And of course it's all just theory.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
    11. Re:_____ by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Frankly, you're a moron if you're not aware of the evolutionist-created timeline.

      Please cure my moronitude then and explain what the hell you are talking about...

      There's no way to reason with you and your dogma. ...or are you just trolling?

  342. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >> it is a theory people. Theory. It still has holes, giant unexplainable holes.

    > This also describes gravity.

    And keep in mind that general relativity has holes, giant (black) holes, too...

  343. Re:Separation of Church and State by brandre · · Score: 1

    The establishment clause never was referred to as separation of church and state until 1948. Since Tom Jefferson and the other writers of the constitution were long gone and there was no constitutional ammendment this was one more example of legislation from the bench. "No matter how noble the result appears, any portion of the government usurping the authority of the other will soon lead to ruin." Ralph Brandt

  344. Stoned? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1 entry found for set in stone. set in stone adj : no longer changeable; "the agreement is not yet set in stone" [syn: carved in stone] Source: WordNet ® 2.0, © 2003 Princeton University I believe this one IS set in stone?

  345. 10 years from now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the future the government will be forced to fight the existence of intelligent design by all means possible. I can imagine a new evolutionist president springing up: "We can no longer allow intelligence to design things such as houses and roads. We will instead construct a theory of houses forming over millions of years, and it will be a fact."

  346. "Spirituality" as a Darwinian-style survival trait by Krehbiel · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Interesting to note that all of the world's human populations, even those that had been separated by oceans for thousands of years (before getting mostly re-accquainted by the 16th century) have some form of religion. I have to wonder if this tendency is a positive survival characteristic.

    Consider: once an animal becomes as intelligent as a human, it may occur to it that certain behaviors, though absolutely essential to the survival of the population, are personally very risky and/or expensive. Take reproduction; why become a mother? Why take the risk and expend the energy to produce and support a child, when it's not necessary for her personal survival? There's a good deal of instinct at work there, but humans are known to be able to suppress instinctive behaviors given training and/or a good reason. And why would a man fight to (re-)gain the resources his community needs from his neighbors when the fight might kill him? Even if the campaign is ultimately victorious and his community prospers, he's personally dead!

    It seems to me that such unselfish deeds of individuals strengthen the population at the expense of the individual - give rather than receive, trade fairly rather than kill and steal, etc. And in a Darwinian sense, it's the survival of the population that matters, and much less so the particular individual.

    So how do you convince a reasoning person to adopt selfless behaviors? One way is by plausibly promising a reward for good behavior. Do these "unselfish" things, and we'll give you these rewards. The spiritual person is generally promised an "eternal" reward - when your life is done, you get to live in heaven/valhalla/etc.

    The alternative is negative reinforcement. If you don't act unselfishly, we'll punish you. The effectiveness of this depends on the plausibility of the threat - "if I don't get caught, I don't get the punishment."

    So the "Theist" (spiritually-minded individual) is optimistically looking forward to a good reward. The Atheist is trying to avoid punishment. The Theist could be expected to give to the community beyond what the community could ever repay - even sacrificing his life. The Atheist will work for pay, so long as the work is low-risk.

    Even if the Atheist is right, I'm not sure it's a better choice for a population.

  347. Science vs Religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know about the rest of you, but I'm seeing people on both sides of this argument acting with religious fervor.

    I'm not saying that evolution is a form of religion, evolution can be seen in our daily lives. I would just like to note that many of those advocating a separation of church and state do so with the attempt to impose a state religion of athiesm (note that I said many, not all, no disrespect intended to agnostics). A frantic disbelief in God can be a religious experience, as are some political philosophies that are crammed down the throats of youth in public schools in areas like Southern California. When you ask whether there is a violation of church and state in a specific matter, ask rather whether it matters, because to attack one religion to placate another does not improve the situation.

    I think evolution should be taught in schools. I think Darwinism should be left as a theory.

    1. Re:Science vs Religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pick a side you damn fence-sitter.

  348. Conservatism will bring down America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its us versus them, the conservatives will state that its a liberal ploy. I would think that if America keeps going this way, America will eventually become the laughing stock of the world. Once a technological leader, now relegated to the history books.

    Conservatives please realize what you are doing to yourselves at the expense of your dominance.

  349. Moderation of this topic by Orodreth · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Hey mods, I don't think your modding is biased enough. Could you make your collective worldview a little more obvious? kthx

  350. Intelligent Design == Bad Science by copponex · · Score: 1

    Evolutionary Theory
    Scientist 1: Hey, where did all of this life come from?
    Scientist 2: I don't know. Let's consider the evidence we have, and construct a theory using the scientific method.

    Intelligent Design Theory
    Scientist 1: Hey, where did all of this life come from?
    Guy That Sells Bibles: I know! God did it!

    Yeah, I'm not buying it.

  351. Out of Left Field by gryf · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Two things I find funny about this article and the ensuing discussion:

    - The assumption that teaching that our understanding of evolution ( as currently or popularly understood ) is flawed is somehow 'fundamentalist'. In fact, questioning theories is very scientific. The belief that our understanding of evolution is flawless is a basically fundamentalist mindset.

    Describing alternative theories of creation in a science class makes perfect sense. How can students learn about the controversy surrounding evolution without being taught that there are alternative theories. ( A science teacher should endorse scientific study of fact not dogmatic argument. That study includes studying ID, if only superficially. ) In my high school bio class we discussed 'spontaneous genesis' in a socratic, scientific fashion. The teacher did not tell us what to believe, only that there was no scientific support for the other theories.

    - The assumption that ID, or Creationism, is incompatible with evolution. I have met many Christian, and live with one, who believes that the Design in Intelligent Design mean that the Creator created the rules for evolution. Like building a wind up toy and letting it go do its own things.

    This idea attributes the development of fundamental natural laws to a Creator and that evolution is a natural outgrowth. No God design the sparrow, says this camp. The sparrow came about because of evolution on a world, in a universe created by God. The creator may have come up with the basic forces witnessed in the first moment of the Big Bang, and left the rest to sort itself out.

    This idea cannot be disproved, and has no scientific answer. Cosmology and quantum physics lead to more theological/philosophical questions than answers.

    I personally believe in a chaotic creation, but there is no scientific evidence of that either.

    In the end, as a secularist and atheist, I see no particular violation of any church and state boundary in the actions of the school, only bad science education if they refuse to explain the flaws in ID and present it as a True alternative.

    --

    #-#
    Ad Astra Per Aspera
    A rough road leads to the stars
    1. Re:Out of Left Field by Zareste · · Score: 1

      Just a matter of politics, really. A hundred years ago they enforced creationism, and now they enforce evolutionism. It all depends who's pulling the strings and controlling the school system. They could be telling people 1+1=12 and this /. article would say "the pseudo-science of 1+1=2".

      Also, everything false can be disproved. I'm just saying. To think anything can't be proven or disproved is to say reality has no basis to be figured out.

      I, myself, like Darwin's ideas, but I'm thinking they'd apply better in the context of the universe and life forms preceding those of Earth, as opposed to just Earth. The painful fact - that some don't want to accept - is that we have spirits, and that they're all over the place. Does it intrigue anyone else that our essence is something capable of survival in space and extremely fast speeds? That we're based in something ideal for jumping from one celestial body to another? Not many people want to think this through all the way.

      I would think the the actual birthplace of life would be near a star, perhaps, where matter goes through a million times more patterns in a second than on a slow-moving planet like Earth. I'd think the trial-and-error methods Darwin observed would meet success way faster in such an environment. It only makes sense. My overall theory on the path of intelligence is that life started as quirky and inefficient gassy form somewhere, then evolved into the fast and more efficient spirits we have today, which in turn invented (or maybe just spawned) the carbon-hydrogen bodies we're controlling right now.

      Just an idea from this little gnostic. No theism or atheism involved.

      --
      I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
  352. Minor Clarification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I agree with your post in general, but wish to clarify the Catholic belief... If you read this comment, please read it in its entirety, or risk getting a mistaken impression.

    Catholicism does not per se believe in evolution. Catholicism believes that nothing in the Catholic Faith contradicts the theory of evolution. Catholicism does not make claims regarding the validity of a specific scientific theory or law, such as the law of gravity. They are outside the purview of religion.

    Catholics are therefore free to judge the truth of any scientific principle based upon its own merits. Catholics as inidividuals generally believe in evolution, but it is their individual viewpoint, not a tenet of the faith.

    Now, any knowledgable Catholic believes in the law of gravity. Similarly, I believe that knowledgable Catholics generally accept that the theory of evolution is the current best explanation. (Newtonian physics was "supplanted" by Einsteinien physics, but the "approximations" made in Newtonian physics are more than good enough for practical purposes in almost all settings. I would consider the theory of evolution to be on the Newtonian Physics level, in general correct, but it would be nice to have another smart person refine the theory.)

    1. Re:Minor Clarification by Golias · · Score: 1

      Thank you for that clarification.

      When I said "believe in evolution," it would have been more accurate for me to have said "do not take it as an article of faith to disbelieve evolution," as none of those religions actually dogmatically teach that evolution is true.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  353. err, that is Intelligent Design by brontus3927 · · Score: 1
    Two, regarding the wider scope of Intellegent Design, why does that necessarily have to conflict with the established theory of evolution? This is like saying that a particular statue could not have possibly been carved by ancient man, because it is clear that it was in fact carved with a stone tool. Can't the ID folks consider the possibility that evolution is the tool God used to create us? Evolution does not disprove the existence of God.

    The theory of Intelligent Design is that life went through a "guided" evolution based on a grand design by a deity (known in Judeo-Christian circles as God, but Intelligent Design isn't limited to Judeo-Christian philosophy)

    What ID'ers disagree with in the theory of "evolution" (at least the ones with intelligent thought and research and aren't just spouting off what someone else told them) is the tenents of natural selection. According to natural selection, evolution is a proccess of random mutations, some harmful, some helpful, some having no effect (such as eye color). Due to the randomness of natural selection, it is a continuing proccess with no "goal." As such, natural selection requires that either 1) there is no God, or 2) God has a laizze-faire additude about life.

    And relating point 1: When I was in college(!!! and this was only 5 years ago, too), I knew a person who had a poster of common "scientific fallacies." On the issue that dinosaurs died out 60+ million years before the "dawn of man" it said this: history (sic) is full of stories of man fighting dragons. Tales of dragons predate the discovery of dinosaurs, but they are in fact, the same.

  354. WTF?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just what part of Creationism is actual science? NONE. It's all based on religion, and nothing else. To take dozens of years of research by thousands of scientists, and to tell them that they are WRONG BECAUSE YOU SAY SO is the most retarded thing ever.

    Even worse is the compromise. Creationism has nothing going for it. Why the hell would someone consider a cop out like creationism to be as valid an argument as real science? This compromise does nothing but give a blow to science so a few idiots can fill their ego.

    Religion was made thousand of years ago to fill in the blanks. There were things that people couldn't figure out back then. There are still things that we can't know today. Religion was, and still does provide an answer, even though we may never really find empirical evidence. But evolution is no longer one of those things. We are figuring out more and more about it every day, hard work with real facts behind it, and religion needs to learn that it's time to butt out.

    Fundamentalists need to stop masturbating to their religion, and get a brain.

    1. Re:WTF?! by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      What a shame...

      People who actually study science, can come to the ID conclusion and many have. You are lumping Creationism (ID passed through the Bible to fill in the gaps) into this discussion. ID is the topic at hand.

      Do some real study prior to mouthing off like this and you may find yourself humbled. There are catastrophy models that easily explain many of the evolutionary theories while making the earth relatively young. People are simple too afraid to entertain the thought that anything semi-religious sounding could still be true.

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
    2. Re:WTF?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      People are simple too afraid to entertain the thought that anything semi-religious sounding could still be true.
      And others are too driven to get the desired conclusion that they piece together a hodge-podge of explanations that do not hold together as a whole.

      For example, one of the usual counters to radiocarbon dating is that there was so much water in the atmosphere that the production of the carbon isotopes by cosmic rays was significantly affected, and thus results dating beyond 6000 years cannot be believed. This sounds plausable, but it is not consistent with radioisotopic dating of other elements. You can date using a variety of other elements that have nothing to do with the way carbon isotopes are created. The key is that all these diverse dating methods are consistent with each other. The whole Creationism, Flood Geology, Intelligent Design, (fill in the current name used to sound scientific), etc. "arguments" are very contradictory. That is why it is not science, and should not be presented as such.

      Personally, I think in the spirit of equal time, which is what the ID-ers are claiming, that churches and Sunday Schools should carry a disclaimer that what they are being told is not a demonstrable fact, but stories and myths passed down through generations, blah blah blah (if I was more clever I would just reword the usual ID-leveraged stickers they are trying to force into textbooks and schools).

    3. Re:WTF?! by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      All dating methods are significantly impacted by the data found in the lake adjacent to Mount St. Helens. The fact is, there are extra circumstances that we know nothing of. Evolution is a guess. So is ID. Both are valid.

      I will absolutely teach ID/Creationism to my daughter as a theory along with Evolution. I would expect any teacher in the classroom to present as such. The problem is, evolution is taught as FACT, when it is not. It is our "best guess" (and I do not think it to be the best). I would have no problem with a teacher stating it is our best guess. But to teach it as fact is wrong.

      The Sunday School teacher is not there to teach creationism (the scientific theory). Instead, they should be teaching the scriptures. There is a difference.

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
  355. AFRAID OF AMERICANS? by refrain · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hrmm...

    As an American, all I can say is that you're being impatient. We've only had about 5 years of this wacko-fundamentalist crap here - it's only been 5 years since the end of the "Clinton Era". Give it some time. Most of the intelligent people here are working too hard to care about politics. Once things get a little too out-of-hand, you'll see those people at the polls again. It's just going to take a little while.

    Meanwhile, back in Europe, you guys were burning people at the stake for HUNDREDS OF YEARS. Oh, yeah, and your continent was filled with internacene warfare between Protestants and Catholics for like 400 YEARS. Let's see... there were the Crusades too. I don't remember any Americans being involved with that lovely affair. Isn't it nice that you guys don't do that stuff anymore?

    So, hey, relax. Give us a few years. We'll get our heads together again. I agree with you that it's not good that America's in bed with Israel and Saudi Arabia, and yeah, we SHOULD be more friendly with our historical allies in Europe. But please don't fly off the handle because our errant, democratic system of government produced some undesirable results for a decade or two.

    Meanwhile, take comfort in the fact that the U.K. and France and Russia and China have enough nukes to annihilate America. :)

    --
    "Sic transeunt omnia."
    1. Re:AFRAID OF AMERICANS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yo Paco, yes you there...

      These "Amerikans" you speak of, where did their ancestors come from?

  356. And that was mod'ed "Insightful"? by khasim · · Score: 2, Insightful
    sad part is i know a lot about evolution.
    Anyone can claim that. Show some evidence.
    a lot they don't teach in schools.
    Ah, so now we're getting into the "secret wisdom" part of the game.

    You know, the part where you know things that mere mortals do not.
    i have read books on it, listened to speakers on it, had my questions answered on it, studdied it.
    You left off the bit about travelling to distant lands and sitting on mountain tops.
    I know a lot that is not common knowledge.
    Bingo! You have much to teach us mere mortals oh enlightened master.
    Why does a discussion of ID never bring up the merits or science but always turns it into a fight against evolution?
    Because "Intelligent Design" does not have any scientific basis.

    With evolution, it is easy to show how species diverge. With actual animals.
    Why not learn about ID before you judge it?
    I have. And there isn't anything that is scientifically demonstratable to it.

    If you believe otherwise, then please enlighten these mere mortals.
    By judging so quickly aren't you just the same as those christian fundamentalists that won't even look at evolution?
    Why do you assume that people who dismiss it haven't looked at it?

    I have and I see that there isn't anything to it.

    It simply attempts to cover any "holes" in evolution theory by claiming such "holes" must be because of an Intelligent Design.

    It becomes very easy to understand once you know the evolution of "Intelligent Design".

    It was too easy to knock the "Creationists" before, so they decided that they could hide "God" behind the phrase "intelligent design" and attempt to get it taught in schools.
    1. Re:And that was mod'ed "Insightful"? by JasontheMason · · Score: 1
      With evolution, it is easy to show how species diverge. With actual animals.

      Trivial, yes - so I presume you can provide me an example of a species diverging? So far as I know, we haven't actually seen one species change into another, merely a species adapting to it's environment.

      It becomes very easy to understand once you know the evolution of "Intelligent Design".

      Pray, enlighten us mortals, then. (Or do I need to find a mountain top first?)

      And there isn't anything that is scientifically demonstratable to it [ID].

      Assuming that science is the formulation of ideas based on what we see, based on this definition, I think it is interesting to note that Darwin formed a theory based on what he saw in the Galapagos Islands. Darwin himself, however, said that evolution could not explain the complexity of some things (I think the human eye may have been one example - it's been a while) and left room for ID.

      It seems to me that a lot of people have a tendency to try to back up what they believe by finding data, and not so much finding conclusions based on the data.

      --
      "Ad infinitem et ultra!" - Buzz Lightyear
    2. Re:And that was mod'ed "Insightful"? by Syrrh · · Score: 1

      Well, it's really simple, see?

      So far as I know, we haven't actually seen one species change into another, merely a species adapting to it's environment.

      There you go, you've answered your own question. Evolution doesn't mean there's a sudden dramatic change. It also doesn't mean there has to be an A -> B -> C transition, unless there's some reason group A dies out, you end up with A and B AND C.

      This is almost as common an argument among creationists as mixing origins of the universe and biogenesis in with something that's only a biological procession explaining increasing complexity over an insanely large number of generations.

      The eye argument is pretty weak itself, as mentioned in the FA. What isn't mentioned is that Planaria have rudimentary eyes too, even if they can only detect light and not really 'see', so without having the fully complex eye there's still a starting point. Give that a couple trillion generations to try different combinations, and you'll get something that can see better, and may or may not be compatible with a basic flatworm.

  357. Just because He used parables by ShatteredDream · · Score: 1

    doesn't mean that many or most of the Bible isn't meant to be taken literally. When Jesus said that if you lust after a woman you have committed adultery, was he speaking figuratively? I seriously doubt that...

    How about Matt 7:1-6 where He explained part of the process of judgement? Most of Jesus' ministry was literal and meant to be taken as such. You can't read in multiple interpretations into most of what Jesus said because there is only 1 valid reading for most it, like much of the Bible.

    1. Re:Just because He used parables by millennial · · Score: 1

      Jesus teaches in parables.
      We are meant to be like Jesus.
      We should teach in parables.
      QED.
      To say that there is only one way to interpret the Bible is to have accepted everything in it without even once considering what it might mean. Example: Two whore sisters, or two whore nations?

      --
      I am scientifically inaccurate.
  358. Re:Atheism also a religion by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    Actually, Atheism is a set of core values or beliefs about the nature of God and the world we live in.

    Christianity is a set of core values and beliefs about the nature of God and the world we live in.

    Judaism is a set of core values and beliefs about the nature of God and the world we live in.

    Islam is a set of core values and beliefs about the nature of God and the world we live in.

    Hinduism is a set of core values and beliefts about the nature of God and the world we live in.

    Get the point. Whether or not there is a God is not germain to whether or not something is a religion.

    Even the language used on their website has religious tones to it in using words like "belief system" and "purpose of existance" and "world view."

    What I don't understand is why Atheists are so embarrassed to recognize that they actually have a set of religous beliefs?

  359. using logic by largenumber · · Score: 1

    You can't use logic to rationalize religious idiology. Religion is not rational. It doesn't need logic. It needs FAITH: belief is something without evidence. Oh sure, you can 'rationalize' all you want about the nature of whatever religion you choose, but I can do the same thing about the Jabberwocky in Alice and Wonderland. Its not logical if your base assumptions are flawed. Its especially not logical if you blatently ignore this fact or deny it by saying 'just have faith'. So don't expect to much success when arguing about the flaws in someones religion. You can't argue with them if you don't accept their base assumptions and, if you value rational, logical arguments, you won't accept many of their base assumptions because they lack evidence.

    The only successful arguments I've had about religion with religious people have centered on their base assumptions and the lack of any evidence behind them. Once you've reach the point in the argument where they say 'but you have to have faith', say bullox, and point out that a real argument requires a logical base. If they are smart they will quickly realize that they can't effectively ARGUE religious idiology.

    At which point the really clever ones figure out that religion relies basically on the art of persuasion for the points where it lacks evidence. Watch out for 'arguments' in that nature.

    As far as ethics go, what could be more EVIL and CORRUPT than someone who claims to be your shepard but insists you must abandon logic and reason so that he can save you from an unsubstantiated evil that convienetly resides within your self, can't be removed, and will lead to certain, undeniable corruption and eternal damnation?

    1. Re:using logic by DumbSwede · · Score: 1
      Well put.

      I have several very intelligent colleagues that believe in Creationism and are devoutly Christian. I'm not sure how the debate came up, but in discussing evolution with one of them one on one, they pointed out the lack the of transitional fossils as proof that evolution did not occur. Now I believe that transitional fossils abound, but that is an aside. I then asked them: what if I could provide overwhelming transitional fossil evidence, would they then believe that Evolution was true? -- to which they replied no. I then asked what in their minds would be sufficient evidence to prove evolution over creationism to which they further replied they could provide no such example that would be sufficient because no such example could exist. I then abruptly disengaged from the debate because there was no point.

  360. THE FINAL ANSWER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's amusing how those who naysay Intelligent Design attempt to prove their position(s) using tools created by The Creator. The fact of the matter is it is fundamentally futile for naysayers to try to support their position using arguments based on logic or Evolutionary theory. Why? BECAUSE THE CREATOR CREATED SUPPOSEDLY THOSE, AS WELL.

    So how can someone possibly argue against Intelligent Design? Or perhaps the better question is, "Why argue at all?" Well, argument is certainly justified when people are trying to shove one or the other ideology down your throat. As far as argument goes, I guess the only method available is to use what the other side has accepted as valid to disprove them. For example, ID folks accept astrological evidence as proof; therefore find astrological evidence that disproves their claims. But using Evolutionary theory to argue with someone who doesn't believe it exists is pointless. And using logic to argue against the existence of a being whom the other side says exists outside all logic is pointless, as well. So stick to hard evidence fellas. It's all you've got.

    1. Re:THE FINAL ANSWER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Someone should check your meds, because the cocktail you're on now is losing its effectiveness.

  361. Not Enough Philosophy in School by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I, too, would love more philosophy in school. As someone who is only now, in my thirties, discovering the joy of philosophy (and getting perfect grades for the first time ever), I look back and think how much better school would have been for me if there had been the slightest hint of philosophy there.

    But that said, if we introduced philosophy into the curriculum, would we introduce only those viewpoints which were sympathetic to modern materialistic science? Only the empiricists and positivists? What about a bit of Feyerabend, the heretic? Feyerabend would really set the cat amongst the pigeons, since he insists that good scientific practice must be diverse. Feyerabend is absolutely pluralist about science, and offers loads of ammunition to those who want "both views" taught in school.

    On the other hand, if you're only going to introduce those philosophies compatible with the view, "evolution is the only scientific theory of origins", then what distinguishes this from outright indoctrination? Philosophy is supposed to be about the development of critical skills, not imparting dogma.

    Frankly I'm betting that philosophy will be kept well and truly out of the school system until the final overthrow of said system, since a decent dose of philosophy (involving several views that contradict each other and all make good points) encourages too much thought. God help us if students should start thinking for themselves, and not just act like willing sponges that soak up whatever fact-of-the-day is served to them. Think of the trouble it would cause! Think of how much more work teaching would involve if students had their intelligence nurtured, rather than being made to work according to the pattern of textbook-du-jour.

    Philosophy has no place in modern schooling. This is why we are reduced to arguments as to which view of science gets exclusive distribution rights in school. To acknowledge that there might not be one single true view of science would open pandora's box in regards to the teaching of science. The students would start asking those kinds of smart alec questions which undermine the teacher's authority, leading to massive control problems. As someone who made the bad political move of questioning authority in school (as a student), I think I have just explained my way to a clearer understanding of why there was, is, and will be no philosophy in school.

    So here's a point to ponder. I think that a goodly portion of the Slashdot audience thinks "critical skills are good, and we ought to encourage them in school". First up, note that my (somewhat cynical) description of the school process above suggests that school simply can not do this without bringing about its own destruction. In short, the students would become smart enough to realise that school is stupid, and revolt.

    But that aside, consider the following dilemma. What if it were demonstrated that teaching two conflicting views of science (both of them credibly defended -- not a "real man versus straw man" situation) produces students with better critical skills? If you're one of the many who've commented that "evolution == science, and !evolution == !science", then would you be willing to allow a pseudoscience into the science curriculum if it improved critical thinking in general? No doubt you would not if there were no benefit, but would you be willing to sacrifice the "purity" of science teaching if it fostered greater critical skills? If not, then what about teaching philosophy and including those philosophers that have the best arguments against modern science, like Feyerabend?

    --
    proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    1. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in School by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      If you haven't yet, read Popper's Open Society and It's Enemies, The Poverty of Historicism and Bartley's The Retreat to Commitment. The answers against justificationalism and the description of making rational choices between models that Bartley lays out answer many of the problems of infinate regress that you've alluded to.

      To acknowledge that there might not be one single true view of science would open pandora's box in regards to the teaching of science.
      There isn't though. There is only one correct view of science, that is the scientific method. How people use the scientific method has been the subject of a number of debates including the one between Feyerabend and Popper, but everyone still agrees that it is the scientific method which is operating. In other words, no one really disputes Popper's falsification, but there is some dispute over how hypotheses are preferentially selected for testing, etc. I believe Barley, and to some extent Popper, found many important discoveries attempting to answer this question. I think that Bartley's rational choices between models defeats Feyerabend's dabbling with anarcho-empiricism. I haven't read enough of either to make a definative statement on that, but as far as I can tell, this seems to be the situation. Also I see this as a bit of an esoteric question, I find the usefulness of Bartley and Popper's discoveries to be much more useful in sociology and political science.

      I may be restating Bartley (I haven't read enough to be certain, this could be my contribution or someone elses) but, I assert that: The truth is the most efficient means for reaching ones moral goals. That moral goals are as individual as DNA and that laws are definitions of rights which provide demarcation in a model of normalized moral goals. Theologies and Legal systems are models which normalize sets of common moral goals.

      My assertions allow both relativism and absolutism to coexist inside working models and thus answers Feyerabend. I've been trying to write more of it down and attempting to falsify it through thought experiments, but I haven't found a problem yet.

      I don't think most people's time should be wasted covering the last 2000 years of philisophical development. Only certain parts will be useful for critical thinking. That's why I'll emphasize Popper and Bartley first and foremost, some like any Hegel and Plato's Republic should be avoided and are counter-productive.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    2. Re:Not Enough Philosophy in School by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you would advocate introducing philosophy into schools in as much as it undergirds the classification of evolution as science (conformant with the one correct view of science), and intelligent design as non-science, because that's what all the best philosophy does. Is that a fair summary, or have I seriously mischaracterised your views?

  362. As a teacher by ifwm · · Score: 1

    I have had to deal with a similar problem. A student who claimed not to beleive in evolution (to get out of work). I SHOWED her evolution in action (easy with the right lab equipment) after which I had to deal with the parents. Sigh.

    The question I have about ID is, what class does it belong in? Not science, because there is no science involved. Social studies perhaps? I imagine if the educators were smart enough to realize this, and shipped the discussion of ID to a "religion" class, they could end this for good.

    1. Re:As a teacher by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      I SHOWED her evolution in action (easy with the right lab equipment)

      Out of curiousity, what experiment did you perform? I can only guess it was something involving bacteria or fruit-flies..

    2. Re:As a teacher by falzer · · Score: 1

      >>I SHOWED her evolution in action (easy with the right lab equipment)

      >Out of curiousity, what experiment did you perform? I can only guess it was something involving bacteria or fruit-flies..

      He just showed her the big bang. She figured out the rest from there.

    3. Re:As a teacher by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      He just showed her the big bang. She figured out the rest from there.

      I guess it would go towards expaining the transfer of genetic material and accellatory effects of sexual reproduction on the genetic search algorithm... if I understood your reference to "bing bang" correctly that is...

    4. Re:As a teacher by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Good guess. Bacteria, stressors (chemicals, antibiotics, etc.) Pretty simple, yet effective.

  363. Don't forget option (3) by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

    ...Which is that random processes aren't. If you are already assuming that the universe is tailor suited for humanity, then it isn't a leap to say that the laws of the universe, including the rules of logic that underlie evolution are also tailor suited. ID is throwing out the baby with the bathwater.

  364. pseudo article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm gonna go find a better tech site before the articles here begin saying "genetic uses of the homunculus" or "harnessing gravity on geocentric Earth"

  365. More atrocities were committed in 20th century... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in the name of Atheism than in all of recorded history in the name of any other religion.

  366. Power Play by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ID is a power play. Debate is pointless. This is about power, and power does not debate.

    So - the only option is to push back - demonstrate, protest and vote. Our tolerance as a society should not extend to a tolerance of dangerous ideas.

  367. Re:"Spirituality" as a Darwinian-style survival tr by man_ls · · Score: 1

    It's been shown (although I can't quote the source at this moment, since I can't seem to find the citation in the textbook) that there is a "certain kind" of personality which is especially susceptible to religious ideas.

    It's the difference between, for instance, being *convicted* of a belief, and just going along with it because it's advantageous to you, or because everyone else is.

    Orthodox Judiasm contains provisions for Kosher preparation of foods. This is decidedly an arbitrary religious imposition, designed to lead to better hygienic practices in the preparation of food, so people don't die from disease. It's not a far stretch to say that various other religions arose with similar precepts, as a method of saying what you should/shouldn't do more authoritatively than a king or chief could.

  368. Re:Not quite (Close but not quite) by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    I agree with most of what you say.
    That being said, if two species develop long pointy fingers to reach into deep flowers for food, they do not develop matching DNA. There will be different underlying DNA that produces externally similar species.
    In some cases different species evolve (because of natural selection) to look almost identical but their DNA is completely different.
    From there, a reasonable conclusion would be if we shared 50% identical DNA with sea cucumbers then at some point we share a common ancestor. If we share 96% identical DNA with a chimpanzee then we shared a common ancestor and it was much more recent than the cucumber ancestor.
    And scientific studies along this line of reasoning have made predictions and tests which supported it. They have rough estimates for the rate of DNA change and can compare it to the relatively more stable Mitochodria RNA to get "ballpark" guesses for time scales.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  369. Evolution is religion by BigTunaCan · · Score: 0

    The problem has always been for creationists that evolution is just a different religion, or cult to them. Evolution and christianity will never be able to coexist. If evolution were solely explaining the way organisms adapt and change for the future then I doubt creationists would have a problem with it. Evolution goes a step further though and says that it is how everything was created from the "premordial soup" so to speak. As far as the facts go and the evidence that has been found there is no support in favor of evolution or christianity from a pure CREATION standpoint. There is plenty of evidence that evolution is working and we conjecture off of that creation. From a creationist perspective God could have created everything in 7 days and evolution is a mechanism he built within his creations to ensure thier survival. I believe that evolution does belong in schools and religion does not, because there is seperation of church and state. However, I do not believe that evolution creation theory belongs in schools because it is counter-religion. If you openly teach opposition to religion then you still are not seperating church and state.

  370. The thing is... by pholubz4 · · Score: 1

    Separation of Church and State is one way. It is meant to keep the Government from interfering with religion. Not religion from interfering with Government or schools.

  371. On Slashdot because it is subversion of science. by guidryp · · Score: 1

    Slashdotters are definitely interested in Science. This is an important discussion because it is an attempt to subvert science. To undermine the scientific method. The worse part is they are attempting to do this is grade school science class.

  372. Should we smite them? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    On her radio show recently, Dr. Laura Schlesinger said that, as an observant Orthodox Jew, homosexuality is an abomination according to Leviticus 18:22, and cannot be condoned under any circumstance. The following response is an open letter to Dr. Laura which was posted on the Internet. It's funny, as well as informative.

    Dear Dr. Laura:

    Thank you for doing so much to educate people regarding God's Law. I have learned a great deal from your show, and try to share that knowledge with as many people as I can. When someone tries to defend the homosexual lifestyle, for example, I simply remind them that Leviticus 18:22 clearly
    states it to be an abomination. End of debate.

    I do need some advice from you, however, regarding some other elements of God's Law and how to follow them.

    1. When I burn a bull on the altar as a sacrifice, I know it creates a pleasing odor for the Lord - Lev.1:9. The problem is my neighbors. They claim the odor is not pleasing to them. Should I smite them?

    2. I would like to sell my daughter into slavery, as sanctioned in Exodus 21:7. In this day and age, what do you think would be a fair price for her?

    3. I know that I am allowed no contact with a woman while she is in her period of menstrual uncleanliness - Lev.15: 19-24. The problem is how do I tell? I have tried asking, but most women take offense.

    4. Lev. 25:44 states that I may indeed possess slaves, both male and female, provided they are purchased from neighboring nations. A friend of mine claims that this applies to Mexicans, but not Canadians. Can you clarify? Why can't I own Canadians?

    5. I have a neighbor who insists on working on the Sabbath. Exodus 35:2. The passage clearly states he should be put to death. Am I morally obligated to kill him myself?

    6. A friend of mine feels that even though eating shellfish is an abomination - Lev. 11:10, it is a lesser abomination than homosexuality. I
    don't agree. Can you settle this? Are there 'degrees' of abomination?

    7. Lev. 21:20 states that I may not approach the altar of God if I have a defect in my sight. I have to admit that I wear reading glasses. Does my
    vision have to be 20/20, or is there some wiggle room here?

    8. Most of my male friends get their hair trimmed, including the hair around their temples, even though this is expressly forbidden by Lev.19:27. How should they die?

    9. I know from Lev. 11:6-8 that touching the skin of a dead pig makes me unclean, but may I still play football if I wear gloves?

    10. My uncle has a farm. He violates Lev. 19:19 by planting two different crops in the same field, as does his wife by wearing garments made of two
    different kinds of thread (cotton/polyester blend). He also tends to curse and blaspheme a lot. Is it really necessary that we go to all the trouble of getting the whole town together to stone them? - Lev.24:10-16. Couldn't we
    just burn them to death at a private family affair like we do with people who sleep with their in-laws? (Lev. 20:14)

    I know you have studied these things extensively and thus enjoy considerable expertise in such matters, so I am confident you can help.

    Thank you again for reminding us that God's word is eternal and unchanging.

  373. Because the books says so? ;) by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    The book says something and you believe it? Ok. I was raised in the former USSR and I was taught not to believe everything that I breathe (thanks Beck.)

    Read between the lines. God is love: love for what? God is most certainly boredom and insanity but he is supreme and allmighty so he creates things for himself to play with. He creates a notion of 'love', which means absolutely nothing because he can only love himself until he creates other things to love. Obviously he loves those other things - he created them. He is a narcissist who enjoys himself and his creations so much because there is nothing else anyway. Of-course he loves what he creates. To behave otherwise would be to admit that what he creates is crap and since there is nothing else but him he has nothing to compare himself against.

    God is not love god is a sick puppy with an infinite amount of time on his allmighty hands and nothing useful to do - he doesn't need to survive, he is all and indistructable. I pitty him.

    but then again, I am an atheist so I don't believe it exists in the first place. Prove it/he/she to me scientificall or give me a good deal of repeatable empirical evidence and I will believe than, the same way I believe Carbon is heavier than Hydrogen.

    1. Re:Because the books says so? ;) by bflong · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry that your life was so miserable that you think that way of God. Perhaps the orthidox church's hypociritcal actions put you off to the whole concept of God. I can't help you by typing. What I can tell you is that people I call my Brothers and Sisters we sent to syberia by the Soviet Governmet becouse of thier faith. Many died for it.
      Hitler did the same thing. So did many, many other governments, inculding the USA.
      There is nothing else I can do for you. I pray that you find someone to talk to about this.

      Knock Knock

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    2. Re:Because the books says so? ;) by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      No it has nothing to do with church or any religion. I am a thinking atheist by choice. Church has no meaning and no significance to me one way or another.

      Good luck to you, sir.

    3. Re:Because the books says so? ;) by bflong · · Score: 1

      I am a thinking atheist

      And by this you imply that if you are not an atheist you are not thinking? Hebrews Chapter 11 verse one says "Faith is the assured expectation of things hoped for, the evident demonstration of realities though not beheld." The rest of that chapter defines faith even clearer.
      You can't have faith if you don't think. You must think in order to reason on the 'evident demonstrations' if you are to attain it. Anyone who says differently is either believing purely on emotion, which is a very weak thing, or is trying to mislead.

      --
      Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
    4. Re:Because the books says so? ;) by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      No, you misunderstood me. Often enough people equate atheism with a religion and I understand what they mean. There are people who 'believe' there is no god - it is a dogma for them, something that needs no prove, something to believe in.

      When I say a 'thinking atheist' I only mean one thing: atheism for me is not a religion, it is my choice that I made by thinking through various options.

  374. Re:Atheism also a religion by hahiss · · Score: 1

    Not all beliefs about the nature of the world are religious, and if you'd bother to read what I actually wrote, you'd see that there is a reason that atheism is not a *religion.*

    If you want to say that the denial of religious truths is a religious truth, knock yourself out. That doesn't make it a religion.

    Thanks for playing.

    --
    "Every decent man is ashamed of the government he lives under." - H.L. Mencken
  375. Not trolling, just curious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is it that the beliefs of every other world religion seem to escape the level of scrutiny that is exclusively reserved for Christianity? Why are their equally radical claims about the origin of life, the nature of God, and the nature of man given a pass in the name of multiculturalism and diversity? Honestly, which is more disturbing to you: someone having an opposing view about the origin of the universe or someone surgically removing a woman's clitoris and forcing her to cover her entire body and walk behind him in public?

  376. Applies to Fed Only by illumina+us · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's a shame how uneducated some people are. Seperation of Church and State only applies to what the Federal Government can/can't do. =/

    --
    -illumina+us "I put on my robe and wizard hat..."
    1. Re:Applies to Fed Only by Sanction · · Score: 1

      Wow, I didn't know that. When did they repeal the 14th amendment to make it apply only to the fed again?

      --
      Well I'm the doctor and I say you're dead, so shut up and take it like a man!
  377. However, the real issue is, what do we teach? by willCode4Beer.com · · Score: 1

    Well, I would say teach in context.

    Teach evolutionary theory in a science class because it is a scientific theory. Science classes are where science is generally taught. Lets test whether heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones.

    Teach ID in a philosophy class since its ideas are just reasoned out and have no basis on science. ID is more like the *reasoning* of the ancient philosophers. Its seems reasonable that heavier objects will fall faster than lighter ones, there's no need to test this by experimentation.

    A discussion on the birth place of a famous person is a discussion of two points in the same context. Comparing evolution and ID has no place in a science class because one of them is not science. It might make a nice discussion for the philosophy or theology class. It would make an even more interesting discussion in a psychology class (why people choose to accept or reject...).

    --
    ----- If communism is a system where the government owns business, what do you call a system where business owns govern
  378. falsifibiality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As far as falsifiabilty, both can be falsified. It is important to note, though, that intelligent design actually covers more territory to be falsified, so is understandably more difficult to falsify completely.

    Falsibiality doesn't mean to falsify the theory. It simply means the ability to create tests that can prove the theory wrong.

    It means the ability to say "if X happens, then this theory doesn't work". For example, the discovery of a feathered mammal would pose problems for the current theory of evolution.

    Religious arguments, on the other hand, completely reject the possibility of being wrong at all. Whatever proves ID wrong, outside of God himself coming out and saying it, ID could just incorporate it and go on.

    1. Re:falsifibiality by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

      Did you not read where I explained that both were falsifiable, but that doing so is incredibly difficult for both? I thought that pretty much showed that I understood the concept of falsifiability.

      In other words, both are incredibly hard to verify, because the test that could prove them false is hard to do?

      I think there are a lot of cases that weaken evolution - such as, for instance, the discovery of a mammal that lays eggs - but the actual proof is hard to come by. So is the proof that God didn't create things.

      And just to make sure when rereading my post you don't miss it again:
      proof that the universe was created another way would rule out intelligent design of life.
      proof that life was created another way would rule out evolution

      Short of those incredibly difficult finds, you're going to have a lot of trouble.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    2. Re:falsifibiality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "proof that the universe was created another way would rule out intelligent design of life"

      So you mean proving the negative of A means A is not true ? And you think that is a reasonable way to determine falsibiality ?

  379. Re:Thermodynamics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The second law of thermodynamics states that entropy increases overall. However, entropy can decrease for a portion of a system as long as entropy increases by more for another part of the system. Here is a quick example:

    Light from the sun (high temperature) strikes grass (low temperature). Grass uses some energy from sunlight to convert dirt+CO2 to sugars. Not all the energy can be used for sugar creation, so the rest of the energy (waste heat) is radiated away (into the atmosphere, and eventually into space). Now, the entropy of the plant has decreased, but the entropy of the solar system as a whole has increased due to the waste heat radiated into space.

    Understand now?

  380. Meta Analysis by 4of12 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Looks to me like a long-time successful meme (Christianity, 2k years old) competing with a new competitor (scientific method, 400 years old, but not recognized as a competitor until more recently.

    Basically, these systems are competing for core memory in the individuals and in societies.

    Both of them create a way of interpreting reality that provides different costs and different benefits to their adherents.

    It will be interesting to see how this plays out. It will become very intense in the next few decades, I think, as the progress of science enables knowledge and technology to do things that were unimaginable even a hundred years ago.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
    1. Re:Meta Analysis by f-f-f-f-fuuubar · · Score: 1

      Whether deliberate or not, this statement actually raises religious thought to the level of scientific pursuits. Science and (known) religions are not equivalent. Ever.

      Science simply is, because of its fundamental grounding in reality. The scientific method says, "reality exists, no matter what humans want or would prefer; therefore our tests must reflect reality, eliminate our intrinsic subjectivity and be demonstrable via replicable results to all." Religion says, "we assert certain beliefs, which you must accept in their entirety without question or dissent. (Oh, and we conveniently left out the problem that much of what we say cannot be proven by any means.)"

      Science is not about interpreting reality, it's about understanding it. Conservative Christiantity (which is what ID proponents are all from, not other branches) would argue to the death provable facts if they conflicted with doctrine. Let's not even begin to discuss the linguistic contortions with which supposed Biblical literalists pick and choose from the Bible, often to support a political point, not a moral one.

      Costs and benefits? The acquisition of knowledge, pursued scientifically and rigorously, is at odds with conservative Christiantity, which denies reality. Benefits of science: inarguable. Knowledge is knowledge, regardless of its use. Religious adherents can insist all they want that 1+1=5, but it won't make it true.

      I hope this isn't what you meant.

      --
      A sig is a waste of bits.
    2. Re:Meta Analysis by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      Science and (known) religions are not equivalent. Ever.

      They are if you are looking at the issue from a fairly dispassionate viewpoint: religion and the scientific method are just programming that human brains use to help them interpret reality.

      Science has a lot more long term potential IMHO because it always leaves open the questions and answers to more consistent logical explanations of perceived evidence (eg, moving from Galilean mechanics to Lorentzian). So, science can grow and adapt to explain more and more. But people are uncomfortable at an emotional level with questions that science does not answer. We humans are basically very upset at a visceral level about our own mortality and at the mortality of those whom we care about.

      Religions provide people with pat answers to difficult questions that are comfortable, complete (they satisfy closure if you adopt their point of view which is based on faith and not logic) and a curtailed view of events. Relgious frameworks resist change - indeed they typically impose strict guidelines to prevent them from changing and their immutability is part of their comfort and appeal.

      Once in a while (eg, consider the metamorphosis from Judaism to Christianity to Islam, not to mention later branches like the Latter Days Saints and the Jehovah's Witnesses), they do change and seem to provide adherents with something they may have found wanting in the previous belief framework.

      Christianity doesn't deny reality. It just provides a way of interpreting it. Eg, that catastrophic event that killed a loved one is part of a larger scheme by God and you can still feel safe because He's still in control and cares about you. It satisfies a deep-seated emotional need of the human animal. If you're uncomfortable with Christian reliance on faith substituting for logic, well, that's your level of comfort with your programming. If you want to believe in your senses and what you call logic - well, go for it. Science's mission is not to comfort us, mere piles of biochemically active protoplasm.

      Science doesn't provide that kind of comfort to the human animal. But it provides a belief in sensory perception and a belief that logic can be used to understand how an independent reality functions and, ultimately, how we can alter that reality. Things aren't good or bad, nor is any resort made to extra-sensory or supernatural explanations. Evidence and reproducible experiments have value. Questions are allowed to be unanswered until the preponderance of evidence and logic are sufficient (yes, the preponderance is there already for some of the issues like geology and evolutionary biology - scientists are satisfied that current theories are based on evidence and logic).

      One of the interesting things is how the scientific method arose out of these other more restrictive memes.

      In the Judeo-Christian heritage, the Book of Job has provided a message of "Don't go assuming what God's will is." People still tend to short circuit lines of questioning by purporting to present God's will as an end to any line of questioning. But the theme of ignorance and errors committed by kings is perhaps enough of a thread to suggest that a more Greek-like pursuit of questioning is a better way to go. Especially considering how often the early nation of Isreal was afflicted by false prophets proclaiming "Thus saith the Lord..."

      "Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful."
      -- Seneca the Younger

      Science has not proven to be as useful in molding public opinion as has religion. Or functionally equivalent institutions, such as patriotic fervor. People that take their religion seriously regard patriotism (promoted by many politicians), materialism (capitalism, advertising themes), egotism as idol worship that distract people from God.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    3. Re:Meta Analysis by f-f-f-f-fuuubar · · Score: 1

      Now that has some meat on it. Some good reading. If your posting needed mod points I'd mod it up.

      I didn't get that from your first posting, however.

      --
      A sig is a waste of bits.
  381. SCI-FI explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if in the future we have enough technology to create pseudo-robots with primitive AI but capable to reproduce by itself and send them to Mars as part of an experiment. This robot is designed to survive in Mars's atmosphera and capable to consume its resources to produce energy. We provide its primitive AI with basic necessities and instincts but without knowledge about its origin.

    Will these robots in a far future create a slahdot site and disscus about the inteligent designer?

  382. Correction by Skye16 · · Score: 1
    Then all God has to do is say "okay" and blink and every animal but the two he chose could live.
    Err, substitute live with die.
  383. Here we go again, how many times now ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some things we'll never get, and some things we will get. This is a hotbed arena for discussion and debate, having been brought up so many times in the past, and so many people bringing their vocals to the board.

    Even Darwin himself said, loose paraphrasing, science should allow equal discussion of both sides. I've heard one pastor argue that evolution and creation are both religions (won't go to detail), based on semantics and definitions.

    Evolution is all around us?? Many would beg to differ. Not only this, but watch what y'all say for opinion, these are sensitive things. And clearly, everyone is using his / her brain, therefore exercising free will. Intelligent Design is not necessarily a science, but that doesn't mean it has less credibility. Weigh the two sides with an open mind, then state your position (easier said than done - don't start analysing with a preset mindset).

    Science still has issues dealing with the very extreme innards of the cell and the intricate mechanisms operating within, let alone DNA.

    And so what if it turns out that ID is in fact, fact and true? What if there exists an intelligent Creator? Get over it, get over yourself.

    1. Re:Here we go again, how many times now ?? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      If you want to teach naturalism vs. creationism in church then so be it. But ID isn't science. It is, in fact, anti-science. And there's nothing incompatible between believing in a Creator and accepting evolution (which does, in fact, happen all around us all the time). Only science should be taught in a science class.

      Oh, and holes in knowledge shouldn't be excuses for inserting your favorite mythology or superstition. Remember a god of the gaps can only get smaller.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Here we go again, how many times now ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there is an incompatibility between belief in Creator and belief in evolution. One is intelligence, while the other has no reference to intelligence (only adaptation). I don't think the two can be intertwined.

      Show that ID is not science; use no reference to religion or intelligent being, but simply the definition(s) of science. Show that evolution is science, along the same lines. Maybe I'm missing something.

      Desiring to understand something isn't an excuse to use something man-made and preach it as truth. Why not mention both sides. God is being placed further outside the picture; is this beneficial or detrimental to students? Should 'flaws' in evolution be mentioned or kept silent?

      Like I mentioned before, maybe I'm missing something or I'm just slow; give some examples of evolution occurring around us daily (including human beings).

    3. Re:Here we go again, how many times now ?? by cornjchob · · Score: 1

      Science still has issues dealing with the very extreme innards of the cell and the intricate mechanisms operating within, let alone DNA.

      Why is it that people in opposition to current theories always cite things like this? "Science still can't explain x", where x is something that current scientific theories have no answer for (semantics, people) or something whose explanation, however unforthcoming, is infact explainable via current scientific theories that are misunderstood by the person using this as a point. I'm unsure which case the parent post falls into, because nothing was cited and there were no specifics. But that, coupled with how it was phrased, makes me assume that the poster's posterior is doing most of the typing. With those concessions aside, it's time now for my actual shot: DNA is very very new on the Grand Scientific Timeline--it took millenia to understand the equations the govern the simplest physics on a macro scale, and you're citing that not having uncovered all the minuteia of the most miniscule interactions in a cell in a scant 50 years as cause enough to reconsider a scientific (read: provable) theory? Make your blowjob payable to Jay Straw, dumbass.

      To touch upon the "equal discussion" bit, however briefly, equal discussion isn't even really possible as another poster pointed out; ID,at its core, is not provable scientifically. It's a belief.

      --
      We now have confirmed reports from an informed Orange County minister that Ethel is still an active communist.
    4. Re:Here we go again, how many times now ?? by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      Ok, just explain this and maybe get somewhere scientifically. The sun loses 5 feet in diameter of nuclear material a day. Go back a few thousand years and the sun is slightly larger, but not a problem for life. Go back a few hundred thousand years -nevermind a million- and you have a sun so large that it heats the surface of the earth to a much hotter temp. than your oven on its highest setting. Being that every evolutionist thinks it took BILLIONS of years for life to evolve, this one fact alone takes all possibility of life making itself out of the realm of possibility.

    5. Re:Here we go again, how many times now ?? by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Where does this 5 feet in diameter crap come about? A single report, based on poor methodology, and contradicted by subsequent measurements and analysis.

      Plus, you've made a mindless extrapolation of one measurement to the arbitrary past.

      So let's see: one scientist measures a contraction of the sun, and immediately, that is incontrovertible. Meanwhile, hundreds or thousands of nuclear physicists work with radioisotopes using the same basic physics to understand stellar fusion, but that is all doubtful.

      Here's a tip: learn science from scientists, not from axe-grinding creationists.

    6. Re:Here we go again, how many times now ?? by cornjchob · · Score: 1

      Great showing, sickofthisshit. Furthermore I'd like to point out that our poster is missing the fact that life does in fact exist at such high and extreme temperatures, such as hot springs and deep sea vents--but of course, that information was probably in the reports his pastor didn't read outloud to the class^H^H^H^Hongregation.

      --
      We now have confirmed reports from an informed Orange County minister that Ethel is still an active communist.
  384. why does everyone assume ID about religion? by googisgod · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Look, let's face it. Science devolves into cosmology at some point. We can examine various subatomic particles and study them and write papers about them, but we can't prove how the original fundamental particles came into existence.

    Does that mean we can't study the particles we DO know about?

    The evolutionists who shout "religion!!!" at any hint of design are just as short sighted. Their claim is basically that random mutation and evolution MUST BE the thing that accounts for the existence of all life in the universe. Because they always bring up the "slippery slope" argument and say "well, if space aliens designed life on earth, then what designed the space aliens?"

    But I would ask- what difference does it make if the last 2 trillion generations of life were created by really smart engineers, and in the infinite distance we can never really know who or WHAT started the first spark of organization and life.

    And for the record, I think the concept of a God as written in the bible is 100% bullshit. I want to repeat that again- I THINK ALL ORGANIZED RELIGION IS PURE BULLSHIT. If you accuse me of being a bible thumper without re-reading this paragraph, then please go fuck yourself in the ass with a rusty nail and LEARN TO LISTEN.

    To ignore the possible branches of study that analyze life as a possibly designed structure, is pure folly. There are only two possible viewpoints of existence- either it had elements of design OR it is purely random. People that discount either possibility out of dogma are retarded and short-sighted.

    1. Re:why does everyone assume ID about religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have no idea what you are talking about.

      Other than the fact that you're obviously some religious nut trying to claim that ID doesn't have to mean Jesus and God.

      You aren't fooling anyone, you know. There are no ID supporters who aren't also fundamentalist christians/muslims/etc. Science has no place with ID. ID is nothing more than religion. ALWAYS.

    2. Re:why does everyone assume ID about religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And the whole argument of "well why would an intelligent designer put in an appendix" or other excuses about vestigal organs means NOTHING.

      Who's to say life on earth wasn't built with some sort of object-orientated language? Maybe some parts were easier just to leave in the source code than build a new creature from scratch? Maybe it's easier to design a few core life systems and let evolution take its course, rather than sitting down at the chalkboard and designing all 180 billion species of insect/plant/animal life on a planet?

      It's like arguing that since my '92 Honda Accord broke down after 300k miles that clearly there couldn't be a designer, because the car wasn't perfect.

      True ID doesn't claim the designer(s) were perfect and infallable Gods. It just claims they might have been really good engineers.

      If humans within then next 1000 years mange to start creating primative life from scratch, what will the evolutionist do then? Will they still claim that all life in the universe must have happened due to random chance?

      I don't believe in God either, but it is pretty amusing to see people who would otherwise claim to be open minded shout down any suggestion that evolution may not be the entire answer.

    3. Re:why does everyone assume ID about religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anyone who argues for ID and doesn't admit they are arguing for the existence of jesus is lying.

      i have never heard of a single ID proponent who wasn't secretly trying to argue for god. even sci-fi fans dont believe the ID/aliens crap.

      ID = religion and jesus and the bible. PERIOD. there is to be no discussion on this matter because anyone who disagrees with me is a religious moron.

    4. Re:why does everyone assume ID about religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Why does everyone assume ID is about religion?"

      You might as well suggest communal ownership of property and then wonder why everyone keeps bringing up these Marx and Lenin guys. Ideas have histories. Perhaps you ought to look into the history of debate on ID. Then you might understand why everyone keeps bringing up religion.

    5. Re:why does everyone assume ID about religion? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Because they always bring up the "slippery slope" argument and say "well, if space aliens designed life on earth, then what designed the space aliens?"

      Well? Answer please.

      To ignore the possible branches of study that analyze life as a possibly designed structure, is pure folly.

      It's folly because there is no evidence of a structure that was designed. Is it folly for astronomers to ignore the possibility that the universe was created last Tuesday, with everything intact?

      There are only two possible viewpoints of existence- either it had elements of design OR it is purely random.

      You are wrong. Evolution is not purely random. It is guided by selection pressures.

    6. Re:why does everyone assume ID about religion? by googisgod · · Score: 1

      there you did it, you went ahead and implied that i am espousing RELIGION. you just couldn't resist, because let's face it- you are completely incapable of accepting that someone who finds ID interesting may not be AT ALL religious. you people are amazingly dense. I can sit here and say "RELIGION IS BULLSHIT, I DO NOT BELIEVE IN JESUS OR ANY OF THOSE FAIRY TALES" yet within two microseconds of me questioning if life on earth spontaneously "happened" , you bring up religion. wow. btw- 200 years ago people were pretty certain that maggots spontaneously "appeared" on meat.

    7. Re:why does everyone assume ID about religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you make a mistake and respond to the wrong post? Let me restate what Yunzil's post said, down to the last word:

      Well? Answer please.

      It's folly because there is no evidence of a structure that was designed. Is it folly for astronomers to ignore the possibility that the universe was created last Tuesday, with everything intact?

      You are wrong. Evolution is not purely random. It is guided by selection pressures.


      Where in that post was RELIGION mentioned?

      If you made a mistake and meant to reply to a different post, perhaps you ought to apologize to Yunzil. Otherwise, everyone who reads this will assume you are a class-A dumbass.

    8. Re:why does everyone assume ID about religion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are wrong. Evolution is not purely random. It is guided by selection pressures.
      Just to confuse the debate a little more:

      A.
      The selection pressures, while appearing purposeful and meaningful on a small scale, are random on a large scale. Why? Because the selection pressures come from other selection pressures, and so on, which ultimately all come from random subatomic events. Randomness begets more randomness.
      B.
      Let us suppose that within a vast ocean of randomness form local pockets of organization that exist in space, like freak cellular automata.
      These blobs of life can either 1) expand 2) contract or 3) stabilize.
      Case 1) Expansion. Life is inherent in the material structure of the universe. Life appears out of nothing everywhere. Contradicted by A. Evolutionism.
      Case 1') Expansion. Life is not inherent in the material structure of the universe. But life has an increasing property. Same outcome as case 1, but not contradicted by A. Creationism from emptiness.
      Case 2) Contraction. Life is a transient phenomenon. There is an injection of life in the universe, and all goes downwards from then. Seems to disagree with the observation that life doesn't easily disappear. Creationism from fullness.
      Case 3) Stabilization. Life exists in a constant amount, and moves like a wave, neither decreasing nor increasing. Neither creationism nor evolutionism.

  385. That has been addressed. by khasim · · Score: 1
    Well, I'm not particularly qualified in science. However, the book I found most convincing from a scientific perspective was "Darwin's Black Box" by Michael Behe. Basically, his argument is that, at the micro level, many cellular functionas are irreducibly complex - that they require a host of different parts to work, none of which do anything independent of the rest. So, how would all these parts have evolved gradually when each of them was useless without the others?
    Simple, evolution happens over many millions/billions of years.

    What you see right now is nothing more than a snapshot.

    Cellular processes that are dependant upon each other also evolve over time. Each individual process can evolve and other processes can take advantage of the new functionality. Over time, they evolve to depend upon that functionality.

    Now, when you look at a snapshot, you don't see the many changes to each process that has been happening for millions/billions of years. All you see is the CURRENT inter-relationship.

    And THAT is the problem with all the "Intelligent Design" books and people.

    They are starting with their conclusion (complex systems are impossible without an Intelligent Designer) and then looking for complex systems that they then claim must have been Designed.

    The correct way (if this was science and not religion) would be to look for something that CONTRADICTED the hypothesis that it is impossible for complex systems to evolve.
    1. Re:That has been addressed. by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      The correct way (if this was science and not religion) would be to look for something that CONTRADICTED the hypothesis that it is impossible for complex systems to evolve.

      Not at all. It is entirely proper scientifically to try to falsify the hypothesis that complex systems can evolve, even if it seems certain that they did. How do you think that the current theories about punctuated equilibria evol... er.. developed? Rechecking previous work happens regularly in science. That is how mistakes are found, ironed out, and theories strengthened. Newton's theories seemed pretty tight until those cracks started showing. Admittedly it will grow tiresome to some, but if there is a genuine problem found it should be looked at. The work of the creationists and ID advocates will only serve to either improve current natural selection / evolutionary theory, or help replace it with something better, even if it causes considerable consternation in the process.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  386. And what about the Avian Lung by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does no one understand?

    The avian lung is constructed in such a manner to preclude step-by-step evolution from the reptillian lung. Unlike the reptillian lung, the avian lung is not a bellows, but a continuous throughput lung driven by separate air sacks that do not exchange gasses. Furthermore, the tiny passages in the lung cannot expand from a collapsed state, thus making the lung impossible to inflate upon birth, as is done in all other air-breathing vertibrates.

  387. GOD & Free Will is a contradiction. by katharsis83 · · Score: 1

    Assumption #1: God gave us free will. (because he loves us)

    Assumption #2: God is omniscient.

    Since God already knows all our future actions, we no longer have free-will; al our actions are pre-determined. So humanity's free will and God's omniscience are mutually exclusive; you can't have your cake and eat it too.

    1. Re:GOD & Free Will is a contradiction. by FuzzyDustBall · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Assumption #1: God gave us free will. (because he loves us)

      Assumption #2: God is omniscient.

      Since God already knows all our future actions, we no longer have free-will; al our actions are pre-determined. So humanity's free will and God's omniscience are mutually exclusive; you can't have your cake and eat it too.


      Im no bible thumper (I'm an agnostic) but your logic is flawed. God is omniscent meaing basicly everything happens at once now then and later are all the same. So in a sense everything has already happened in an omiscent beings eyes. So your statement is like saying everyone in the past didn't have free will because we know now what happend. They had free will at the time they made the choice.

    2. Re:GOD & Free Will is a contradiction. by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      People in the past had free will because AT THE TIME there was nobody who knew precisely what they were going to do. Nobody has the free will to change the past. If there exists an entity for which, right now, everything is "the past", then that does get in the way of free will.

      If god's alleged omniscience was reduced to merely being omniscient about what is happening everywhere NOW, rather than For All Time, the problem would go away.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  388. Finite Particles, Infinite Time by dunc78 · · Score: 1

    So if there are finite particles in this universe and an infinite amount of time, isn't there a probability of 1 that the particles will arrange themselves in the same orientation they are now at some point in the future and for that matter, infinitely more times in the future? So we will be right where we are now. Oh well, I'll finish this post then.

    1. Re:Finite Particles, Infinite Time by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1
      So if there are finite particles in this universe and an infinite amount of time, isn't there a probability of 1 that the particles will arrange themselves in the same orientation they are now at some point in the future and for that matter, infinitely more times in the future? So we will be right where we are now. Oh well, I'll finish this post then.

      Perhaps. Assuming that there aren't some kinds of local minima such that the particles become stuck in one orientation. On the other hand, there hasn't been an infinite amount of time. There has only been 17 thousand million, and 17,000,000,000 isn't larger than infinity, even for extremely large values of 17,000,000,000.

      -Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    2. Re:Finite Particles, Infinite Time by STrinity · · Score: 1

      So if there are finite particles in this universe and an infinite amount of time, isn't there a probability of 1 that the particles will arrange themselves in the same orientation they are now at some point in the future and for that matter, infinitely more times in the future?

      No. While time may be infinite, most (all?) particles have limited life-spans. Plus, as the universe expands, all the particles in it will be spread over an ever increasing volume.

      --
      Les Miserables Volume 1 now up with my reading of
    3. Re:Finite Particles, Infinite Time by dunc78 · · Score: 1

      Ok, how bout a finite number of the elementary units that make up particles and the fact that the universe isn't supposed to expand forever.

    4. Re:Finite Particles, Infinite Time by dunc78 · · Score: 1

      Well, wasn't the super dense clump of matter around forever? Maybe before it was a super dense clump of matter is was another universe. And maybe the 17,000,000,001st universe before this one is where we were last time we were talking about this. Well, I gotta go, the monkey wants to start typing Shakespeare again.

    5. Re:Finite Particles, Infinite Time by STrinity · · Score: 1

      Ok, how bout a finite number of the elementary units that make up particles

      They'll be around, but not in the form of protons, neutrons, and electrons, so they won't be able to form every possible combination, even given infinite time.

      and the fact that the universe isn't supposed to expand forever.

      Last I checked, universal expansion was speeding up. Do you have a contrary source?

      --
      Les Miserables Volume 1 now up with my reading of
    6. Re:Finite Particles, Infinite Time by dunc78 · · Score: 1

      Well, eventually, if they are around they would find combinations that form protons, neutrons, and electrons, and miscellaneous elements and then our world. Ok, don't have much time, but this http://www.thebigview.com/spacetime/universe.html is the first link I found. It says people aren't sure whether the universe will expand forever or if it will eventually contract. Seems like expansion and contraction would help make sure the elementary units get mixed up sufficiently that they could form the combination that they are in today.

    7. Re:Finite Particles, Infinite Time by STrinity · · Score: 1

      Well, eventually, if they are around they would find combinations that form protons, neutrons, and electrons, and miscellaneous elements and then our world.

      The Second Law of Thermodynamics would tend to disagree. It took the Big Bang to make those particles, so in the absence of second one, once they break down they'll stay broke.

      Ok, don't have much time, but this http://www.thebigview.com/spacetime/universe.html is the first link I found. It says people aren't sure whether the universe will expand forever or if it will eventually contract.

      Scientists are never sure of anything, but the current evidence points towards continued expansion.

      Seems like expansion and contraction would help make sure the elementary units get mixed up sufficiently that they could form the combination that they are in today.

      You're begging the question.

      --
      Les Miserables Volume 1 now up with my reading of
  389. ID is not a scientific conjecture - by definition. by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    This is not an insult, but simply a clarification. Part of the definition of a scientific conjecture is that it be falsifiable. Darwinian evolution as a theory on the evolution of life forms IS falsifiable. For instance, hard evidences of Larmarkian evolution would disprove it.

    However, ID by construction, cannot be disproved. Any contrary evidence (like Gould's quip for God's inordinate fondbess for beetles) can be parried with "that's the way it was designed" or "we are just too stupid to understand God's will". Furthermore, to fully disprove ID, one would be required to prove the nonexistence of a Designer - a logical impossibility.

    THAT is the fundamental reason that ID does not belong in a science class, but would be appropriate in the humanities or religion or anthropology - it is fundamentally a way to frame phenomena.

  390. so sue me by sal · · Score: 1

    No one had to go to court to get science to accept calculus. Or quantum theory. Many people rejected the big bang theory due to all the nasty problems in cosmology it raised. In the end it won out not because people wanted to believe it but because there was just too much evidence to reject it. Science rejected Relativity, then accepted it, then rejected parts of it.

    Science is self correcting.

    If ID has merit, then science will accept it. No matter how many problems it may raise. No matter how inconvenient it is. No matter how happy it might make the religious right.

    So WTF are the ID people trying to use the courts to get it taught? Because they know ID has no merit.

  391. Re:Atheism also a religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms, Debussy, Schubert, Tchaikovsky ... we certainly do.

  392. What's the deal with these (fundamentalists) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Its simple - they never learned the difference between different systems of belief. So they imagine that Science is a threat to religious belief.


    Clearly, if you try to bring religion into science class, the result will be the application of the scientific method to questions of faith.


    Only one thing will happen - the students will conclude religion is bunk.


    Enough of us in my generation did exactly this without actually confusing the two in the classroom in science class. The basic idea that the scientific method does not work on religous ideas was never discussed. The fundamentalists have not worked this out either and that's why they are trying to stamp out science in schools.


    Ironically, the forcing of this sort of bunkum into Science class could improve the teaching of science. There is too much emphasis on authority in School Science classes and not enough on students thinking through theories and seeking to test their validity for themselves.


    If they are encouraged to do the latter they will quickly recognize creationism as nonsense. They will also get an idea of how science can be perverted by politics which has always been a good thing to be aware of and especially in the current political climate in the US.


    So if you are in a position to work on a Science syllabus, try to emphasize scientific method over just learning facts handed down by authorities.

  393. No problem with church and state here. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1, Troll
    If the ACLU is against this, then I am for it! Look, it's a good idea to have different opposing viewpoints. How else are our young going to learn to choose what they believe is best? Truth is, this evolutionary theory, which you can claim has "time and time again" explained everything there is to know, is flawed. There are many holes and unexplained elements in this theory. Personally, I believe that evolution can and does exist, but as a component in a much more complex system created by (are you ready for this?) GOD! There is nothing wrong with teaching kids that: Some people think this; Some people think that; Some people think a combination of the two; You make up your own mind.

    Oh yeah, and if you're in the United States and you get horrified when "church and state" get mixed, here's a pop quiz for you: Which amendment states: "The separation of church and state shall not be abridged." I bet nobody on Slashdot will be able to figure this one out.

    *
    *
    *
    *

    Answer: The first amendment is not the answer. It reads: "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." Note that Congress, not public schools, is the entity mentioned in this amendment. Also note that the rule is: no law respecting blah blah blah or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. So don't tell me that's what the almighty Constitition states, because it doesn't.

    1. Re:No problem with church and state here. by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      "Look, it's a good idea to have different opposing viewpoints."

      Not when one of those viewpoints is valid science and the other viewpoint is unverifiable conjecture.

      "How else are our young going to learn to choose what they believe is best?"

      Well, let's see - there's this thing that a lot of parents put their children in on Sunday. A sort of "school" for religion. Maybe they could learn their religion there?

      "There are many holes and unexplained elements in this theory."

      As there are in any theory. That doesn't mean that ID is right. It's sort of like arguing "well, this car doesn't look like a Ford, so it must be a Chevy".

      ID is not right simply because evolution isn't 100% correct.

      "Which amendment states: "The separation of church and state shall not be abridged.""

      Which amendment states that you have an explicit right to prviacy? Which amendment states that the president has a right to a cabinet? Which amendment states that the Supreme Court has the right of judicial review?

      There are lots of things that are inferred from the Constitution. It's a terse document, and it's not intended to be a laundry list of every right that we have. That's why we have the 10th amendment.

      "I bet nobody on Slashdot will be able to figure this one out."

      Oh! You got me! It doesn't say "separation of church and state" in the Consitution. Of course, there are a *lot* of things that we adhere to that aren't in the Constitution. It's a baseline document, not the body of our law.

      You have to look at case law to understand the meaning of the Constitution. Apparently, you haven't learned the meaning of the word "precedent". I suggest you learn how our government really works before spouting off misinformed mistruths.

      "Note that Congress, not public schools, is the entity mentioned in this amendment."

      The restrictions in the Bill of Rights apply to state governments as well. And guess who is trying to make laws that force the teaching of religous beliefs in class?

      "So don't tell me that's what the almighty Constitition states, because it doesn't."

      I will tell you that's what the Constitution says because it is *exactly* what the Constitution says. Here we have a governmental institution attempting to establish a religous belief in the classroom.

      That sounds like "establishment of religion" to me.

    2. Re:No problem with church and state here. by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Why do people keep modding this crap up?

      First of all, there is something wrong with using public tax dollars to teach kids in public schools that your religious viewpoint is more valid. Your entire attack on the separation of church and state, which your assertions are based on is bunk. It's sheer fantasy, your conjecture about the Constitution is nothing but ignorance of the founding of this country. You should really be ashamed of yourself, claiming to be an American, but knowing so little about your own country.

      Here's a pop quiz, how is teaching that God kicked off evolution in public schools with public tax dollars not a government endorsement of a religious view? It seems that Jefferson, architect of our public schools, would have seen it that way. He argued for the separation of church and state in the Anti-Federalist papers. The term "separation of church and state" is used throughout the writings of the Founding Fathers in reference to the First Ammendment. What, do you think a bunch of heathens pulled this shit out of thin air?

      How is it that John Adams, one of the authors of the Federalist Papers signed the treaty of Tripoli as President (which was ratified unanimously by the Senate), when it contained the following statement (no 11 of 12) "As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion; as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquillity, of Mussulmen; and, as the said States never entered into any war, or act of hostility against any Mahometan nation, it is declared by the parties, that no pretext arising from religious opinions, shall ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries."?

      The entire thing is a page long, it's not like they missed this part. If you had any freaking clue about the factual history of the United States of America, you'd see what a load of crap your argument is. You'd respond with shock and horror anytime you saw it espoused. Your position is a slander upon the history of the US and what it means to be an American.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    3. Re:No problem with church and state here. by mikeg22 · · Score: 1

      The 14th Amendment extends the Bill of Rights to the states. Thats the answer to your first question. The answer to your second question is that the Supreme Court (working off writings of Thomas Jefferson to help framer intent) decided that the seperation of church and state was what "make no law respecting an establishment of religion" means.

  394. True ID is not religious! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Intelligent Design theory, in its true form, does not involve religion. It basically says, "Look, life forms employ efficient internal energy machines (mitochondria), auditory pattern matching systems (language/speech, birds that replicate sounds), complex light capture and processing systems (vision, ability to focus and adapt to light light levels and color balance, depth perception, motion detection, pattern recognition), wildcard foreign body detection and combat and antigen pattern propagation (immune system), self repair mechanisms (healing wounds), complex intersystem communications (nerves, hormones), various modes of locomotion, ...

    and the presence of these mechanisms *suggests* that *perhaps* life was designed, engineered, and mostly well planned. The chances of these mechanisms assembling themselves, even over billions of years, is slim. The fact that life has the capability to "fix" damage and combat previously unseen invaders, to me, indicates some degree of planning. (Teaching ID theory is very straightforward; it basically amounts to what you have just read. Don't attempt to identify the designing agent(s) -- it's unnecessary, we have no evidence, and you know the kind of controversy it leads to.)

    Now, religious folks catch wind of this new scientific-sounding theory and think, "Hey, let's use this as a wedge to drive our religious propaganda into schools!" So they put on their Intelligent Design coats and march forward.

    Ask them this: Why do you say there is a "Designer", singular? Couldn't there be multiple designers? Why do you capitalize Designer, He, Him, etc.? Do you believe this designer could have faults and is capable of making mistakes? Do you believe this designer worked entirely within the laws of matter and energy? The answers often indicate a religious bias in the ID proponent if he/she has such a bias.

  395. HHGTTG had it all along! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe that the entire Universe was in fact sneezed out of the nose of a being called the Great Green Arkleseizure.

    Can we start teaching our children that now! I swear it's true. Promise! They even have books about it (3 of them!) and a movie as well!

  396. The only thing I have to say is : by jmcwork · · Score: 1

    Platypus - Please Discuss.

  397. Re:Disagree! by symbolic · · Score: 1

    A person who says he is a Christian is a Christian.

    Remember the old saying, "actions speak louder than words"? Anyone can say they're Christian. Far fewer can put those words into action. Fewer still can do it with any degree of consistency. In fact, I'd question the motives of anyone who feels like they have to make a public spectacle of it.

  398. Douglas Adams quote... by nighthawk127127 · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Oh! I hadn't thought of that!" said God, and disappeared in a puff of logic.

    Then man went on to prove that black is white and got himself killed by a bus while crossing the street.

    --
    10100111001
    1. Re:Douglas Adams quote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're going to whore for the sake of getting your free ipod sig link into a busy thread, at least get the quote right.

      The man got himself killed on the next zebra crossing. The zebra crossing bit is kind of important to the whole black-is-white getting him killed.

    2. Re:Douglas Adams quote... by nighthawk127127 · · Score: 1

      I promise to you in all honesty that I wasn't trying to "whore" my sig (even though I would like a free iPod), and I apologize since it's been a year or two since I last read HHGTTG.

      --
      10100111001
  399. About 3 seconds on Google. by khasim · · Score: 1
    If there is a test of macro evolution that is successful, I would like to know about it. If there is a test of spot evolution that is successful, I would like to know about it.
    And about 3 seconds later with Google:
    http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB910_1.html

    Easy enough.
    I do not see evidence that natural selection has removed people with vision problems from the gene pool.
    And why would it? You don't understand the theory of evolution.

    How does my wearing glasses make me less likely to survive?
    It has also done nothing about ugly or stupid people.
    Again, you don't understand evolution. Very few humans are below 20 IQ now.

    Go back a million years or so and you'd find very few animals with above a 20 IQ.

    Evolution.
    In other words, the testing issue has been weak on both sides.
    Check the URL I provided. Do more research. It's easy to show how fast breeding species can be forced to evolve into none interbreeding colonies.

    That is evolution. That has been tested. That has been documented.

    Claiming that it hasn't happened won't make it go away.
    If the ID was done by something that is external to our realm of existence (ie a 3-D entity acting upon a 2-D) what is to say that our concept of creation/design and existence has any relevance in the other realm of existance?
    Which results in infinite recursion. Who Designed the Designers?

    If they could just spontaniously appear, then why not the universe we see?
    Just because something is potentially beyond our scope of comprehension does not mean it does not exist.
    The same can be said of Santa and Bigfoot and the Easter Bunny.

    What you are describing is a RELIGION. Not science.
    1. Re:About 3 seconds on Google. by rakjr · · Score: 1

      You have pointed to an example of micro evolution. There is no dispute about the existance of micro evolution. The evolution forms in question are macro/spot/hyper evolution, and as I stated at present, there is no example of these.

      With respect to vision, poor vision is a weakness. If the point of natural selection is removing weakness then when is it going to start? Even "fatal" genetic problems have not been selected out. (the ugly and stupid part was a little bit of tongue-in-cheak sorry if I was not being off beat enough, my humour gene isn't too strong).

      With respect to the fast breeding/quick changes these are still only examples of micro evolution. As stated in the article, a fly is still a fly. Macro evolution is about a fly becoming a higher order life form.

      orig. - If the ID was done by something that is external to our realm of existence (ie a 3-D entity acting upon a 2-D) what is to say that our concept of creation/design and existence has any relevance in the other realm of existance?

      response. - Which results in infinite recursion. Who Designed the Designers?


      Actually, that assumes that existance within the other realm is also linear.

      orig. - Just because something is potentially beyond our scope of comprehension does not mean it does not exist.

      response - The same can be said of Santa and Bigfoot and the Easter Bunny. What you are describing is a RELIGION. Not science.


      And ignoring an answer which is potentally the truth is science? Imagine if aliens came to the earth after mankind was dead. Some alien scientist wonders, are all these natural or were they designed. He gets ingored because that is religion not science (assuming they have nothing similar to genetic engineering).

      Science is about attempting to determine truth. If design/direct manipulation is automatically discounted as weakminded anti-science, then don't expect aliens to ever give us credit for the same. It also goes without saying you have just classified "scientists" who design/direct as being in the realm of religion instead of science.

      Just like the study regarding the underwater rock formations. It is a design vs. nature question. It should investigated with a mind set that both are potentially true until proven false.

      --
      In a place beyond time and space, in a land far better than this, look for me there...
    2. Re:About 3 seconds on Google. by J05H · · Score: 1
      With respect to the fast breeding/quick changes these are still only examples of micro evolution. As stated in the article, a fly is still a fly. Macro evolution is about a fly becoming a higher order life form.

      You, sir, are changing the goal posts. "Macro evolution" has a specific meaning: "Large-scale evolution occurring over geologic time that results in the formation of new taxonomic groups." That includes speciation along with larger-order changes. Speciation doesn't even occur on geologic scales, it has been observed in and out of the lab many times. Drosophilia, aquatic worms, certain flowers, every domesticated crop, check out the talk.origins fact for actual cited science on this. Speciation, in fact not rhetoric, is COMMON, hence the incredibly diverse biota on Earth. No cite, but I've heard that humans have changed physically in recorded history: Roman writers record that men could, in that time, pull their testicles up into their body. Show me an modern human that can do that.

      Science isn't about determining truth, it is about understanding the natural world and applying that knowledge. "Truth" is elusive and spiritual.

      Genetic engineering has no more to do with religion than writing evolving computer code.

      this message brought to you by the Old Poster's Club.

      josh

      --
      gigantino.tv - Heavy but weighs nothing.
  400. A great, random work of art. by RealSalmon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I found a beautiful painting of a great landscape in the ditch the other day. It was absolutely perfect and beautiful.

    I imagine that it was probably created when a paint truck drove by and hit a rock that was in that road, causing some of the paint to spill out. I never did find the rock, but I'm sure it was there.

    The wind and the rain must have blown and swirled the paint in just such a way that the clear images I saw in the painting were exquisitly displayed . . . although it was clear, calm, and sunny when I found it.

    I'm still not sure where the canvas came from, but I imagine that I'll figure it all out one day.

    --

    -B

    1. Re:A great, random work of art. by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      I found a beautiful painting of a great landscape in the ditch the other day. It was absolutely perfect and beautiful. ...

      I can only assume that you are suggesting that exquisitely complex and internally consistent things cannot come out of random chance. This shows your complete mis-understanding how evolution works. Evolution is a directed process. That is, in your example, instad of all of these things happening spontaneously all at once, you have 3 billion years of self-replicating "paintings" trying and failing to produce your "beautiful landscape" and at each stage if one of them gets just one more tiny leaf of a tree in this landscape right, it gets to become a base for the next generation of more refined paintings. Repeat this countless billions of times and presto: exquisite landscape by the side of the road for you to find.

    2. Re:A great, random work of art. by RealSalmon · · Score: 1

      That is, in your example, instad of all of these things happening spontaneously all at once, you have 3 billion years of self-replicating "paintings" trying and failing to produce your "beautiful landscape"

      Except that you don't really have 3 billion years, do you? No, because evidence shows that the conditions suitable for life only existed for a tiny fraction of geologic history.

      And the painting isn't really *trying* to do anything, is it? Things are just happening (errors, mainly), and if environmental conditions dictate those errors to be favorable at that time, then those changes are propagated to the next generation.

      That is what I was suggessting. If you think that such an absolutely complete and beautiful work of art could be created by such conditions (even given a nearly infinite timespan), so be it. If you think instead that a skilled artist directed his brush, applied paint to empty canvas, took his time, and created a masterpiece, so be it.

      --

      -B

    3. Re:A great, random work of art. by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Except that you don't really have 3 billion years, do you? No, because evidence shows that the conditions suitable for life only existed for a tiny fraction of geologic history.

      Err, actually it was 3 billion or so. Earth is estimated to be 4 billion years old, pre-bacterial/bacterial life is believed to have evolved for about 3 billion years until finally a cell structure became available out of which multi-cellular organisms could form. The trial and error combinations accross trillions upon trillions of generations each made up of trillions upon trillions of cells is staggering.

      And the painting isn't really *trying* to do anything, is it? Things are just happening (errors, mainly), and if environmental conditions dictate those errors to be favorable at that time, then those changes are propagated to the next generation.

      These conditions determine the direction of evolution. Just as you arbitrarily decided that the vector of evolution of a "painting" should be towards "beautiful landscape" to which I oblidged by specifying the appropriate evolutionary criteria.

      That is what I was suggessting. If you think that such an absolutely complete and beautiful work of art could be created by such conditions (even given a nearly infinite timespan), so be it. If you think instead that a skilled artist directed his brush, applied paint to empty canvas, took his time, and created a masterpiece, so be it.

      This is a classic cop-out. First "complete and beautiful" is an arbitrary, subjective criterion. What is "complete and beautiful" to one person, is "kitsch" to another. Furthermore, it was you who framed it in such terms, I can only guess to try to leave an escape hatch opened to esoteric talk about an "artist" in case someone managed to challenge your "common sense" attempt at discrediting evolution. If you want to keep religion in the realm of never-never land of fantasy and conjecture, you will find no argument from me. But if you attempt to project it onto things that can be subjected to scientific discovery, expect to be made to follow the rules of the playing field you are on.

    4. Re:A great, random work of art. by RealSalmon · · Score: 1

      This is a classic cop-out. First "complete and beautiful" is an arbitrary, subjective criterion. What is "complete and beautiful" to one person, is "kitsch" to another. Furthermore, it was you who framed it in such terms, I can only guess to try to leave an escape hatch opened to esoteric talk about an "artist" in case someone managed to challenge your "common sense" attempt at discrediting evolution. If you want to keep religion in the realm of never-never land of fantasy and conjecture, you will find no argument from me. But if you attempt to project it onto things that can be subjected to scientific discovery, expect to be made to follow the rules of the playing field you are on.

      Spare me. "Complete and beautiful" are words I chose to use. If you don't agree, great. My point is the in demonstration of the complexity of living organisms. If you weren't so determined to make me out to be a bible thumping ignoramos, maybe you could have seen that

      Esoteric? What's esoteric about it? Any fool knows I was referring too. It was quite clear. It would make you more comortable if I said The LORD, yes? There I've said it. Maybe now you can stop with the ever classic poo-pooing of ideas that don't agree with what you believe to be unquestionable fact.

      As far as following the rules go, let's stick with the ever faithful scientific method. You can show me real experimental evidence that proves how the chemical precursors to life happened to have come about in the violent environment of pre-life earth? And don't tell me about the papers where molecular pre-cursors are subjected to a single stimulus, after which the products are whisked out of solution and/or protected from further stimulus and degradation. Those don't do anything but prove my point that the sequence of events across time that lead to what we have today were directed by an Intelligent Designer (or The LORD God, if that makes you more comfortable).

      --

      -B

    5. Re:A great, random work of art. by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Really? What a fascinating story!
      I hope you do realise though what you describe there has about as much in common with the process of evolution as throwing a stone in the air has with the process of flight..

      I've often heard analogies like yours, which claim to describe evolution - at least you didn't use the "tornado goes through a junkyard and leaves in it's wake a fully assembled Boeing 747" one, but it's basically the same claim.

      First things first. What does the theory of evolution tell us about the origins of life on Earth?
      Think very carefully....
      That's right, the answer is... Nothing!

      Evolution tells us about species, and all the weird and wonderful ways life came to manifest itself after it came to exist on this planet, but doesn't concern itself one jot with how that happened.

      Evolution is also a directed process. Not consciously directed, but directed nonetheless.
      Have you ever seen a snowflake under a microscope? It looks like a fantasically intricate crystalline structure of ice, symmetrical and quite remarkable. A complex shape indeed - and it certainly didn't come about by chance. Nor, however, did it come about at the hands of a deliberate ice sculptor.
      Instead, it was directed in it's formation by forces that exist in it's environment.
      That is much the same way as evolution is a directed process.
      The main "directing" factor in evolution is death.
      A short necked giraffe wouldn't live very long, as it wouldn't be tall enough to reach the leaves from the trees, and would starve, while the long necked giraffes would do just fine.
      So, what becomes of these poor short necked giraffes? Well, they live shorter lives, so fewer of them get the chance to mate.. there are fewer offspring, and over time, they die out.
      On the other hand, if you're a giraffe, a long neck is a definite advantage, as you have access to a much bigger stock of food.
      Result - when food is scarce you'll do better, having access to all the leaves avaliable rather than to have to compete with the shorties for the leaves at the bottom of the tree.
      Result? You "live long and prosper", probably getting loads of whatever the giraffe equivalent of hot chicks is, and passing on your long necked genes to your offspring.

      See how it works?
      Those with the advantages survive and reproduce, thereby passing on those advantages. Those without the advantages die out. Over time the advantages become more and more pronounced through this type of selection.
      Result? Weird, wonderful, and diverse varieties of life on Earth, and no need for some invisible man in the sky to put it all together.
      Isn't the world an amazing place?

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    6. Re:A great, random work of art. by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      My point is the in demonstration of the complexity of living organisms.

      Which in your view prohibits their incremental, spontaneous development..

      As far as following the rules go, let's stick with the ever faithful scientific method. You can show me real experimental evidence that proves how the chemical precursors to life happened to have come about in the violent environment of pre-life earth? And don't tell me about the papers where molecular pre-cursors are subjected to a single stimulus, after which the products are whisked out of solution and/or protected from further stimulus and degradation. Those don't do anything but prove my point that the sequence of events across time that lead to what we have today were directed by an Intelligent Designer (or The LORD God, if that makes you more comfortable).

      Right. Next thing you will ask me to "prove" to you how it worked by producing a time machine and transporting you backwards in time to the precise moment and place where that occured...

      So let me repeat: 3 billion years of reactions in a vast (planetary-sized) pool of chemical goo, with miriads of varying conditions between places is rather hard to simulate experimentally in the lab. Instead, mathematical models are developed which describe the process in compressed time-scale but as necessity, lose the precision to describe fine-grained details such as the chemical composition of molecules. That is how it is with the "theory" of evolution. A model which explains experimental evidence and is able to predict with great accuracy the behaviour of the process in current conditions.

      By your logic, Sun does not exist, because noone was able to replicate in a lab the complete set of fusion reactions, combined with neccessary mass to effect sufficient gravitational force and did not wait a few billion years to see how did it work out...therefore the only explanation is: "God made it!", no?

    7. Re:A great, random work of art. by RealSalmon · · Score: 1

      Have you ever seen a snowflake under a microscope? It looks like a fantasically intricate crystalline structure of ice, symmetrical and quite remarkable. A complex shape indeed . . .

      Actually, no. A snowflake isn't the least bit complex. It's highly repetitive and involves very little complexity. Their form and function have remained essentially unchanged throughout geologic histroy. So to use your rather childish tone . . . What has that to do with evolution? Nothing.

      The main "directing" factor in evolution is death. . . . A short necked giraffe wouldn't live very long, as it wouldn't be tall enough to reach the leaves from the trees, and would starve, while the long necked giraffes would do just fine.

      Again, no. The driving force being evolution is competition. Not death. If you apply your own theory, then a long necked giraffe came from a short necked creature. That short necked creature must have done just fine with a short neck, at least for a time, or else there would have been no long necked giraffes. But it's really not that simple . . . although I'm sure you'd like it to be in order to explain it to a foolish bible bumpkin such as myself . . . because with that longer neck comes decided disadvantages. For one, decreased ability to hide from predators. Also is the fact that as an aerobic organism's size increases, so do the difficulties associated with diffusion of oxygen. That means that the ability to sustain high speed runs in order to escape from predators is significantly reduced. To use your childish tone once again . . . See how that works?

      And I'm inclined to agree with you on the mechanism for change. . . we just disagree on the overseeing force. I think that the series of mutations creating that long neck was directed by The Lord. You seem think they happened by chance error, and that mistake happened to be favorable according to the environment.

      Those without the advantages die out.

      Really? Does the fossil record show that? No. The fossil record shows that most species die off in huge, cataclysmic events.

      --

      -B

    8. Re:A great, random work of art. by RichardX · · Score: 1

      First off, it seems I maybe antagonised you a little with the style of my first post - if so, let me apologise.
      Likewise, if anything in this post offends it's not intentional.

      My point with the snowflake isn't that it's such a complex shape (I rather overemphasised that), but that it is considerably more complex than it's initial form.

      You say that the driving force in evolution is competition, but competition doesn't actually achieve anything in itself. Winning or losing a competition makes absolutely no difference on it's own. It's the result, the "prize", if you like, of the competition that matters.

      The prize, in this case, is life... the price of 'failure' is death.

      As you say, the short necked giraffe did just fine until the long necked one came along - with the advent of the long necked giraffe came competition, and with competition came death. Competition is definitely one of the major components in deciding who lives and who dies, but not the only one, and so I stand by my original statement that death is the main directing factor in evolution.

      In regard to traits such as a long neck having both advantages and disadvantages, you're spot on there. When you get a new trait, you take your chances with it, and it's pretty rare that a trait is ever either wholly good or wholly bad.

      Ultimately though, a trait can be "totalled up" as being either a net advantage, or a net disadvantage. Do the pros outweight the cons, or vice versa?

      As you say, we appear to agree on the mechanism (selection by death/reproduction) for change, but disagree on the force directing mutation.

      At this point you say that you see the overseeing force as being that of God, deliberately mutating these creatures over successive generations to produce the desired result.
      This raises a few questions in my mind:
      Firstly, the form of the creature is dictated purely by God's will. That means it doesn't necessarily need to have any relation to the environment it lives in other than God choosing to make it fit.
      For example, if he chose to, God could have made it so that giraffes live in the Sahara, or the Atlantic, or anywhere else their necks would serve no useful purpose to them.
      Except, as we've already established, that wouldn't work due to their being horribly disadvantaged in such an environment they would die out... ..but you also refute that, saying that there's little or no evidence for species dying out due to disadvantage in the fossil record, with them instead being wiped out by catastrophe.

      So what does that leave us with? God is forced to play by the rules of evolution. Breaking any of these rules won't get him anywhere (as explained above), so he has to just go along and act like he isn't there.

      As far as I can tell then, a world which came to be this way by Evolution (random mutation + selection), and a world which came to be this way by God's hand (divine mutation + selection) would be indistinguishable. In which case, we're back to good old Occam's Razor.
      So what, other than pure faith, leads you to believe it's God at work here?

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    9. Re:A great, random work of art. by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Whoops.
      the bit about Giraffes living in the Atlantic was meant to say "Antarctic", not "Atlantic".. but come to think of it, either seems an equally unlikely environment.

      Why do I always notice them half a second AFTER I hit "submit"? :)

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    10. Re:A great, random work of art. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As far as following the rules go, let's stick with the ever faithful scientific method. You can show me real experimental evidence that proves how the chemical precursors to life happened to have come about in the violent environment of pre-life earth?


      Evolution is not abiogenesis. Evolution says nothing about the origin of life. Evolution assumes the presence of life.
    11. Re:A great, random work of art. by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Physics and chemistry are not random. Sure, you put a mole of oxygen in a tank with two moles of hydrogen and each atom will react with a randomly chosen partner. But the end result is water - every time!

      The chemistry of DNA is likewise also not random.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
  401. make it stop!!!! by comet69 · · Score: 0

    I wish people would stop taking for granted the fact that we have freedom of speech in the first place, which allows them to preach all they want about how incorrect the school systems are..

    everyone is looking for someone or something to blame for the corruption of the youth and its total bullshit..

    Parents also need to understand that its THEIR American right to teach THEIR kids about whatever the hell they want regarding religion, so therefore they should take advantage of that, instead of trying to stop the knowledge of science from being spread around the world, and learned properly..

    --
    - Hi I'm Linus Torvalds and I pronounce Linux, Lih-nix..
    1. Re:make it stop!!!! by comet69 · · Score: 0

      they need to be teaching kids more about their rights as american citizens rather than trying to make them into robots who conform to one stupid ignorant fucking belief..

      --
      - Hi I'm Linus Torvalds and I pronounce Linux, Lih-nix..
  402. Get NABLA in those textbooks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ROFL

  403. both sides too religious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is some heresy for you. Both sides are too religious in this debate. There certainly are elements within the Christian community who will attack anything vaguely scientific that might not support their interpretation of Christianity. However, we can't deny that the there are also elements within the scientific community who are just as narrow minded, and will reflexively attack anything that sounds religious. Both sides are willing to ignore or brush aside anything that doesn't work in their world view.
    The way I see it evolution is a very useful model. Certainly explains a great deal of what I observe in nature. It is also an incomplete theory. That means that there are aspects of the natural world that are not explained by traditionally evolutionary theory. So what? Why do some scientists seem unwilling to admit that the evolutionary model is incomplete and will be futher developed as time goes by? That is pretty much the truth for every other model out there. There was a time when people argued over whether light was a particle or a wave. Both models had evidence in their favor, but also limitations. As time when by smart scientists were able to come up with another model that worked even better and the old wave-versus-particle dispute became pointless.
    The evolutionary model is similar. It is a great model and also has failings. Trying to make the model into the ultimate truth or ultimate evil is just silly. Like I said, both sides are too religious on this one.

    1. Re:both sides too religious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So simple, yet so profound.

  404. school boards, intelligent design, liability issue by mysticgoat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Should school boards be required to look at potential liability issues when considering whether to incorporate intelligent design into science curricula?

    My thinking is that if a school district begins to teach intelligent design as an alternative to the theory of evolution, it could be held culpable for the failure of its graduated students to achieve in the realms higher education and/or technological training. There might be massive class action suits by former students who can demonstrate statistically that they were unable to get the high paying jobs that students in similar schools with sound science curricula were able to get.

    I envision an argument something like this: the conflation of the scholastic reasoning of intelligent design with the empiricism of the scientific method had damaged the student's minds (or "reasoning", or "cognitive ability") to the degree that they were unable to compete successfully with students from other school districts in acquiring technological skills. Directly measured damages could be the costs of remedial schooling and the loss of income potential for those years that they played catch-up.

    I think there would also be very fertile ground for developing punitive damages, since the School Board could probably be shown to be egregiously negligent in causing this situation (purposefully blind to the risks they were putting the students in, despite being charged with minimizing those risks). And as I write this, I begin to wonder whether individual School Board members might be charged with criminal negligence for the recklessness they exhibited toward their obligations of office.

    It seems to me that if this line of reasoning is widely distributed now, it would increase the likelihood of success of the class action suits that might be brought in five or ten years. And might also cause School Boards to pause and consider this concern now, and therefore decrease the number of such potential suits later on.

    I would dearly love to hear from PJ or other paralegals or lawyers about this.

  405. Summing it up: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are three main kinds of tought:

    1- God made the world exactly as Bible tells us; evolution is a lie
    2- Evolution is a fact and was planned by God
    3- Evolution is a fact by itself. There is no God

    . In a non passionate analysys, evolution is a fact
    . Actual data shows clearly that the Bible explanation is not feasible as literal facts.
    . In the bottom line, evolution happens by a combination of random genetic changes and favorable environmental conditions
    . Evolution has produced astonishingly complex structures, wich require millions or even billions of righ changes happening in the right sequence and in the righ environment
    . Some people claim this complexity cannot be achieved by random, so God is the explanation
    . Some people claim they were in fact achieved by random, so God is not an explanation
    . No one up to now came up with actual proof of either claim.

    So, if we want to be really scientific, options 2 and 3 need to be considered.

    1. Re:Summing it up: by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      It is a shame that people are so concerned about religious people. There is plenty of facts that can be taken to 'prove' either side of the argument. Once you introduct the catastrophy theories, all age, fosil, dating methods are easily explaned.

      This is the fundamental problem with the scientific method. You start with a theory and try to prove it. You can always find a way to prove you point if you look hard enough.

      Religious people have NOT handled themselves properly in this and many other debates, but the fact remains that no origin theory is without error. Teaching ID is just as good a theory as teaching evolution. I fully think that both should be taught.

      Just because some people of faith look to the bible for the "Missing pieces" of the ID theory, doesn't mean it is a worthless theory. It has just as much merit as evolution.

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
  406. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  407. Re:Not quite (Close but not quite) by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    You are correct in stating that two species developing long pointy fingers do not develop matching DNA. However, two species that share a common ancestor that has short stubby fingers, who go on to develop long pointy fingers (from those short stubby ones) will have very similar DNA as related to finger length (there are only so many genes related to finger length in organisms with a shared ancestor).

    You are also correct in that looks don't figure into relatedness. A shark and a dolphin look very similar but have significant differences in DNA.

    On the otherhand, there is quite a bit of shared DNA among all living creatures. This means that somewhere, various organisms shared common ancestors.

    The problem with using DNA to delineate common ancestors is that it is all based on probabilties. Even paternity testing is not 100% accurate unless there is an abnormal gene that is passed on and that is only one generation removed. The results are always given as a probability, because there is always room for a slight error.

    But as the generations expand between the ancestor and the individual, those slight errors can introduce major deviations.

    Now mitochondrial RNA is very interesting, as it is only passed on by the mother. I believe it created quite a stir a number of years back, when Newsweek ran an article that all humans alive today shared a common maternal ancestor 10,000 years ago. If I recall, they called her "Eve."

    Of course, once again, the research relied heavily on probabilities, as does all DNA/RNA extrapolations. This isn't a fault, but it always needs to be kept in mind when evaluating research or test findings.

  408. The Obvious Answer Can Never Be The Truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firstly, I think I should mention that I am a believer. I believe that God created the Universe and that the Earth is only around 6000-8000 years old. Creationists have one thing wrong: no matter what they do, they will never be able to convince somebody of the existence of God if they are unwilling to accept it. Evolutionists have the same problem, but I feel much more dismayed at the behavior of Creationists due to my beliefs. I personally believe that everything proves the existence of God, and that it is the most obvious thing in this world; man, in his finite wisdom, tries to break everything down into things he can more likely control (science), but all that we do is point our eyes in the wrong direction. That is the foundations of science. If an answer is obvious, it's probably "wrong" and will never be accepted by the scientific community; this is because an obvious answer cannot easily be further broken down into yet more fundamental concepts, which is a practice scientists love too much. In this way, our modern day "science" does not meet its own definition; true science carefully considers all possibilities, even if one of the possibilities doesn't lend itself to easy analysis. Besides this, I see no reason for Creationism to be any less valid than Evolution. Anybody care to actually address this?

    1. Re:The Obvious Answer Can Never Be The Truth by comet69 · · Score: 0

      i agree with you completely.. however the issue is more directed towards wether or not they should allow to teach the evolutionary process in schools..

      i believe it should be allowed.. because its not anybody's right to say its NOT allowed.. its our right as americans to teach our kids our religion, and its our KIDS right to let them decide for themselves what they wish to believe...

      --
      - Hi I'm Linus Torvalds and I pronounce Linux, Lih-nix..
    2. Re:The Obvious Answer Can Never Be The Truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, who's to say it's just religion? If there's a chance that it's true, then it's a theory, just like any other form of science.

    3. Re:The Obvious Answer Can Never Be The Truth by comet69 · · Score: 0

      well see, we KNOW evolution is REAL because we've seen things evolve right in front of our very own eyes.. evolution is a real thing and thats a fact..

      however this does not necessarily mean that humans were created from evolution... Teaching kids that we CAME from evolution seems to be what we're arguing about.. i don't have an opinion on that because its too crazy and i think we're not supposed to know the truth at this point in time any way..

      kids need to learn about evolution because its a simple and gerenal scientific fact in association to living organisms and other creatures that we've monitored for sight of their evolution..

      maybe we did, or maybe we did not come from evolution.. but it is quite ignorant to say that evolution does not exist.. therefore it needs to be tought in a more generic way.. and not making it the ANSWER or BLAME for this given situation..

      --
      - Hi I'm Linus Torvalds and I pronounce Linux, Lih-nix..
    4. Re:The Obvious Answer Can Never Be The Truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, but I think the issue is whether it is right to teach macro-evolution. We have never witnessed such a thing, just as we have never witnessed the creation of a species by a supreme being.

  409. False dichotomy by Jedi_Knyghte · · Score: 1

    I notice a false dichotomy at play in far, far too many of these comments. The assumption would seem to be either that one accepts evolutionary theory or one is a caricatured raving fundamentalist who thinks that every word of the Bible is meant to be read as a 19th Century work of science. That is not the case, as a person who wishes to investigate the question for himself may easily ascertain (or, for a simpler example: I myself hold to neither position). Whether or not a person agrees with their conclusions about evolutionary theory, many of the leading figures in the Intelligent Design movement do not hold to flatly literal readings of the creation narratives.

  410. It occurred to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One last point - the Sunday school I went to as a child focused on the creation story as being VERY important. And it drew no distinction whatsoever between the old and new testaments in regards to validity or accuracy.

    I used to wonder why the various christian sects made such a big deal about evolution. Given that the evolutionary process has been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt, why were they hanging onto Creation? They only had to execute a few dozen scientists before they managed to deal with a heliocentric universe but this evolution/creation thing seemed to just go on and on.

    Then I thought about a comment I read on ./ and all of a sudden it twigged: Christ supposedly died so that we could be redeemed for Man's Original Sin. If there was no Creation and no Garden of Eden, then Original Sin goes out the window. Without Original Sin, Christ was just a really nice guy. Since all the other Middle Eastern religions are pretty much agreed on that part, what do you tell your congregation: "It turns out the Muslims and Jews were right but God still wants 10% of your income."?

  411. About religions by VStrider · · Score: 1

    Ask anyone who is devoted to a given religion and they will tell you their religion is the true one. But is it? Is there such a thing as a "true" religion?

    Different religions are so similar, one wonders whether they are different at all. Evidence shows, there must have been an evolution in religions as well. So, newer religions are based on older ones, or religions co-existing in time, interchanged ideas during their evolution. If you examine several different religions you'll recognize familiar elements from other religions.

    There is always a creator(s), who created the world around us and ofcourse, us. Most religions portray humans and god(s) not so much alike. For example, christians portray god as a perfect being who also has human attributes via jesus(his son, who also is one and the same whith god). Ancient greeks portrayed their olympian gods as perfect all powerfull beings, whith, again, human attributes. Buddists, again, claim that gods are subject to karma as well as humans. This goes on for other religions as well.

    All religions state that the human race originates from an ancestor couple, a man and a woman. christians call them Adam and Eve, ancient greeks called them Deukalion and Pyrrha, and so on.

    All religions also refer to a major catastrophic event that was caused by god(s) when humans went astray from their chosen path.

    I could go on and on pointing out identical patterns of thought between all religions. Religions are a product of society and culture, and in the past it was this that kept societies together. Nowdays, of course, the 10 commandments would be somewhat insufficient to keep our societies functioning properly. We have millions of laws, as our societies are more complex.

    With the advancement of sciences, we also have less need for a creator(s). We can now understand and explain many things about our universe and about the origins of life.

    But as science delves deeper into the unknown, it becomes harder and harder to get empirical evidence on a given solution to a problem. Sciences become more theoritical, where the most plausible theory persists. So, science is again a product of culture and society. That's not so different from religions, science -is- a modern evolved religion, that explains the world around us better than any other.

    Science also carries the human fallacy of a beginning of everything. Just like all religions believe in a beginning of everything which attribute to a creator, science believes in a beginning of everything which attribute to a theory of everything(TOE). I personally believe there is no such thing. I think there is no absolute truth, no creator(s), no beginning of everything or a theory of everything. If there was and we found out, we'd have no more goals to reach, there wouldn't be any meaning to life, would there?

    --
    VStrider.
  412. It's a very simple question to answer... by vorpal22 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Creationism and intelligent design have about as much place in a science class as evolution and chemistry have in a religious studies course.

    1. Re:It's a very simple question to answer... by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      It is obvious where the moderators stand on the topic. There are plenty of posts in this thread underscoring the fact that ID is a scientific theory. In all fairness, why aren't these being shown as insightful? Read on, vorpal, and find that your post simply does not hold water.

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
  413. Holy Shit. Proof of Divine Intervention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A link on Slashdot to a Kur5hin article! Will miracles never cease?

  414. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  415. He set us up the bom...er... Fruit of Knowledge! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    You've never seen a parent of a child who just broke a window or something come to that child and ask "What did you do?". He was allowing Adam and Eve to expain themselves, even if thier excuse was feeble.
    Adam: "It's the womans fault"


    God the Deciever! Nice.

    Let the woman get away with it.
    Wait until the man, seeing that the woman got away with it, and in his God given innocence trusts his one true love who was telling him it's allright, and then punish them both!

    --

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

  416. You can't argue with these people by phlegmofdiscontent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The other day, I was watching some news program (they all begin to blur after a while) where they were debating Creationism vs. Evolution. The man arguing in favor of Creationism said quite specifically that he believed "every word in the Bible". When anyone says something like that, they're immediately disqualified from any rational discussion, in my book. Maybe I'm a product of my upbringing. I went to a Catholic high school where we learned about the Bible and one thing I learned is that in the first chapter, there are TWO creation stories. If you take one to be literally true, then you cannot take the other one to be true since they're mutually contradictory. Logically then, they CANNOT both be true. This is in the first chapter, for Christ's sake, the contradictions continue throughout the entire book. Since a RATIONAL being cannot take the entire book to be literally true, then the conclusion must be that the Bible is merely an interpretation, opening up the possiblity that science may in fact be correct. After all, science does not disprove the existence of God, nor does it prove the existence of God. The two are mutually exclusive and therefore can coexist. I guess my point is that there is no point in arguing with a Creationist, since s/he is not rational.

    1. Re:You can't argue with these people by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      Let it be said that not only the religious folks are narrow minded. This post seems like the same thing you would hear from a ultra-fundamentalist christian.

      I believe that the Bible is to be interpreted in it's context. I do not believe every word to be literal truth (read the Song of Solomon and picture the literal woman described there), but instead to be interpreted through a set of literary principles taking into account the Genra, time, historical and cultural contexts.

      That being said, I am a creationist. Simply because after a thorough study of the first section of Genesis, I can see that this section is to be interpreted as literal. To your contradiction, I say this: The contradiction is between the first two chapters not one. The second chapter recounts the section specifically dealing with Humans. This is because the rest of Genesis (and the rest of the Bible) will deal with humans and their struggle with spirituality.

      I am not a scientist, though I have studied enough of the topic to see that neither theory can be proven. It is unfair to say that all who believe in creationism are irrational. I have weighed the ideas, tried to do a serious study (on my own - not just read other people's stuff) and found myself leaning toward an intellegent recent design of this planet. Science does NOT disprove this position, so therefore I should be free to interpret the passage either way.

      Many people of faith buy into whatever they hear and have caused many to stereotype all people of faith into irrational bigots. This is simple not true. Some of us think and study and learn and come to conclusions that point to a god. Why is this so difficult for people to accept?

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
    2. Re:You can't argue with these people by dustmachine · · Score: 1
      Sorry, you'll have to point out the contradiction to me. Please use an appropriate literary analysis and the original Hebrew where appropriate.

      I don't agree with the Young-Earth-literal-24-hour-interpretation-of-Day creation, but I have even more problems with the something-from-nothing-we-are-here-by-accident evolution.

    3. Re:You can't argue with these people by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      I do not believe every word to be literal truth

      then you aren't whom the poster was talking about.
      People who do actually claim to believe every word in the bible are either (A) lying, or (B) really, really, really dumb.
      Do you believe people should be stoned to death for wearing a cotton/polyester blend shirt? Leviticus says yes.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    4. Re:You can't argue with these people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this so difficult for people to accept?

      Because of your statement "neither theory can be proven". In your context, I'm assuming you're under the impression that scientific theories are treated as by the scientific crowd in the same way that scripture is treated to the ID crowd -- that is, that scientists belive thier theories to be infalliable.

      That is manifestly not the case -- the people making the claims that scientific theories are 100% proven and infalliable are either not scientists or are overly emotional scientists.

      Scientific theories are never "right" -- they are simply the best we can do for now, given the ability we have to observe the world around us. At one point, it was belived that newtonian physics was 100% absolutely correct -- but relativity and later quantum mechanics came and showed classical physics to be full of holes.

      A similar thing could happen to evolutionary theory -- we could make some discoveries that lead us to belive that our planet was seeded by Andromedan[1] aliens, and the other primates on our planet are devolutions of the seed race. We don't know. But the point is, from the evidence we have right now, evolutionary theory is the best explanation we have for the diversity of life and the origin of the human species. If a better explanation comes along, that has more evidence associated with it, and can explain things that evolution may not be able to explain, then it will (eventually) be adopted by the scientific community.

      ID is not that theory, though, because ID is not a theory. It doesn't make any predictions, it offers no models to compete with evolutionary theory. It's simply not playing the game. ID is throwing in the towel and saying "I cannot imagine how life evolved, so it didn't. God did it."

      That's why people have a problem with someone who is allegedly open minded and intelligent choosing ID as a model of life. Because it's not an answer -- it's simply a resignation to defeat. When you accept ID as a model of the world, what you're saying is "I give up. My mind is either too weak or too small to imagine the eons of time over which the processes of evolution have had to act."

      [1] http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0354668/

    5. Re:You can't argue with these people by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      ID does play the game. It has theories, models, tests, etc. None are conclusive as you so aptly said, but there is an entire scientific arena devoted to the catastrophy models. Look at what we have learned from Mount St. Helens. Data from the adjacent lake showed major flaws in current carbon dating when a catastrophy occurs.

      It does make predictions as well. It says that the world is in a state of digression because it was started. The fact that the world is getting worse is ( physically, not morally) is apparent.

      My point is that ID should not be written off as a theological stance, it is a scientific theory, based on scientific data.

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
    6. Re:You can't argue with these people by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      I am, because he was saying creationists believe that every word is literal truth... There are so many other factors in the process. People, in the Old testament would be stoned for their mixed fabrics. Proper theological study shows a reason why this was so, and shows that God has since fulfilled all the purposes of the Law in Jesus.

      Let me be clear... I believe every word of the bible. I do not believe every word is to be taken literally. But every word is to be interpreted, through a set of interpretive rules, and "Every word is profitable..."

      Does this mean I am lying or really really dumb?

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
    7. Re:You can't argue with these people by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1


      Does this mean I am lying or really really dumb?

      Yes. But most likely the sort of lying you are doing isn't the dishonest type, but rather it's the "lying to yourself" type. People who interpret the bible figuratively (who is NOT whom the poster was talking about, despite your claim to the contrary), are essentially using the following thinking path:
      step 1 - decide what is morally right.
      step 2 - read the bible.
      step 3 - creatively interpret the bible to match what you came up with in step 1.
      But the whole while they will claim that what they are really doing is:
      step 1 - read the bible
      step 2 - interpret which parts are literal and which are not.
      step 3 - derive morality from that.
      Becuase that gives a false air of extra legitimacy to what are essentially their OWN beliefs that are just as human and mortal as are mine.

      I don't have any respect for that practice, becuase it's an attempt to craft an appeal to authority to get around having to defend your moral beliefs on their own terrestrial merits.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    8. Re:You can't argue with these people by TrogL · · Score: 1
      Sorry, you'll have to point out the contradiction to me. Please use an appropriate literary analysis and the original Hebrew where appropriate.

      Here ya go.

      http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/contra/accou nts.html

    9. Re:You can't argue with these people by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      If your theory was true, then no one would change what they believe. I have, since beginning my own study of scripture, found that I have had to change many things that I believe. I make it a point to approach the scriptures with an open mind. I do not decide what is literal/figurative on my own. There are basic principles to interpreting passages. (Hermanuetics if you are interested).

      Again I state, there are many who do not do this. Most christians are lazy enough to simply believe whatever their pastor/priest/whatever says to them. It is a shame, but my point in the thread is still the same. There are those who seriously think through what they bible says and find themselves believing in God. If that does not make sense to you, then OK, but it is true.

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
    10. Re:You can't argue with these people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      It says that the world is in a state of digression because it was started. The fact that the world is getting worse is ( physically, not morally) is apparent.


      Not the GP, but I have no idea what you just said here.

      How do you know the world is getting worse?

      What does it mean?

      Why does this require "being started" to be getting worse?

    11. Re:You can't argue with these people by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      I definitely did not define this point well. Let me clarify without too much more detail, because it is not the main point.

      The world is falling apart. We see in nature a digression. The world is not bettering itself as evolutionary theories would assume it has been doing for billions of years.

      Some see the digression as a result of modern technology, others see it as God's curse on man for sin. Others may think it is because we were some alien's play toy and we have been set on his shelf like the penguin in Toy Story.

      The statement was that ID does not make predictions. I am saying that ID does make predictions. One such prediction is that the world will be destroyed (either by some force or the eventual degeneration of a planet that is systematicallly falling apart). The world could be getting worse as a result of poor human usage of the resources given to us (global warming etc.). This fits into the evolutionary mindset. The other solutions fit into a ID mindset.

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
    12. Re:You can't argue with these people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      You're confusing things. Evolution does not say anything about "the world bettering itself". Evolutionary theory is specifically discussing genetic mutations in organisims, and how those genetic mutations compound to cause divergence in life.

      It's not discussing climate change. It's not discussing pollution. It's certainly NOT discussing the fall of human civilization.

      If ID is discussing things, that's fine, but if you think that it in any way applies or contradicts evolution, you're mistaken. (i.e. The famous "Evolution runs contrary to entropy argument" -- hint, entropy only applies in closed systems. The planet is not a closed system. The universe, maybe.)

    13. Re:You can't argue with these people by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      I will concede that evolution doesn't assume the world is bettering itself. I see your point. My point however, that ID does make predictions is still valid.

      -Cheers

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
    14. Re:You can't argue with these people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The world is falling apart.

      I'd just like to intercede in your conversation, and point something out.

      This will be the case with everything. It's called the second law of thermodynamics, more commonly known as entropy, and (again) has little to do with ID, and certainly doesn't require an intelligence to have started anything in order for something to degrade.

      It's the old entropy thing -- things degrade. Erosion wears down the land masses. The earth's core cools off. The sun will (eventually...) go out. Eventually, there will be no usable energy left in the universe. It's called "heat death", and is possibly the most depressing scientific conclusion that there is.

      But there's nothing there that needs an intelligence to explain it...

    15. Re:You can't argue with these people by OO7david · · Score: 1

      This is actually not 100% correct. Speaking here as a linguist*, native english speaker, and someone with strong familiarity with both modern and ancient hebrew (it was part of my thesis) I have to say that there isn't a timing problem.

      For simplicity's sake, let's do this in English since that is what the linked page used (I'm not certain which translation they used for this, but that shouldn't matter). Out of the first section we should not that there are no elements of ordering or timing. Yes, the consecutive use of "and" would seem to imply that there is a sense of timing, but if I were to say "I went to the store and I went to the game, and I went to school" in simple recounting of events there is no timing therein. It is simply stating what happened, not when.

      In the second section the same issue with timing prevails. The earlier section simply says they were created, but the second gives timing. For example if I were to say that I created LRGO models, technik and pirate in the image of the box, all I've said is that I made them. where is the timing there? Once again, simple recounting of event.

      So, yeah, I can see why there may be confusion over this, but A) the translation is weird and fairly far from literal, and B) to arrive at such a conclusion requires one to do no more than a cursory look at the text and no consideration of what the grammar actually says.

      *to the other linguists, I still am a descriptivist grammarian, but I cite being a linguist in order to indicate that I look closely at language rathan that prescribing how it should be.

    16. Re:You can't argue with these people by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      If what you say was right, two Christians wouldn't be able to disagree so strongly on morality and BOTH be using the bible. The slavery abolitionists backed up their argument with the bible - and so did the slavery proponents. And both were absolutely convinced they were right. I say eliminate the middleman and actually argue the merits of morality directly. It's more honest that way.


      There are those who seriously think through what they bible says and find themselves believing in God. If that does not make sense to you, then OK, but it is true.

      I will have no part in insanity, be it a socially acceptable form of it or not.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    17. Re:You can't argue with these people by ktakki · · Score: 1

      I went to a Catholic high school where we learned about the Bible and one thing I learned is that in the first chapter, there are TWO creation stories. If you take one to be literally true, then you cannot take the other one to be true since they're mutually contradictory. Logically then, they CANNOT both be true.

      I've heard a couple of explanations for the contradictory Creation stories in Genesis (as well as the two parallel accounts of the Flood). The first explanation posits that there were two versions of Scripture, one in the Kingdom of Judea, the other in the Kingdom of Israel. After the Babylonian Exile and the destruction of the first Temple, the Deuteronomists sought to create a unified Torah. That there are two Creation accounts and two Flood accounts (one involves a dove, another a raven) results from a compromise between exiles from the two kingdoms.

      The other explanation is that the Biblical Creation stories are based on two different Mesopotamian creation myths. The patriarch Abraham was originally from Ur (now in present day Iraq), and much of ancient Hebrew law and lore is based on Mesopotamian practices (c.f. Code of Hammurabi).

      A good book that explores these contradictions is Richard Friedman's Who Wrote the Bible .

      k.
      --
      "In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." - Anne Frank
    18. Re:You can't argue with these people by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Can you list make a list of 3 of those?

  417. good point- by purduephotog · · Score: 1

    The story he told me was the cables snapped on the tower and the tower came down...

  418. Ask Slashdot by alex_guy_CA · · Score: 2, Interesting
    A good friend of mine was raised as a Jehovah's Witness. He has left the religion, and is an intelligent person, but he was raised on a lot of pseudoscientific anti-evolution mumbo jumbo. I was wondering if anyone knew of any good recourses, books, websites, articles, to debunk all of the standard Christian half truths that they use to debunk science. Here is an example just for fun. He refuses to believe that scientist have any idea how old the earth really is.

    I appreciate your help.

    1. Re:Ask Slashdot by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Sure.. here's two invaluable resources for you:
      Firstly, talkorigins.org - it'll tell you everything you ever wanted to know (and more!) about evolution, and how/why it can stand up to all the claims and accusations creationism throws at it.

      Also, the Skeptic's Annotated Bible is a wonderful resource, detailing all the flaws, errors, contradictions, fallacies, and other nonsense in the bible. Critically, the actual bible part is a 100% genuine, unaltered King James Version bible, so nobody can pick fault with it saying it's "not a real bible", etc. I'm not sure how much use this will be in the case of a Jehova's Witness (I don't know much about how their beliefs differ), but it's a great resource at any rate.

      Finally, you might want to ask around in the forums at Infidelguy's site which is a site dedicated to these sorts of issues.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  419. Evolution has been tested? by downwa · · Score: 1

    Yes, evolution has been tested by predictions of what we might find in the fossil record. However, it has not always passed the test. Geologists and biologists have repeatedly been surprised when they didn't find what they expected. Of course, they adjusted the theory each time.

    However, what if there was another way to explain the evidence?

    There is. Check out the site of this noted biologist, a former atheist, who became a creationist based on the evidence he uncovered:

    http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_main.h tm

    --
    Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    1. Re:Evolution has been tested? by ttfkam · · Score: 1

      Very compelling.

      Well... very compelling if you haven't taken any college-level science classes. His statements about natural selection are curious. His assertions about radiometric dating are hilarious.

      To see how messed up amazingdiscoveries.org actually is, read the comments about dating, and then read Dr. Roger Weins's Radiometric Dating: A Christian Perspective. The "revelations" on amazingdiscoveries.org made me laugh out loud.

      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    2. Re:Evolution has been tested? by downwa · · Score: 1

      Regarding his comments on natural selection, I assume you are referring to these:

      http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_natura lselection.htm

      I'd be interested to hear any comments on these. They seem compelling to me, especially coming from a respected biologist. (And yes, I have had college level science classes).

      Regarding his "hilarious" assertions about radiometric dating (http://www.amazingdiscoveries.org/beginning_radio metricdating.htm), he did provide references to respected scientific journals. If even one example shows a system to be flawed, I would be cautious about trusting it without cross checking. The book you linked to (http://www.asa3.org/ASA/resources/Wiens.html) is interesting, and did claim numerous cross checks have been done. Still, these can only show accuracy into the known past, and don't deal with possible changes in the ratios of elements measured in the various tests (though the linked book asserts that such changes are unlikely).

      Another possibility I didn't see addressed on either site is that the elements of the earth have been around in their present form much longer than life on earth, thus explaining the great age of the rocks, while leaving room for the possibility of life on earth relatively recently.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    3. Re:Evolution has been tested? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Check out the site of this noted biologist,

      Was is his name?

      And what is this amazing evidence that he never wrote up in a peer-reviewed journal, totally upset 150 years of research with, and won the Nobel Prize by discovering?

    4. Re:Evolution has been tested? by ttfkam · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Regarding natural selection:

      Yes, technically he's correct. Natural selection is indeed an eliminator. However he fails to acknowledge random mutation. Random mutation adds diversity so you end up with more variations than you start with. Random mutation can be observed easily in drug-resistant bacteria. The ubiquitous undergraduate biology example of fruit fly genetics also comes to mind.

      Regarding radiometric dating:
      If you shake the hourglass, twirl it, or put it in a rapidly accelerating vehicle, the time it takes the sand to fall will change. But the radioactive atoms used in dating techniques have been subjected to heat, cold, pressure, vacuum, acceleration, and strong chemical reactions to the extent that would be experienced by rocks or magma in the mantle, crust, or surface of the Earth or other planets without any significant change in their decay rate.

      and
      The uncertainties on the half-lives given in the table are all very small. All of the half-lives are known to better than about two percent except for rhenium (5%), lutetium (3%), and beryllium (3%). There is no evidence of any of the half-lives changing over time. In fact, as discussed below, they have been observed to not change at all over hundreds of thousands of years.

      The latter is the kicker. All radioactive decay follows the exact same decay curve with only a change in period (length of time). The proposition that this curve alters substantially after say a hundred thousand years is the equivalent to the proposition that the same physics that has sent probes to other planets and unleashed the destructive force of a split atom is fundamentally wrong. Not "I missed a question or two and got a B+" wrong. I mean it would be "I got a D because it was multiple choice and I got lucky" wrong.

      Regarding life on Earth:

      Just how "recent" are you talking? If you mean "less than 10,000 years," you are sadly mistaken. We've found structures made by humanoids that are at least 500,000 years old.

      There are aquatic fossils found on top of Mount Everest. Unless you also discount plate tectonics wholesale and/or expect that Mount Everest was the product of a few millenia of uplifting, why would aquatic creatures be found there?

      The only reason to believe that life has not existed on the planet for over a billion years is because it conflicts with the Bible. It is not because the evidence is lacking.
      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    5. Re:Evolution has been tested? by downwa · · Score: 1

      Random mutation can be observed easily in drug-resistant bacteria. The ubiquitous undergraduate biology example of fruit fly genetics also comes to mind.

      Drug resistant strains could also be produced from a population of bacteria which had the capability of resistance latent within it. Those strains that are killed off more quickly have less of a chance to continue their line, and those that survive by virtue of already having greater latent resistance, end up appearing as a "new strain" of drug resistant bacteria.

      In a recent case demonstrating this at a macro level, most varieties of honey bees are susceptible to Varroa mites, but a small population are already naturally resistant. The naturally resistant population will take time to build up. Recently, a strain of the fungus Metarhizium anisopliae has been found to be highly pathogenic to the mites. These variations already existed in isolation from each other, and it didn't take mutations to produce them.

      Mutations can make changes in the genes, but these generally can be shown to be negations of features already existing. For example, what might appear to be an added defensive feature (a snake's poison glands) turns out to be a degraded set of salivary glands, once the structure is studied in detail.

      All radioactive decay follows the exact same decay curve with only a change in period (length of time).

      Regarding radioactive decay, while the decay rate remains constant, the unknown is the original ratio of isotopes (e.g., C-14 to C-12) that are used for measurement. What is assumed is that the ratio has remained the same throughout history, but this is clearly an assumption we cannot prove one way or the other. There are multiple possibilities as to how the original ratio could have been different.

      We've found structures made by humanoids that are at least 500,000 years old.

      Based on the above dating methods, which we can't always rely on. We've also found multiple layers of rock, dating over "millions of years" with upright fossilized trees buried through multiple layers. Usually this is explained as a product of rapid burying, followed by erosion and reburying later. However, in this case, you would expect to find signs of erosion between layers, which turns out not to be the case. What does turn out to be the case, is that fossils can be formed much more rapidly than previously thought. We already have petrified forests from Mt. St. Helens 1980 eruption.

      There are aquatic fossils found on top of Mount Everest.

      Exactly. Millions of dead things, buried in rock layers, laid down by water, all over the earth. Maybe there really was a worldwide flood.

      Unless you also discount plate tectonics wholesale and/or expect that Mount Everest was the product of a few millenia of uplifting, why would aquatic creatures be found there?

      I believe there is good evidence for rapid sedimentation (see for example turbidites), coupled with massive plate tectonics and widespread volcanism, that yes, could actually form Mt. Everest over a few millenia.

      The primary reason to believe that life has required billions of years to evolve on this planet is because it gives people a way out of believing the biblical account.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    6. Re:Evolution has been tested? by ttfkam · · Score: 2, Informative
      Drug resistant strains could also be produced from a population of bacteria which had the capability of resistance latent within it. Those strains that are killed off more quickly have less of a chance to continue their line, and those that survive by virtue of already having greater latent resistance, end up appearing as a "new strain" of drug resistant bacteria.

      Almost right. This seems to be one of the hardest concepts for some people to grasp. You are absolutely, positively, 100% correct that the resistance was already in the population of bacteria (and bees) before the limiting factor was introduced. That's the good news.

      The bad news is that a month ago, that resistance may not have existed.

      Random mutation does not happen with a purpose. No strain of bacteria "tries" to be immune to antibiotics. No bees "try" to be immune to the effects or Varroa mites. That's not how it works and is generally the hardest thing for most people to get. You are trying to substitute the will of God for the collective will of bacteria and the model fails.

      It actually goes something like this:

      * Copy errors during reproduction/replication give rise to what we call mutation.

      * That random mutation is not sought out. It's remarkably similar to the game of Telephone where the message that comes out is not the message that went in. All participants in the game can try to reproduce the input exactly, but inevitably, variation occurs. The DNA of bacteria tries to copy exactly, but inevitably, variation occurs. (Random mutation occurs precisely because we live in an imperfect world.)

      * Those copy errors can occur for just about any reason: too much sunlight, too little sunlight, exposure to certain chemicals, isolation from certain chemicals, etc.

      * Those variations can have a good effect (aid survival), a bad effect (kill the organism or hinder survival), or no effect at all. On the other hand, a mutation that has no effect at all at first -- or even a slightly bad effect at first -- may somewhere down the line provide benefits or drawbacks like drug resistance for example.

      So in summary, yes, the trait was already there. However, the trait was not always there. Big difference! We only know the trait was there some time before exposure to the antibiotics.

      For more info on this, check out the early genetic study of fruit flies. Random mutation is clearly documented in these early experiments and repeated ad nauseum by others.
      Regarding radioactive decay, while the decay rate remains constant, the unknown is the original ratio of isotopes (e.g., C-14 to C-12) that are used for measurement. What is assumed is that the ratio has remained the same throughout history, but this is clearly an assumption we cannot prove one way or the other. There are multiple possibilities as to how the original ratio could have been different.
      Once again, absolutely right. This is why scientists use more than one radiometric dating method at a time. While it is, for example, possible for two different dating methods to be wrong, it is highly unlikely that both will be wrong at precisely the same rate. If you use three or four different isotopic decay models for dating, the possibility that all of them are wrong in exactly the same amount becomes infinitesimal. Add in that others will repeat the results in their own labs and get the same results lends itself to the conclusion that the dates are indeed valid.

      Remember, this is not just about C14 decay. This is about the myriad different isotopes used. ...and the fact that they come up with the same answer given the relative half-lifes.
      Exactly. Millions of dead things, buried in rock layers, laid down by water, all over the earth. Maybe there really was a worldwide flood.
      Aaaargh! I have been trolled.
      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    7. Re:Evolution has been tested? by downwa · · Score: 1

      check out the early genetic study of fruit flies. Random mutation is clearly documented in these early experiments...

      The issue is not new traits, but new genetic information. For example, there are no known cases in which antibiotic resistance is the result of new genetic information. An information loss can confer resistance in several ways. New (even helpful, adaptive) traits can come from loss of genetic information (which is to be expected from mutations).

      Yes, Homeobox mutations in e.g. fruit flies can cause growth of an extra pair of wings, but those wings hindered flying due to a lack of muscles, and would have been eliminated by natural selection. And in any case, that was not a case of new genetic information being generated, but a loss of information.

      Gene duplication, polyploidy, insertions, etc., do not help explain evolution. They represent an increase in amount of DNA, but not an increase in the amount of functional genetic information-- these mechanisms create nothing new. For macro evolution to occur, new genes (e.g. for making feathers on reptiles) would be needed.

      Remember, this is not just about C14 decay. This is about the myriad different isotopes used. ...and the fact that they come up with the same answer given the relative half-lifes.

      But according to this and other sources, the primary dating method used in dating the fossil bearing geologic column is K-Ar. One method agreeing with itself is nothing exciting. I'd be interested in a demonstration of widespread agreement between all methods within the geologic column.

      --
      Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
    8. Re:Evolution has been tested? by ttfkam · · Score: 1

      A direct rebuttal to your trueorigins.org link.

      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
  420. The wrong perspective by the_rev_matt · · Score: 1

    I think a lot of people opposed to ID are looking at it all wrong. Sure it's a load of nonsense, but that can be used to your advantage. When the local fundies start trying to force their god into the schools, go to the school board meetings. Insist on equal representation for ALL mythologies. Threaten discrimination lawsuits. Get Thor back in there. And Apollo. And Mars. And Baal. And so on and so on and so on. They can't prove that the gods of Norse mythology are any less real than their Bible based god.

    --
    this is getting old and so are you

    blog

  421. Some observations... by rock-like-slayer · · Score: 1

    1. intelligent design is not exclusively Christian
    2. seperation of church and state does not mean that that theories put forth by scientific groups, or even purely religous groups should not be taught as theories in a classroom.
    3. there seems to be a lack of defense for ID, and a lot of wild flaming, so i would encourage people to investigate things, rather than taking anything said here as a basis for any credible information on the issues. I have yet to see any information or links provided to current research being done into ID. Most references are being drawn from older purely "creationist" material.

    Here are some links...
    Institute for creation research...yah these are are Christians scientists supporting ID and creationism... so go ahead and get angry if that offends you.
    http://www.icr.org/index.html
    http://www.icr.org/research/

    here is the site of a college ID group. has a lot of links, and im sure there are some people willing to debate with anyone interested in actually hearing someone defend ID... not that it seems anyone here is.
    http://www-acs.ucsd.edu/~idea/index.shtml

    there must be more "good" ID links, but i do not know them. if anyone else has some i would encourage their being posted

    I have heard what are... to me... very credible arguments for ID, Though i do not have the knowledge or time to defend it in this forum.
    well, my shift at work just ended, so its time to get productive. hope this post has made this a more rational place -ben

  422. I Think the Term Morons Would be Pointless Here by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1, Troll


    'Nuff said.

    Well, not quite. To quote Aleister Crowley, "The Christians to the lions!"

    Yes - that DOES mean I would like to see you all exterminated to the last man, woman and child.

    And I will.

    Have a nice day.

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  423. Assuming, of course... by gillbates · · Score: 1

    That the rate of continental drift is constant. If this assumption is incorrect, well, then so is the age of the Earth. Consider me a skeptic, but I don't place much faith in scientific hypotheses based on unproven assumptions. Granted, I might not believe the Earth is only 6,000 years old, but then, I'm not keen on believing it is 6 billion years old, either. From where I sit, it seems like neither side can really prove their case. In fact, for those with true faith, the age of the Earth is irrelevant; it might be a nice intellectual curiosity, but it has nothing to do with importance of the sacrifice Jesus Christ made on the cross.

    ID is more of an evangelical curiosity than a good argument for the existence of God. This is mostly due to the fact that ID's arguments are statistical in nature - while ID shows (and rather convincingly) that a universe as complex as ours would be a statistical anomoly, it does nothing to show that we aren't exactly that - a statistical anomoly. Anyone willing to believe that we are a rather fortunate accident can live with both the claims of evolution and ID without any apparent conflict between the two.

    That said, it still irks me that so many proudly proclaim what they in fact do not know. Yes, if continental drift, atomic decay, etc, were constant throughout the ages, we may be able to safely conclude that the earth is more than 6000 years old. Problem is, we can't prove this. Therefore, we can hypothesize about what might have happened, but definitive proof will have to wait for a time machine.

    Instead of bickering about the past, we should instead be looking at what is happening now. At least this we can prove through scientific experiment.

    And one final thing: The conflict over Earth's age isn't about the age of sedimentary rock. Rather, it is a struggle for cultural authority between atheists and theists. Each side seeks to be the authority trusted by the people for truth. The age of the Earth is irrelevant; what is really being sought is the authority to impose one's worldview on others. And in this regard, at least the theists are willing to tolerate those who believe something other than what they believe, as they understand that faith is a gift given from above. But I've yet to meet an atheist willing to consider the possibility that those who disagree with them arrived at such a conclusion through rational analysis of their own experiences.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    1. Re:Assuming, of course... by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      Yes, if continental drift, atomic decay, etc, were constant throughout the ages, we may be able to safely conclude that the earth is more than 6000 years old. Problem is, we can't prove this.

      They do all more or less agree though, so they'd all have to be inconsistent to be wrong. Nothing can be proved to be absolute, but some theories are overwhelmingly more likely than others given the weight of supporting evidence.

      You left out the fossil record, the DNA record, ice cores, astronomical evidence etc. by the way. You're welcome.

    2. Re:Assuming, of course... by shawnseat · · Score: 1
      Granted, I might not believe the Earth is only 6,000 years old, but then, I'm not keen on believing it is 6 billion years old, either.

      [snark]Fortunately it's only 4.5 billion years old, so that will set your mind at ease.

      Yes, if continental drift, atomic decay, etc, were constant throughout the ages, we may be able to safely conclude that the earth is more than 6000 years old. Problem is, we can't prove this. Actually, we can. We look for the Earth's entire surface melting within the last 6 kyr or so -- friction produces a LOT of heat, and there's nowhere else for it to go than out. Oh, and if U-235 decay was about 1e6 more... KABOOM!

      --
      Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    3. Re:Assuming, of course... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Yes, if continental drift, atomic decay, etc, were constant throughout the ages, we may be able to safely conclude that the earth is more than 6000 years old. Problem is, we can't prove this.Actually, we can prove that atomic decay has been constant for at least several hundred thousand years. Brightness curves in supernova explosions and all that.

    4. Re:Assuming, of course... by gillbates · · Score: 1
      but some theories are overwhelmingly more likely than others given the weight of supporting evidence.

      And unfortunately, Intelligent Design is just one of those theories. Given the evidence, the explanation of an intelligent creator purposefully crafting life makes much more sense and is much more plausible than merely positing that the beauty in nature is due to a rather serendipitous accident caused by random events.

      Incidentally, it's not hard to disprove evolution - at least the part which suggests that it was shaped by merely random events. Simply write a program which fills a framebuffer with random numbers and tell me if it ever produces anything structured or resembling life, or even anything worth looking at.

      The problem with 'random interactions did everything' hypothesis is that it just does not work. A sequence of random numbers will always be random regardless of size. It won't ever form something with structure because then it would cease to be random.

      I've come to view evolution as a test for critical thinking skills. If someone comes to me and claims that life on this planet was the result of a serious of fortunate, random events, I simply regard them as lacking in critical thinking skills. If, OTOH, someone comes to me and explains a mechanism by which environmental factors can change DNA and produce traits which are of use to a species, then I'll listen. But what is most unfortunate is that there's a great many more people in the former category than the latter.

      Explaining the existence of life on this planet by stating that we are the result of random mutations is less intellectual and much less enlightening than simply saying we were created by God. At least the latter doesn't contradict the laws of mathematics. If evolutionary biologists were held to the same standard as the other sciences, they would be showing us the mechanisms of evolution, rather than simply professing blind faith in the power of random numbers.

      (As an aside, I do realize that there are biologists who are able to show the mechanisms of evolutionary change - however, their work is relatively recent, incomplete, and usually overlooked by textbook writers. When I speak of evolution, I'm talking about evolution as presented in elementary and secondary school textbooks. In fact, I think we'd all be much better off if schools simply left the question of the origins of life out altogether - there are better uses of time than teaching obsolete theories that have since become an embarassment to the scientific community.)

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    5. Re:Assuming, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with 'random interactions did everything' hypothesis is that it just does not work. A sequence of random numbers will always be random regardless of size. It won't ever form something with structure because then it would cease to be random.

      I've come to view evolution as a test for critical thinking skills. If someone comes to me and claims that life on this planet was the result of a serious of fortunate, random events, I simply regard them as lacking in critical thinking skills. If, OTOH, someone comes to me and explains a mechanism by which environmental factors can change DNA and produce traits which are of use to a species, then I'll listen. But what is most unfortunate is that there's a great many more people in the former category than the latter.


      Nice rant, but you are missing out on the idea of a selection criteria - instead of just relying on random mutations (which we already know occur, see:microevolution) Start with something interesting, then mutate it a bit. If the new mutation is more interesting than it's parent, keep it and make copies which each have the possibility of a new interesting mutation. Otherwise discard it & mutate the original... rinse & repeat as desired.

      BTW, way to judge others when your own critical thinking skills suck.

    6. Re:Assuming, of course... by gillbates · · Score: 1
      If the new mutation is more interesting than it's parent, keep it...

      And how does a mindless force of nature differentiate between what is interesting and what is not?

      This is the whole crux of ID - that the forces of nature don't possess the ability to discriminate between what is good and bad. Or, to put it another way, creating sophisticated life forms requires sophisticated means.

      But again, this is elementary to someone with a college education. Besides, the point still holds - as soon as someone comes up with a suitable explanation for the variety of species, it ceases to be driven by merely random events. Instead, it becomes structured. Now, whether or not you buy the whole argument that structure implies design and design implies a creator - this is another argument entirely. But I do wish those who don't understand how evolution really works would stop saying that it is the result of random events. It is not, and this is empirically provable. Granted, you don't have to believe in an intelligent designer, but neither should you fall for what is provably false.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    7. Re:Assuming, of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how does a mindless force of nature differentiate between what is interesting and what is not?

      This is where you are going wrong - there is plenty of criteria for which nature to decide what is interesting and what is not (hot/cold, light/dark, etc). In a highly structred envirnment, these criteria can be a bit complex (resistance to penicillin for instance). In a significantly less structured environment, the selection criteria could be as simple as ability to reproduce, or even the ability to exist for a period of time. There need not be anything significantly sophisticated, it only needs to be slightly better than what currently exists.

      Evolution is not a theory on how to shake an Etch-A-Sketch and produce the Mona Lisa, it's a description of how to go from lines in the sand to a rough sketch to a fine drawing through many small steps and the occasional hop.

    8. Re:Assuming, of course... by Fnord · · Score: 1

      The mindless force of nature is quite effective at differentiating what's interesting and what isn't. The "interesting" changes survive. By interesting we mean more capable of survival than what came before. If you take a colony of bacteria and let it sit around, tons of mutations happen. Each set of offspring is slightly different than its parents. Some of those changes are drastic and some aren't. The ones that aren't, don't really change much. Of the ones that are, given that they are random, most kill the reciever. Then every once in a while one is beneficial. That bacterium is more suited to survive than the rest, and so reproduces more. The resulting group is more suited to reproduce more, and so does. Soon the colony is taken over by this change. The colony has evolved.

      You keep saying that randomness doesn't evolve, but you've obviously never seen the Game of Life. Go download it sometime. A bunch of random numbers are piped on screen and set to evolve. Soon patterns emerge from it. Its random stuff that's happening, but in any random set, some patterns are self propogating. Since non-propogating patterns die out as soon as they appear, the whole set if left long enough will eventually fall into self propogating patterns. Life is a self propogating pattern. In a random universe life is inevitable.

    9. Re:Assuming, of course... by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, it's not hard to disprove evolution - at least the part which suggests that it was shaped by merely random events. Simply write a program which fills a framebuffer with random numbers and tell me if it ever produces anything structured or resembling life, or even anything worth looking at.

      It does. Even if you leave out the main principle of Natural Selection (the "selection" part, i.e. survival of the fittest), if you fill a framebuffer with random data you will eventually cycle through every possible image that could possibly be shown.

      I am currently working on a PhD in the field of Evolutionary Computation. To be specific, I am working on a technique known as Genetic Programming. It uses similar techniques to Natural Selection to create sophisticated programs out of initial random data. Read up on it.

      I've come to view evolution as a test for critical thinking skills.

      Me too.

    10. Re:Assuming, of course... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      This is mostly due to the fact that ID's arguments are statistical in nature - while ID shows (and rather convincingly) that a universe as complex as ours would be a statistical anomoly, it does nothing to show that we aren't exactly that - a statistical anomoly.


      Actually, that's not exactly true. The universe isn't such a statistical anomaly as you'd think. It turns out that most of the values in the fine-structrue constant (which is what the ID folks attack) are interrelated. Bump one of them up, another part of the constant goes down. The physics which allow for carbon to be such a wonderful atom for life has a high tolerance.

      As for the atheist world view: you can think what you feel like. But don't go around trying to tell _me_ that the Earth is only 6000 years old without some evidence better than "God made it that way". Believe it or not, most scientists aren't engaged in a struggle for cultural authority. Most scientists don't care - they're trying to explore truth, and truth simply is. As Gailleo said: But it does move
      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    11. Re:Assuming, of course... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      The astronomical evidence is the big one; it shows that the rate of atomic decay, in particular, is reasonably constant, certainly for the last several billion years.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    12. Re:Assuming, of course... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, it's not hard to disprove evolution - at least the part which suggests that it was shaped by merely random events. Simply write a program which fills a framebuffer with random numbers and tell me if it ever produces anything structured or resembling life, or even anything worth looking at.


      It's been done: it's called genetic programming. And it works.

      Life evolves fairly easily: matter gets thrown around in random configurations. Some (an extremely small percentage) turn out to be self-organising and reproductive. That is, they are stable, and can use other matter around them to create more-or-less identical copies. Pretty soon, the replicating material is the only thing in the game. And all it takes to accept this is the awareness that some configurations of matter (particularly those involving carbon) are self-organising and reproductive, and an awareness of the timescales invovled.
      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    13. Re:Assuming, of course... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      Actually, strictly speaking, all we can prove is that is what it looks like from here.

      I leave it up to the "intelligent" design folks to argue why God would go to the trouble of making it look like that for us.

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    14. Re:Assuming, of course... by gillbates · · Score: 1
      In a random universe life is inevitable.

      As a sophomore in college, I too had to write a version of the game of life. What struck me as particularly interesting was the fact that changing either of the criteria for living or dying had a dramatic effect on how the game played out. It turned out that in order to do something interesting with input of random numbers, you had to restrict the criteria for living and dying to a very narrow set of values; IIRC, Conway's constants were the only ones that would work correctly all the time.

      So yes, random events may produce interesting patterns, but only in a highly structured environment. And the environmental requirements for evolution to flourish have been largely ignored by evolutionary theorists. Instead, we're supposed to believe in the power of big numbers, as if this is enlightening.

      It all comes back to order and structure. Life could not exist, or come to have existed without a great deal of organization. Whether or not that organization was the result of random events impinged on a structured universe, or of intelligent events impinged on an unordered universe remains to be seen. But evolutionary theorists will discover neither, because current evolutionary theory pre-supposes that life is inevitable given enough time and random events. It's the scientific equivalent of: "Because I said so". There's no attempt to actually discover or explain the natural mechanisms or requirements for evolution. And I think if such an attempt was made, we'd discover that the formation of life is substantially more complicated than currently envisioned.

      And so that we don't argue past each other, I understand that there are biologists who have made some progress in this area. But their research is far above the elementary textbook level explanation of evolution that will be given to children. Instead, our children will be told that evolution is a process where random events created life and kept on improving it - as if a string of random events alone, however long, would produce something useful.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    15. Re:Assuming, of course... by gillbates · · Score: 1
      It's a description of how to go from lines in the sand to a rough sketch to a fine drawing through many small steps and the occasional hop.

      Except for the fact that the many small steps are explained as "... a series of random events ..." If they actually explained what those steps were, I don't think I'd have a problem with it. But, even something as simple as protein folding requires extraordinary odds to get right in a truly random universe. It is much more likely that the process was directed by an intelligent designer, or was governed by a very complicated set of physical laws. While ID argues the former, evolutionary theorists try to deny the latter, only undermining their position further. I think evolution would be much more believable if scientists came out and explained the mechanisms by which a series of random events could produce even a single cell. Currently, they haven't, which makes ID (even though I disagree with statistical reasoning) the best explanation for life on this planet.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    16. Re:Assuming, of course... by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      There's no attempt to actually discover or explain the natural mechanisms or requirements for evolution.

      What part of the current model of natural selection do you have problems with?

      Instead, our children will be told that evolution is a process where random events created life and kept on improving it - as if a string of random events alone, however long, would produce something useful.

      If that is what children are being told then that is of course wrong. That is not what I was taught as a child however.

    17. Re:Assuming, of course... by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      even something as simple as protein folding requires extraordinary odds to get right in a truly random universe

      No, it doesn't. Care to back up your claim?

      I think evolution would be much more believable if scientists came out and explained the mechanisms by which a series of random events could produce even a single cell.

      No one is saying that cells came about solely through random events. And, even if they were, random events will (given enough time) produce single cells.

    18. Re:Assuming, of course... by gillbates · · Score: 1

      Evolution is not Natural Selection. Natural Selection made sense - it provided an explanation for paring down of an already existing diverse gene pool. And, it was mathematically sound. Evolution, OTOH, claims that nature created that diversity in the first place without ever explaining how. Perhaps if evolutionary theorists had had Darwin's skepticism, science wouldn't have had to suffer the embarrassment of theory whose only reasoning lay in statistically improbable events.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    19. Re:Assuming, of course... by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      You are seriously confused about evolutionary claims of diversity.

      Most theories of biogenesis assume that diversity was initially *very low*. Then, mutation and other shuffling of genetic material (accelerated by sex) generates diversity, while competition for limited resources tends to reduce diversity by favoring one winner over a lot of losers.

      Mass extinction events drastically alter the diversity: both by randomly wiping out populations that are otherwise well-adapted as well as pushing marginal populations over the edge of sustainability, and then by freeing up ecological space for surviving species to diversify into.

      Without such disaster, diversity is at something like an equilibrium: some species become extinct, while successful species can divide into newly diversified species.

    20. Re:Assuming, of course... by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      Natural Selection made sense - it provided an explanation for paring down of an already existing diverse gene pool. And, it was mathematically sound. Evolution, OTOH, claims that nature created that diversity in the first place without ever explaining how

      You are confused and ignorant as to what you are arguing against. Evolution is merely the genetic change in a population over time; I don't think anyone is arguing that this doesn't occur.

      Educate yourself.

      Natural selection is the primary process through which evolution in biological organisms occurs, and the reason why evolution is not purely random as in the straw man you keep constructing.

      Educate yourself.

      Your arrogance in asserting your claims when you haven't even bothered to do the most basic research into what you're arguing against is astounding. If it wasn't for your number of posts I would assume you were a troll.

  424. We just keep making it worse... by Shifty+Jim · · Score: 0

    Schools like this are the reason acceptance of Darwinism has waned in the U.S. in recent years. It's unfair to blame stupidity. The truer explanation is to blame poor schooling and massive ignorance. American schools don't teach biology properly, and the cycle is repeated as political pressures born of prejudice against evolution further subvert scientific education.

    --
    "To surrender to ignorance and call it God has always been premature, and it remains premature today." -Isaac Asimov
  425. Force of evolution is a fact. Super bugs anyone? by guidryp · · Score: 1

    "We must remember that Darwins theory is just that, AN UNPROVEN THEORY"

    How do you think we got the modern crop of super bacteria resistant to our anti-biotics? Super bugs as they are called in the media.

    http://my.webmd.com/content/article/64/72307.htm

    Evolution is based on variation/challenge/survival & reproduction:

    Variation: successive generations will have differences. Species members of current generation also are variants. This is an observable fact. Is there a Counter argument?

    Challenges: Anything that could hamper reproduction. Diminishing food resources, death by predation, environmental stress (toxins, water supply etc). Also observable fact. Is there a counter argument?

    Survival & Reproduction: Advantageous genes are passed on selecting this set of genes over those which were not succesful in reproduction. Any counter argument with this?

    Frankly the forces at work are so simple basic and obvious, I doubt any rational being with an open mind could deny them.

    Evidence: Everywhere, we are creating acellerated evolution all the time when we try to wipe out pests.

    We poison rats/roaches and insects that eat our food crops, with a few generations they are immune to out toxins.

    We have antibiotics for numerous infectious bacteria, but because we have used them so much the bacteria after many generations are growing immune.

    Now I doubt this is because God is saying, "Damn those pesky humans are getting the upper hand on vermin, time to introduce super vermin"? How many really believes this? You may as well say gravity is invisible trolls pulling me to earth with ropes.

    It is because of small variations/changes in organisms, and the fact that the survivors had some small advantage that they pass on to the next generation. In a couple of generations of only the strongest resistors producing off-spring, you have an immune population. IOW evolution.

    Evolution is happening all around every day. Denying it is lunacy. The principles are simple and easy to see and verify. This is a working force that is nearly unassailable.

    Combine this force with the fossil records and you have the most logical explanation for the species that have inhabited this planet.

    What amuses me is that arch conservatives are often at the same time dead set against Scientific Evolution, but seemingly love to practice social darwinism.

  426. How Vs. Why by the_gain_card · · Score: 1

    I have always taken these two issues, Religion and Science as non-contradictory in that Religion (god bless it), no matter which one, is used to explain WHY the universe was created and Science is for explaining How. Why people get so bent out of shape about this is beyond me; i think they can go hand in hand.

  427. Mormon public relations by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    If you are LDS, then the answer is yes, and yes there is an endless recursion, or at least that is the implication. Of course if you are LDS, then evolution probably doesn't bother you much.

    You know, I think it would do you mormons a lot of good, credibility wise, to stop calling yourselves saints .
    It's kinda creepy.

    --

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

    1. Re:Mormon public relations by John+Harrison · · Score: 1
      Why do you get to decide what I should be called?

      In any case, you misunderstand the term. It is used in the biblical sense, not the Catholic sense.

    2. Re:Mormon public relations by Scrameustache · · Score: 1
      Why do you get to decide what I should be called?

      I don't.
      Why do you interpret "I think it would do you mormons a lot of good" as a grab for power?
      Honest and friendly discussions are shunned by your church all of a sudden?
      Job 40:8
      "Do you presume to tell me what I'm doing wrong? Are you calling me a sinner so you can be a saint?

      In any case, you misunderstand the term. It is used in the biblical sense, not the Catholic sense.

      What do you mean?
      --

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

    3. Re:Mormon public relations by John+Harrison · · Score: 1
    4. Re:Mormon public relations by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      This is what I mean.

      One cryptic reference, good.

      And about putting words in my mouth? You are silent?

      --

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

    5. Re:Mormon public relations by John+Harrison · · Score: 1
      Search for "saints" the plural form, as it occurs in the name of the church. Look at how most of the epistles start.

      As for putting words in your mouth, please forgive me. The church is called what it is called because that the name that the Lord gave it. You can take the issue up with Him, ok?

    6. Re:Mormon public relations by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      As for putting words in your mouth, please forgive me.

      Instead of simply forgiving you, I'll ask that you just don't do it again, to me or to others. I'd rather see you be honest and loving out of genuine personal character, rather than apologetic for past hypocrisy / angry replies.

      The church is called what it is called because that the name that the Lord gave it. You can take the issue up with Him, ok?

      Consistency, isn't it about time?

      --

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

    7. Re:Mormon public relations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, his single passage is 'cryptic', yours is what? Illuminating? I don't think you're one to point at other people and call them hypocrites.

      Whether the LDS are correct or not, I think you've got a beam in your eye that's interfering with your attempts to remove the mote from the previous poster's.

  428. There's another test: by DG · · Score: 1

    There's another test that one could do:

    I postulate that anything that *could* occur via a natural process *or* via divine intervention *must* have taken place via the natural process - the alternative is a micro-managing God who makes everything work via an expression of divine will.

    Eg, sometime today I will get hungry. Am I hungry because of some natural process that triggers the feeling of "hungry", or am I hungry because God decided it was time to make me hungry?

    I postulate that God does not take direct action to make everything in the world happen - that the world functions according to natural law without God's constant intervention.

    That being the case then, it follows logically that if you can find any occurance that cannot be explained by natural law - which means in turn "occurs *contrary* to natural law, not "occurs and we don't know a natural law that could explain it yet" then you have de facto proof of divine intervention.

    There's a nifty side-effect of this.

    As we discover natural processes that explain various events, we reduce the space in which one could find a divine cause for it. If event X takes place, and we don't know why, then it might be natural, but it might also be God. Once a natural cause is found, it can no longer be an expression of divine will.

    So far, the space in which God could play has only been reduced. At no point has anyone been able to conclusively determine that *anything* has had a divine origin.

    If this continues, we wind up with a God who is left with only one action availible to him - the triggering of the Big Bang. All else that occurs after that is an expression of natural law, and so occurs without divine involvement.

    If that is the case, then God is irrelevant.

    DG

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
  429. America did not pop from nothing by aepervius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Your argument would be valid EXCEPT that the American guy came from the same country you aforementionned. Especially for the crusade argument. Thee were no american yes, but there were their ancestor there. So please share the guilt. America (N&S) did not pop out of nothing in existance. The people came from Europe. Thus You can only start your comparison from the 17th century. As far as i can tell Burning on stakes occured hundred year ago in USA too. Should we also speaks of segregation which stopped only 50-60 years ago ? If we can say it really stopped... Frankly we can probably make a very long list of bad stuff which happenned on both side of the atlantic. Let us only compare the "now" and right now, we do NOT WANT to give you a few more year. You already had those 4 years ago. And you willingly (as a group) choose 4 more years of the same stuff.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:America did not pop from nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As far as i can tell Burning on stakes occured hundred year ago in USA too

      Nope. No such event ever happened in the U.S., let alone merely "hundred year ago". The United States might have both imperfections and "a very long list of bad stuff", but our "very long list of bad stuff" pales in comparison to that of Europe, even ignoring Europe's long history. Your holocaust victims number in the millions, while ours number in the hundreds (events like Tuskeegee, etc., which the average American probably doesn't even remember)

  430. "And the evening and the morning" by KalvinB · · Score: 1

    Key phrase there. "Evening and Morning" define the period which "day" is talking about.

    Funny how everyone who talks about the definition of "day" fails to address that part of the verses.

    Mormons try to account for "evening and morning" by claiming it's talking about the time between evening and morning on Kalob (think that's the name of God's home planet) which is 1000 years of evenings and mornings on earth. It comes from the idea that "A day to God is as a thousand years."

    Mormons also have the parent poster's explanation which fails simply because they focus on the wrong part of the verse.

    People who can't understand where the literal 6 days comes from simply havn't done enough research on the matter.

  431. What what WHAT? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

    ***SOME*** math?

  432. Intelligent Design is about subversion by jjoyce · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Consider this a draft for the armies of religious zealotry in all its forms. When you want another generation of uninformed groupthinkers, you seek access to the one place where thoughts are still malleable: the school system.

  433. Does not contradict? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, intellegent design does not contradict evolution.

    I disagree with you on this. The ID theory, as espoused by its biggest advocates (I'm thinking of Dembski, Behe, and Johnson, specifically) constitutes an attack on evolution. Indeed, the entire academic content of Behe's book is that certain elements of complex systems simply can't evolve (flagellum, eye, natch). Ditto for Dembski, who believes he has created a statistical measure which can determine if an object was designed or came to be as a product of natural occurrences. And - surprise! his method shows that life must have been designed.

    I would also like to address the issue of fossils.

    Except you did not. Where did those fossils actually come from? Are they really millions of years old? If you say yes, you must be prepared to defend your account of Biblical history, because there are some Christians who believe, using a literal count from the Bible, that the world is only six thousand years old, and they may accuse you of taking liberties with Scripture.

    1. Re:Does not contradict? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > If you say yes, you must be prepared to defend your account of Biblical history, because there are some Christians who believe

      I believe the world came out of my ass, or rather, will come out of my ass, the moment I will die. I wrote a book about it. A couple people believe it, so you MUST be prepared to defend your account of reality as compared to mine.

    2. Re:Does not contradict? by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      I believe the world came out of my ass...

      I guess that would be the Big Butt Theory?

    3. Re:Does not contradict? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And why, exactly, are you holding this one Christian accountable for what "some Christians" believe? That doesn't work. You're putting words in his mouth.

      I know lots of Christians who insist that we cannot figure out how old the Earth is using the Bible. They point out things like God's tendency to wait around, enjoying his creations. How can you say he didn't create the Earth, the dinosaurs, etc. and then just enjoy it for billions of years?

      You can't. The point is not clear in the Bible, it is speculative and/or interpreted.

      You're just another finger pointer that doesn't know what he's talking about. You don't have any real knowledge, you just look for things to nit-pick at and try to say God doesn't exist because... because... carrots are orange!

      Oh yeah... and that whole going to hell, can't live your life selfishly, have to love people thing that you don't want to believe.

    4. Re:Does not contradict? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I guess that would be the Big Butt Theory?

      Pshh, you haven't seen my ass! It's not just BB, it's the the VBB (Very Big Butt) Theory.

  434. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by DavidTC · · Score: 1
    If you were trying to make a semantic difference between 'law' and 'theory', you picked an idiotic example.

    We know Newton's Law of Gravity are wrong. It is an absolute fact it is incorrect, thanks to the orbit of Mercury. It has been disproven, so it's not even correct to call it a current scientific theory.

    In science, 'law' just means 'theory or observation that's been boiled down to a single equation or phrase'. It can even be known to be wrong in certain circumstances and still used, which theories cannot! (Well, they can, but people have to fix them.)

    Calling it a law just means scientists can take at that equation or rule and just use it without having to justify that 'watts equals amps times volts' or 'an object in motion stays in motion unless acted on by an outside force', and other scientists are fine with it.

    As such you can use Newton's Law of Gravity, F = G M m / r2, to calculate how fast an object falls, and no scientist will blink. That's the only reason it's called a law.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  435. Kent Hovind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You should look up Kent Hovind. He explaines creation very well. There is a torrent out there of his seminar. drdino.com for his site and search for Kent Hovind on isohunt.com for the torrent of his siminar. Its not copyrighted so fell free to copy it and give it to your friends.

  436. apply your reasoning across the board then... by Jay9333 · · Score: 1

    You can apply this same reason (not falsifiable) to natural selection as well, at least to the segments of the theory that I mentioned. So just re-read my original post and substitute "falsifiable" for "repeatable". My points stand.

    ~jay

    1. Re:apply your reasoning across the board then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you convinced anyone.

    2. Re:apply your reasoning across the board then... by SeattleGameboy · · Score: 1

      I have no idea what theory you are talking about, but let me see I can bring some light to the dark dungeon that is your mind.

      It is easy to test for the validity of evolution. Even if that test cannot be done in a lab.

      How do you test for falsifiability of generation of a new specie? Just look at history: i.e. fossils.

      If it was impossible for a specie to evolve to a completely different specie, then you should be able to find a geographically isolated area (let say an island) where through out history, all species on the island is completely stable.

      Oooh, guess what? No such place exists (thus evolution has not been proven false yet). Every corner of the earth shows fossil history that is dramatic in its changes (over a long time - at least in human scales). And when the fossil records are good, it show step by step evolution of a specific specie (let's say an early elephant) into another (walrus). It is repeated (there's that word again) again and again, everywhere you look.

      There you go, an easy falsibility and repeatability test for evolution.

      Too bad for you (and other religious nuts who have not idea how science works - but yet yell about it at the top of your lungs), it passes the test with flying colors every time.

      Want more?

    3. Re:apply your reasoning across the board then... by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
      ...let me see I can bring some light to the dark dungeon that is your mind.

      I have no idea what the fuck you mean by this comment about my mind... but this is obviously a case of the pot calling the kettle black again, as I mentioned with you liberal plank-eyes looking for specs in the eyes of people you disagree with. There certainly seems to be a lack of "respectable disagreement" when it comes to quite a few of you guys, especially on slashdot.

      How do you test for falsifiability of generation of a new specie? Just look at history: i.e. fossils.

      And the evidence isn't there. That's the whole reason you guys came up with the "punctuated equillibrium" *theory* if I remember correctly.

      If it was impossible for a specie to evolve to a completely different specie, then you should be able to find a geographically isolated area (let say an island) where through out history, all species on the island is completely stable.

      That's assuming that oceanic levels/land masses/land bridges haven't moved... which earth science tells us they have.

      Oooh, guess what? No such place exists (thus evolution has not been proven false yet)

      Don't you love it when people use excited sarcasm to make a point that is so obviously flawed. Calm down, and remember that your "geographically isolated" island has not always been, and no one in their right mind would say that is a controlled environment in which experiments should be done or wholly relied upon. Also remember, I didn't say evolution has been proven false. I said it hasn't been proven true ("macro" evolution that is). I'm not "anti-evolution". I'm simply open minded enough to let two opposing theories about the origins of our universe and our species battle it out in the minds of our up and coming thinkers instead of trying to blind their eyes to perfectly legitimate theories. I personally am glad there are evolutionists out there seeking a better understanding of our origins. I love to hear evidence the have found and presented. I also enjoy hearing intelligent design thinkers analize the possibilities of natural selection 'designing' some of the most intricate complexities of life. I think the bias displayed against the latter in the scientific community is sad, as is obviously seen in your heated, sarcastic, (and flawed mind you) tone.

      And when the fossil records are good, it show step by step evolution of a specific specie (let's say an early elephant) into another (walrus). It is repeated (there's that word again) again and again, everywhere you look.

      No, actually it doesn't. Not nearly clearly enough and most certainly not in a way that shows us how to repeat such theoretical phenomena in a controlled, repeatable manner.

      God bless, jay

    4. Re:apply your reasoning across the board then... by SeattleGameboy · · Score: 1

      I don't disrespect your disagreement. I disrespect your lack of knowledge.

      I AM a liberal, but I GREATLY admire Antonin Scalia, because although I disagree with him on almost every decision he makes, you cannot argue about how brilliant the guy is. His arguments are succinct, well reasoned (if somewhat flawed), and impeccably presented.

      Your arguments on the other hand is mostly consisted of repeating bits and parts of what others have said in a way that exposes how much knowledge you lack.

      That is what I disrespect.

      For example:

      And the evidence isn't there. That's the whole reason you guys came up with the "punctuated equillibrium" *theory* if I remember correctly.

      Do you even know what a punctuated equilibrium is??? May be you should read the book that Prof Gould wrote about it (I DID). Punctuated Equilibrium is a theory that earth goes through periods of intense evolutionary changes. And he makes this claim on FOSSIL EVIDENCE!!!

      That's assuming that oceanic levels/land masses/land bridges haven't moved... which earth science tells us they have.

      Again, you extrapolate what little you know about geology into stating something so obviously dumb. Land and oceanic bridges happen over tens, hundreds thousands or even millions of years. There are periods in which a land mass is sufficiently isolated (say, New Zealand, Australia) for long enough period time for unique species to develop (do you see kangaroos in SE asia?). And there are ample fossil record to show HOW they developed in that isolation.

      No, actually it doesn't. Not nearly clearly enough and most certainly not in a way that shows us how to repeat such theoretical phenomena in a controlled, repeatable manner.

      Says who? You? The guy with absolutely no scientific training? The guy who doesn't read anything that isn't related to the bible? I think I'll just go with the opinions of the professionals (i.e. people who eat, drink, and live this stuff every day of their lives), over yours - call me crazy.

    5. Re:apply your reasoning across the board then... by Jay9333 · · Score: 1
      Do you even know what a punctuated equilibrium is???...Punctuated Equilibrium is a theory that earth goes through periods of intense evolutionary changes.

      Again, calm down. I saw the first question mark. The other two just show you have more emotion in this debate then reason.

      Punctuated Equilibrium is more an observation than a theory of evolution. To Eldredge and Gould Instead of a slow, continous progression, the evolution of life on Earth seems more like the life of a soldier: long periods of boredom interrupted by rare moments of terror. And of course they observed fossils to make this observation. The fact is though, their observation is not proven. In fact the reason they had to start looking for evidence to support PE is because of a *lack* of evidence supporting darwinian macro evolution.

      The evolution from one species to another is not proven and certainly is not repeatable. It remains a theory. Some scientists are more convinced by the little evidence we have then others. And you're assumptions about my reading habits don't prove anything either, they just continue to make you look bigotted, biased, and foolish.

    6. Re:apply your reasoning across the board then... by SeattleGameboy · · Score: 1
      You can Google, whoopee for you.

      I will allow late Prof. Gould to answer your distortions (a man who I greatly admired and saw several of his lectures and read his books).

      Quote:

      Second, the theory became an issue (quite coincidentally) just when creationism reached its acme of thankfully temporary influence. Creationists, with their usual skill in the art of phony rhetoric, cynically distorted punctuated equilibrium for their own ends, claiming that we had virtually thrown in the towel and admitted that the fossil record contains no intermediate forms. (Punctuated equilibrium, on the other hand, is a different theory of intermediacy for evolutionary trends--pushing a ball up an inclined plane for gradualism, climbing a staircase for punctuated equilibrium.) Some of our colleagues, in an all too common and literally perverse reaction, blamed us for this mayhem upon our theory. At least we were able to fight back effectively. Most of my testimony at the Arkansas creationism trial in 1980 centered upon the creationists' distortion of punctuated equilibrium.

    7. Re:apply your reasoning across the board then... by Jay9333 · · Score: 1

      Should I be suprised that an anti-creationist doesn't want to admit weaknesses in evolutionary theory? No, I shouldn't be... no more so then I should be at your assumptions of my reading habits. However foolish such may be, I'm not suprised by them.

      You guys shouldn't be afraid to call PE what it is... a response to the observation that the fossil record didn't (doesn't) lend the kind of support darwinian "macro" evolutionists expected.

      ~jason

  437. nearly 1500 replies in under 4 hours by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you think we hit a nerve? Hmm....

  438. Evolution proven in two steps... by Urusai · · Score: 0

    1) Do you accept the notion of heredity? Of course you do. Any farmer does; otherwise, what's the use of breeding?

    2) If you die prior to having offspring, then, whatever offspring exist in the next generation come from other parents. Parents, who have different genetics than you, presumably, unless it's your twin who's the parent.

    ERGO: Those who survive to breed pass on their genetics to their offspring, and those who don't, don't. Consequently, a species consists of the offspring of those who survived (and managed to breed, sorry Slashdotters). That's survival of the fittest, that's evolution, and you'd have to deny heredity to deny evolution.

    Antievolutionists deny heredity. Therefore, I propose they abstain from breeding, and no harm done from their perspective. From ours, the world will be a better place in a generation.

  439. Re:Atheism also a religion by Alsee · · Score: 1

    The original intent of separation of church and state was to ensure that there would be no state mandated religion.

    False. It is broader than that. The force of government cannot be used for the purpose of favoring or suppress any religion or any religious belief. That would be a violation of our constitutionally guaranteed right of religious freedom - freedom against the use of government power against us for religious purposes. That is not a valid purpose for the use of the force of government.

    Students are free to pray in school. School officials are prohibited from absuing their power as official agents of the government to promote or supress such prayer. For example the ACLU fought and won a case for a student's Bible quote to be included in the school year book. The religious right routinely misrepresents court battles on the subject. They misrepresent the cases to provoke outrage. When they write their propaganda press releases on such cases they leave out the use of government power that was actually targeted. They misrepresent court cases against the abuse of government power as an attack on religion. They also incorrectly use word "public" where the correct word is "government". The ACLU engages in court cases against government displays of religion, but defends public displays of religion - even on government land. For example the ACLU fought (and I believe won) a case defending people's freedom to preform baptisms in a public(governemnt land) park. And the religious right spews propaganda about attempts to attack any public display of religion. That is either outright lying propaganda or it is the ignorant disemination of misunderstanding.

    Atheism is then as much a religion as Islam

    Ignoring the very sloppy question of whether atheism is a religion, I will say that the belief that there is no god *is* a religious belief.

    The two abolve points do indeed mean that the force of governent can not be used for the purpose of promoting or suppressing the belief that there is no god.

    the atheistic view of evolution

    Your right that public school should not teach an atheistic view of evolution. Nor should they teach a theistic view of evolution. In fact a majority of Christians believe a theistic view of evolution. (Yes, a majority of Christians accept evolution. Most Christians are not in the US.)

    Schools should teach science. That means teaching evolution.

    Evolution says nothing about the existance or nonexistance of God. Any teacher teaching otherwise does not belong in the classroom.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  440. establishment clause? by scrout · · Score: 0

    Perhaps a better debate would be how the establishment clause prevents teaching a creationism class in public schools. It's amazing how the simple words can be interpreted by those with their own agenda. Please define how teaching said class equals Congressional legislation for one state religion?? Please. But hey, these same folks look at Amendment #2 and come up with "only armies get guns". WTF?

  441. Religiousity was a survival trait. Esp. in War. by guidryp · · Score: 1

    I don't have the cites, but I have read that there is a genetic component to faith.

    And there is definitely a survival benefit, but it is more along the lines of controlling your tribe and convincing them to wipe out your neighbors. AKA Holy War.

    If you neighbors had more Athiestic traits, there would probably be less "faith" and more dissent about wiping out your neighbors.

    So the religious would likely muster a great force to wipe out the less so.

    This is not my theory. It was some documentary I was watching once.

    BTW there is no evidence that theist are any more altruistic than non theists. And as far as avoiding punishment. The screaming zealots I see on TV with signs Saying queers will burn in hell, seem to be the ones more into punishment.

    1. Re:Religiousity was a survival trait. Esp. in War. by Krehbiel · · Score: 1
      Your title seems to suggest you think that spirituality was a survival trait once, but not any more. Do you think that's true? Why?

    2. Re:Religiousity was a survival trait. Esp. in War. by guidryp · · Score: 1

      The main component that was a survival trait was blind faith, in obeying the religious leaders commands to go to war a slaughter the enemies of god.

      While this is still happening it is to a smaller degree and is no longer a significant driver of survival.

      In fact if you look at Religious Driven suicide bombers, they are very often the young and have not yet reproduced. Their shortcut to heaven is an anti-survival trait. Thier religious ferver is removing their genes from the pool.

  442. MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's making shit up!

    1. Re:MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's making shit up!

      I dare say anyone who eats solid food, through the process of digestion, will be making shit up.

  443. Teach this philosophy class, not science by davidwr · · Score: 2, Informative

    Some explainations of how the universe works may be correct but are unprovable. This is one of them.

    Such theories are the domain of philosophy and religion, not science. They may have a place in a philosophy class, not in a science class.

    Personally, I think the universe is a figment of CowboyNeal's imagination, and I was predestined to write this post. I think the Dover, PA school board should give my world view equal time in their schools. *joke*

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  444. Parables and Metaphors by squirrl811 · · Score: 1

    "Jesus taught in parables!"

    I've found a nice rule of thumb when it comes to the Bible is, if a passage easily makes sense when taken literally, then take it literally. If it does not easily make sense when taken literally, look for the metaphorical meanings.

    The Bible takes on some pretty heavy topics, and I think it is fair to say it is easier to understand something complex when it is described to you in metaphorical stories (parables). I think that is why Jesus taught by parable so often.

  445. IntelligentDesign != good; by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    i know a lot about evolution. a lot they don't teach in schools.

    You know things they do not teach in schools?
    Where DO they teach it? Church?

    i have read books on it, listened to speakers on it, had my questions answered on it, studdied it.

    Books written, and questions answered, by whom?
    Biologists, or theologians who did lip service at universities to get "credentials" in biology?

    Why does a discussion of ID never bring up the merits or science but always turns it into a fight against evolution?

    Because that is the very reason for the creation of the "intelligent design" movement: It is an attempt at using pseudoscience to discredit science by using it's vernacular. It is a mockery of science, a unholy work of obfuscation and purposeful confusion.

    --

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

  446. No such thing as separation of church and state by RealSalmon · · Score: 1

    I'm sure this will get modded down as a Troll, so mainly I write this just for myself . . .

    From TA . . .

    Unfortunately, Intelligent Design's attack on the separation of church and state in our schools is something to be concerned about. It is a slippery slope, from the teaching of a theory with no scientific backing in the classroom, to school sponsored prayer in the classroom. It may seem like a stretch, but as soon as the line is blurred, it is much easier to rationalize each step until an extreme is reached.

    I could make the same kind of statement about not allowing the teaching of strict creationism in schools as well. It is a slipperly slope from prohibiting school sponsored prayer in the classroom to prohibiting the individual right to prayer in a school.

    In fact, there is no such thing in The Constitution as this lately preached 'Separation of Church and State'. That clause clearly states the FEDERAL government SHALL MAKE NO LAW concerning the establiment of a religion. That means such things are deferred to the states. The Federal Government has no say in the matter. The Supreme Court should not even be hearing these cases.

    The founding fathers actions are in clear contradiction to the interpretation of that clause espoused today by the courts. Indeed, one of their first acts was to establish a national day of prayer.

    --

    -B

  447. what about the others? by maxpublic · · Score: 1

    Not only is this the imposition of religion on government - definitely unconstitutional - it's the imposition of ONE religion upon government. All other religions are ignored as being irrelevent because they don't have a majority following in the country.

    As I recall, this is precisely what many of our ancestors were trying to escape when they fled from Europe. Instead it seems they brought that evil with them.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  448. Teach it, why not? by c-reality · · Score: 1

    Why shouldn't Intelligent Design (or Creation) be taught in schools?

    My problem with evolution (besides the fact I believe it impossible, more on that later) is that it's a theory that everyone treats as fact. Quite the opposite is true. If you are going to teach a theory, why not teach a few more theories that make just as much sense? What makes people so willing to immediately shut ID or Creationism out without a single thought?

    Is is really that crazy or kooky that an intelligent being (God) could have created the universe and all that is within it in 6 literal days? Or is it just as crazy or kooky that everyone treats a theory that involves unfathomable mathmatical problems, and plain doesn't make sense logically?

    I just take God's Word at face value. That said, I do not believe it's possible God created using evolution. As another thread far above this one mentioned, why would God use something as long and drawn out as evolution is supposed to be when He could just speak it into existence? That's a good point, and one of many.

    The Bible does not leave room for any sort of evolution or time gap theory. One member incorrectly translated the Hebrew meaning of day in the term of "Back in my father's day", meaning a wide span of time. The Hebrew word used (yom) for day in Genesis 1-2 is without a doubt a 24-hour period of time. This was done by God (who doubtless could have done everything in a split second) for a reference for Israelites to follow (as written in the Bible). You can get that information right from Google, or for a better source use www.icr.org (which, by the way, has papers written by extremely intelligent men educated by non-Christian colleges for those of you who might consider their education biased). Therefore it was created, not through evolution, but by God simply speaking it into existence. If a professing Christian believes evolution was the way God went about Creation, then he/she needs to step back and re-evaluate their faith because the Bible leaves no doubt. If Christ died for your sins, was buried, and rose again and you believe that with all your heart, then you'd better believe Creation because He said that's the way things went about.

    While reading through this thread I saw a lot of attempts to shut ID and/or Creationism down as mere lore or stories but praise the wonder of evolution. Have you stepped back and realized the impossibility of evolution? How can the big bang (an explosion!) go from uncontrollable chaos to the order (over hundreds of billions of years...or is it hundreds of trillions? The numbers keep changing on me)? What about the second law of thermodynamics? Why don't we see (without a single doubt) evolution happening as stated by Darwin today? Why is the world getting worse, instead of better as evolution would have it? Why do things such as disease and homosexualism exist today? Doesn't that contradict evolution as it attempts to better man and the universe? You would have thought we were over that 8 trillion years ago...

    I also read some threads arguing about fossils not being able to be explained by ID/Creationists ("we say they are there because God is testing our faith"...ugh). That is a silly claim, because we do have some very good evidence to support a world-wide flood did happen, which cause a great deal of re-working of the earth's surface (erosion is a simple thing, take a garden hose and spray it into the ground) and fossilized remains quickly (look at how quickly Mount Saint Helens fossilized stuff!). As for the flood being possible, the Bible speaks of a water canopy which covered the earth much like a shield blocking radiation and creating a greenhouse type effect underneath (allowing for some incredible plant and animal life, and also explaining the extended lifetimes of humans mentioned in Genesis). During the flood this canopy would have had to collapse upon the earth. This also would have moved our continents around a bit, much like a garden hose being pointed at the groun

    1. Re:Teach it, why not? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      Your whole post is nothing more than a fallacious argument from incredulity, not to mention betraying an enormous and rather sad ignorance of evolution specifically and science in general. As to water canopies, for one moment fathom that atmospheric pressure that sea level would be at with a water canopy of any size.

      I hate to tell you this, but you have bought into a big load of bullshit to support your Biblical literalism. Evolution happens all the time. The evidence for it is vast and if you want your side taught in science class, not only are you going to have to demonstrate why evolution does not explain observations, but why your side does emperically. Unless what you really want taught is your religious beliefs, in which case, stay away from my kids' school. I want them taught science in the science class, and not given sermons by people who believe in Global Floods in Water Canopies and other such idiocies.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Teach it, why not? by c-reality · · Score: 1

      "Your whole post is nothing more than a fallacious argument from incredulity, not to mention betraying an enormous and rather sad ignorance of evolution specifically and science in general."

      Ignorant? I argue you're the one with the blind fold on. If you want to get right down to it, how ignorant is someone who believes a theory that the mathmatical (yes, let's use some science here) probably of it is CRAZY I couldn't even get all the numbers in all the pages available in the world! Or how about the fact that no mutations can produce a new feature? How come the big bang doesn't agree with the second law of Thermodynamics?

      Please! Answer my questions in my original thread before calling me ignorant.

      "As to water canopies, for one moment fathom that atmospheric pressure that sea level would be at with a water canopy of any size."

      It would be something like the world-wide hyperbaric chamber. Take a look at the effects of a hyperbaric chamber, especially for critically wounded people.

      "I hate to tell you this, but you have bought into a big load of bullshit to support your Biblical literalism."

      I could say the same for you (with less harsh language). Sounds to me you have a problem with the Bible.

      "Evolution happens all the time."

      Where? I don't see ANYTHING in a transition process.

      I hate to break it to you, but it doesn't take a wizard to see the world isn't getting better.

      "not only are you going to have to demonstrate why creation does not explain observations, but why your side does emperically."

      Looks a bit better...

      "Unless what you really want taught is your religious beliefs, in which case, stay away from my kids' school. I want them taught science in the science class, and not given sermons by people who believe in Global Floods in Water Canopies and other such idiocies."

      Creationism is science. You must have missed that part. I could easily argue (and have multiple times elsewhere, including in my original thread) that evolution is the idiocy of our time. If that's all man can come up with, we're in sorry shape.

    3. Re:Teach it, why not? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Alright then, let's see what you've got. Show me the Scientific Theory of Creationism, including most importantly ways that said theory can be falsified.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:Teach it, why not? by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Okay, I'm only going to reply to one part of this, because otherwise there's just too many faults to cover.

      the mathmatical (yes, let's use some science here) probably of it is CRAZY

      1. Invoking the name of mathematics does not magically make something into science - try showing your math next time.

      2. I presume the "insane probabilities" you're referring to here take form of the old creationist chestnut of "Evolution is like a tornado passing over a junkyard and leaving in it's wake a fully assembled Boeing 747" (or any similarly unlikely chaos-to-order event)

      If that is what you're talking about, then you need to really examine what you know about evolution, because that's a stance so flawed that even the leading creationists and IDers advise it be dropped due it being utterly, massively, and demonstrably flawed.
      I've already pointed out the flaws in this argument here in this Slashdot discussion.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  449. Whoops, forgot to say... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Insightful


    > Seriously - you want me to believe that the simplest explanation is that sex, butterflies, and Picasso "just happened"????

    Is it really any simpler to think there just happens to be a god that created sex, butterflies, and Picasso? All you've done is add a middle man... your 'explanation' leaves more to be explained than when you started.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  450. Fixing the article... by noblesse+oblige · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The only change between the slashdot intro and the K5 intro is the sentance, "An article over at Kuro5hin discusses the controvery over the Intelligent Design movement." While not a gross error, unless Mime Narrator and benna are the same people, it should have been in quotes. Such inflamatory writing and unattributed quoting indicates incestuous propegation of problematic ideas.

    The quote, "a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again" is an interjection of commentary in the reporter's passive third person voice and is not accurate. Surely it is a queue to illicit the contemtuous responses such as such as (Score 5: Insightful):

    Honestly, just what is the deal with these fundamentalists?

    If the author was wishing to be non-inflammatory, or better yet honest, they would have said, "a theory that has been accepted as an explaination of the origins of life time and time again." Many explanations are accepted in science that are unable to produce repeatable results (even one-off results) because as a framework they explain a lot of what we do see. The unverifiability is overlooked and clearly acknowledged to students. There is no shame in promoting a theory we still lack the ability to ultimately verify. For instance many aspects of Einstein's theory of relativity remain unverified.

    However, one may see in this dishonest attempt to reach beyond being "accepted" to being "shown" a peek at the motivation for the piece. It is also pretty indicative of the same mental gymnastics he attemps throughout the piece.

    Another example is the ommision of a mechanism for origin of life in the the next paragraph in the K5 article:

    To understand the problems with Intelligent Design, first it is important to understand the theory it is attempting to oppose, evolution by natural selection. The theory is this: If organisms reproduce, offspring inherit traits from their progenitor(s), a variability of traits exists, and the environment cannot sustain all the members of an increasingly large population, then those members of the population that have poorly-adapted traits (to their environment) will die out, and those with well-adapted traits (to their environment) will prosper (Darwin 459). Over a long period of time, this process leads to extreme complexity, and adaptedness.

    One would think this is a crucial item to develop after reading the inherent outrage against the situation "that high school science teachers teaching evolution tell their students that evolutionary theory [sic] is flawed, and that intelligent design is a valid alternative." Where "flawed" simply means it has many unverified elements as does Intelligent Design.

    Indeed, if all the author thinks of evolution is the ability for orgamisms/species to change traits over generations then there is no conflict. There is also no mechanism proposed to explain the origin of life with evolution either.

    So while outraged at the mear co-habitation of ID and evolution, the contradiction offered is abandoned so quickly? All that is left is just competition. The author chooses not to compete over verified applications of the two theories. Evidence is also skipped. The author instead chooses to make evolution and ID compete in clearly unverifiable ways. The author awkwardly chooses "complexity" as his chosen arena, and chooses mathematical theory as his weaponry.

    The rest of the article invokes its own pseudo-science in the use of highly specific mathematical models of statistcal theory as models of natural behaviour and law. At issue is "complexity" and he makes the mistake of using the complexity of a mathematical system to represent the complexity of a natural system, and they are not the same thing at all.

    Further damning the piece as a pseudo-intellectual work is his overly constrained focus on "complexity" i

    --
    Some will always be above others. Destroy the equality today, and it will appear again tomorrow. --Ralph Waldo Emerson
  451. Please... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 3, Insightful

    After reading the comments, I think I have a good advice for some of you: learn the difference between Theory and Hypothesis. Figuring out which one is 'evolution theory', and which one is 'intelligent design theory', is left as an excercise for the reader.

  452. ICR by wrast · · Score: 2, Informative

    Good info at http://www.icr.org/.

    1. Re:ICR by RichardX · · Score: 1

      This is obviously some new meaning of the term "good information" of which I wasn't previously aware

      Some actual good info here though: http://www.talkorigins.org

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  453. Why Comment?!?! (Yes, this is ironic.) by Atraxen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But really? Why comment? Both sides are inherently dogmatic - no one's going to change anyone else's mind via a comment here. I know my religious views (or the lack of - I refuse to specify) aren't about to change because of JoeBlow37's +5 insightful scythe of either side of the issue.

    More importantly to discuss - isn't this a great opportunity to begin PROPERLY teaching scientific process in the schools in a meaningful and relevent way? I'm a research chemist who works in an inner-city public school 2 days a week (thanks NSF!!!!) - I've been using this debate to demonstrate that all arguements should be supported (don't bother calling me contradictory here - I see the arguable dichotomy the evolutionists claim the creationists possess here and reject it - the point here is the dialogue), should attempt to address the point where they break down (for example: creationist - evidence demonstrating evolution at work; evolutionist - statistical inprobability of non-protected evolution), and should attempt predictive power (worthy of note - many creationists believe in the process of evolution, just not evolution-as-genesis).

    Comments welcome on the educational opportunities afforded by this discussion - but please, if you want to scream about your side/call me biased toward one side or the other/etc., for the love of god/not god, do it in someone else's thread! Otherwise, why comment?!?!

    --
    Be careful of your thoughts; they could become words at any minute...
  454. The Isreali People by stewymcstewstew · · Score: 1

    This is not ment to be a troll, I swear. The people who came up with the idea of creationism, which ID is based on, is of course the Isreali people. This means that we are teaching the ideas of creation created by a tribe of nomadic goat herders who lived 4000 years ago. Around the same time, you would have found very similiar creation myths in all of the religions of the world. If we were to be fair, we would be teaching every creation myth from 4000 years an up. Just because there is one dominant religion in the United States in no way does it give the theory any more validity. They aren't teaching the christian creation myth in schools in most eastern parts of the world as fact, much as we aren't teaching any of their creation myths as fact in ours. To me, this seems incredibly hypocritical, and a huge oversight by the majority of fundemental christianity. It's continuing domination over the people of this country is becoming frighting, and there needs to be steps taken to interveen the actions of this government. I'm sorry if it offends you that I'm tossing christianity aside as myth, but to a very large precentage of the world, it is. Sitting in front of my computer, i realize that it is constructed of plastic, metal, sillicon, etc.. In no way am I postulating that it functions solely on "magic" which i can't see and understand. However, my reaction to the words on the screen, what other people are saying, and the fact that the ideas of plastic, metal, etc.. are all valid thoughts in my head is a perfect example of a nonphysical existance that is coupled with the physical existance of my computer. The bible teaches that the earth is the center of the universe, that women are second to men etc.. The short of it is, religion was never ment to play a part in science. It's merely an attempt at people understanding the metaphysical existance of the world around them. When you start intertwining science and religion so heavily, that the lines become blurred, you risk falling back into the dark ages of an oppressive catholic regime executing anybody who used this "science" to "prove" things "wrong" in the bible. They simply aren't trying to explain the same thing. Please realize that.

  455. Evolution doesn't only apply to life. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Evolution doesn't explain how life started. It doesn't even address that. It explains how more life changes over time. It explains how more complex life may arise from simler life. [...] Evolution represents our best understanding of the development of life.

    Evolution doesn't apply exclusively to life, you can see it occur in computer simulations (http://dllab.caltech.edu/avida/), or the marketplace.
  456. Slashdot Proves That God Exists by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    The /usr/bin/games/fortune at the bottom of this vast page:

    "Garbage In -- Gospel Out."

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  457. Newton was doing science, by anomaly · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We agree violently about your Newton example above. Origins - specifically that of the universe is by definition untestable.

    Naturalists and Creationists agree that specific data has been collected. We both theorize about origins and have differing understandings of the MEANING behind the collected data.

    Since the scientific method cannot be used, let's stop calling speculation about origins science.

    As I said, once naturalists take their phiolosophy out of the science curriculum, I'll cease trying to get my philosophy in. If it's fair to apply materialism and naturalism, then theism is fair game, too.

    Until that happens, I think that the textbook stickers are a great idea. If nothing else, it gets people to think, and I hope we can all agree that a thinking populous is a good thing. I will also work to "call a spade a spade" with respect to philosophy in science class.

    It's not those 'neutral thinking scientists' versus 'those biased religious nuts' it's
    those 'biased materialistic naturalists' versus 'those biased people of theistic faith.'

    Let's be fair and acknowledge our bias.

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Newton was doing science, by cnelzie · · Score: 1
      Naturalists and Creationists agree that specific data has been collected. We both theorize about origins and have differing understandings of the MEANING behind the collected data.

      You make a mistake here. Without being testable, at best what can be made is a hypothesis. After a hypothesis has been tested and found true, more then once, it can become a theory.

      You are mistaking the 'Theory of Evolution' with the original 'Hypothesis of Evolution'. In science, there is a very significant difference between the two. The Hypothesis, which came first, was tested out and some factual truths were discovered, this went into the formation of the Theory, which is a body of factual evidence that can be scientifically tested to prove correct or incorrect.

      Inteligent Design is at best a hypothesis if one wishes to shoehorn it into science. However, being completely untestable, completely unverifiable, it does not fit within the confines of the scientific method. It does sit neatly within the realm of theology within the greater school of philosophy.

      --
      If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
    2. Re:Newton was doing science, by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      No. It's about "scientists with testable theories" versus "religious nuts who won't or can't submit their loony theories to any test at all".

      I have no biases. (Well, maybe one, I'm a socialist.)

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
  458. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Xrikcus · · Score: 1

    Your belief in ID is one thing. Your attempting to say that Evolution is "only a theory" when that is a meaningless statement in a scientific context is quite another. If you are an intelligent person, with an understanding of science as you claim it is possible to be, then you should realise that. ID does not proclaim ignorance, "it's just a theory" does.

  459. It's all just a huge mistake... by kiddailey · · Score: 1


    ...and all I know is that it was a huge mistake to come down from the trees to begin with...

  460. Wrong... Dead Wrong by drumsetdrummer · · Score: 1
    The school board is teaching a science class and is teaching the fact of evolution. Evolution has a tonne of evidence supporting it - evidence that continues to grow, not shrink. "Intelligent Design", on the other hand, has NO evidence supporting it and is simply the latest incarnation of Creationism...

    This statement was birthed in ignorance. Firstly, evolution is not a fact (scientifically speaking). If it was, it would then cease to be called the theory of evolution, and become the law of evolution. (How do you prove "billions and billions of years ago"? You can't.)

    Secondly, there is an array of evidence for creationism. (Start here: http://www.google.com/search?q=creation+science&so urceid=mozilla-search&start=0&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe= utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:offic ial)

    You are basically stating unproven theories as facts which is what got you so uptight to begin with.

    1. Re:Wrong... Dead Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Secondly, there is an array of evidence for creationism

      You're funny...

    2. Re:Wrong... Dead Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously don't know what a scientific theory is.

  461. somewhat technical pedantry by BitterAndDrunk · · Score: 1

    Lucifer is never outlined as the serpent in Eden. Popular Christian belief states that it was, but that's not outlined specifically in Genesis or later.

    --
    You better watch out, there may be dogs about . . .
    1. Re:somewhat technical pedantry by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Lucifer is never outlined as the serpent in Eden.

      Huh, lookadat, you're right.

      Well, that's even worse! It means a beast, without free will, and therefore one of God's automaton, instructed the innocent Eve to eat the fruit, whislt she was ignorant of good and evil.

      --

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

  462. intelligent? by frankgod · · Score: 1

    If I was designed by some sort of omniscient intelligence, where do I file a bug report?

  463. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Xrikcus · · Score: 1

    Not if it was a valid test. I should also point out that evolution isn't as simple as saying that single-celled organisms evolved into humans, that's merely an extension of the premise of the theory. That is to say that one thing evolved into another, so it seems reasonable to take that back all the way.

    There are many ways to disprove features of the theory, talkorigins.org has a number listed for a start.

  464. political correctness over ignorance by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

    I am under the assumption that they choose political correctness over any type of an education. You can debate all you want over whether or not God created whatever you say it created. It seems in the interest of furthering knowledge of our children a parent would put their views/beliefs aside to let their child get the best education possible.

    I believe what I can see touch taste and feel, but I also know I can't feel an atom, yet I know one exists. I am not one to say some type of God doesn't exist. I don't see a harm in teaching evolution and creation to children and letting them make an educated desicion for themselves based on the facts they are given as to what is true and what is to be taken on blind faith.
    I for one know humankind evolved, crawled forth from the seas etc etc. This is my choice to believe based on the facts I was presented. One can not just be told something is true with no evidence presented to them, this is taking someones word for it as bieng such or going on faith.

    As a parent I would have no problem with my daughter bieng taught something like this in school. Having all the facts she could better decide what is best for her to believe. While she is my daughter, she does not have my beliefs/religion it is up to her to find her own way. It is my job to present her the facts and to educate her to make the best possible desicion for her.

    --
    I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
  465. we've come a long way, baby by PMuse · · Score: 1

    So, are we supposed to have a good academic discussion about where we stand on the issue or are we supposed to flame anyone who is a proponent of Intelligent Design?

    Instead, let's raise a pint and celebrate our victory over creationism. Schools now teach evolution as the mechanism by which life arrived in its present form. They teach no alternative mechanism. There is no danger of this changing any time soon. That's the ballgame, ladies and gentlemen -- we won.

    The only argument still in play is whether there is scientific proof (a) that god exists or (b) that god doesn't exist. Recall that the theory of ID states no more than "I observe stuff that proves an intelligent designer acted."

    But, we don't need to care about this. Let the religious folks believe what they want about whether god exists! So long as they acquiese to teaching kids how the mechanism of evolution works, that's enough. All of this debate about uncaused causers, anthropic principles, et al. is post-high school level stuff anyway.

    --
    "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
  466. ID is great ... by mbaudis · · Score: 1

    ... but is limited to the U.S.A. Especially the central parts.

    Maybe there is some kind of accelerated regression of mental capabilities at work? I think, so GOD exists? But wouldn't this be proof of evolution?

    Questions... Not really.

  467. I can't wait to vote these jerks out of office... by dnebin · · Score: 1

    The whole thing is another stupid attempt to bring church back into the classroom. I have a couple of problems with the idea: 1. The ID is meant to come from their version of god; not the jewish god, not the muslim god, not the ancient greek/roman/egyption gods, etc. They like ID as a represention of their faith, not the faith of others. 2. It shouldn't be done in public school. If the wacko's want their children to have a faith-based education, they are free to pull them out of public school and put them in a religious school. Or take them to sunday school. Or teach them themselves. But using the public school as a pulpit to reach out to my child w/o respecting our beliefs is just wrong. 3. The community as a whole was not given the option to discuss the idea of mandating ID before it was mandated. I live in Dover, and there is a huge local outcry about the ID debacle. Businesses are pulling support because many folks are threatening pickets, etc. It's neighbor against neighbor down here, too. We've got an upcoming school board election, and I'm predicting a high turnout for those that oppose and support the school board. I for one am the former and will be out on election day getting people to give the current school board members the boot.

  468. Journal by JJ · · Score: 1

    I've posted a journal entry discussing this issue. Feel free to comment.

    --
    So long and thanks for all the fish . . . !!!
  469. argument makes no sense by elgatozorbas · · Score: 1
    We've only had about 5 years of this wacko-fundamentalist crap here - it's only been 5 years since the end of the "Clinton Era". Give it some time....
    Meanwhile, back in Europe, you guys were burning people at the stake for HUNDREDS OF YEARS.

    Assuming you are right, your argument makes no sense: we stopped burning people at the stake, you are beginning to while you should know better. It's not like every nation has the right to have their Middle Ages at some point in history.

  470. laws of physics by planetfinder · · Score: 1

    If one were looking for intelligent design then the place to look is at the intelligent design of the laws of physics. Presumably the laws of chemistry and ultimately biology can be derived from the laws of physics. So God made the laws of physics so that biology would be what it is and evolution would work the way it does. Of course the laws of physics are just a theory that is used to organized our observations and guide us in the next round of measurment and theoretical speculation. To go further, physical theories use mathematical descriptions which are strings of symbols arranged in patterns. All this would suggest that God is some kind of Scrabble freak. Is not this fun.

  471. Intelligent????? by Univac_1004 · · Score: 1

    ...only an idiot would run a waste disposal canal through an entertainment area!

  472. Re:you are astoundingly idiotic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The plant did not change itself to become immune to the effects of round-up. The strong plants survived and the week plants died."

    you are an idiot.

    no single plant changed itself. BUT, the make-up of the population as a whole changed because of the environmental/poisonous circumstances.

    your second sentence describes evolution quite well, except it's not technically a matter of "strong" and "weak." in fact, WEAKNESS would be selected for if some environmental entity started preying on the "strong" ones because of their particular properties.

    anyway, when those population make-ups change over time-- lots of time-- the accrual = EVOLUTION.

    it's amazing that evolution is completely lost on so many people. it's not complicated at all. but the concept(s) have been twisted around into all sorts of straw men, and superficially nonsensical simplifications. it's messed up.

  473. Dear God, please protect me from your followers!!! by mojoNYC · · Score: 1
    ...the ones who feel the need to impose their own personal faith on me--religion should be a personal matter, between the individual and their god of choice, so please quit telling me what *you* think God wants!

    I'm not at all sorry to say that I believe that my connection to God is no lesser than George Bush's, or Pat Robertson's, or the Pope's for that matter...but i'm not running around telling other people that God told me to tell them what to do!

  474. Check out the koran by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check out the koran

  475. bacteria resistance is not proof for evolution by moements · · Score: 1

    Bacteria resistance is only proof for natural selection not evolution (i.e. gaining information from non-information, e.g. "from goo to you"). Natural selection is repeatable, observable science. Evolution theory uses natural selection as a mechanism, but requires information-adding mutations and many of them (often at the same time) in order for them to be "selected". Yet there are no such examples of information being added. In every case of bacteria resitance, no new information in being added, maybe duplicated, but usually only lost. For example, the bacteria (through mutation, copy errors, etc.) looses the ability to eat a certain food (say, a certain protein). The anti-bacterial agent we use poses as that food. The resistant bacteria survives and multiplies but is less, not more than it's parent. - moements http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/508.asp

  476. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by BigGar' · · Score: 1

    Actually ID isn't even a hypothesis because it is not testable or falsifiable, two requirements for a statement to be a hypothesis.

    --


    Shop smart, Shop S-Mart.
  477. fg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Adam was created with age. He wasn't created as an infant. This explains the carbon dating. God could have created things as old as he wanted.

  478. Un+1 = P(Un) ??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That one is dead; Heisenberg killed it!

    The uncertainity principle states, that we cannot even know the complete state of the universe at one given moment; calculating the 'next frame' is thus impossible.

    Though I agree that even if it were possible, we could not go beyond our plane/dimension of existence, which is probably limited by U0 (or U-1).

    Speaking of 'the beginning': I wasn't aware we had any 'good' information on that; only (rather intersting) theories...

    1. Re:Un+1 = P(Un) ??? by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Two things:

      I didn't say it was possible to gain absolute knowledge about any of the components. (In fact I was pretty careful to illustrate that that's difficult / impossible.)

      Even if you could gain perfect knowledge about the compoents, you still can't know anything about U-1. That was my real point.

      A theory is good information. =) That's a heuristic that works pretty good.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
  479. A learning/teaching opportunity by BigGar' · · Score: 1

    Perhaps, just perhpas, this can be used to instruct students on what it means to be "just a theory" and how that whole "scientific method" thingy works.

    --


    Shop smart, Shop S-Mart.
  480. Non-biological petroleum by jfengel · · Score: 3, Informative

    Some geologists support a theory by Thomas Gold which says that petroleum has a non-biological source. The gist is that non-biological methane is converted into longer-chain hydrocarbons by bacteria deep in the crust.

    There's a bunch of evidence to support the theory. It may or may not be sufficient to explain all of the petroleum we see, but it could be; it's not a complete crackpot theory.

    I'm not supporting ID or creationism here; I think that the intelligent design people are nut jobs and/or hypocrites. But you don't get to call yourself a scientist without taking all the facts into account. Abiogenic petroleum doesn't constitute a shred of evidence against evolution or for intelligent design. It just means that the irony you cite isn't quite as funny as it could be. Sorry.

    1. Re:Non-biological petroleum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, there are about six "Geologists" that support that theory. You are mistaking the volume (loudness) of a few nuts for a large volume (number) of followers.

  481. The other side of the story by JOhn-E+G · · Score: 1

    One thing I will say about this is Evolution is a Theory. Creation is also a theory. Both need to be taught and discussed.

    I happen to be on the creationist side and feel that there are holes in evolution. The thing that convinced me the most is that evolutionist want me to believe that we evolved by chance. What you fail to remember are the Laws of Thermodynamics and that entropy, chaos, is increasing (the reason my aptartement never cleans itself and just gets worse). For a single cell thing to become more entropy would need to decrease. That can't happen without work being done. This is simple Physics 101. Also we look for Aliens using the Intelligent Design. An evolutionist looking for E.T. needs to ask himself 'How do we know that the organized pattern of radio waves we are looking for didn't just evolve by chance like we did'. If you take a critical look at evolution you will see it is as full of holes as they claim creation to be.

    I am not a biologist and admit I probably could not convince any biologist/evolutionist of creation. However, I have known some trustworthy biologists who were creationists and they explained it well. A good web site for reading more on the creation theory is Answers In Genesis.

    1. Re:The other side of the story by What+me+a+Coward · · Score: 1

      True both are theories and both are taught and discussed and should be discussed in their proper places.

      Science class is not the place to discuss creation since it can't be proven via scientic methods. Religion is the proper vienue for discussing creation since religion is faith based and science can't explain faith hence shouldn't bleed into religion.

      Your argument about your apartment is flawed as your apartment is not a living entity and theirfore cannot act to change it's state and theirby overcome entropy but a cell can as it is alive and can act and does act to overcome entropy by absorbing nutrients around it and expelling wastes. And a single cell can not only accomplish this but can also change it's location your apartment can't not without outside intervention by you or others.

      As for looking for E.T. an intellegent signal is one that couldn't be produced by chance or evolve by chance as you put it. An intellegent being saying "hey their how are you we are here at this location x,y,z" through a signal is not something that could be produced by chance less so would be a signal that uses intellegent mathmatics in it's transmission. A random signal created by the universe couldn't evolve base mathmatics and pie in it. Nor could it evolve a musical symphany like bach or behtoven or music like the beachboys or billyjoel. A signal sent by an intellegence will stand out from all other signals in the universe.

      To date neither seti nor nasa have encountered any organized pattern of radio waves produced by the universe by chance. Of course the same can be said for radio waves produced on purpose by any intellegent beings other than signals from earth and it's satalites of course.

      Please theology should be discussed in theology classes not in science classes both have their place and both do best in thoughs places.

      --
      Coward? Coward! Thems fighten words!!
    2. Re:The other side of the story by RichardX · · Score: 1

      What you fail to remember are the Laws of Thermodynamics and that entropy, chaos, is increasing

      Oh, come on! This is really basic stuff!
      Even most creationists have abandoned this one by now. Heck, even the site that YOU cite (answersingenesis) lists this one on their Arguments we'd advise creationists NOT to use page (i.e. failed arguments against evolution)

      For a more detailed overview, read this and consider the fact that you obviously don't know as much about evolution OR thermodynamics as you thought you did... so where else might you be wrong?

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    3. Re:The other side of the story by JOhn-E+G · · Score: 1

      As I tried to explain, I am not experienced in this and normally do not argue it as I don't know much about it. I just know there is more out there on creation than people give credit, and start spouting off it's religous propaganda. And I know that alot of inexperienced creationists come off sounding dumb when they say stuff like God put the fosils there to test us, which I don't ascribe to my self. I appologize for not fully understanding the 2nd law my self and now see why it doesn't fit as a good argument. I still feel that evoists put a wall to creation only because it came out of religious circles first. If an athiest scientist had said it first there would be no issue.

      as for where else I might be wrong. Well I am human and I make mistakes everyday so there are lots of places. Just like you I imagine. Never claimed I am always right. And If you are implying that my faith is wrong simply because I didn't take enough physics and science in college. Imply all you want, no one aside from the God of the bible can ever change my faith and I know that as a fact (even if you think its not). No offese.

    4. Re:The other side of the story by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Imply all you want, no one aside from the God of the bible can ever change my faith and I know that as a fact (even if you think its not). No offese.

      None taken, and likewise, I hope you won't be offended if I point out that your reasoning here is circular (also known as "begging the question").

      You say that the "only thing that would change your faith is God Himself", a statement which assumes from the get-go that God is both real and infalliable.

      Basically what that boils down to is:
      "I know God exists because He said so"

      Let's say I write a book. It contains three pages, which contain the following
      1: Everything written in this book is true
      2: Oranges are purple.
      3: This book is never wrong

      I now know for a fact that oranges are, indeed, puple - it says so right there in the book, and as we can see, the book is always true and never wrong!

      I don't for a moment think that this is going to shake the foundations of your faith (indeed, if it has, you might want to have a serious look at your beliefs), but I hope you will at least acknowledge the cognitive disonnance you must engage in to hold certain beliefs.

      If you are really prepared to examine your beliefs, may I suggest you take a trip over to The Skeptic's Annotated Bible which details many of the flaws, holes, contradictions, and other errors the bible contains.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    5. Re:The other side of the story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You ain't no physicist either.

      What you also don't know is that the processes of life are a big source of entropy. Eating, breathing...

      I'd even speculate that the second law of thermodynamics makes the spontaneous emergence of life inevitable, given the presence of free energy.

    6. Re:The other side of the story by JOhn-E+G · · Score: 1

      I don't mind that you pointed out my cicular arg. I find them annoying myself so I don't want to put them out. However, from my perspective it isn't circular as I have built the reasons for my assumption over the last few years. I failed to realize you may not have that. Silly me. I have more proving to me that the bible is true and God exsists than just the bible itself. Though I don't think going into it will convince you other wise so I won't. But you do have a point about the circularity of the argument though it was more of a statment of fact of my faith than an argument to prove it you. And your right you didn't shake me as expected.

      at least we had a civilized discussion too many nonchristians and christians fall into petty quibbing.

    7. Re:The other side of the story by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...should be discussed in theology classes not in science classes...

      If science and theology both seek truth, then they both must overlap at some point. Science is good at answering "how" questions but lousy at "why" questions that theology attempts to address. The most important, deepest questions we ask begin with "why", such as "why are we here", why is there suffering and evil etc. Science cannot answer these.

      --
      All theory is gray
    8. Re:The other side of the story by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      The most important, deepest questions we ask begin with "why", such as "why are we here", why is there suffering and evil etc. Science cannot answer these.



      Why are we here?

      To survive long enough to reproduce and perpetuate our genes. No other reason. No reason needed. We just 'are'.

      Why is there suffering and evil?

      Well suffering is simply the imbalance in nature when one species grows too large for the environment is is in. Cold, but that's the way it is.

      As for 'evil', well I'm not sure that exists in the sense you think. 'Evil' behaviour is the result of the suffering mentioned above. Cold, but that's the way it is.

      Does that mean we do nothing about these things? No, we fight to alleviate them because the removal of 'suffering' is the best way to ensure that your offspring or your genes (in relatives or other kin) are propogated to the future. Cooperation and altruism are the best survival strategy in evolution (balanced with some degree of strength and agression). This helps get rid of 'evil' as well.

      Of course if your are thinking about suffering and evil in the Bible sense, then its obvious - God created it all. All suffering and evil are the creation of God, according to the Bible.

      And considering this, it is no surprise that more suffering and evil have occurred because of religion (especially Christianity orver the past 1700 to 2000 years) than any thing science could dream up.

      So to alleviate suffering and evil, we get rid of God and religion.

      Oh man, that sounds wonderful...

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
    9. Re:The other side of the story by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...To survive long enough to reproduce and perpetuate our genes. No other reason. No reason needed...

      So then why should it be considered wrong and a crime that society prosecutes as murder for someone to just kill you so that they can have the resources you have worked for? That way they can pass on THEIR genes which are obviously better than yours since he/she was able to "survive" better to evolve further. Why should it be a crime for someone to rape your mate so they can then pass on THEIR genes? After all, that is just 'natural selection' working by eliminating you since you are weak and the genes of the weak should die out. Don't you see the end of your reasoning? If 'survival of the fittest' is why we are here, then we would need no laws or government.

      --
      All theory is gray
    10. Re:The other side of the story by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      Because, despite your mis-interpretation of "survival of the fittest", that kind of behaviour is actually quite detrimental to passing on genes than altruism and cooperation. It is not "survival of the fittest" but rather survival of those organisms more able to adapt to change in the environment.

      You are far more likey to have food, shelter, and safety if you cooperate with your neighbours and kin than if you bully them or kill them. It may seem to work in the short term, but eventually the social system breaks down and these genes do not survive - you are not able to reproduce or protect the children you do create (or the children of your kins). Check out The Evolution of Cooperation. Paul Tobin has a good summary here with a very good summary. This is also a tenant of Game Theory as well.

      No, despite your attempts to argue from fear and ignorance, living the "survival of the fittest" that you describe is not how evolution works and is actually not the best strategy for survival of the genes - cooperation, altruism and acting in a moral and ethic manner are. That is why most people are genuinely good and why, despite our incredible numbers on the earth, we AREN'T killing and raping each other on a daily basis.

      Acting that way is natural and I don't need a "God" to give me morality or force me to obey rules on the threat of eternal torture. I can just act they way I know from millions of years of biological evolution, is the "right" way.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  482. Re:I can't wait to vote these jerks out of office. by planetfinder · · Score: 1

    1. There is no longer natural selection for increased intelligence. 2. Just about anyone above the right age gets to vote. 3. Just about anyone who reaches maturity gets to reproduce. In summary : You are directing your stream of urine upwind in a hurricane and natural selection has not resulted in a bladder of sufficient strength for you to avoid urinating on yourself under these particular circumstances.

  483. Testing God by notcreative · · Score: 1

    I have God trapped in a box in my lab. I poke Him with sticks and He makes squeaking sounds. In order to dispense food pellets, He has to hit tiny buttons in the correct order. Please advise me of some more tests I can do on Him to prove He created the Universe, as He claims. Also, you may want to hurry, as the button combinations are becoming increasingly complex and I fear He might starve.

  484. several steps forward, actually by PMuse · · Score: 1
    Honestly, just what is the deal with these fundamentalists?

    Answer: they're losing. If we RTFA, then we RTF Wikipedia article, and then we RTF external links in support of ID, we find something positively heartwarming. When the creationists fought this fight 30+ years ago, they said:
    [S]cientific creationism is defined by the following six tenets:
    [1.] The universe, energy and life were created from nothing.
    [2.] Mutations and natural selection cannot bring about the development of all living things from a single organism.
    [3.] "Created kinds" of plants and organism can vary only within fixed limits
    [4.] Humans and apes have different ancestries.
    [5.] Earth's geology can be explained by catastrophism, primarily a worldwide flood
    [6.] The earth is young--in the range of 10,000 years or so.
    But, we've since knocked down (disproved) so many of those creationist tenets that all they're left with is:
    Intelligent design, on the other hand, involves two basic assumptions:
    [1.] Intelligent causes exist.
    [2.] These causes can be empirically detected ...
    They're in retreat and they don't have much ground left to give. Just makes you smile inside, doesn't it? Here's to the victories of the next 30 years!
    --
    "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
  485. Re:He set us up the bom...er... Fruit of Knowledge by bflong · · Score: 1

    Wow... thats messed up.
    Adam was not decieved. Read 1st Timothy 2:14.

    --
    Why is it so hot? Where am I going? What am I doing in this handbasket?
  486. I absolutely love this mistranslation crap by lorcha · · Score: 1
    It seems every time someone wants to bend the Torah to say something it doesn't, they simply assert that the ancient Hebrew was mistranslated.

    Every time I go back to the Hebrew and look for myself, the original translation is obviously the correct one. 9 times out of 10 are like this example, where a direct explanation is given in the text just to make it perfectly clear.

    --
    "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
  487. Wrong....Evolution is a "Law" by clonan · · Score: 1

    Evolution has been directly observed beyond all reasonable doubt.

    We have directly witnesed the creation of new species (African Ciclids being a great example) and we have samples of animals AND all their ancestor species all living together (ring species).

    Evolution has been proven. It is only called a "theory" because the people who don't like it put up a fuss. By any measure of science, evloution is a law.

    1. Re:Wrong....Evolution is a "Law" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      re. Evolution has been directly observed beyond all reasonable doubt.

      You are incorrect. Simply redefining the term species doesn't prove anything. What was found was no different then the finches. Changing beak configuration does not change species (expecially as they change back over time based on local conditions).

      National Geographic not withstanding (and hardly a disintrested bystander)... what was found in the African lakes was facinating, but doesn't change the debate, I'm afraid.

    2. Re:Wrong....Evolution is a "Law" by clonan · · Score: 1

      A species is a group of genetically isolated interbreeding organisms.

      http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=species

      Therefore the ciclids have rapidly speciated. Even a small color change will genetically isolate them from the rest of the genepool and therefore they are a species.

      This happens to be an extrodinary simple case, but still true. The anti-evolution group is the one trying to redefine species to make this observed fact not mean anything. They are trying to say that because you could artificially mate two different colored ciclids, and get a viable offspring, they must be the same species. Even though they would never mate in the real world....this is a redeffinition of species.

      Now I will admit ring species are an unusual case...however they are directly predicted by Darwin's theory of evolution and thus even if you decide the whole group is actually one species, it still proves evolution.

      BTW, I was quoting the Journal of Molecular Bio. You can do a pubmed search and come up with several thousand articles about ciclids..I didn't even know National Geographic talked about them...what issue was it? I'd kinda like to see it.

    3. Re:Wrong....Evolution is a "Law" by clonan · · Score: 1

      Also I might add....just because things evolve back does not mean it is the same species.

      There are a wide range of body plans that are equally efficient (the color schemes of ciclids) and there are some body schemes which are natually more efficient (vultures and Andies condor).

      The condor and the vultures are absolutly different species but looking at them you would think they are identical.

      As far as the ciclids go, once they have evolved a new color the genome has completly lost the ability to make other colors....the only way back is the re-evolve the old color.

      Even though the great-great-great-etc-parents were that color, it is a novel color for that fish and therefore it is a mutation and an example of evolution.

      The same goes for the finches. The beak shapes happened to be the most pronounced difference and that is why the drawings were included however even now thoes birds are acknowledged and different species. They were defined as different species because they don't interbreed NOT because their beaks were different.

      A good example of this is the sub-species of dolphin that lives in bay's. They eat different foods, live in very different communities and even look different enough that people first thought they were a different species....BUT they also freely interbreed with ocean dwelling dolphins and therefore are the same species.

  488. Talk Origins by BigGar' · · Score: 1

    Just in case this hasn't been poseted yet.
    Talk origins, is a great resource on the Creation /Intelligent-design /evoultion controversy.

    Talk Origins

    --


    Shop smart, Shop S-Mart.
  489. Intelligent Design is an INSULT TO GOD by skintigh2 · · Score: 1

    Humans are far from perfect. Take the human eye: the veins go over the retina instead of under it and abscure vision, the retina isn't attached to the back of the eye and can spontaneously come lose causing permanent blindness, there is a blind spot in the middle of out vision because of the "wiring" being on top of the retina, and there are many other flaws.

    Evolution explains all of these flaws.

    To say that God designed such a poorly designed eye is to say that God is a fool.

    To say that God makes so many mistakes that he constantly has to meddle with every generation to fix previous mistakes and then create more mistakes that need to be fixed in the next generation... well then maybe we need to rewrite the term "to err is human."

  490. misquote by notcreative · · Score: 1
    Although I do enjoy your hysterical conflation of myself as a rational citizen of the US with the idiots on the religious right, I'd like to point out that your quote:

    your own president believes that atheists should not be considered as citizens and cannot be patriots

    is not actually from our current president Bush II, but rather a quote from our former one-termer, Bush I. I'm sure Baby Bush holds similar ideas, but he hasn't expressed them in the same way as his pa.

  491. this isn't real science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True science is the search for truth. The single most important principle of science education is the one that instructs students to identify assumptions, use critical thinking, make logical deductions, and consider alternative explanations. When any theory becomes dogma, and its proponents seek every device to protect the theory from challenges and seek to ban alternatives, this is poor science, poor education, and a violation of the academic freedom of students and teachers.

    Aren't scientific theories restricted to the use of natural laws and natural processes? It is true that in our efforts to observe, to understand, and to explain the operation of the universe and the operation of living organisms we do and must employ only natural laws and processes. The evolutionist, however, goes beyond this, stepping outside of empirical science when he insists that we must use these very same natural laws and processes to explain the origin of the universe and the origin of living organisms. Thus the evolutionist is substituting metaphysics in the place of true science, the search for truth. No theory about origins, creation, or evolution, fulfills the criteria of a scientific theory. A scientific theory must be based on repeatable observations, be subject to scientific test, and be potentially falsifiable. There were no human observers to the origin of the universe, life, or a single living kind. These events took place in the unobservable past and are not capable of observation today. All changes that occur among living things are merely fluctuations within limits. No one observes apelike creatures evolving toward humans or fish evolving into amphibians. Creation and evolution are theories about history, and such theories are not scientific theories. They do have scientific characteristics, they can be discussed in scientific terms, and there is a mass of circumstantial evidence that can be evaluated. Evolution is no more scientific than creation and it is just as religious. What is more religious, a Creator, or no Creator? Dr. Michael Ruse, an evolutionist (and who was then a philosopher of science professor at Guelph University), was one of the main witnesses for evolution in the 1981 Arkansas federal trial concerning the constitutionality of the equal time law for creation and evolution passed by the Arkansas legislatur (declared unconstitutional by Judge William Overton). At that time he argued strenuously that evolutionary theory was strictly science, while creation theory was exclusively religious. This served as the main basis for Judge Overton's decision. About 20 years later, in an article published in a Canadian newspaper, Ruse, although still a Darwinian evolutionist, revealed his complete turnabout on the question of evolutionary theory and religion. Ruse flatly stated that he now believes that "Evolution is promoted by its practitioners as more than mere science. Evolution is promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion--a full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality . . . Evolution is a religion" (emphasis added). Unfortunately, the unofficial state-sanctioned religion in U.S. public schools today is this non-theistic humanism which clearly violates the separation of church and state.

    But isn't the scientific evidence, circumstantial or otherwise, solidly in favor of evolution? Didn't Darwin provide the mechanism that explained how evolution could and did take place? The amazing thing is that today, 140 years after publication of Darwin's book, not only is Darwin's theory under attack by creationists but is under attack by more and more evolutionists! In fact, Søren Løvtrup, well-known Swedish scientist and an evolutionist, has declared that "I believe that one day the Darwinian myth will be ranked the greatest deceit in the history of science." The fossil record, for example, does not produce the evidence Darwin predicted. If evolution is true we should find innumerable fossilized ancestors and connecting forms. However, every one of these complex invertebrates

  492. Re:Thermodynamics by PhysicsPhil · · Score: 1

    I think that evolution is valid in that species can change over time, but I can't believe that life started from a few random molecules. The second law of thermodynamics states that entropy always increases. How does that fit with a few molecules that became life evolving into a human being (that is a remarkably well ordered trillions? of molecules). I should say first that the concepts of "order" and "disorder" as they relate to entropy are poorly understood outside of the science community. They have precise definitions having to do with the number of available quantum states etc., so how these things apply to living systems is a little nebulous. That being said... The entropy of the universe goes up in any physical process, but with the input of energy you can make local areas ordered. When you clean your room it becomes more ordered, but you did work that increased the entropy of the universe as a whole. The earth has a continual input of energy from the sun, so there's nothing that says that the local entropy can't decrease.

  493. Simple Blood Clotting [Re; ID!=C] by dondelelcaro · · Score: 1
    Consider this: for blood clotting to occur, one needs a dozen proteins to be present, none of which serve ANY OTHER PURPOSE in the absence of all of them. How could this evolve?
    Clearly you have not yet studied introductory molecular biology.

    You can get rudimentary clotting with two proteins. Fibrinogen, and ICAM. Obviously to any molecular biologist, these two proteins have very important functions in any relatively large organism. The latter is one of the intracellular adhesion molecules that is reponsible for the adherance of cells to basal lamina amongst other functions. Why is that important you ask? Consider what would happen if your epidermis came unglued easily from your basal lamina: blisters on all of your joints. (Yes, people who have mutations in these various receptors do have blisters on most joints.)

    So clearly, one of the proteins that functions quite elegantly in clotting is quite important in other functions of the organism, and a similar protein would have to be present early on in order for single celled organisms to clump together to form a multicellular organism.

    As for the second protein, fibrinogen, it's actually quite simple. You stick a whole bunch of RGD interspersed with spacing regions, and you can get a reasonable approximation of fibrinogen. [Obviously, the early multicellular organisms would also have had to have expressed something for ICAM to bind to as well, so they would have been making a similar membrane bound protein quite early on.]

    Finally, before trotting out examples of how specific proteins don't serve "ANY OTHER PURPOSE" it would be quite helpful to list exactly which proteins you are refering to, and to have done some preliminary thinking on your own to propose a method in which those proteins could have arrisen.

    [If someone wants to check the possibility that the program I've outlined here actually occured, you can quite easily track fibrinogen and ICAM homologues through various organisms that have been sequenced (the C. elegans->drosophila->human comparison should be illuminating) to see just how ICAM and fibrinogen could have been derived from those present in early organisms.]
    --
    http://www.donarmstrong.com
  494. Q:ARE WE NOT MEN? A:WE ARE DEVO by punkrocher · · Score: 1

    God made man
    But he used the monkey to do it
    Apes in the plan
    We're all here to prove it
    I can walk like an ape
    Talk like an ape
    I can do what a monkey can do
    God made man
    But a monkey supplied the glue

    -DEVO "Jocko Homo"

    --
    I can stand brute force, but brute reason is quite unbearable. There is something unfair about its use. It is hitting be
  495. A Question of Abstraction by mech_knight · · Score: 1

    I think it's correct to call both ID and evolution as "theories". The difference is in how these two ideas use abstractions to support their view of reality. One says an intelligent being must have designed life, while the other says life evolved due to pressures of environment.

    One requires a belief based on faith, the other a belief based on observation and reasoning. Which one is a better representation of reality?

    --
    "Size matters not. Look at me. Judge me by my size, do you?" --Yoda {whips out green light saber}
  496. Re:He set us up the bom...er... Fruit of Knowledge by Scrameustache · · Score: 1
    Wow... thats messed up.
    Adam was not decieved. Read 1st Timothy 2:14.


    11A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. 12I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent. 13For Adam was formed first, then Eve. 14And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner.

    Yeah, that IS messed up.

    So god created the serpent who tricks the woman, whom he created without knowledge of good or evil, who then offers it to Adam, whom she loved, after she learned of good and evil. She was created gullible and tricked by another of the omniscient's creation, while he watched in silence into learning of good and evil, and she chooses to share this with the love of her life rather than be above him while he stays ignorant.
    And for this, she is punished with endless chores and horrible pains in childbirth. Truly an act of love! Sheesh.
    --

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

  497. No public schools, no problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why the state should have nothing to do with education. It cannot possibly have its hands in education and maintain separation between church and state. We don't need the state to educate us. We did fine before it started.

  498. It is trivially easy. by khasim · · Score: 1
    Trivial, yes - so I presume you can provide me an example of a species diverging? So far as I know, we haven't actually seen one species change into another, merely a species adapting to it's environment.
    3 seconds on Google.
    http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB910_1.html

    See the bit about "reproductive isolation". That means that the new fruit flies cannot breed with the other descendants of the the original colony. They are a different species.
    Pray, enlighten us mortals, then. (Or do I need to find a mountain top first?)
    Did you miss the rest of what I posted? The "It was too easy to knock the "Creationists" before, so they decided that they could hide "God" behind the phrase "intelligent design" and attempt to get it taught in schools."
    Assuming that science is the formulation of ideas based on what we see, based on this definition, I think it is interesting to note that Darwin formed a theory based on what he saw in the Galapagos Islands.
    Rather than pursuing that weird line, why don't you look up the "Scientific Method"? Here, I'll make it easy for you.

    http://teacher.nsrl.rochester.edu/phy_labs/Appendi xE/AppendixE.html
    It seems to me that a lot of people have a tendency to try to back up what they believe by finding data, and not so much finding conclusions based on the data.
    Which is why we have the "Scientific Method".

    It is easy to find material that supports your beliefs. And because it is easy, it is almost worthless.

    So the Scientific Method requires experimentation to confirm/deny the hypothesis.

    "Intelligent Design" does not. In fact, there is no way to test whether "Intelligent Design" is valid or not. Therefore, "Intelligent Design" is useless as anything other than a religious statement.
    1. Re:It is trivially easy. by Degrees · · Score: 1
      So the Scientific Method requires experimentation to confirm/deny the hypothesis.

      "Intelligent Design" does not. In fact, there is no way to test whether "Intelligent Design" is valid or not. Therefore, "Intelligent Design" is useless as anything other than a religious statement.

      I would argue that it is possible to generate mathematic models of biologic complexity, and subject those models to Scientific Method investigation. Exceedingly hard to do - but not impossible*. Given that Evolution is based on the assumption that anything is possible, ID ought to be held to at least that standard.

      As an example of complexity, I saw a slide on a TV show recently which showed that some enzymatic protein replication operations at the cellular level appear to have redundancy checks built in. That is to say, as the process goes forward, portions of the resulting protein must physically match up with portions of the enzyme it hasn't yet touched.

      An analogy would be bootcode checksumming its bootrom - if the checksum doesn't match, no sense continuing to boot. (Well, an intelligently designed system does not continue to attempt to boot. An even more intelligently designed system would have a backup rom and exception handling code. This level of complexity is recognizable as not random.)

      One of the things that makes a modern CPU work is the perfection of atomic operations. You don't push 125 million transistors at 3.5 billion cycles per second if there are flaws in the microcode.

      The hypothesis to test Evolution then, is: there exist biologic processes that are too complex to have 'evolved'.

      The hypothesis to test Intelligent Design is then: all biologic processes are simple enough to have 'evolved'.

      Using mathematical analysis of biologic processes, one can attempt to reduce the complexity of the process. If the complexity reduction simplifies to a point where spontaneous perfection of biologic processes is reasonable, then ID is out the window, and Evolution wins. On the other hand, if repeated experiments at getting simplified processes to work fail, without an intelligent designer interfering, then Evolution and ID are still tied.

      If a process is found that cannot be simplified, Evolution has a lot of 'splainin to do.

      At some point, Evolution is going to be asked to explain some very complex processes. Not that it can't be done; I'm just of the opinion that the transformation path from the single cell to the human body and mind wasn't accidental chaos.

      My main point is that testing of ID is possible. The "let's pretend it isn't testable" argument doesn't carry weight. You wouldn't accept Evolution as a theory just because Someone Famous Says So. Nor should you accept an alternate theory without question. But to claim that the theory should tossed out, because its proof or disproof is hard isn't decent science.



      * And what would be the worst case, of learning how to model, build and test complex biology? It's an overall win, even if one theory loses out to another.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
  499. Kirk Cameron is the Master! by Amyloid · · Score: 1

    http://www.wayofthemaster.com/ I guess he is going through some growing pains...

  500. There are two fundamental points of view by onemorechip · · Score: 1

    Either multicellular creatures have ancestors, and those ancestors at some point were of different species than today's generation, or it is possible for a multicellular species to appear without a parent generation. Let's call these the evolutionary and sudden appearance hypotheses, respectively. Of course, one of these (the evolutionary hypothesis) is supported by observation so at least some version of it qualifies as a theory. There has never been an observed instance of sudden appearance.

    The intelligent design hypothesis must be tied to one of the above hypotheses; it could never stand on its own. Combine it with the sudden appearance hypothesis and you get traditional creationism. Tie it to the evolutionary hypothesis and you get a weird hybrid (guided evolution).

    In order for guided evolution to work, we would require that one of the following is possible: (a) intelligent life evolves under the guidance of a lesser intelligence than the greatest intelligence that can be produced through that evolution, or (b) intelligent life evolves under the guidance of an intelligence greater than or equal to the greatest intelligence that can be produced by that evolution. (b) is flawed because there is no explanation of the origin of the greater intelligence (it can't be the product of guided evolution without creating an infinite regress, and if it came about unprecedentedly then you are back to sudden appearance). (a) is more believable but it is no better than traditional evolution in addressing the purported concerns of intelligent design proponents (i.e., how can advanced features evolve from less advanced features?), and has the added burden of externalizing the intelligence.

    --
    But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
  501. Close but not quite by ShieldWolf · · Score: 1

    Man did not evolve from Monkeys.

    We both evolved from a common ancestor.

    Why is this so hard for people to understand?

    P.S. - it is not just DNA evidence that links us to apes. The fossil record is rather convincing on its own.

    --
    just = (My)Opinion.toCents();
  502. (sigh) by Explodo · · Score: 1

    Let's face it, fundamentalists of any religion have already disconnected their centers of logic and reason and blindly follow their pastor/priest/imam without thought. Those that do this long enough and fervently enough become the pastor/priest/imam and gain followers. If they are even more fervent and persistent they can become the pope/ayatollah/etc. If we agree that the brain must be excercised in order to be maintained, then the leaders of fundamentalist groups, though they have excellent people skills with which to make followers, have gone the longest without critical thought and therefore are the least capable of doing anything that's truly exceptional and/or intelligent. So let's all get in line to become a zombie.

  503. Is either one falsifiable? by zCyl · · Score: 1

    ID is not science for one simple reason: it is not falsifiable. That is, it does not provide any criterion under which we can say "ID is false."

    I'm very much a proponent of evolution, since it's obviously very well supported. But to play Devil's Advocate a little bit here: To mark this as a distinction between ID and evolution, you need to clarify how evolution itself is falsifiable.

    Sure, evolution makes certain predictions, and those predictions are testable, but what observed result would the scientific community accept as falsification of evolution? Evolution presents an explanation mechanism, but if the precise mechanism of formulation or transition between species is not understood, then evolution postulates that there's simply an as-yet undiscovered missing link. Now the saving grace for evolution is that these missing links keep getting discovered, justifying this prediction of evolution. But again I emphasize, by what means can an observed result falsify evolution?

    (This isn't just rhetorical, I'd appreciate if anyone could put forward an answer. It would be helpful in future discussions of this topic.)

    1. Re:Is either one falsifiable? by Zeroko · · Score: 1

      Well, certainly, if we saw a huge sign drop from the sky which said "Evolution is false" & was made of some indestructible material, that might be good counterevidence. Seriously, though, evolutionists can always claim that it occurs so rarely that we cannot observe it in our lifetimes, & furthermore, they could claim it only occured in the past (just like creationists claim), if they cannot find any instances of it, so it cannot be falsified. Evolution makes a claim about how species change over time (that is, they improve according to a fitness function). To disprove this, one must either disprove significant change of species (which would require a *long* time) or that a suitable fitness function exists (which would require testing nearly all possible cases). Creationism claims everything was created in more or less its present form x years ago (about 6,000 in the Bible). To disprove this, one would need to travel into the past & show that 1. no significant species changes happened & 2. it all was created at some point, not eternally existent. Simply proving that evolution can occur now would not prove it for the past (although it would support it by Occam's razor), & would certainly not prove that things were not created in almost their present form & evolved slightly from there. If both sides were honest, we would be having a philosophical debate, not a "scientific" one.

    2. Re:Is either one falsifiable? by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      As someone has earlier pointed out - if you find a pre-cambrian fossil of a rabbit, the theory of evolution is fucked.

      Generalise this as far as necessary.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    3. Re:Is either one falsifiable? by zCyl · · Score: 1

      Ah, right. An anachronistic species would be a definite red flag. Good point.

  504. Giving answers before getting facts by PoolDoc · · Score: 1

    I know it's too much to ask of SlashDotters, but it would be nice if the folks who are agin' "intelligent design" (ID) would bother to understand what ID is, before they launch their attacks against it. I haven't read every post below, but the ones I read attack a wide variety of ideas and concepts, which unfortunately DO NOT include the Intelligent Design hypothesis.

    The situation is complicated because the cited Kuro5shin article, authored by "benna", doesn't bother to keep make the necessary distinctions, either. Of course, if you have a sympathetic and uncritical audience, who all agree on the conclusion they want to reach, before they begin the argument, it's not too hard to 'convince' them that you've offered a powerful analysis. Heck, many of the posters here could recognize that the argument was "powerful" and "cogent" just from the fact that it reached the right conclusion!

    But, on the odd chance that someone here is actually interested in knowing what ID is, and how it differs from the old probablistic 'argument from design', I'll try to distinguish them briefly and clearly.

    The classical argument from design (usually for the existence of a Deity, and not just against naturalistic evolution) is precisely what the Kuro5hin begins attacking. Kuro5hin user 'benna' describes ID like this:
    "The premise of Intelligent Design is that the universe is so unimaginably complex and perfect that it must have been created by an intelligent designer.
    This is a false and misleading definition of ID, but a very good description of the classical 'argument from design'.

    By contract, one might well describe ID as the theory that certain specific bits of the universe are so knowably complex, as to constitute systems recognizably similar to systems created by other designers (men!) and recognizably dissimilar from all systems which are known to result from natural or probablistic processes. Michael Behe, a microbiochemist cited by "benna" makes the point that no one (as of the date of the publication of his book) has published in ANY peer-reviewed journal biology, microbiology, biochemistry, etc. so much as even a HYPOTHETICAL process by which these mechanisms, such as the hemoglobin based oxygen transport system, could have evolved in an incremental biological process dependent on random mutation.

    So, in a sense, ID is the OPPOSITE of the classical argument from design. The classical argument piles up improbability upon improbablity, collecting them first from quantuum mechanics (such as the extreme sensitivity of the gravitational constant), then from biology (such as the very poor ratio of beneficial mutations to destructive ones) and thence from astrophysics (such as the critical, and improbable relationship between the mass of the sun and the orbital radius of planets theoretically capabable of sustaining life. Once a sufficiently high odds ratio is produced (it's apparently not hard to achieve odds ratios in excess of 1 : 10^100), the argument is offered that no conceivable amount of time is sufficient to make it likely that life emerged.

    This argument can be, and is answered, more or less by say, 'Well, yes, it's improbable, but improbabilities happen daily, and this one (ie, the existence of life) did. So, there!'

    ID is completely different. ID asserts that there are numerous (I've seen numbers from half a dozen to several dozen) biochemical processes or systems which are fully comprehended and "irreducibly complex". The comprehended bit simply asserts that all these systems' parts are known, and the functions of each part is also known. Behe goes on to state (apparently without challenge) that (a) the parts are numerous and that thus the systems are "complex" and that (b) the function by each part is essential, making the systems "irreducible". While Behe means, more or less what you might think by "complex", he intends something specific and perhaps not obvious by his use of the term "irreducible , and that is that the system is such tha

    1. Re:Giving answers before getting facts by RichardX · · Score: 1

      [Lots of blahblah about how Michael Behe's Irreducable Complexity theory proves evolution to be flawed]
      Wrong, wrong, wrong.
      Behe's "Irreducable complexity" argument is flawed. I suggest you read up on it here and here

      It's also worth noting that not one single biological system has ever been shown to actually be irreducably complex according to the criteria of Behe's argument.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  505. the funniest part about sodom and gomorrah by BitterAndDrunk · · Score: 1

    The funniest bit about S&G is that Lot offered his daughter and wife up to the mob to be raped in order to appease them. . . yet he is the righteous one spared. Ok I'm a sicko to find that funny but there it is.

    --
    You better watch out, there may be dogs about . . .
    1. Re:the funniest part about sodom and gomorrah by elphick · · Score: 1

      In that culture, the obligations of hospitality were sacred. When forced to choose between protecting his guest or his family he had to choose the former.

    2. Re:the funniest part about sodom and gomorrah by DoctorFrog · · Score: 1

      So have the rules of moral behaviour changed, or is that how we're still supposed to behave?

    3. Re:the funniest part about sodom and gomorrah by elphick · · Score: 1

      So have the rules of moral behaviour changed, or is that how we're still supposed to behave?

      I'm not sure that either is true. The scripture does not say that Lot made the right decision.

  506. alpha theory: life origins via thermodynamics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    For all the complaining about the mysterious origins of life, alpha theory offers a consistent, corroborative explanation for the origin of complex structures including life. It centers on a dimensionless measure 'alpha' (much like Reynolds, Strouhal, Archimedes numbers) that captures the ratio of coherence versus dissipation for a flux of free energy.

    The theory is derived using the first and second laws of thermodynamics and the Gibbs-Boltzmann relationship. The explanation is built on probabilities including chemical kinetics, Brownian motion, Gaussian and Poisson dynamics. It is still being fleshed out but the argument is very convincing.

    There are a total of six installments to alpha theory. The derivation begins here.

  507. Support by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

    I don't know the truth of this. Some of it just sounds too rapid to believe. But here it is. As I mentioned earlier, I haven't had the chance to go over things with a fine toothed comb yet, so I could be being hoodwinked.

    The Attempted Proofs of Directed Evolution
    Many experiments have been performed with to prove directed evolution. Only a few of them will be mentioned, and most of them have their critics and alternative explanations.

    Epigenetic inheritance systems, in which the phenotype (observed appearance of an organism) that expresses cell information is modified by environmental stress, have been noticed as modified phenotypes appearing in subsequent generations.

    In 1988, a team of Harvard biologists under the leadership of Joseph Cairns challenged the previous experiments performed by Luria and Delbruck in 1943. The early experiments seemed to prove that all mutations occurred randomly and none could be directed. Cairns group reasoned that in the earlier investigations the bacteria had been given too lethal a dose. They died before they could develop and propagate self-directed mutations.

    The Harvard experimenters used bacteria that could not grow in a specific environment because they lacked a working gene for an enzyme needed to metabolize the only available food. By genetic engineering, the bacteria were given versions of the necessary gene in which the coded message was, in effect, scrambled and therefore useless. Most, if not all, the bacteria failed to grow. After a few days they began thriving, feeding and reproducing. The distribution of bacteria colonies that survived showed that many bacteria had unscrambled the code and performed self-directed mutations that corrected the deficiency.

    Barry G. Hall, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Rochester, NY, damaged cell DNA by two different forms of genetic damage. Mutations that might occur to repair either of the damages were not sufficient to benefit the cell. Both damages required repair for any benefit. In one of two 1991 experiments, which are too complicated and lengthy to describe in this space, he showed that the cells repaired themselves by producing the correct mutations at a rate billions of time sooner than if chance alone had caused the changes. (Washington Post, April 20, 1992, p.A3)

    Note: Both of these investigations were criticized as lacking effective controls, and ascribed to known physiological processes. Subsequent work by Hall with more controlled experiments eventually led to experimentally verified acceptance. (Johannes Wirz, Progress towards complementarity in genetics, Elemente der Naturwissenschaft, 64(1), 37-52 1996)

    Epigenetic changes, which are alterations in gene expression, can be passed from mother cells to daughter cells. However, it had not been shown that subsequent generations inherited the same properties. Evidence is accumulating that the epigenetic changes are not erased. This phenomenon has been observed in plants, fruits and yeast. (Was Lamarck just a little right? Michael Balter, Science, April 7, 2000)

    Geneticist Enrico Coen and others at the John Innes Centre in Norwich, U.K. reported that a mutant version of the toadflax plant (flowers radial rather than bilateral) was due to an epimutation in which a gene was not expressed. The gene state and and the flower characteristic were inherited by subsequent generations of toadflax plants. (Nature, September 9, 1999)

    Inherited epigenetic changes have also been observed in mammals.

    Mohan Raizada at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida and others inserted a therapeutic gene into a modified virus, and delivered the gene into the hearts of rats that are predisposed to high blood pressure. These rats and two subsequent generations were protected from hypertension.
    "Our data support the notion that the AT1R-AS is integrated into the parental genome and is transmitted to the offspring. The proposed germ-line transmission of the AT1R-AS is consistent with previous reports

    --

    ___
    It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
  508. Exactly right by ttfkam · · Score: 2, Informative

    Life from non-life is what's known as abiogenesis. Creationists and ID proponents often bring up the early Miller experiments as proof that abiogenesis cannot happen.

    I highly recommend reading up on the recent work of Dr. Sidney Fox. The short version is that not only can life be created from non-living chemicals, it can consistently be done and result in near ideal conditions for the development of RNA (and later, DNA).

    Google Fox and abiogenesis for more info.

    --

    - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
  509. What does God have to say about this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Sorry for the inconvenience." -- God

  510. Split evolution? by cvstSD · · Score: 1
    We don't know everything, but we know something!

    The theory of Evolution really should be broken into two parts.

    1. the science of evolution: The theory that living organisms adapt to their current environment based on a process of natural selection occurring over generational boundaries...

    This has been observed and is as close to being a "fact" as anything can be.

    2. origin of life evolution: The belief that the science of evolution can be extrapolated back to non-biological matter, thereby explaining how life came to be. The last time I checked, it could not even prove that natural selection could be used to explain the emergence of new multi-celled organisms from existing species, let alone, the emergence of DNA from non-biological mater.

    To be honest, it has been quite a few years for me, but I'm guessing if either of the problems with #2 had been experimentally supported, it would have made the main-stream press.



    . . .
    Now for something completely different, but still on topic (if a little tongue in cheek).

    As long as you treat ID as part of science and not as an attempt to discuss religion it actually might work (i think).

    The two-slit experiment shows us beyond any reasonable doubt that an observer is required for the wave component of the universe to collapse into the physical atomic particles we (and our universe) are made of. This means an initial observer existed in wave form (pardon the pun) that is responsible for the current universe, from the smallest sub-atomic particles, to the biggest of bangs.

    Also, this observer would have had to survive the collapse into physical particles or the universe would have simply reverted back to a wave function. It is even likely that an observer in the wave universe probably occurred many times but did not survive the collapse. The universe being here now proves (?) that the last observer made it. :-)

    Of course, this theory has the same problem with origins that all other scientific theories have. The scientific method, being self-limited (sort of) to only observable physical phenomena, is required to produce an origin (a "cause") and can't... EVER.

    Fortunately, religious faith has no such requirement beyond the ultimate and absolute origin. The great "I am", which is God.

    1. Re:Split evolution? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      2. origin of life evolution: The belief that the science of evolution can be extrapolated back to non-biological matter, thereby explaining how life came to be.

      That is not a part of evolution. That is abiogenesis.

      It's like how chemistry deals with how elements behave once they exist, but you need nuclear science and fusion to explain the origin of elements. Evolution only explains how life evolves once it does exist.

      Virtually any scientist you ask will fully acknowlege that abiogenesis is a weakly developed and weakly supported theory. It's just damn hard to peer back into the past to see some microscopic molecular reaction in some random pool of muck at some unknown location on earth. It is also damn hard to recreate such an event with anything less than an entire planet as a laboratory and a couple of hundred million years to run the experiment.

      Creationists love lumping the origin of life in with evolution. They love to attack it as a soft target. The theory of abiogenesis is easy to attack, it is to a signifigant extent a vaporware theory. However attacking abiogenesis as vaporware is not a valid attack on evolution. Just as attacks on nuclear science (when it was in it's infancy) would not have been a valid attack on chemistry.

      The two-slit experiment shows us beyond any reasonable doubt that an observer is required

      Actually the "observer" stuff shouldn't be considered a good and established scientific theory. The stuff going on in quantum mechanics is really really bizarre, and we just have no familiar way to explain it and we don't really know what is going on in between the photon being emited and the the impact measurement. The whole "observer" think is more of a metaphysical model to attempt to make sense of it. You can do away with all of the "observer" stuff if you hypothesize a "multiverse" where everything that can happen does happen in sort of a parallel universe. That is the model I mainly go with. Those two models are thus far perfectly indistinguishable in terms of testable predictions. Or there could be some other completely different explanation to quantum mechanics. Maybe when we can unify relativity and quantum mechanics the mechanisms behind it will make more sense.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:Split evolution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a popular misunderstanding of quantum mechanics that a sentient observer is needed for there to be an "observation" or "measurement." These are just words we use to signify that a system which we have been treating as closed (or, completely isolated from the rest of the universe) is now interacting with something else. For example, an electron that's just been flying through free space could pass through a non-uniform magnetic field. Then, the path it takes depends on its spin (which was previously undetermined).

  511. Re:intelligent design != God (corrected spelling) by thehomeland-org · · Score: 1

    Scientists as well as non-scientists witness evolution every day. Every time a germ mutates to offset our attempts to destroy a germ we witness evolution.

    What you seem to fail to take into account is whether the germ is programmed to adapt. Adaptation is not (macro-)evolution. That's like saying if a rabbit darts in front of my car, I make a minor course correction and magically become a new species.

    Every time a fetus is created from a couple of cells we can witness evolution of the fetus.

    Except that an intelligence made that happen. You just proved ID, not evolution.

    We can even direct evolution in our science labs and create mutants by changing environment of their habitat or by playing directly with their genes.

    Again, ID, not evolution. To see the fruit of these experiments, we are required to orchestrate the circumstances we have yet to witness in nature. All too frequently I see the words "create" and "direct" in reference to proving evolution is possible -- without the light coming on. They all must have had the capability in the first place to adapt, a pre-written code. Emphasis on written, as in, requiring a writer. We see Mac OS X 10.3 turning into 10.4, but fail to suspect that it might have happened by itself over billions of years.

    It is difficult to imagine that a species could change because it wanted to or was simply adapting to terrain or environment. Environment changes drastically in 1 billion years, to extreme ups and downs within a year. By the time a successful alteration is made a billion years later, the scenario for which it was manifested has long past. Another reason that selfwill-based changes are unlikely is simply the state of humans -- no claws, fangs, wings, exoskeleton, etc. What guy never wanted one or all of these? I could frankly go for an exoskeleton and the ability to fly. It sure would help me to escape plane ticket prices. Despite any amount of jumping and flapping that me and my descendants attempt, I nary suspect any of us will sprout wings because we wanted to mutate.

    ID attempts to address the quandry of "how did they know to do that?" changes that only seem possible if someone had set them purposely to interact with each other. If random mutations suddenly just "caught on" by process of elimination and the survivor made more of himself, how did he know to stop mutating and that this was the most suitable mutation to reproduce? How did his progenitors know they needed to mutate in order to survive? The "tendency of an object in motion to stay in motion" is too strong to stop just because it happened to.

    In observing the comments on this article, it is amazing to me that so-called scientists are so red-in-the-face-p'd-off-so-let's-nuke-the-snot-out -of-those-ID-freaks-angry about ID. So, we can declare that everyone must accept homosexuality as a valid lifestyle, but must martyr all ID'ers for having such an impossibly absurd idea. Loads of sense there, Plato.

    It was my understanding that science can never solidly declare any given concept, despite how well tested, as the Truth, because doing so would make them biased since science is always objective. By nature, science cannot refuse to address any given position because doing so would be unscience-like. The obviousness that ID is incorrect by evo'ers is the identical obviousness that evolution is incorrect to ID'ers.

    It is also baffling as to why "fundamentalist" is such a dirty word. An accountant trusts that the fundamentals of math will remain correct and utilizes them daily, making him/her a math fundie. An acrobat understands fundamentals of how his body works and the balance it is capable of, making him a bio-fundie. A child relies on the ball to bounce in order to continue having fun, so is therefore a reaction-fundie. A Christian trusts that Christ's sacrifice pays the balance of all his/her sin ever comitted past and future to reconcile with God's tally, so he/she is a religious fundie, but is ridiculed. How is this different?

  512. I'm just hoping and waiting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...for the day the Crazy Creationists decide to just stop sending their kids to school. Then we can just forget they exist!

  513. Evolution does NOT explain biogenesis. by Physics+Dude · · Score: 2, Interesting
    ... that evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again ...

    Don't delude yourself. Evolution explains adaptation, change and selection but it most definitely does NOT explain the origin of life (biogenesis).

    Biogenesis is a PREREQUISITE for evolution. Evolution can't take place until you have a system that can metabolize energy and materials from its surroundings and use them to synthesize copies of itself.

    Some have tried to make claims about 'molecular evolution' and such, but I've never seen any sufficiently detailed (or even feasable) theory that holds water. Handwaving and speculation is SCIENCE!

    1. Re:Evolution does NOT explain biogenesis. by jasonp1014 · · Score: 1


      Right. Good point.

      And also just because the idea of "Intelligent Design" may be part of a biased christian agenda doesn't mean that the gist of it -- creation of life isn't random -- doesn't have merit.

    2. Re:Evolution does NOT explain biogenesis. by Physics+Dude · · Score: 1

      er... that should have been Handwaving and speculation is NOT SCIENCE! ;)

  514. Erm, not really. by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

    >You can look at the design of creatures and think, "would this
    >be the sort of thing that an intelligent designer would make?
    >Or does it look more like the result of random alteration and
    >natural selection?"

    Well, no, you can't.

    Grab a layperson off of the street and ask him to tell you if a house in progress is "well designed."

    Good luck getting an educated answer on the matter.

    Now talk to a scheduler or an architect and ask the same question. Different perspective, no?

    You are assuming, with your statements, that:

    a) We are looking at the finished products (not a valid assumption).

    b) That the final goal is intelligible to us (it wouldn't necessarily be).

    c) That we can make a fair evaluation of the designs as they stand now, taking into account "metabenefits" that relate directly to the design and how the design happens (we can't).

    d) That the designer knew exactly where It was going from the get go and knew perfectly what It wanted the final result to be and what would work given the circumstances (as anyone who has ever designed software or a scientific experiment, or better yet had to deal with someone else's, can tell you: omniscience- Hel, even competence--is not a prerequisite for design).

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  515. Sorry, still not logical by VernonNemitz · · Score: 1

    "Unchanging" defines a pretty static situation. As in "unable to Create", because some sort of Change must occur within the Creator for that Act to happen.
    Once any sort of change can be associated with the Creator, then there only remains the question of Determinism (cause and effect) or Free Will (a cause that is not itself an effect).
    Determinism takes the effect of Act of Creation and follows it back to the origin of the Creator, leading to the infinite-recursion question.
    Free Will means that events can happen without causes. Possible example: The Big Bang, no Creator necessary.

    1. Re:Sorry, still not logical by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Ummm, for free will to apply, doesn't there have to be an entity to excercise that free will? If there has to be such entity, then doesn't that still imply a cause (the entity excercising their free will) to the effect?

    2. Re:Sorry, still not logical by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Ummm, for free will to apply, doesn't there have to be an entity to excercise that free will? If there has to be such entity, then doesn't that still imply a cause (the entity excercising their free will) to the effect?

      That doesn't cut it. You say that an entity exercising fee will is the cause for a action based in free will. However, you get into an infinite recursion problem. What caused them to exercise their free will? Free will?

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    3. Re:Sorry, still not logical by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      No, you stated that universe can exist without cause because of free will. Well, if it requires free will for the universe to exist without cause, then the existance of free will is the cause. Now, free will by itself cannot exist. Because it implies by it's very nature that it is the will of something else (free or otherwise). Therefore, if the universe existing is dependent on free will and free will is dependent on this other entity that can exercise that free will then it stands to reason that the universe is dependant on that other entity.

      It doesn't matter what caused the excercise of the free will, that fact that it was exercised is the cause to the effect you are talking about.

    4. Re:Sorry, still not logical by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      No, you stated that universe can exist without cause because of free will.

      That was actually the OP, not me. Regardless I can try and elaborate on what I believe to be his argument. What I think the OP was getting at is not that the universe exists because of free will. What he is saying is that what we call free will requires something in the brain to behave in a non-deterministic manner. If neuron's behave as we typically believe them to as simple biological switches (when inputs on a given neuron reach a certain threshold an output is triggered) then as complex as our behaviour may appear, free will must be no more then an illusion. Our behaviour is determined entirely by the state of our neuron's at a given time, which is determined by all our past experiences. Complex, but inarguably deterministic.

      Anyhow, the point being that if we assume free will to be true (as most creationists do) then we also must assume that other things in the universe can happen without cause. Thus if things can happen in the universe without cause, why not the universe itself?

      I think that's his argument. To put it more simply, he is trying to take two axiom's of creationist theory and showing them to be contradictory. If a creator is required, then free will is impossible and if free will exists then a creator is not required. Interesting argument, IMHO.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    5. Re:Sorry, still not logical by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the explanation, but it still isn't logical. If free will works as you describe, then it is still dependent on the neuron's acting as you describe, therefore free will is still part of the cause (neuron firing) and effect (choice made).

      If the universe happening without cause is based on free will happening without cause but, it really does have a cause (the neuron firing), then the argument fails.

    6. Re:Sorry, still not logical by VernonNemitz · · Score: 1

      That is just about exactly right, thanks! I used the two keys "determinism" and "free will" because they are at opposite ends of many discussions. As you indicated, Free Will can exist only if at least one type of event can happen without any cause whatsoever. And once ONE causeless event is accepted, why not others?
      The funny thing is, while causeless events might explain the Universe and allow Free Will, it does not preclude the existence of one or more God-type entities (and souls).... That is, so far as we know, the Universe does not have to have been Created, but it could been, anyway. The problem with Creationists is that they insist the Universe must have been Created, and that is where they can be entirely wrong.

    7. Re:Sorry, still not logical by millennial · · Score: 1

      What caused the Big Bang? If the universe were infinitely small, and space-time so tiny that time was essentially infinite, and the universe didn't immediately explode, wouldn't that mean that there was a long period when the universe was stable? Why would it suddenly explode outward?

      For that matter, where did the singularity COME from? Evolution and creationism aren't trying to answer the same question here. Evolution only deals with life. Creationism deals with the entire universe. That's not to say that I believe in it.

      --
      I am scientifically inaccurate.
    8. Re:Sorry, still not logical by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      If free will works as you describe, then it is still dependent on the neuron's acting as you describe, therefore free will is still part of the cause (neuron firing) and effect (choice made).

      How do you figure? If neuron's act as I describe, then there is no room for free will because in theory neuron's work just as mechanically as logic gates in a computer. In a AND gate, if two inputs are recieved, an output is triggered. Likewise in a neuron, if N inputs are recieved (where N is that particular neuron's threshold) then an output is triggered. In order to have free will, you need neurons to be triggered (and hence thoughts though) by something other then the automatic stimulation by other neurons.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    9. Re:Sorry, still not logical by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      How do you figure? If neuron's act as I describe, then there is no room for free will because in theory neuron's work just as mechanically as logic gates in a computer. In a AND gate, if two inputs are recieved, an output is triggered. Likewise in a neuron, if N inputs are recieved (where N is that particular neuron's threshold) then an output is triggered. In order to have free will, you need neurons to be triggered (and hence thoughts though) by something other then the automatic stimulation by other neurons.

      Using (if a then b) and (if b then c) then (if a then c):
      For a neuron to work like a logic gate in a computer, something has to trigger the inputs. That trigger is the cause and the effect is the neuron firing. The neuron firing then is the cause and the effect being free will. So the trigger to neuron is the cause and the effect is free will.

      The real question is what triggers the inputs. Most likely, other neurons, but then we keep tracing it further and further back and either we end up with some kind of cycle routine (assuming we remove the external inputs of the sensory system) or we have to admit that we just don't know.

      Regardless, extrapolating back, whatever causes that first neuron to fire witch triggers the cascade firing of all the others is the cause. Whether that cause if from God, or a stray gamma ray, doesn't matter, it is a cause which leads ultimately to the effect of free will.

      Even your last statement: In order to have fre will, you need neurons to be triggered... shows a cause and effect. Unless what you are really suggesting is that we don't have free will and everything is pre-destined on how we will act/react. But then, that leads to the question of how did it/we get that way. And, however we did, again God or a stray gamma ray, that becomes the cause and the pre-destination is the effect.

      Under both scenarios free will and pre-destination, there is a cause. So, to use either to suggest that the universe could exist without cause introduces an error in your logic. We know that the universe exists and we know that something caused it to exist. We don't neccesarily know what that something is, though. People can argue till the end of time whether that something is God or not (and they probably will), but that doesn't change that something "caused" the universe come into existance.

    10. Re:Sorry, still not logical by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Using (if a then b) and (if b then c) then (if a then c)

      I assure you my boolean logic skills don't need the refreshing. I'm quite certain what I'm saying is not violating any logic :)

      The real question is what triggers the inputs. Most likely, other neurons, but then we keep tracing it further and further back and either we end up with some kind of cycle routine (assuming we remove the external inputs of the sensory system) or we have to admit that we just don't know.

      I don't think there reallys is a question about what triggers the inputs. You don't need to trace back a chain of neurons or anything, just randomly sample a large number of neuron's. If they all are triggered by inputs from other neurons, then you found your answer. Of course, neuron's can be triggered by sensory nerves as well. If this was not the case, our mind's wouldn't develop very far.

      Even your last statement: In order to have fre will, you need neurons to be triggered... shows a cause and effect.

      By all means I am not arguing against cause and effect. I whole heartedly agree that neurons act exclusively on measurable triggers.

      Unless what you are really suggesting is that we don't have free will and everything is pre-destined on how we will act/react.

      Bingo! I am a believer in the reductionist cognitive theory's. I've read arguments against it (e.g. The Emperor's New Mind, Roger Penrose) but they have never been convincing. Based on everything I've heard about the workings of the brain, our thoughts are solely based on the very complex, but theoretically predictable, interactions of neuron's in our brain. The state of the neuron's at any given time are a result of our biological development, past states (i.e. memories) and sensory inputs. I was extremely skeptical of that idea when I first heard it, I really wanted to believe we were more then just elaborate biological computers, however the more I read and understood the argument the more I agreed with it. Douglas Hofstadter is a great proponent of the idea and author of some absolutly fascinating books, Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid and The Minds I, the latter being the book that changed my views on the subject. I highly recommend them to anyone interested in how our minds work. Also give Penrose's book a look, it's always good to get a dissenting view on things.

      I hope that helps to clarify my postion, I think you may have been confused thinking I was trying to reconcile the idea of free will with the behaviour of neuron's in our brain.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
  516. Re:Summary = [-1, Flamebait] ALTERNATE ARTICLE by ChodeMonkey · · Score: 1

    This is a good point. The article summary is clearly biased for a discussion in one direction. I propose that rather than discuss the notion of ID that we take the discussion a bit deeper. ID is serving only as a proxy for the real conflict. In that sense ID only serves to complicate the discussion with unnecessary details. There is too much in the ID/Evolution debate that is prone to nit-picking and nobody ends up going after the meat of the problem.

    Instead pretend that some article exists ->here- (nobody reads the real articles so you don't have to read the imaginary one either) that discusses the relationship between faith and observation, and then discusses how to present the results of these two experiences to other human beings.

    It is unnecessary to bring God, Christianity, Evolution, ID, or many other things into the discussion. In fact please avoid them since they usually just cloud the discussion and will in the long run reduce the strength of the argument.

    --
    All your attention are belong to my old internet meme.
  517. The Burden of Skepticism by alewar · · Score: 1

    We should read again that wonderful article by Sagan: http://www.positiveatheism.org/writ/saganbur.htm

  518. I'm sorry, did you just post "God is Love" on /.? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

    Shouldn't you be handling snakes somewhere in Ozarks?

  519. Re:Atheism also a religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Regarding the ACLU and the rare occasion they screw up and do something right, I always think of the saying that even a stopped clock is right twice a day. Whether or not they represent something for the better of America, the fact still remains, the overwhelming majority of cases they represent are for squashing the rights of a Christian because someone got their feelings hurt, etc.

    This example sums up the ACLU perfectly. A couple of years ago, the ACLU threatened to sue a Georgia School district because they had the phrase "Christmas Day" under December 25 on their school calendars. The school district, strapped for money in the first place, caved because they didn't want to waste taxpayer money on a frivlous lawsuit by the ACLU. So they got their way and Christmas day was removed from the calendars. Nevermind the fact that Christmas day is a LEGAL FEDERAL HOLIDAY and Christ wasn't even born on Christmas day. This is a gleaming example of the colossal ignorance and heavy handedness of the ACLU. This is their tactic. Threaten to sue the common folk because one nutcase gets "offended". The ACLU was founded by communists and should be disbanded. Thank God for the ACLJ (American Center for Law and Justice) that is gaining strength and has won cases and has been able to fend off the ACLU.

    Atheism is a religion because of the simple fact that an atheist can only BELIEVE there is no God. An atheist has no way to prove that God doesn't exist. And don't tell me you can't prove a negative because process of elimination is proving a negative.

    If I said there is no gold in China, what do I need to bring to the table to prove my case? I need to know what is under every rock, in every cave, in every mouth of the people in China, in every jewelry box. I would have to be able to prove that I have full knowledge of everything in China to be able to say that there isn't any gold in China. Conversely, all I need is a speck of gold the size of a grain of sand to prove the opposite.

    The burden of proof is on the atheist. If you say there isn't a God, you must first prove to me that you have actually looked everywhere. Otherwise you are sharing with me your religious belief that you believe that God doesn't exist.

    If the ACLU is going to strip religion from the public square, they will also need to shoot themselves in the foot and eliminate every vestige of atheism and secular humanism from the public square as well. Well ACLU, get busy! Make yourself useful.

  520. Once and for all... by imnojezus · · Score: 1

    SCIENCE class should teach SCIENCE: i.e. theory that has been proven through experimentation, and everything involved in the scientific process. Evolution is a thory that can be proved through experimentation. It may not be perfect, but it is what all signs point to.

    We can prove that there was a Big Bang, but we can't prove who pushed the button. That discussion should be saved for philosophy class.

    1. Re:Once and for all... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Evolution is a thory that can be proved through experimentation...

      Really!? When has *anyone* EVER shown the change from say a cat into a dog or an ape into a man experimentally?! If those changes are too complex, has anyone ever experimentally "evolved" and ameoba into say a paramecium? Both of these are "simple" single celled organisms. Experiments have been done in adaptations and breeding and even, more recently, genetic engineering that all only prove that even only limited changes require large amounts of intelligently directed effort.

      --
      All theory is gray
  521. The anti-religious bigots come out... by tz · · Score: 1

    Some of the first few posts immediately said the ID people were ultraliteralist fundamentalists who thought the earth was 6000 years old, etc.

    I can say that I don't know how old the earth is. I've looked at the experiments that claim to measure it, but they have to make some assumptions (with huge potential for error) about initial conditions. But "we don't know exactly" doesn't sound as scientific as "4.5 billion years".

    The ID people simply say it is a proper question to ask how something came to be - accident or design. We need not consider the nature of the designer (I can imagine a pure energy creature which is diffuse and only utters one syllable every few centuries, so we can't hear what is said due to the time mismatch - your pentium is running at gigahertz and would take "forever" in its timing to hear you say a complete sentence).

    When a body has fallen from a building, we usually ask if it was accidental or intentional, and if the latter murder or suicide.

    Passing a law saying all falls are by definition accident would seem absurd, but currently the law is such that all nonpatented lifeforms arose by accident.

    In the article at K5 it notes that people have proposed mechanisms whereby the complex mechanims might have evolved, but those aren't in the fossil record, nor actual experiments.

    In another bit of sillyness the digitial life forms are not representative of organic ones, and some complexity is in the system (e.g. how do you know the 100 monkeys have produced shakespeare without already having a complete copy of shakespeare).

    The case for ID is presented in various books too, which are worth reading, as are articles.

    But the whole thing is this discussion and debate is completely censored. Yes CENSORED. In a way possibly worse than the tizzy people get in over the filters used on computers in schools and libraries. You cannot discuss any heresy against darwin in school. You can't even bring up scientific criticism (note the above points were scientific, didn't bring in God, the bible, etc.).

    If science is about theories, experiments, and challenges, why doesn't this apply to evolution?

    Why is design v.s. natural processes a question that cannot be asked in schools? That only one side can be presented, although those who argue for design only discuss scientific experiments, discoveries, and such?

    So much for liberty and freedom from the cybercrowd - they want to censor what they don't consider popular. They are intolerant against any idea which might threaten some old and generally non-experimentally verifiable theory.

    I also worry about some of the geology - plate tectonics was like ID in 1905, and astrophysics, 100 years ago steady state and big bang were though equally probable, Mars had life that built canals, and things like neutron stars and black holes are inferred.

    1. Re:The anti-religious bigots come out... by What+me+a+Coward · · Score: 1

      Uhm yeah...... How should i put this......

      Just what have you been smoking to give you such incredibly dulusional fantasies as that which you just vomited all over slashdot.

      If i had mod points i'd have modded you incredibly idiotic! for that one

      --
      Coward? Coward! Thems fighten words!!
    2. Re:The anti-religious bigots come out... by planetfinder · · Score: 1

      Please feel free to believe that Angels push the planets around the sky, that the earth is flat, that there are secret messages encoded in the Bible and that biological organisms were designed from the top down. Why not just believe that God inteligently designed the laws of physics and the rest followed including evolution. The latter story is actually simpler and more intelligible. Only problem with it is you do have to learn something and have an open mind to understand it. All of the laws of physics boil to a few lines of text patterns. Pretty amazing or even miraculous considering the number of things that are accurately described by those few patterns. Contrast that with the so called "intelligent design" scenario which boils down to an encyclopedic list top level designs, one for each life form and human identifiable thing in the universe. Only a child, or an uneducated adult who had been implicitly threatened from childhood by religious authority would find this kind of explanation satisfactory. Its not bigotry that you feel its pity.

    3. Re:The anti-religious bigots come out... by grolschie · · Score: 1

      Note that the two replies to your post had to reasoned argument to rebutt your assertions. Only childish non-scientific insults.

      Two things that I have seen first-hand:
      1). Indeed not all ID scientists belief in a 6000 y/o earth.
      2). Not many darwinists (that I have met) objectively look at other theories. Most show the signs of religious attitude and defensiveness when their belief system is questioned.

      All scientists (incl evolutionists and ID'ers) should be open to the following concept:
      "If something is true it can stand being questioned, if it is not true it needs to be questioned".

    4. Re:The anti-religious bigots come out... by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      If science were on the evolutionary side you would not see the howling emotional reactions you got from your statement. When someone can't prove a pet theory of theirs that they have held for years, that they claim is based on science, they go insane. A tiny scratch on their scientifically unprovable dogma about evolution and they know it will evaporate faster than spilled rubbing alcohol. They're getting really scared now. It must feel really empty to only believe one thing, supposedly based on science, that never gets challenged. How anyone with any scientific knowledge could believe that everything made itself is beyond amazing, but that pretty much sums up their world view.

    5. Re:The anti-religious bigots come out... by grolschie · · Score: 1

      I find it funny how nature itself defies the "survival of the fittest" theory. I mean so much of nature is dependant on other parts of nature. e.g. many plants that are totally dependant on animals for pollenation or transport of the seed. They even seem to be engineered to attract the right host to enable the transfer of the pollen. Whereas evolution theory would imply that to survive things would evolve to be less dependant on factors outside their own control. Our ecosystems are so finely balanced that it doesn't take much to screw the whole ecosystem with the introduction or removal of one factor.

    6. Re:The anti-religious bigots come out... by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      We're not scared of anything. Opponents of evolution have not been able to put up anything near solid evidence in favor of their views.

      What evolutionists ARE is ANGRY that they have to waste their time with the mental equivalent of flat-earthers. If scientists had to put up with as many people wanting equal time for a flat earth, you would see just as vehement a reaction: we have known the earth is round for thousands of years, and there can be basically no doubt.

      ID and other creationism is total bullshit backed by religious bias dressed up as science. That's an insult to all of us who are actually DOING science, and pisses us off. That any idiot can come off the street and claim evolution is "non-scientific" and be believed is simply unbelievably stupid.

      I am biased against stupidity, especially when it is willful.

    7. Re:The anti-religious bigots come out... by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      NOt scared of anything? Man you're pissing in your pants right now because you're secular god is failing you and you don't know what to do. Earth is easily proven to be an oblate spheroid by an amateur astronomer. BUt its funny you mention a flat earth since God told Job about the rotundity of the earth in the book of Job. If he had told the 'wisemen' of his day about it they would have laughed him to scorn, kind of like you, or people who believe like you to this day, saying without proof that everything made itself. You claim you're doing science? What science? A meth lab?

    8. Re:The anti-religious bigots come out... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never said there was biblical evidence for or against a flat earth hypothesis.

      What is clear is that there have historically been a number of people, that a simple Google search will reveal, who seem to earnestly hold onto a theory of a flat earth, no matter how much evidence can be marshalled against it.

      You seem to be as vigorously attached to some young Earth theory, no matter that practically EVERY field of science produces evidence directly opposed to such a theory.

  522. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why would I be worried about dying? If there is no hell/heaven, then when I die that'll be that and I'll no longer have to worry about pleasing family, friends, the government, and more importantly an all powerful being that keeps people in suspense throughout their entire life, worrying if whether or not the impure thoughts they've had about the next door neighbor's incredibly attractive asian girlfriend will send them to an infinite life of misery and pain.

  523. hey by Baric · · Score: 1

    is it too late to join this discussion?

  524. The real question... by sjb21043 · · Score: 1

    To me, the real question is how stupidity like this keeps getting past school boards. There must have been at least one rational person at the meeting where they voted in the new policy who explained they were wrong.

    I suspect the problem is more that School Boards aren't really in a position to weigh one side's arguments against the other, so they pretty much just count noses - a priest, a minister and a rabbi over there, a physicist and a molecular biologist over there - looks pretty close to me.

    The problem is that we can't seem to make clear to them that there are virtually no reputable scientists who would accept ID as a legitimate scientific theory.

    OTOH, to a certain extent, that's nearly the definition of "reputable scientist". There's some circularity to the argument.

    1. Re:The real question... by What+me+a+Coward · · Score: 1

      For the same reason that bush got elected twice when he shouldn't have been elected once.

      To many religous freaks out their pushing for it while the rest of us wern't looking and didn't notice till after the fact.

      --
      Coward? Coward! Thems fighten words!!
    2. Re:The real question... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...that there are virtually no reputable scientists who would accept ID as a legitimate scientific theory...

      Just because a majority of people, scientists or otherwise, believe something to be true, does not make it so. Before Mr. Roemer came along in the 1600s, the majority of 'reputable' scientists believed that light traveled instantaneously from place to place. It took over 50 years for that belief to change to the fact that ligh takes a finite amount of time to travel a given distance. There have been so many wrong ideas all accepted by "reputable" scientists that eventually turned out to be wrong. Evolution will be another one of these some day.

      The Bible certainly is not a book of science, but in all areas of science it touches, but especially archeology, it has so far always eventually proved to be right. NONE of the false ideas about our world, that abounded throughout human history have found their way into this book. The book of Job for example correctly tells us that the Earth is a sphere and that it is suspended in space. Long before science learned of the water cycle we are told that the rain comes from the sea and it cycles back to there. How did Moses know that the blood clotting factor of a newborn peaks at the eighth day when he specified this as the day of circumcison? Did he get this info from the biochemist who designed the bood clotting system?

      Science is a search for truth and no truth ever discovered and actually measured and understood as a FACT, experimentally verified, has ever been at odds with any statement in the Bible. Evolution has never been experimentally measured to take place.

      --
      All theory is gray
    3. Re:The real question... by sjb21043 · · Score: 1

      You're wrong on so many levels...

      First, this thread started because someone told Science teachers to teach ID as an alternative to evolution. Only scientists are qualified to determine what's acceptable scientific theory. It doesn't matter that millions of superstitious people believe in ID - it's what scientists think that matters. It's a science class. Teach your superstitions in religion class.

      Second, the drivel about the bible being "right" about archaeology is pure wishful thinking. The thing starts out saying the world was created in six days. There's almost nothing in the first couple of chapters of Genesis (or Beresith, if that's your version) that can be described as "right".

      "No truth ever discovered and actually measured and understood as a FACT ... has evern been at odds with any statement in the Bible" - you really think that's true? Fact: snakes don't talk - at odds with Gen 3:1. Fact: many animals eat meat - at odds with Gen 1:30. Fact: ten thousand new species of animals are discovered and named each year - at odds with Gen 2:18-22. Fact: many animals exhibit no evidence that they fear humans - at odds with Gen 9:2. Fact: the coloring of goats is determined by genetic inheritance from their parents - at odds with Gen 30:37-39. Fact: carbon decays at a fixed rate and fossils must be millions of years old to account for their carbon content - at odds with the geneology offered for Jesus' descent from Adam. Fact: biological decay processes make it astronomically unlikely that an unmodified human can live more than, say, 150 years - so unlikely that in all of (accurately) recorded history there is no one who's ever approached that age - at odds with Gen 5:21-27 and 11:10-32.

      I'm just picking on Genesis because it's up front. Fact: hares do not chew their cud - Deu 14:7-8. Fact: bats are unrelated to birds - Deu 14:11,18. Fact: the earth's revolving around the sun cannot be stopped and restarted - Jos 10:12-13. Fact: the earth hangs unsupported in space - 1 Sam 2:8, Job 9:6.

      How about some archaeology/history, instead of general science? Fact: In the third year of the reign of Jehoiakim (606 BCE), Nebuchadnezzar wasn't yet king of Babylon, when he was, Jehoiakim was dead and his son, Jehoaichin ruled Jerusalem - Dan 1:1. Fact: "three days travel" (on foot) is about sixty miles, Ninevah was never that large - Jon 3:3.

      Some new testament nonsense? Fact: Josephus, avid chronicler of Herod's life makes no mention of the massacre of the firstborn, surely he would have if it happened - Matt 2:16. Fact: many seeds are smaller than mustard seeds, and mustard seeds do not grow into trees - Matt 13:32, Mark 4:31 Fact: epilepsy is caused by improper development of the brain - Luke 9:39. Fact: prayer does not cure disease - Jam 5:14-15.

      Those are just a few examples off the top of my head and from some simple searches. Before you go spouting any nonsense about the bible not having been demonstrated to be wrong, you might actually try reading it, rather than taking your priest's word about what's in there.

  525. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 2, Informative

    The theory of evolution meets Occam's Razor. But is it falsifiable?

    Evolution has made MANY predictions, and every single time it has passed with flying colors.

    I would say the single biggest prediction was back when DNA was first discovered. Evolution PREDICTED that DNA analysis across species would fall into a tree pattern. In fact all life on earth falls into a extremely strong DNA tree pattern. A tree that strongly points to a single root. Sure we're still working out a few details of the tree, but the overall structure is extremely distinct.

    Evolution could have very easily failed that prediction. That was perhaps the single biggest test of evolution, and the single strongest strongest evidence. It was certainly not the only test.

    Hmm, actually I'd like to add a second test here. One that I have in fact done myself. Evolution predicts that mutation and heredity and selection in a population is sufficient to CREATE INFORMATION and produce great complexity and optimisation. I have run this test myself. I have witnessed the power of evolution in action. In a computer I established the simplest elements - a population, mutation, heredity, and survival selection to an arbitrary environment - and I have proven those minimal elements are sufficient to generate information. Sufficent to create complexity. Sufficient to produce powerful optimization to any enviornment you throw at it. In fact this optimisation process is so powerful that at times it can find designs better than the best designs of human experts. It has been used to find more efficient jet engine designs that save millions of dollars in fuel costs.

    So I have given you the single strongest test and validation of evolution, and my personal test and experience validating evolution. Again, these are hardly the only tests evolution has passed.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  526. Re:Disagree! by Otto · · Score: 1

    Anyone can say they're Christian.

    Yep. And this makes them Christian. Because your religious belief is what you say it is. Of all people, you should know just what it is that you believe.

    Far fewer can put those words into action. Fewer still can do it with any degree of consistency.

    Christianity is a religion. A religion is a belief. In other words, what you do doesn't mean shit, it's what you believe.

    Maybe you want to discuss something other than semantics here, and if you want to say that somebody who claims to be christian can act unchristianlike, then fine, I agree with you. But that's irrelevant to the point. I'll still lump them in with the whole "christian" group, because that's what he claims and I cannot question that. After all, they're *his* beliefs. I'm in no position to question his belief system. His sanity, sure. ;)

    --
    - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  527. Analogy vs Homology by meehawl · · Score: 1

    there are only so many ways for DNA to create a thumb

    Actually, there are probably a near-infinite combination of ways for DNA to code for the form of a function of a thumb. Many thumbs and thumb-bearing taxa evolved through homologous synapomorphies, but some evolved as simple look-alike analogies and may not share any common genes.

    --

    Da Blog
  528. Intelligent Design vs Evolution by SeanDuggan · · Score: 1
    *wry grin* Having lived in the Bible Belt, I'd also wonder how much bias is being caused by the fundamentalists being the loudest ones. Take, for example, the NRA. Just reading that name, you probably visualized a bunch of paranoid militia members, a hillbilly toting his shotgun, or a slightly-crazed-eyes man polishing his large collection. That is, unless you're actually in the NRA or personally know people in it, in which case you'd realize that the public perception is largely based on the lunatic fringe.

    Casually googling for the topic of inteligent design and creationism, it seems somewhat divided. People like me who see evolution as just another trick in God's toolbox seem to about evenly describe themselves as believing in "evolution" or "intelligent design." *shrug* To my perspective, the debates generally come down to whether textbooks are (required/allowed) to (admit/deny) the (possibility/certainty) of (randomness/an intelligent being) guiding the process. *wry grin* For any particularly selection of values for those sets, someone on one side is trying to fight for it. Some people want textbooks to explicitly say that there is no God influencing life. Some people want textbooks to explicitly say God is guiding the course of life. Some people are content with not stating the source of evolutionary drift at all, figuring people will fill in the blanks as they please. And then some want to mention both sides, saying that the source of evolutionary change might be random or it might be caused by a higher power. No position will satisfy everyone involved. To my view, the textbooks should go ahead and just acknowledge the subject without any mention of why it happens. Any parent on either side who cares will teach their children to interpret the information as is fit. *shrug* But then again, I feel the same way about sex education. Give all of the facts and I will teach my child what is right, and show them how to notice when they're being snowed by bad statistics. (Ever notice how sex ed. classes downplay the unreliability of artificial contraception and then use figures from the 1960s for any of the NFP methods? At least they acknowledge abstinence being the most effective method these days.)

    --
    This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
  529. God is not cruel or deceptive. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have free will.
    God is good.
    Assume: Evil entered the world from the bad things we do. (not from a good God).
    If God stopped all evil we would only be able to do things that were good.
    Inevitably, this would mean we could only do the very best of the good things when given a "choice"(at this point we can no longer really choose anything. We are stuck with doing one thing: the very best of the good.)
    If we have only one course of action, then we have no free will.
    Now that free will is gone, evil will disappear too.
    Free will is the cause of evil.

  530. why is god like that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The characteristics of God reflect the characteristics of those who created him (or sometimes her or even it).

  531. We're both right by anomaly · · Score: 1

    I think that evolution - where it describes adaptation of creatures based on favorable characteristics contributing those characteristics to the gene pool and therefore having dominance within the offspring is clearly demonstrably correct. Totally supported by the evidence, and quite testable. This is good science.

    I agree that evolution as a theory of origin of species is a viable scientific theory. In my opinion, it's a horrible theory, but it is scientific, and it is the current conventional wisdom with respect to the genesis of species. This explanation is the best bad explanation of the gathered facts, IF you start with the philosophical basis that materialism and naturalism are effective and complete models for describing the universe.

    Noted evolutionists have admitted that evidence tends to be lacking, (Gould - 'philetic gradualism' was 'never seen in the rocks') and that they have an 'a priori commitment to naturalism.' (Lewontin) This sounds like an admission of bias to me....

    I submit to you that naturalistic or materialistic explanations of the origin of matter or the universe suffer from the same challenges that you describe about ID. According to the 'rules' of the scientific method, either could emerge from hypothesis status.

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:We're both right by Hast · · Score: 1

      Your argument is basically that science isn't fair because it requires things to be scientific. The entire point of science is that it should NOT be dependent on what the scientists (here used to the describe all people who use the scientific method and not only people wearing white robes) believe.

      Naturalism states that scientific laws are adecuate to describe all fenomena. So as such it's not really correct to claim science to be naturallistic, as it's really the other way around. (Ie scientific laws are a prerequesite for naturalism, not the other way around.)

      What science does is claim that in order for something to be accepted as "scientifically true" it must first be a falsifiable hypothesis and then it must be tested and not be proved false. If it is proved to be false then the hypothesis can be changed to fit the new evidence and retested. This is the way scientific knowledge is formed.

      If it can be demonstrated that non-materialistic phenomena are indeed testable and verified as true then those too will become part of the scientific knowledge. I'm sure it will take some time since all people (even scientist) tend to object to change. But as long as it remains true it will be accepted.

      As for your two quite brutally cited quotes I'm not quite sure what you want. The theory of punctuated equilibria by Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould doesn't seem to provide any evidence against evolution, it is merly an addition to it [1] (although it seems like it's not quite accepted, paelenetology isn't really my field). As to the quote from Richard Lewontin that doesn't contain anything that refutes evolution; he is just one more scientist who tries to explain evolutionary theory to others.

      I can see that you are not a naturalist, and that's just fine and dandy by me. But if you want to make ID a scientific hypothesis you must first fulfill the demands that places on a scientific hypothesis. Because as it stands it's not one.

  532. An Enlightened "Born Again" by Plankt0n · · Score: 1

    The church has been wrong about science matters before, and honestly, I think that for Christians to deny any validity to SOME of the science is foolish. I believe in a literal translation of the Bible, but the Bible doesn't say the world is 6000 years old. (Though most of my Evangelical brethren think that it must.) Frankly, I believe I was created in God's image, and that I did not evolve. But that doesn't neccessarily mean that the world is not much older than 6000 years. If a day is like a thousand years to God, and man was made after the animals, then perhaps the animals were around for a GREAT amount of time before man.

    I think the valid dispute that Christians have is that we believe the Universe was created, and man was created. Not just "POOF!". On the other hand, if God spoke,and "POOF!", then that's fine. I didn't come from a monkey.

    1. Re:An Enlightened "Born Again" by LovedByGod · · Score: 1

      Frankly Brother, Us Christians have a lot more to stand on than you believe. Check out the book "in six days why fifty scientists choose to believe in creation" These guys are heavy hitters in the scientific community and blow huge scientific holes in the scular religion of evolution. God bless you and keep you.

    2. Re:An Enlightened "Born Again" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they are "heavy hitters" in *your* scientific community, but they are at best marginal figures in the scientific community at large.

      It's amazing how much *any* qualification at all is pumped up by creationist types: ooh, look, a Ph.D. in Architectural Engineering..., yet they claim evolutionists are simply slaves to academic authority.

      There are more than 220 Ph.D.'s *named Steve* http://www.ncseweb.org/resources/articles/4023_the _press_release_2_16_2003.asp
      who don't believe ID or creationism are baloney.

      About 1% of scientists are named Steve. That makes it likely we could come up with about 22000 scientists willing to sign a statement to that effect.

    3. Re:An Enlightened "Born Again" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oops, that is 220 steves who DO believe ID and creationism ARE baloney.

  533. Evil overshadows good. by nightgrave · · Score: 0

    Evil overshadows good. For example, say you have a man who donates all his money to the homeless, helps elderly women cross the street, goes to church regularly, never lies, etc; However, he rapes little children and then murders them afterwards. You obviously wouldn't call this man 'good', right?

    1. Re:Evil overshadows good. by ymgve · · Score: 1

      Flawed argument, since the evilness of that man's actions outweigh his good actions.

      Consider if Superman raped and murdered little children, but saved the whole world now and then, would you call him good or evil?

    2. Re:Evil overshadows good. by onemorechip · · Score: 1

      Neither. "Evil" describes actions, not people.

      --
      But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
  534. Omega Point - Orthogenesis - Noosphere - Teleology by meehawl · · Score: 1

    it's God that drove evolution to man and gave him the soul

    This is just de Chardin's orthogenetic noosphere theory, decked out in new clothes. The current "Singularity" fad is this daydream in shiny, dayglo rags. The idea that evolution has a "direction" or "goal" (ie, a teleological linear progression) is hard to reconcile with the evidence.

    --

    Da Blog
  535. Picking your happy thoughts by planetfinder · · Score: 1

    If I reach into a grab-bag with 10^100 distinct marbles and draw one out then the probability of drawing that particular one is 1 in 10^100. There is no sigificance to that fact that a particular marble was drawn. You are saying that intelligent design is responsible for the fact that that particular marble was drawn.

  536. What we have here... by psyberjedi · · Score: 1

    is a failure to separate belief from religion.

    Belief in (Gg)od does not require adherence to any particular religion.

    Belief in the bible does.

    A religion is a set of rules and practices defining a group of people and their collective beliefs.

    Belief is personal and should be individual.

    Most zealots and fundamentalists can not separate their faith from their religion. If the pope starts molesting children, that does not mean their is no christian god. It does not mean all catholics are wrong or pedophiles. It means the pope is a sick bastard.

    Accepting evolution along with creationism, if you choose to do so, is simply marrying man's increasing knowledge of his universe with his faith in god.

    Everyone has done this to some degree. Unless of course you still run and hide everytime a comet crosses the sky.

    --
    He who confuses his religion with his science knows neither.
  537. Oh Ye Of Little Faith by meehawl · · Score: 1

    I've never really understood why fundies are so eager to get ID or creationism "taught" as fact. Like, if they believe that the world is run by God, or gods, or the big pink fluffy bunny who lives in their shoes, then why isn't their faith in that belief strong enough to sustain them? Why must they seek to dictate their beliefs on others as inflexible ideologies? The only answer that makes sense is that their faith is paper-thin, not very strong at all, and requires constant reassurance and peer-support. That's a pretty poor sort of faith.

    --

    Da Blog
    1. Re:Oh Ye Of Little Faith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      ...because like all mentally ill folk, they need their support groups...the more they indoctrinate, the more they feel that they are in the right...

  538. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 1

    various eugenic laws

    You are not talking about science, period.

    You can use the theory of gravity to figure out that a person falling a certain distance will likely die. You can then make a political choice to pass a law imposing certian safety designs on all windows above a certain hight.

    That "gravity law" regarding windows has absolutely nothing to do with sceince. It is a political choice that may have been inspired or guided by scientific knowledge, but the theory of gravyity certainly does not direct you to pass that law. Such a law involves other entirely nonscientific considerations, and more importantly is based on entirely nonscientific motivations. Science provides no motivation at all, in itself. Nuclear science provides no motivation to build an atomic bomb, no motivation to build nuclear power plants, says nothing about what the law should be or what we should do. It can certainly be used or even abused for such purposes.

    There is absolutely nothing wrong with "eugenics" if you are actually talking about science. If you are talking about a social policy, I will agree it's... well lets just say it's extremely problematic as a social policy.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  539. HGttG is also a valid alternative by whymw · · Score: 1

    I think creationism and intelligent design are both flawed and propose HitchHikers Guide to the Galaxy as a valid alternatve. At least the white lab mice and the old dude designing fjords make more sense than most of the Old Testament stuff about floods, etc. HGttG should be required reading in school science classes (I'm not sure I'm kidding on that one)
    jim

  540. Darwin, Marx, Freud....where's Smith!?!?! by lspd · · Score: 1

    It's comical that the Wedge Strategy lists Darwin, Marx and Freud as champions of viewing people "as animals or machines who inhabited a universe ruled by purely impersonal forces"...

    Why don't extend this list to its logical conclusions. If Darwin, Marx and Freud were wrong in taking this view of the world, then Adam Smith, was wrong...he applied the same logic in the same way and came to virtually the same conclusions. Darwin was obviously building on ideas that Smith made plain. We could go even further back and it looks like the reasoning behind democracy is also in question.

    What unifying theory works for organizing a nation in the absense of "logical self-interest", or as they're calling it, "materialism"? It's the big F. The sooner free market conservatives realize their goals are completely at odds with Christian fundamentalist conservatives, the better.

  541. I hate God by Majiseuth · · Score: 1

    Creationists are stupid, and their god is stupider. Mod me up.

  542. David Hume by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I haven't seen any mention in the discussion yet of David Hume's "Dialogues on Natural Religion". One section includes decisive refutation of the Argument from Design.

    For general mind-blowing philosophy that continues to challenge the most talented philosophers today, dare to study Hume's "Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding".

  543. Dust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, I've been reading the many posts -- and it's some good discussion. Honestly, I don't *truly* know (at least not in a way I'd ever be able to prove) whether God created us in one fell swoop or if evolution was our means of creation. However, I do believe life was created by God. But, if you don't believe it - well, that's your choice. I'm not going to waste my time arguing about it.

    However, something interesting I heard once...kinda made me laugh as I thought about it.

    Let's say I'm wrong - God does not exist, he never did and I'm the product of bacteria that became a fish that became a whatever...and we now have a human. Okay, fine. I waste some of my life praying to my God (which does, at the very least, make me feel good) and then, when we both die, we're done - that's it. Dust.

    However, let's say God *does* exist. So, now, I've spent my life worshipping the creator of life and, well, when you and I both die, I will be going to heaven and you'll be heading to hell.

    I know - not the best reason to believe, and it should NOT be the reason you believe (because, God knows your heart and knows what you are really about), but, heh, it was fun to think about.

    1. Re:Dust by wk633 · · Score: 1

      That's known as Pascal's wager. The problem is that it assumes a bilateral choice, God or no God. What do you do about choosing between multiple Gods all of whom claim to be the only God?

      But I agree, arguments like that, although interesting, aren't very good reasons to 'believe' in anything.

  544. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

    Sounds cool.

    I look forward to seeing your human level AI generated using your evolutionary algorithms.

  545. Re:Separation of Church and State by Shag · · Score: 1
    And if the government were to support or favor any religion they would have established a de facto official religion. Therefore it is impossible to be compliant with that law without a seperation of church and state.
    All true. But if "intelligent design" consists of the belief that the Universe was designed and/or created by a supreme being of some sort... which religion does that favor? Many, probably most, if not all, religions have creation mythology, and creation myths tend to involve supreme beings.

    Yes, I'm sure the folks in the state that brought us Senator Santorum probably have a particular supreme being in mind, but I think it should be quite possible to present a non-deity-specific version of "intelligent design" which would not endorse or advocate for any specific religion, and thus not violate the establishment clause.

    --
    Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
  546. Re:Omega Point - Orthogenesis - Noosphere - Teleol by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    "de Chardin" isn't his last name, it's where he's from. So technically, you should state "This is just Teilhard's orthogenetic noosphere..."

  547. The wrong argument? by Major+General+Panic · · Score: 1

    Somehow it seems to me that evolution in its most simplistic form isn't even at the level of a scientific theory. It just says this:

    Things which are not suited to their environment are more likely to be eliminated by it.

    Is this really something we can debate? Can you honestly tell me that there's a better way of explaining why some things prosper and other don't, why systems adjust themselves and produce complex things intricately suited to their environments?

  548. I meant 'NEITHER' not either! by anomaly · · Score: 1

    According to the 'rules' of the scientific method, either could emerge from hypothesis status.

    YIKES - what a typo!

    That should have read According to the 'rules' of the scientific method, neither could emerge from hypothesis status.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
  549. Double Standards by gDeleteMe · · Score: 1

    I can see by a brief scan that this entire discussion has turned into the religion vs. nonreligion. Quaint. I live within a five to ten minute drive of Dover, and I applaud their efforts to push the envelope. If anyone who is complaining doesn't know, ID doesn't mention any form of 'God', so all coorelations in that manner to religion is void. Additionally, religion is about faith. ID does not even hint at any sort of faith, and therefore completely unrelated to religion. Neither atheists nor the religious are able to prove existance or lack thereof, so once again, I see ID as a strength. Far away from the religion aspect which I believe is mute, is the fact that school is ment to be enriching. What's wrong with teaching two conflicting theories and having discussion? I'd like to inform those from outside the local area that _that_ is how most of the higher-level classes in York are taught. I love the fact that evolution is being taught with an accompanying theory. I remember when I went through evolution, the teacher stood up in front of the class and stated "Now, before we begin, humans did not descend from apes - we have X more chromosomes." I heard that and was disgusted at how petty legal disputes can force the mouths of teachers. Additionally, Dover has freakin stickers on every book and the chapter that ID is discussed in stating that it is a theory and is to be considered alongside evolution. So, finally, I beg people not to rush to make rash double standards about that is or is not a valid theory and actually think - much like high schoolers like me do.

  550. You are racist! by Jagasian · · Score: 1

    You are just a bigot. Be honest with yourself. I am not a religious nutcase, I voted against Bush two times now, and I was against his war against Iraq. Yet I am to be blamed? What did I do to deserve blame? What did you do to not be blamed? Oh, yeah, you aren't a citizen of the USA, yet I am, so you are right and I am wrong. You are a pathetic, fucking racist piece of shit. So let me turn your crap back in your face you whiney brat!

    If you are not a religious nutcase but you are not in the USA, don't fucking apologize. DO SOMETHING. You are to blame for letting these rabid fundamentalists take over. YOU have to stop them.

  551. This post will get lost by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

    I'm sure this post will get lost in deluge of posts here, but I'll post it anyway.

    Perhaps the real problem that we don't have a separation of school and state? If there were no government schools, then there would be a problem with this, or with students voluntarily praying, or holding religious baccalaureates for those that want them, or saying the pledge of allegience, or having a creche on the lawn, or anything like that. If you don't want your kid taught evolution|creationism, you send him to a school that teaches creationism|evolution instead.

    There's going to be some disagreements on how to finance non-government schools, but those disagreements are going to inconsequential compared to the current hate-generating disagreements over religion.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  552. Fix your own definitions first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do NOT confuse opposition to materialist PHILOSOPHY with opposition to the scientific METHODOLOGY. Otherwise you are as big a religious fanatic (and you act it, by the way) as any inquisitor.

    No one in the ID movement is proposing we get all Almish on you. You can be an ID person and work perfectly well in any scientific disipline.

    Also keep in mind the bias that claims no scientists are behind this. Let's ask the obvious question - if an ID paper were sent into a hostile publication, would it be published? Or would it be tossed out of hand? And have you completely ignored the fact that most of the research quoted in ID is from atheistic sources.

    Materialist philosophy as expressed as a state religion has two historic instances - Nazism (20 million dead) and Communism (120 million dead). When Materialism becomes the state religion, as it threatens to in the US, let's just say I'm not a fan of their previous work.

  553. Sad to see you go. by Jagasian · · Score: 1

    If you are not a religious nutcase and you are not in the USA, don't fucking apologize. DO SOMETHING. You are to blame for letting these rabid fundamentalists take over. YOU have to stop them.

    Sound familiar? Yup, you and the racist buddy you support sound like this. Non-Americans are just as much to blame as Americans. This crap has more to do with those that support this kind of crap, e.g. racism, wars, versus people who are rational. You are turning towards the camp of crap with your racist rants.

    It isn't hard to accidentally fall into the wrong. I am sure Osama and Bush's people once had good intentions. As with you and yours.

    1. Re:Sad to see you go. by subtropolis · · Score: 1

      huh? care to elaborate? i don't understand what you're getting at. Not a flame; just confused by your post.

      --
      "Our interests are to see if we can't scale it up to something more exciting," he said.
    2. Re:Sad to see you go. by Jagasian · · Score: 1

      You caved into your anger and made a generalization that all Americans are to blame for the fundies.

  554. What are fossils?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I would also like to address the issue of fossils" OK, so what's the explanation? A lot of really bad science behind carbon dating and such?

  555. Deus ex Machina! by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1

    and I don't mean the game:-)

    Though the works of ID advocates to evoke images of wires suspended from the sky:-).

  556. Re:Disagree! by symbolic · · Score: 1

    Christianity is a religion. A religion is a belief. In other words, what you do doesn't mean shit, it's what you believe.

    If this is your position, it seems to me that you'll have a very difficult time reconciling the vast difference, that often exists between what people say, and what they actually do. I can accept the notion that anyone can say that they believe something, but it's not quite the same when it comes to being Christian. Merely calling myself a Christian, or implying that I'm Christian by virtue of what I say I believe, doesn't make me a Chrstian any more than calling myself the President makes me the President.

  557. Yeah if there was a designer by MichaelPenne · · Score: 1

    he/she/it wasn't very intelligent ?8-0.

    Deus Ex HomerSimpsona!

  558. LDS by bugeaterr · · Score: 0, Troll

    Everyone should try LDS at least ONCE in their lives.
    It'll really close your mind to possibilities you've already imagined.

    1. Re:LDS by bugeaterr · · Score: 1

      That was a joke. Read it again you Troll-assigning retard. LDS LSD? moron.

  559. Like what? by lorcha · · Score: 1
    if you're not a religious nutcase but you are in the U.S., don't fucking apologise. DO SOMETHING.
    Like what?
    --
    "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
  560. People are overreacting. by sycomonkey · · Score: 1

    Saying that Evolution is "just a theory" is terribly misleading. I'm sure most people here realize why. But "Intellegent Design" is a hypothesis that cannot be totally thrown aside. I'm not sure if it's a strong enough hypothesis to be mentioned in a high school biology class, but mearly having it mentioned hardly counts as a integration of church and state. It's not like they're saying ID is true and evolution isn't. That WOULD be going over the line, I think, unless of course ID could be proved, which I imagine will be very difficult considering not many scientist want to go that direction or could even think up any experiments to test it... if it's even possible to test. Of course if it's impossible to test then it's no longer a valid scientific base to stand on, but that's beside the point.

    --
    --The universe will not be altered by forum threads, even those which are very wry. --Tycho Brahe (Penny Arcade)
    1. Re:People are overreacting. by What+me+a+Coward · · Score: 1

      And thats the problem ID isn't proven and their is no proof to say ID is a better explination than evolution but that is what the Dover Pennsylvania schoolboard is saying teachers are to tell their students. Which is clearly going over the line.

      And no science can't prove god if a god exists then said god couldn't be proven unless said god wanted to be proven. Otherwise science could spin it's wheels forever trying to prove a deity that is omnipotent and able to change the results of any test conducted to come back as inconculsive. Likewise if said god could be proven then faith no longer applies as god would be fact and not just our belief or lack theirof anylonger. And that would open up a whole new can of worms to deal with.

      --
      Coward? Coward! Thems fighten words!!
  561. Great, fundie moderators at work by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    I state a fact, I am told "you assumed that fact", I provide evidence from the source material.

    Moderated as troll? Not by someone honest, that's for sure.

    --

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

  562. I'm very confused by lorcha · · Score: 1

    I don't remember learning about two different mutually exclusive creation stories. I'm familiar with the one that begins, "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth." but what is the second?

    --
    "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
    1. Re:I'm very confused by RichardX · · Score: 1

      There's a nice overview of the two contradicting creation stories here.. the rest of that site is also well worth checking out as well

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    2. Re:I'm very confused by cstacy · · Score: 1
      I don't remember learning about two different mutually exclusive creation stories.
      The older story (which comes later in the book, Genesis 2:4) doesn't say anything about "In the beginning..." or how the earth came to be. It just says, "Once upon a time, God made the earth and heavens. It didn't rain on earth." Then it immediately tells how God made the man (from dust, breathing into his nostrils) and plunked him down in Eden. But "it was not good that the man should be alone", so he created the animals. But Adam was lonely, so then God made Eve. The newer story (Genesis 1:20) is the one with "In the beginning" and the "days", and it says that all the living creatures happened on the sixth day. It doesn't give any details (no putting Adam to sleep and taking his rib). It simply notes that God made animals first, then he created "man in his own image...male and female".

      These two versions of the stories were written by different people at different times. The later version (a re-cap of the original story) has the mystical "seven days", but doesn't bother with any details about people. When it gets to that part, it just says, "Then God made people, and he put them in charge." (And, "Good job, if I say so Myself; time for a nap!")

      Genesis (and Exodous and Numbers) each had multiple authors, as seen by the writing styles. In Genesis, the original creation story was written by "the Yahwist", and is more poetic. The second version of the story (which appears first in the book) was written by the "Author of the Priestly Code". The Priest had a different focus on which parts of the story were most important, and was more like a lawyer of mystical symbolism and order. The Priest doesn't seem to care about the exact order of animals/man/woman, but he wants to get that magical "7" days in there. And he wants to be able to cite God as demanding a Sabbath by way of example. His main point is that God went to a lot of trouble to create the world, then he turned it over to humans (in His Image) to take care of.

      Whether you think that's two different contradictory stories or not is a matter of opinion. They might seem that way to someone who was reading it all in an extremely literal way and not realizing that it was two different people telling the stories for different reasons at different times.

      Some people say they "literally believe" every word. Some other people say, "Well, the words are literally contradictory". This suggests to me that, for one thing, the fundamentalist Christians and the anti-Christian critics do not even agree on the what "literal reading" means (never mind what "theory" means). Anyway, do the Intelligent Design proponents say that they are literal believers? I thought they mostly did not, which makes this whole point of discussion something of a strawman argument cooked up by the side that is trying to claim the high ground of "logic".

  563. some things to consider... by jasonp1014 · · Score: 1
    • Evolution is a theory does not try to explain the origin of life. It's presupposed.
    • Intelligent Design may not necessarily be the workings of personalistic, Christian diety.
    • The origin of life, consciousness and the universe may be part of some intelligent design that is implemented in a manner that we observe as Evolution.
    • The true nature of reason and inquiry would be to allow skeptical discourse of any type to be allowed in education.

    I think teaching something like, "And God created earth in seven days... end of lesson" would be ridiculous. Just as I think teaching "Intelligent Design" where it becomes a politically correct euphemism for "Our Christian God" is wrong.


    On the other hand here's the type of belief that I don't believe:

    "Everything started by a random bunch of molecules that just happened to form into life and consciousness"

    A trillion to the trillion monkeys typing on typewriters for a trillion years will *not* write a play by Shakespeare.

    Even if life somehow got started by some random bunch of molecules... how could it be sustained? How could the consciousness come from that? The instinct of all animals to strive?

    A completely athiestic scientific viewpoint is a dogma just like fundamentalist christianity. Both think they have a complete understanding of everything. Both want to reduce all complexity and mystery into a simple rigid belief system.

    The best thing to teach would be there is this theory called Evolution which explains how species change over time, but does not explain the origin of life.

    The questions that we don't know the answer to should be taught as "we don't know".

    Some people have the opinion that there is an Intelligent Design behind things. That's okay at face value.... but the problem is when all of a sudden they stick their own personal religion as the answer where there's no connection!

    So great maybe there is an intelligent design to the universe.... what does that have to do with Adam and Eve, Noah's Ark, the burning bush and all the other ancient fairy tales that go with christianity?

  564. Biblical Interpretation by gidds · · Score: 1
    Some broad generalisations there, which are invariably false*.

    (* Far too few people get that one...)

    I can't speak for too many, but I'm a member of a Baptist church here in England, and I know people from several other local churches (Baptist, Methodist, Brethren, Elim, &c); I'd guess that very very few take the literal creationist position. I certainly don't. I think 'Baptist' means something slightly different here from what it does in the southern US...

    But it's not the simple yes/no question that some seem to be assuming. To take every word of the Bible absolutely literally, you'd have to accept not only that the universe was created in exactly 144 hours, but that there actually existed a man with a plank in his eye, and that St Paul actually looked at everything in a mirror ('through a glass darkly').

    On the other hand, if you say you don't take every word of the Bible literally, you're then placing yourself in the same category as people who take practically none of it literally, who practise pick-n-mix religion and don't believe that there was ever an actual person called Jesus who did any of the things that were written... and I wouldn't call those people 'Christians'!

    So it can get very hard to define terms here.

    My view is that you have to understand the intent of the various Bible writers. Some parts were clearly not meant literally: poetic passages in the psalms, figures of speech, reports of dreams and visions, parables and stories. Other parts clearly were. And in most cases, the difference is made fairly clear from the context. But to understand which is which, we need we need to apply our wisdom and intelligence -- things which seem to be in short supply in some parts of the world!

    --

    Ceterum censeo subscriptionem esse delendam.

  565. Re:Evolutionary Naturalism Vs Intelligent Design by Hungus · · Score: 1

    Try reading the article they cannot dispute ... otherwise you are effectively saying you want to read a bunch of failures.

    --
    Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
  566. Teach the controversy! by RichardX · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Gravity is just a theory, yet it's taught as fact in almost all schools.
    What about the alternative theory? That we're held to the planet's surface be the combined efforts of millions of invisible pixies called Clarence?

    Why not teach the Clarence theory alongside gravity?

    and don't even get me started on all this "The Earth is Round" stuff that kids get brainwashed by...

    --
    Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    1. Re:Teach the controversy! by What+me+a+Coward · · Score: 1

      Well flawed or not it's called the Newtons law of gravity not Newtons theory of gravity.

      Yes newtons laws were flawed and needed einstiens theories to correct it's flaws but nonetheless Newtons gravity is a law not a theory unless they repealed it in the last couple decades since i studied it.

      --
      Coward? Coward! Thems fighten words!!
    2. Re:Teach the controversy! by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Pah.. don't you go using your complicated jargon to try and flummox me, you, you, you.... scientist, with your fancy "laws" and whatnot.

      Everybody knows you can prove anything that's even remotely true by using facts. I'll stick to my Clarence theory, thankyouverymuch.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  567. I agree with you - do you with me? by anomaly · · Score: 1

    if you want to make ID a scientific hypothesis you must first fulfill the demands that places on a scientific hypothesis. Because as it stands it's not one.

    And materialistic explanations of the origin of the universe are not testable and therefore not falsifiable. They are therefore non-scientific, and should not be taught as such in science classrooms.

    Do you agree?

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:I agree with you - do you with me? by chialea · · Score: 1

      >And materialistic explanations of the origin of the universe are not testable and therefore not falsifiable.

      Excuse me? Scientific theories about the origins of the universe make predictions. These predictions are testable, and in fact have been tested, over and over and over. They are falsifiable, just not falsified, as evidence has been seen to accord with the predictions.

      Creationism isn't testable. It's like string theory was, except with a rather odder way of coming up with the idea. How the idea was formed, however, is irrelevent -- we just have to ask "does it make testable predictions?". If not, then it's not a scientific theory. (BTW, string theory is/was considered mathematics, not science, unless/until it makes some actually testable predictions (which people have worked very hard on), and gets them tested.)

      Lea

  568. Flawed? by mike3k · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No scientist has disputed evolution. The only people who consider it flawed and dispute it are those who feel that evolution conflicts with their religious beliefs and refuses to reconsider those beliefs.

    1. Re:Flawed? by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      Man have you got it backwards. It might behoove you to know that in fact only 51% of physical scientists believe in evolution. Of the ones that do, very few can explain how it happened since they have never reproduced it in the lab. If the term physical scientist escapes you that means real scientists and not Sociologists or gender studies professors. Just 51%! Its a crying shame not one evolutionist can demonstrate evolution under any circumstances, test it or otherwise observe it. Maybe if they did no one would question it.

    2. Re:Flawed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only 51% happens to be a majority. There's plenty of evidence weighing in on evolution's side. Maybe if man hadn't created religion no one would question evolution.

  569. creation measure? by xPsi · · Score: 1
    I am both an atheist and a scientist and give no credence to ID, Creationism, or other pseudoscientific philosophies. However, for the moment setting aside the skewed political and philosophical agendas being pursued by these groups [and my own biases], I do think that there is an interesting teleological question underlying the issue: "is it possible to objectively and reliably determine a priori if something was actively created or not?"

    Currently, I think the he answer is a very murky "sometimes." This "sometimes" usually involves essentially knowing the answer - and usually knowing something about the path of the system to the final observed state. Nevertheless, one has to wonder if there isn't some clean scientific measure of this "property" of objects.

    At some point, people bandied about Shannon entropy as a possible measure. The idea being that created objects will have a lower entropy (i.e. fewer microscopic configurations) and thus "more information." Not a bad idea. The problem is that one has to know quite a bit about the nature of the constraints in the system. For example, "water" molecules of arbitrary geometry and arbitrary chemistry may or may not undergo a phase transition to ice when cooled below some critical temperature. But "real" water molecules (of a specific geometry with a special natural chemistry) always undergo such a transition under everyday STP circumstances. If you just applied such an entropy argument to the "arbitrary" water, you might conclude that ice was impossible unless "created." Moreover, one has to have considerable knowledge of the system's degree of isolation and degree of equilibrium (thermodynamic, information, or otherwise). Sub-systems can lower their entropy if another part of the system is dumping energy into it (e.g. earth-sun, etc.). Not to mention applying information theory and thermodynamics to systems out of equilibrium is tricky business, if not impossible. Not surprisingly the ID folks exactly used this information theory argument to try bolster their claims life was indeed created. Another example of how a perfectly reasonable scientific question can be distorted and abused for the sake of a misguided philosophy or agenda.

    Nevertheless, I do wonder if a reliable, generic scientific "creation measure" can be constructed (and if it would identify itself as having been created).

    --
    i\hbar\dot{\psi}=\hat{H}\psi
  570. ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by Knight_of_BAAWA · · Score: 2, Insightful
    As has been stated by many previously: why don't the anti-science, anti-reason, anti-logic, anti-thought, anti-reality people get it? Their myth is not something that should be taught in a science class.

    It doesn't matter how many people believe that there is a god. Doesn't matter how good it makes people feel. Doesn't matter how often they trot out the same refuted-to-death strawmen and blatantly false arguments. Doesn't matter that they can't grasp evolution. Their inabilities mean nothing. Evolution is a fact, and for people to want to have ID taught in "public" schools in any manner other than "ID is simply literalist xer biblical creationism dressed in new clothes in order to attempt to fool people into thinking that it's not really some superstition" is tantamount to pushing for phrenology, astrology, and flat-earthism to be taught. It's just that much junk.

    Keep ID in theology, where it belongs. I'm glad that many groups are stepping up to expose the fraud of ID and to keep it from being taught in schools. Truth is not democratic, despite what the ID people push. We don't get to vote that Bill Gates is male or that Douglas Adams wrote HHGTTG or that the Golden Gate Bridge is in California--truth isn't determined that way. But the IDers want people to believe that truth is determined by a political vote.

    They are sorely mistaken.

    1. Re:ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by KD5YPT · · Score: 1

      I agree with out on many points, however, despite being an evolutionist, evolution is not a fact. It's a very good theory that's supported by a numerous evidences of its validity, but with being observed directly, it cannot be a fact. Theory will always stay as a theory, and very few became law (the only "law" we got, gravitation and conservations were both over thrown by the relativity theory).

      --
      In US, you can easily buy enough major firearms to wipe out your neighbourhood but a few little fireworks are banned.
    2. Re:ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by megalomang · · Score: 1

      You may be correct on a few points, but on the other hand, you are also somewhat ignorant of the entire ID argument. And you are certainly ignorant of the scientific process and how we define theory vs definition. Evolution is a theory. ID is a theory. Bill Gates status as a male (as we have defined what it means to be a male) is a physical property of Bill Gates. The location of a bridge is again based on complex set of definitions and assumptions that are not scientifically questioned. However the entire process that led to our current existence is definitely not fully known nor fully documented. There is insufficient evidence to claim whether evolution was completely responsible for our current state.

      As many point out, there is extensive evidence across all walks of life that evolution is an ongoing process. You simply need to look at fossil samples taken across a span of time to demonstrate this. I don't think too many ID scientists find it possible to deny evolution entirely.

      At the same time, there is no complete evidence documenting the entire evolution of all life forms starting at some premordial form. Consequently, it is impossible to say for a fact that evolution was the only factor bringing us to where we are today. And consequently, ID remains a theory that is is nearly impossible to prove incorrect.

      I'm sure that most (but certainly not all) ID advocates are in some way or another religious, however there are notable differences from the literalist interpretation you assume. First, ID does not claim that the world was created in 7 days. Nor does it deny the existence of evolution as would a literalist. It merely tries to explain certain "irreducible complexities" that exist in nature that would have been formidable if not impossible for evolution to create on its own.

      Second, there are actually those who believe not that we were created by some God, but rather by some super-intelligent extraterrestrial race as an experiment.

      The only point you have been able to clearly argue to me is that you are ignorant, your mind is closed, and you are not a scientist.

      All that, and I do not even believe in ID... lol.

    3. Re:ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by Knight_of_BAAWA · · Score: 1

      Actually, evolution is both fact and theory. It is fact in that it has been observed. It is theory in the sense of the explanations for it. It is just like gravity in that respect: gravity is a fact, and we have theories (like Quantum Theory of Gravity) to explain it.

    4. Re:ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by Knight_of_BAAWA · · Score: 1
      You may be correct on a few points, but on the other hand, you are also somewhat ignorant of the entire ID argument.

      Actually, I'm well-read on it. And I know that it is used almost exclusively by the xer fundies.

      And you are certainly ignorant of the scientific process and how we define theory vs definition.

      Oh, the irony of that will be shown.

      Evolution is a theory. ID is a theory.

      No, ID is NOT a theory. ID is a guess. A theory in science is " an explanation or model based on observation, experimentation, and reasoning, especially one that has been tested and confirmed as a general principle helping to explain and predict natural phenomena"

      ID in no way fits that description. ID has no tests. ID has no falsifiability. ID is just pseudo-science.

      Bill Gates status as a male (as we have defined what it means to be a male) is a physical property of Bill Gates. The location of a bridge is again based on complex set of definitions and assumptions that are not scientifically questioned. However the entire process that led to our current existence is definitely not fully known nor fully documented.

      So what? That doesn't mean that it's open to a vote. The facts are what they are, and they all point to evolution.

      You would also have to state that "the entire process that leads to gravity is definitely not fully known nor fully documented", so we would have to allow for other ideas.

      Somehow, I don't think you'd agree to that

      There is insufficient evidence to claim whether evolution was completely responsible for our current state.

      We don't see any evidence of a god or aliens or bigfoot or whatnot.

      As many point out, there is extensive evidence across all walks of life that evolution is an ongoing process. You simply need to look at fossil samples taken across a span of time to demonstrate this. I don't think too many ID scientists find it possible to deny evolution entirely.

      You'd be amazed. They accept it only insofar as they want to be taken somewhat seriously.

      At the same time, there is no complete evidence documenting the entire evolution of all life forms starting at some premordial form. Consequently, it is impossible to say for a fact that evolution was the only factor bringing us to where we are today. And consequently, ID remains a theory that is is nearly impossible to prove incorrect.

      It's irrelevant that we don't have all of the facts and evidence just yet. That also doesn't mean that ID is a theory, nor that it is some sort of valid alternative.

      I'm sure that most (but certainly not all) ID advocates are in some way or another religious, however there are notable differences from the literalist interpretation you assume. First, ID does not claim that the world was created in 7 days.

      Most of them do, actually. They just couch it in pseudo-scientific terms.

      Nor does it deny the existence of evolution as would a literalist.

      Again, they accept it insofar as they want to be taken seriously

      It merely tries to explain certain "irreducible complexities" that exist in nature that would have been formidable if not impossible for evolution to create on its own.

      i.e. argument from personal incredulity leading to "goddidit".

      Second, there are actually those who believe not that we were created by some God, but rather by some super-intelligent extraterrestrial race as an experiment.

      And none of those are lobbying to have their pet idea taught in school

      The only point you have been able to clearly argue to me is that you are ignorant, your mind is closed, and you are not a scientist.

      Wow--that really makes me rethink my entire existence. You certainly told me. Wow. I'm so stunned. My life has now changed because of your razor-sharp insight. You--the person who doesn't know what a theory is in science--tells me that I'm not a scientist. Wow. I'm just amazed.

    5. Re:ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Actually, evolution is both fact and theory. It is fact in that it has been observed...

      Really now. What repeatable experiment has anyone done to show evolution as a fact? Has anyone ever created even a single living cell from non-living matter. If anyone ever is able to do this, then evolution is indeed a verifyable experimental fact. Until that happens, it shall remain a theory that can explain some things in our world, but cannot explain others.

      --
      All theory is gray
    6. Re:ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by Knight_of_BAAWA · · Score: 1
      What repeatable experiment has anyone done to show evolution as a fact?

      http://talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.html
      http://talkorigins.org/faqs/speciation.html
      http://talkorigins.org/faqs/evolution-fact.html

      Has anyone ever created even a single living cell from non-living matter.

      That's ABIOGENESIS, not evolution. Learn the difference, chuckles.

      Oh, and you might want to know that gravity is a theory, too. Quantum THEORY of Gravity.

    7. Re:ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by arminw · · Score: 1

      so abiogenesis has nothing to do with evolution?

      --
      All theory is gray
    8. Re:ID = literalist xer biblicalism in new clothes by Knight_of_BAAWA · · Score: 1

      No, they are separate concepts.

  571. Slippery slope? by Mike+A. · · Score: 1

    If there's such a slippery slope to prohibiting the individual right to prayer in school, how come it hasn't happened? (Barring a few cases of school officials not understanding the law, which are as likely to be sued by the ACLU as the ACLJ.)

    --

    --
    Do I look like I speak for my employer?
    1. Re:Slippery slope? by RealSalmon · · Score: 1

      If there's such a slippery slope to prohibiting the individual right to prayer in school, how come it hasn't happened? (Barring a few cases of school officials not understanding the law, which are as likely to be sued by the ACLU as the ACLJ.)

      Again, I could ask the same question, reversed, on the other side. It wasn't me who brought up the issue of the slippery slope. It was TA.

      --

      -B

  572. Intelligent design by joeyblades · · Score: 1

    ...evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again...

    Well, first, evolutionary theory does not explain the origins of life... that would be the theory of abiogenesis. Evolutionary theory is something else entirely.

    Second, evolutionary theory has not shown anything. Most people are very confused about what the theories (plural) of evolution actually tell us.

    Don't get me wrong. Evolution is a fact; it happens. The theories of evolution have a powerful explanatory appeal, however they do not demonstrate anything.

    If you think that scientific evidence from observed cases of evolution or reconstructed evolutionary events are going to convince the Creationists that they are misguided - it is you who are misguided. In fact, there is nothing logically unsound by the Creationist arguments for intelligent design. Since actual evolutionary history cannot be reconstructed, it is pointless to engage in these sorts of discussions...

    ... and yet, we persist. Ironically, in spite of all the passion from both sides, if it were possible to know the unknowable, it would have absolutely no impact on anyone's life... If we knew that we came to be as a result of a chemical process, or were placed here by God, or are the results of some alien science project... what possible difference could it make!?

  573. The basics of the argument. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    First, Evolution is a fact, and there is a theory that describes how it occurs. Similarly, gravity is a fact, and has a theory that describes how it occurs. Evolution is the change of allelles in a population over time; It is demonstrable by anyone with eight generations of Drosophilia fruit flies and the ability to note their eye colours - or anyone who has ever bred roses, or seen a brunette couple with a redheaded child. Evolution HAPPENS. Whether it does is not contested.

    Secondly, Intelligent Design (I.D.) is a notion that is both Wholly unscientific (It is not testable, nor falsifiable), and No Matter How You Slice It, originated as Religion - The people who created this notion did so as a way to make their religious notions seem scientific, by couching them in 'scientific' jargon.

    Most objections to the teaching of Evolution in a science class are based upon one of several reasons -

    A: The objector feels that religion conflicts with their religious notions. Well, we're sorry, but Galileo and Kepler's notion that the Sun, and not the Earth, was the focal point of orbit in our solar system went against someone's religious notions too.

    B: The objector feels that there is no way life could have arisen totally randomly, and will often use the analogy of a watch being assembled by a tornado. This is a horrible strawman of an argument; Evolution and life itself are highly structured and the change comes randomly, not the assembly.

    C: "I didn't come from no monkey." Ridiculous. The conclusions of the evidence are that all modern primates (and that includes HUMANS and other APES) had a common ancestor.

    D: Evolution is a secular humanist/atheist/homosexual/insert-group-objector- hates-here agenda to corrupt their children. Do I really have to show why this is ridiculous?

    E: A highly respected scientist has objections to the proposed method of evolution, and the objector feels this suffices to generalise it all the way to "Evolution is False". Pure hokum.

    That, in a nutshell, is the ENTIRETY of why there is a "debate" or "uproar" about the teaching of evolution in American schools - Ignorant religious fundamentalists who believe that Evolution contradicts their religion feel that it should not be taught in school.

    Perhaps we ought to teach that the Earth is flat, and that the Sun revolves around it, as well.

  574. Where's Evolution in the Fossil Record? by alucinor · · Score: 1

    I know evolution isn't suppose to even explain origins, just how life gets along ~after~ originating, and we can definitely observe it on many levels in our world.

    But still, I've always wondered this: evolution by natural selection produces new species by infintesimal increments of adaptation. Why is it that when we observe the fossil record, we don't see such a gradual shift? We have hundreds of thousands of fossils now, from many strata, and we just keep uncovering a lot of similar species over and over again.

    I'm not trolling against evolution here: I think it's a valid theory that has been observed. I just think that some form of evolution other than by natural selection must be taking place in order to explain what's been observed from the fossil record.

    Darwin thought we'd have a multitude of transitional species by now. But we don't. Where's this gradual continuum of evolution in the fossil record???

    I think this is a very valid question, and I would appreciate any mod points to be able to get it some attention. I would very much like a good informative answer to this.

    --
    random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    1. Re:Where's Evolution in the Fossil Record? by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      "evolution by natural selection produces new species by infintesimal increments of adaptation." No. Not at all. Evolution works on the genetic structure, which is very much discrete. The reason for the occassional sudden shifts is that: (a) Morphology does not correspond well to genetic change. Changing a gene may not change morphology at all - or it may change things drastically. The physical effects of certain genetic disorders appear very dramatic, even though they correspond to a small shift in the genetic makeup. Similarly, big changes in genetics may occur, and not show up in skeletal structure (which is what fossils are) at all. (b) Fossil records hide detail. The process of fossilisation is incredibly difficult to make happen, and it certainly doesn't happen at regular intervals. Often, they correspond to a disaster, or sequences of events that see alot of fossils all corresponding to a single time frame, and then not alot more in between. (c) Darwinian evolution is really kinda obselete as a theory. Modern evolutionary theory recognises that the rate of speciation may alter. For example, a sudden change in environment might spur some change. Other changes may help speed the rate of advancement. Some species may come to dominate their environment, decreasing competition and slowing their own evolution - for a while. Speciation can also be sudden - for example, models of speciation have shown an effect where if the genetic variation is quite uniform, interbreeding helps keep the species the same - until some threshold is crossed, in which case differences rapidly amplify. (d) We do see such a gradual shift - in most cases. If we focus on looking for non-gradual shifts, since we don't have any reference changes to compare, obviously we will find 'sudden transitions'.

    2. Re:Where's Evolution in the Fossil Record? by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      Natural selection only eliminates parts of the gene pool, it does not give anything more than what it already has. THIS is a proven fact. The same thing does for vestigial organs, thats a LOSS of information and/or organs, not a gain. Evolution has to rely on mutation, to which most radical mutations are counter-survival. This also is a proven fact. After more than 30 years of bombarding fruit flies in the lab with radiation and other mutation inducing poisons, all they have been able to come up with is retarded fruit flies. NOt a new species, not a new variation or race, just retarded fruit flies. Maybe after a couple of hundred years of producing retarded fruit flies in the lab they might actually decide that is all they will ever get trying desperately to produce evolution. Kind of sad, really, like heading east looking for a sunset.

    3. Re:Where's Evolution in the Fossil Record? by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      "After more than 30 years of bombarding fruit flies in the lab with radiation and other mutation inducing poisons, all they have been able to come up with is retarded fruit flies." And fruit flies which live 70% longer than average. http://whyfiles.org/shorties/070old_fly/ Those experiments were targetted at discovering how genetic mutations can go wrong. An analogy is that where normal mutations are like rain, these were like dropped buckets on people. Whole groups of genes were knocked out. And obviously, the chances of causing damage is high. In any case, many of the mutations caused are neutral, even if they were radical. Eye-colour changes, and body colour changes have no effect on survivability. Mutation has also consistently produced new 'species' of virii and bacteria. Losing organs is not 'loss of information'. There is no rigourous concept like you are thinking of in genetics. Turning a switch off is not very different from turning a switch on.

    4. Re:Where's Evolution in the Fossil Record? by grolschie · · Score: 1

      Dude! Your post was great. Retarded fruit flies - I gotta remember that one. Thanks for posting! :-)

    5. Re:Where's Evolution in the Fossil Record? by 2marcus · · Score: 1
      I counter your retarded fruit flies with my Nylon Bugs !

      Not to mention all the cool things bacteria have evolved to deal with our antibiotics.

      Or the entirely new viruses which have emerged over the years.

      I would check your so-called "proven facts".

  575. Re:Evolutionary Naturalism Vs Intelligent Design by kindbud · · Score: 1

    I have read the "undisputable" article, and it seems like a bunch of hogwash and hand-waving to me. Word games, nothing more. But I am sure that all I have done with this declaration is to convince you that I am not "one of best of natural philisophers." But I would like to see who else has done what I have done. Do you have a list, or not, of the ones who have disputed it?

    Or are you lying?

    --
    Edith Keeler Must Die
  576. Scientists have a bias, too by anomaly · · Score: 1

    We all bring bias to the discussion.

    Gould represents one of two major factions within evolutionary thought. The lack of compelling evidence for traditional evolution in the fossil record was what compelled him to form a new theory. This helps to support the idea that even evolutionists disagree about the meaning of the evidence.

    The Lewontin quote is a clear admission that he has a bias that precludes his consideration of anything supernatural.

    So... What if it's true? What if a non-natural explanation is the REAL explanation? Lewontin would be precluded from even *considering* it.

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Scientists have a bias, too by Hast · · Score: 1

      Science, as of today, will not be able to accept a hypothesis which require supernatural elements in order to explain something. This is because science deals with things that can be measured and tested. That is a fundamental basis for science (much like how faith is a fundamental basis for religion).

      As such a scientist would be led to reject any hypothesis which assumes a supernatural element; not really because of the hypothesis but because the basic assumption isn't true.

      If you do logic testing based on unverified assumptions you can reach pretty much any conclusion you want. Because of this the scientific method (and logic in general) requires that you check your assumptions before making any conclusions.

      As I said before though. If you can *prove* that supernatural phenomena are in fact true, then we can begin to work on the hypothesis of ID from a scientific viewpoint.

      This is something many creationist/IDists seem to fail to grasp. The scientific method IS NOT VALID if you do not apply it correctly. If you can't apply it correctly IT MAKES NO PREDICTIONS what so ever. Iow, it would be hard to apply the scientific method to prove the non-existence of god.

  577. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by Yunzil · · Score: 1

    What is "zero times zero"?

    However, N times zero is also zero. The total energy in the universe could be 0 (gravity being "negative" and everything else being "positive"). Thus, even though the universe exists, in a certain sense you could say that it amounts to nothing. :)

  578. Dominant Religions by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1
    GP: Christianity isn't even the *dominant* religion on the planet, in terms of number of believers.

    You: Yes it is [see parent for url]

    Wow. That is a horrible chart to base your opinion on. You don't see that it's flawed to title a chart "Major Religions of the World Ranked by Number of Adherents" and then include non-religions?!

    I give you this awesome quote from the bottom of the page were they are backing up their spurious claims:
    AR [animal rights] is a religion, but for the majority of Animal Rights supporters, AR functions as a movement and/or lifestyle choice, not their primary religion.
    Emphasis is not my own. This admission leads to double counting. I.e., Most Japanese are Shinto at birth, Christian at marriage, Buddhist at death; these are based on cultural and pop-cultural traditions. Are these events sufficient to claim 'adherence'. The chart also discounts the vast population of the PRC because communist rule outlawed religion, despite that they count Confucianism, Taoism, et others for non-Chinese. WTF? They go to great lengths to justify their numbers rather than just supply census or survey results. Broadly though, their percentages are relevant which brings us to...

    Next -- do we take dominant to mean most popular?

    http://www.zpub.com/un/pope/relig.html There are 2 billion Christians, but 4 billion non-Christians, does this minority dominate the majority or is it the other way round?

    Here's why I say this... Christianity is obviously the dominant religion in America (as there are more Christians than not). Christianity is not the dominant religion in China (or India, or Iraq, the locale is irrelevant) as there are more non-Christians than not. If one agrees with these two claims, then Christianity is not the Earth's dominant religion.

    --
    Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    1. Re:Dominant Religions by yetanothertechie · · Score: 1

      To start with, here are several other links that support the fact that Christianity is the largest religion in the world by number of adherents.

      Next -- do we take dominant to mean most popular?

      Since there are 800 million or so more Christians in the world than the second highest religion, (Islam), Christianity is both the most dominant and most popular.

      I give you this awesome quote from the bottom of the page were they are backing up their spurious claims: AR [animal rights] is a religion, but for the majority of Animal Rights supporters, AR functions as a movement and/or lifestyle choice, not their primary religion. Emphasis is not my own. This admission leads to double counting.

      You're assuming that there are at least 800 million double-counts, all of which list themselves as both Christian and something else. That's a pretty wild assumption. The article in the (grandparent) link gives no indication of anything of that nature or magnitude.

      Christianity is obviously the dominant religion in America (as there are more Christians than not). Christianity is not the dominant religion in China (or India, or Iraq, the locale is irrelevant) as there are more non-Christians than not. If one agrees with these two claims, then Christianity is not the Earth's dominant religion.

      See all the links at the top of this post, and do your own research. You'll find that it's simply a fact that there are more Christians than any other religion's adherents in the world. However one feels about Christianity, or any other religion, it doesn't change this fact.

      --
      Facts are stubborn things.
    2. Re:Dominant Religions by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1
      Congrats on missing my fundamental point. I guess all that zeal got in your eyes. To clarify (again?):

      I did not dispute that Christianity (as a whole) has more adherents than any other religion. Reread that last sentence. Here's the part of my GP so you don't have to go back and look:
      Broadly though, their percentages are relevant which brings us to...

      Next -- do we take dominant to mean most popular?

      http://www.zpub.com/un/pope/relig.html [this url is one of their sources, what you didn't check them?] There are 2 billion Christians, but 4 billion non-Christians, does this minority dominate the majority or is it the other way round? [note my crafty rhetorical correctly using the word dominate]

      Now that you understand that we agree --which you go to great lengths to reiterate-- let's talk about what was of interest to me in the first place ... what does Dominant Religion mean?


      Davinci1980: Christianity isn't even the *dominant* religion on the planet, in terms of number of believers.

      You: Yes it is

      Me: Christianity is obviously the dominant religion in America (as there are more Christians than not). Christianity is not the dominant religion in China (or India, or Iraq, the locale is irrelevant) as there are more non-Christians than not. If one agrees with these two claims, then Christianity is not the Earth's dominant religion.

      You: See all the links at the top of this post, and do your own research. You'll find that it's simply a fact that there are more Christians than any other religion's adherents in the world. However one feels about Christianity, or any other religion, it doesn't change this fact.
      Now that we've re-read this exchange, tell me what dominant means.

      Does dominant mean a majority? The majority of Earthlings are not Christians.

      Now, since that didn't get through to you last time ... let's talk about what the word dominant means. If one is dominant they "exercise the most influence or control, [second, they are the] Most prominent, as in position; ascendant." The word, being rather binary in connotation also implies as submissive. For these reasons it is either imprecise or JUST FUCKING PLAIN OLD WRONG to say that "Christianity is the planet's dominant religion." It is bigoted (unless you're a Christian of course) to say that Christianity is 'ascendant', i.e., supreme to all other religions by nature. It it wrong to say that Christianity exercises the most control or influence over the planet's population. The claim is baseless for the same reason I can't say that being non-Christian is the dominant position. Dominant does not mean popular, it does not mean majority, it does not mean biggest. It does mean reigning, commanding, controlling, supreme, etc.

      I hope I've made my position clear. Don't bother to come back at me if it's just going to be more of the same crap. And don't give me that prescriptive-linguistics argument. Words have meanings. Using the wrong words creates fallacy.

      Sorry to rant and rave. I hope you see where I'm coming from, though. You thought it was cute to quip about how Christianity was the dominant religion when what would have been more honest would be to say 'right, maybe it's not the dominant religion but it does have more adherents'. You and I wouldn't have wasted so much time arguing over semantics if you could've just stepped back and said "what am I really saying with the simple words 'yes it is'." Cheers.
      --
      Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    3. Re:Dominant Religions by yetanothertechie · · Score: 1

      Whether Christianity is dominant in terms of "exercise the most influence or control, [second, they are the] Most prominent, as in position; ascendant" is a whole different argument, which I didn't even address.

      My original fundamental point was that of people who adhere to one or another of the world's religions, more adhere to Christianity than any other. Recall the point from the original post that I was disputing:

      Christianity isn't even the *dominant* religion on the planet, in terms of number of believers.

      The original parent post used the word dominant to mean number of believers. No that's not the correct use of the word by its dictionary meaning, but with his "in terms of number of believers" phrase he made his use of it clear, and it was clear that his assertion was incorrect. I wanted to make sure that people who read his statement and understood it the way he meant it got the correction.

      Congrats on missing my fundamental point...I guess all that zeal got in your eyes....JUST FUCKING PLAIN OLD WRONG...It is bigoted (unless you're a Christian of course) to say that Christianity is 'ascendant', i.e., supreme to all other religions by nature...You thought it was cute to quip...

      Why so much venom? Yes, I'm a Christian, but I'm not blinded by zeal, stupid, or bigoted. It seems like you don't like Christians very much. Why? If this isn't the case, then what are your views on religion? Whatever they are, you seem to feel pretty strongly about them.

      Instead of continuing this discussion on slashdot, why don't you email me so we can continue it offline. I've created a throwaway email at yahoo - perhaps you can do the same so we don't risk choking our regular emails with spam. You can reach me at N0$PAMyaddayadda13579@yahoo.comN0$PAM, (remove the first and last parts of course). I hope you choose to contact me to continue this discussion.

      --
      Facts are stubborn things.
  579. equal time in church? by murdocj · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If science texts have to give equal time to religion, perhaps the gov could require that all religious texts have a prominent notice that "God" is merely an unproven theory?

  580. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're practically daring people to prove you wrong, but obviously you haven't made the feeblest of efforts to understand evolution.

  581. And Mr. Popper twisting in his grave. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... science teachers teaching evolution tell their students that evolutionary theory, a theory that has been shown to explain the origins of life time and time again, is flawed,..

    1. Scientific theory can't be validated. It can only be invalidated. Nothing seems to invalidate the evolutionary theory so far.
    2. Inteligent design IS NOT a scientific theory because it CAN NOT be invalidated by its nature. It's a matter of faith. Period.
    3. When teached in lessons, these lessons shouldn't be called science anymore, and shouldn't be teached by science teachers therefore.

  582. Testable? by anomaly · · Score: 1

    These predictions are testable, and in fact have been tested, over and over and over. They are falsifiable,

    You can make predictions about finding evidence that supports a hypothesis, and if you do, that lends credence to the hypothesis. If you do not, you simply lack evidence.

    In either case, you cannot test to determine the root cause of the genesis of the universe. It is impossible to test that, or to observe it.

    Science can investigate and falsify ideas about the cosmos, but can merely speculate about what cannot be observed or repeated. This speculation has no more credence in my book than ANY philosophical explanation of origins.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Testable? by Hast · · Score: 1

      The fundamental difference is that in order for something to be a scientific theory it MUST be proven to work.

      So lets take abiosis on Earth as an example. If you can demonstrate that if you take a tube filled with the type of goo that to the best of our knowledge existed on Earth a long time ago and zap that with electricity and from that get simple forms of life. Then that is a scientific hypothesis that fits the facts (as we understand it today at least) and as such it is likely to become a scientific theory (after more testing of course).

      This doesn't mean that it must have happened this way. It means that it is ONE of the possible explainations for how it has happened. If you have multiple competing ideas then you can apply Occams Razor to try to find the least unlikely one.

      Please note that science doesn't deal with absolutes. We can never be sure that it is "the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth". We only know that this is the best explaination we know of today. Scientific knowledge is always changing, that too is a requirement of science.

      Given the cause of the universe most of those theories are (like string theory) born in mathmatics. Often you can find reasonable concepts using mathmatics which you can later form into a scientific hypothesis in physics and test.

      Science doesn't require that we go back to the point of creation and look at that. Science requires that we can explain what we can observe with our hypothesis. And the evidence of the creation of the universe (natural or otherwise) is all around us.

  583. Religion Sucks by bryan8m · · Score: 0, Troll

    1. God never existed. 2. People made God up. 3. Intelligent design is just a way for fundamentalists to bring God back into the classroom.

  584. 2000 fundamentalists and counting... by ansak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have read the article and I wish to make two criticisms of it. Then I wish to point out the absolute lack of well-reasoned dialogue on this point.

    1. benna writes:

    The premise of Intelligent Design is that the universe is so unimaginably complex and perfect that it must have been created by an intelligent designer.
    Anyone catch the "gotcha"? What ID proponent is going to say that the universe is so "unimaginably... perfect"? This is a classic but cloaked "argumentum ad hominem - abusive": make ID'ers look like extremists so it's "obvious" to everyone that they're stupid before they even look at what is actually being said.

    2. benna also cites a lack of ID articles in peer-reviewed journals as evidence that nobody in the "real" scientific community believes in ID.

    This is a trifle circular. The tools used by those who oppose theistic explanations for the world (including ID) include belittling, caricaturizing, marginalizing, black-listing, not to mention monopolizing money and prestige to the exclusion of all other options from serious consideration. Faced with the scientistic forces arrayed these bodies of ideas, is it any wonder that nobody who wants to be taken seriously later will give articles with an ID point of view serious attention? This is less about ideas "winning or losing" in the scientific marketplace and more about ideas being sand-bagged and informally kept from being heard in that marketplace.

    If you don't believe this possible, look at what happened in a slightly different field to Immanuel Velikovsky when what he said didn't line up with accepted scientific orthodoxy in the fields Worlds in Collision and Ages in Chaos speak to -- whether or not you accept the contents of his books as reasonable alternative explanations.

    As to my subject line: it seems that very few people can make a dispassionate, deal-with-the-facts comment on this subject either in favour of or in opposition to Intelligent Design. It struck me that there are more than one kind of fundamentalism and many slashdotters who would sooner die than be called fundamentalists merely suffer from fundamentalism in a different direction.

    cheers...ank

    --
    Still hoping for Gentle Treatment...
  585. Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    Would you view Newton's theory of gravitation a theory, or a fact? Now, would you view gravity itself as a theory or a fact?

    Theory, in both cases. The only facts are specific observations, i.e. "On May 2, I dropped a pencil and it fell to the floor." All generalizations (e.g. "objects fall when dropped") and explanations ("there is a force that attracts all masses to one another") are theories, subject, at least in principle, to disconfirmation by subsequent observations. Some theories, such as the idea that there is such a thing as gravity, are extremely well confirmed, to the point that no sane person doubts them, but that doesn't turn them into facts.

    1. Re:Theory vs. fact by tez_h · · Score: 1
      The only facts are specific observations
      Well, let us run with your example. Is the observation enough to deny [some theory of gravitation]? Yes, a theory that is only as specific as "Gravity does/doesn't make objects fall". Now let's say the pencil, starting at a height of 2.3m, was released and took 0.69s to reach the floor. Then we may falsify a distinguish between much more precise, accurate theories.

      At this point, one should come to the realisation that facts are not unassailable certainties. Their accuracy, even their definition, are all part of whichever paradigm is being used to model them. Which is to say, points of data, observations, are subject to the same kind (though probably not degree) of doubt that theories themselves are.

      Even if you do not agree with the above, let me pose this. "All massive bodies are attracted to one-another by gravity," and "There exist massive bodies that are not attracted to eachother by gravity." One of these is a fact, since their disjunction is exhaustive. This would seem to contradict your notion that "The only facts are specific observations".

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    2. Re:Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      At this point, one should come to the realisation that facts are not unassailable certainties. Their accuracy, even their definition, are all part of whichever paradigm is being used to model them. Which is to say, points of data, observations, are subject to the same kind (though probably not degree) of doubt that theories themselves are.

      An observation is not a certainty about the external world. The fact is simply that a particular observation was made or reported to have been made. All inferences about the world itself (including the degree of accuracy of specific observations) fall into the category of theory.

      Even if you do not agree with the above, let me pose this. "All massive bodies are attracted to one-another by gravity," and "There exist massive bodies that are not attracted to eachother by gravity." One of these is a fact, since their disjunction is exhaustive.

      I would say rather that these theories are mutually exclusive. A set of facts (observations) may let us exclude the first theory (the second cannot be excluded), leading us to believe that the second theory is correct. But there is always the possibility that there could be an alternative theory that fits the observations equally well (even though we may not know what that theory might be). For example, if you happen discover an object that does not appear to be subject to gravity, there could be some other interfering force or measurement error that is preventing you from detecting the influence of gravity. Or there may be no such thing as gravity (and the forces between objects are dictated by something quite different), in which case both theories are wrong.

    3. Re:Theory vs. fact by tez_h · · Score: 1
      An observation is not a certainty about the external world. The fact is simply that a particular observation was made or reported to have been made.
      So now an observation per se is not a fact, but that an observation is made is? I hope I am not being obtuse if I ask for clarification, or what it is your point is supposed to reveal.
      All inferences about the world itself (including the degree of accuracy of specific observations) fall into the category of theory.
      So you agree with me here? Realise this - trivial observations will only ever support trivial theories, trivial theories will be falsified by trivial observations, and theories that can not be falsified are not theories.

      As for your last paragraph, nothing you mention contradicts the fact the "All massive bodies are attracted to one-another by gravity" and "There exist massive bodies that are not attracted to eachother by gravity" are mutually exclusive and exhaustive. If "...you happen discover an object that does not appear to be subject to gravity, there could be some other interfering force or measurement error that is preventing you from detecting the influence of gravity", then case 1 is true. If there is "...no such thing as gravity (and the forces between objects are dictated by something quite different)..." then case 2 is true. In other words, I still question your assertion that "All generalizations (e.g. "objects fall when dropped") and explanations ("there is a force that attracts all masses to one another") are theories", since it is the case that there are generalisations that are true, even if the generalisation is 'the universe is not ammenable to any laws'. What I think we have helped to confound are epistomology and truth (though they are inherently intertwined).

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    4. Re:Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      So now an observation per se is not a fact, but that an observation is made is? I hope I am not being obtuse if I ask for clarification, or what it is your point is supposed to reveal.

      It is fairly simple. If I drop an object and observe it to hit the floor with a time that I measure to be about half a second, the fact is that I made such a measurement. The measurement is of course distinct from the actual time that the object took to hit the floor. The latter is something that cannot be known exactly, although one can develop a theory, based upon statistical analysis of multiple such measurements, of how long it takes objects dropped from a particular height to land.

      As for your last paragraph, nothing you mention contradicts the fact the "All massive bodies are attracted to one-another by gravity" and "There exist massive bodies that are not attracted to eachother by gravity" are mutually exclusive and exhaustive...If there is "...no such thing as gravity (and the forces between objects are dictated by something quite different)..." then case 2 is true.

      OK, if you want to regard "something else besides gravity" as a subcase of theory 2, then I would say that it is exhaustive. I would consider that to be a statement of ignorance rather than a theory, but it doesn't make much difference. The issue is not whether or not a generalization is true (I am willing to take as a postulate, "there exist true statements about the universe"), but whether we can prove it to be the case. The distinction is fairly simple. Facts are individual observations. Generalizations and explanations are theories, which can be disproved, but never proved. Since they can never be proved, they never become facts, no matter how much evidence you collect.

    5. Re:Theory vs. fact by tez_h · · Score: 1
      Since they can never be proved, they never become facts, no matter how much evidence you collect.
      As I said in the parent post to yours, this is to confuse truth and knowledge. Unless you're using 'fact' to mean 'known truth', it is not necessary that one have proof of some statement A for it to be true. Of course, we would need evidence (here, A is not a deductive statement) to believe and know that A is true, but our missing that knowledge does not diminish the facthood of A. This is the thrust of my exhaustive example. Either A or ~A is true. This is a demonstration that truth is a separate concept from knowledge. One *must* be true, but of course that has no bearing on whether we know (or can ever know) which.

      On a total sidetrack, when you say 'if you want to regard "something else besides gravity" as a subcase of theory 2...', I'm not sure what you had in mind. If there is something that acts similarly to gravity that acts on all massive bodies in an attractive way, how is that not gravity? And if nothing in the underlying reality (yes, yes, this term is open to abuse) resembles gravity, ie. a force does not exist that even closely matches our understanding of the attraction between massive bodies (in other words, gravity does not exist), then both cases in my example are true and false, trivially.

      All this has nothing to do with the epistemology of the scientific method per se, but that such terms as 'fact', 'truth', 'knowledge', 'theory', 'proof' can be comingled and bandied around erroneously, and is open to abuse by pseudoscienific groups and endevours (to bring us back to the topic!).

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    6. Re:Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Unless you're using 'fact' to mean 'known truth', it is not necessary that one have proof of some statement A for it to be true.

      That is precisely the distinction that I am making between fact and truth. A fact is not merely something that is true, but something that is known with certainty to be true. Anything that is in principle subject to disproof by further data (additional facts) is a theory.

      On a total sidetrack, when you say 'if you want to regard "something else besides gravity" as a subcase of theory 2...', I'm not sure what you had in mind. If there is something that acts similarly to gravity that acts on all massive bodies in an attractive way, how is that not gravity?

      It might act arbitrarily on some massive objects but not others, or some of the time but not other times.

      All this has nothing to do with the epistemology of the scientific method per se, but that such terms as 'fact', 'truth', 'knowledge', 'theory', 'proof' can be comingled and bandied around erroneously, and is open to abuse by pseudoscienific groups and endevours (to bring us back to the topic!).

      Yes, and this I think is the danger in drawing some arbitrary threshold beyond which a theory becomes a fact. Trying to rebut the "evolution is only a theory" complaint by insisting that evolution is not a theory merely leads into a fruitless and logically unsatisfying debate about who decides where that threshold is and when it has been crossed. I think that it makes more sense, and is more logically consistent, to acknowledge out that all generalizations about the universe are fundamentally theoretical. In other words, most of what we think that we know is theory.

    7. Re:Theory vs. fact by tez_h · · Score: 1
      Trying to rebut the "evolution is only a theory" complaint by insisting that evolution is not a theory merely leads into a fruitless and logically unsatisfying debate about who decides where that threshold is and when it has been crossed.
      Well, this was the point of one of my (much) earlier postings nearer the top of this thread. I never disputed that the theory of evolution by natural selection is any more (ugh) than a theory. I wanted to point out that the individual phenomenon that make up the basis of the theory -- inheritance, mutation, environmental suitability -- can be demonstrated, much like the individual observations you say are fact. We can cross-breed 2 plants (of the same species) of different colour, and produce grand-children that occur with a 3:1 colour ratio of the grand-parents. We can examine the DNA, and find that their structural similarity is maintained. We can submit bacterial cultures to artificial environments and force contrived natural pressures. *These* are the facts of evolution. That the theory goes on to make other generalisations is what makes the framework a theory. It is this aspect of "evolution is only a theory" that denies that there are any factual parts of evolution at all.

      Something tells me we agree (since you obviously think humans can know points of truth, if you will), only we have both said it with different emphasis. To use '... only a theory' is to be blind to the truths that are to be found in the theory of evolution.

      -Tez

      --
      Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
    8. Re:Theory vs. fact by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      This sort of relativist approach (taking Hume's objections to the limit, EVERY bit of knowledge is provisional and tentative) masks the essential "grading" of knowledge.

      I am very certain, for instance, that George Washington existed and was once president of the United States. I am quite doubtful that there was a historic Garden of Eden or Noah.

      My knowledge of George Washington is provisional and theoretical. I know it only because of what I read in books and see in monuments, and it could all be a gross distortion or fiction. I have a theoretical model of Colonial and Revolutionary America which could be made more doubtful by new discoveries.

      At some point, however, we will take George Washington's existence as a "fact." Otherwise, we are just playing a silly nihilistic game where NOTHING is factual, and anything could be true or false depending on the current whims of the universe.

    9. Re:Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      This sort of relativist approach (taking Hume's objections to the limit, EVERY bit of knowledge is provisional and tentative) masks the essential "grading" of knowledge.

      Now you are falling into the sort of thinking that one hears from Creationists, who imagine that "theory" denotes doubt. All theories are not equal. For some theories, supported by a huge number of facts, there is a very high level of certainty. It just doesn't transform them into facts.

      At some point, however, we will take George Washington's existence as a "fact." Otherwise, we are just playing a silly nihilistic game where NOTHING is factual, and anything could be true or false depending on the current whims of the universe.

      No, there are still facts even in history. Specific documents and photographs would qualify as facts. Inferences about historical personages could be regarded as theoretical. But as a scientist rather than a historian, I don't know whether this sort of rigorous distinction between theory and fact is all that useful in the field history.

    10. Re:Theory vs. fact by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      I was simply responding to your defintion

      "fact" = "known with certainty to be true."

      But NOTHING is known "with [absolute] certainty" Only "beyond all reasonable doubt" or "by the preponderance of evidence" or "in all recorded experience" or "is undisputed."

      My point is that certainty is never 100%. But George Washington is at, say 99.9999%, and evolution in general 99.9999%, with specific details being at the 90% or less "certainty."

      The reason we can dismiss the creationists with only brief consideration is that they are attacking the 99.99% certain stuff, with silly arguments, instead of the 60% certain stuff with interesting arguments.

    11. Re:Theory vs. fact by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Just to respond to an additional point:

      Specific documents and photographs are "facts" of only a very limited extent: at this time and place, I hold this in my hand, and it appears to have certain markings. Behind any interpretation of those observations is an assumption, such as that it hasn't been doctored or forged, that the photographer was at some place at some time, that the camera was in working order, that the writer was a particular person, writing from recent recollection, etc., etc.

      Only by enough concordance between observations (inductive reasoning) can we assemble beliefs with some degree of certainty, and at some threshold, begin to take them as proven "facts." Hume showed that all inductive reasoning is intrinsically unproven, but *practically*, we take many things at face value, because we believe, for psychological reasons, that reality is not some kind of cruel, arbitrary hoax.

      Gullible types delight in taking Polaroid pictures, pointing the camera at the sun, and seeing mystical images or writing, when "in fact" what is happening is light leakage reflecting off the printed film package, or other parts of the camera, leaving a distorted image. This kind of thing hardly "proves" the Virgin Mary appears in the light, although it is appealing to these people precisely because they have the naive notion that a photograph is an intrinsically reliable piece of evidence.

      See, for instance, http://ourladyoftheroses.org/Photographs.htm
      .

    12. Re:Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Specific documents and photographs are "facts" of only a very limited extent: at this time and place, I hold this in my hand, and it appears to have certain markings. Behind any interpretation of those observations is an assumption, such as that it hasn't been doctored or forged, that the photographer was at some place at some time, that the camera was in working order, that the writer was a particular person, writing from recent recollection

      Correct. That is the point. The facts are that it appears to have certain markings. When you start to interpret it (e.g. as authentic or forged) you are constructing a kind of theory.

      Only by enough concordance between observations (inductive reasoning) can we assemble beliefs with some degree of certainty, and at some threshold, begin to take them as proven "facts." Hume showed that all inductive reasoning is intrinsically unproven, but *practically*, we take many things at face value

      I tend to take more of a Popperian view. Facts are those things that can be directly verified. All else is theory, which can be proved false, but never proved true. There is no "threshold" at which something passes from one category to the other. It is certainly true that "practically" we take many things at face value, including many things that are wrong. But in science it pays to be more rigorous.

    13. Re:Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      But NOTHING is known "with [absolute] certainty"

      What is known with certainty (the facts) are the results of individual direct observations. What is theoretical is the generalizations and conclusions about the real world that we draw from those facts.

      The reason we can dismiss the creationists with only brief consideration is that they are attacking the 99.99% certain stuff, with silly arguments, instead of the 60% certain stuff with interesting arguments.

      Unfortunately, these figures of 99.99% and 60% are purely arbitrary. There is no logically valid way, based upon any amount of observation, to place a hard number on the level of certainty of a theory. So really it comes down to individuals saying subjectively, "I'm really sure," or "I'm moderately certain." Since you can't calculate a number, you can't have a defined threshold. So you end up saying, "It's a fact rather than a theory because I and a bunch of other people can't think of any plausible other explanations for these observations."

    14. Re:Theory vs. fact by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      But even personal observations are, on some level, simply ways your cerebrum is making sense of nerve impulses. All sorts of bizarre stuff happens in dreams; rational people accept that their brain is not responding to reality at that time; less rational people will claim these dreams are messages from God, or premonitions, or whatever.

      Once we let individuals declare their "direct" observations factual, we are back in the soup; the fundamentalists all can claim "direct" observation that they have received the baptism of the Holy Spirit, or whatever, and we can't gainsay it. [That is, primarily, the reason these people often won't yield to evidence; they seem to be clinging for psychological reasons to a self-justifying edifice of belief; perhaps, one must say ultra-skeptically, scientists are as well.]

      I have a friend who converted from Judaism (after making clear when he got married to a Christian that his Judaism was personally important) because he claimed to have had a vision of some kind. I think it is stupid, but I can't particularly say it is not factual.

      The percent certainty, of course, is arbitrary. But I think, similar to the notion of economic utility, we can imagine a monotonic arrangement by each person of statements from less to more certain. That ranking would, of course, be often psychological, but we could largely base it on probabilities: how many other statements would have to be simultaneously false, and how certain are those.

      Ultimately, I have to base my judgements on evolutionary theory on the prevalence of those views among serious academics, as well as the "persuasiveness" of somewhat-popularized accounts and rebuttals, as well as the non-"persuasiveness" of the creationist tactics: continuously quoting old, out-of-date, extremely selectively, out-of-context scientific statements, and particularly the way they accept observations of nature when they can handwavily claim "irreducible complexity" but studiously avoid all the observations that scream unavoidably "totally un-designed Rube Goldberg evolution." Whereas true scientists are always probing and looking for *fresh* observations, instead of rehashing the same material OVER and OVER.

      No one can go into the field and repeat lifetimes worth of study to directly "prove" evolution to his own sastisfaction, except as a kind of thought experiment.

    15. Re:Theory vs. fact by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      In my view, even theories can never be "proven false." They can only be made sufficiently implausible that people stop using or talking or thinking about them. The point is, that we *pose* and *accept* scientific theories as valid because they *suggest* experimental falsification. Not because, in practice, they *are* falsifiable.

      Young earth creationism was still interesting for some time after Darwin published Origin of Species. Later developments made using Noah's Flood to explain things seem pretty silly to scientists. That some vocal nutcases haven't caught on more than a century later is what makes this all so frustrating.

      Historically, the Popperian ideal does not match scientific inquiry very well. Thomas Kuhn's whole point is that reasonably "plausible" and even "proven" theories get abandoned before newer theories have accumulated enough observational evidence.

      Look at Einstein's work: most of it had very little experimental support. He might not even have heard of Michelson's null result at the time of special relativity, and his quantum explanation of the specific heat of solids had *one* experimental measurement behind it. But his explanations were so compelling, they were accepted far more quickly than was justified by hard-eyed "observation."

      As scientists, we obviously like to think we are playing by some hard rules like Popper suggests. In practice, I think we have to admit these rules depend a lot on calling our own fouls and on some imperfect referee blowing his whistle from time to time.

    16. Re:Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      In my view, even theories can never be "proven false."

      It is trivially easy to construct theories that can easily be proven false. A broad generalization, such as "All objects fall upward when dropped" can be disproved by a single counterexample.

      Historically, the Popperian ideal does not match scientific inquiry very well. Thomas Kuhn's whole point is that reasonably "plausible" and even "proven" theories get abandoned before newer theories have accumulated enough observational evidence.

      Popper wrote about the logic of proof, Kuhn wrote about sociology of science. There are certainly fads and trends in science. I may favor a theory that does not have as strong evidence as another because it appeals to me esthetically, because it has more interesting implications, or simply because I have better ideas of how to pursue it. A lot of science is like Nasrudin looking "where the light is good." But that has nothing to do with the logic of proof. Ultimately, when we think about what we can really conclude from our results, we end up going back to Popper's reasoning.

    17. Re:Theory vs. fact by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Once we let individuals declare their "direct" observations factual, we are back in the soup

      Remember not to confuse the map with the territory. The fact is that somebody reported a particular observation. Relating that fact to the object of that observation is theory.

  586. Science only answers scientific questions by alucinor · · Score: 1

    Science can only answer scientific questions.

    Questions like "what is right or wrong", or "why am I here" are not things science concerns itself with. Human culture has many other facets that are important, and thank goodness science isn't meant to reveal everything about us as creatures ...

    or frankly, our race would be very dull and probably despised and rejected by more advanced races!

    I say all this because I just can't comprehend why some of these ridiculous obnoxious fundamentalists (who are the only ones that ever get any press in scientific journals) want to attack science so much.

    Science isn't everything, and neither should it be. So they shouldn't act like schools are trying to make it so.

    I mean, I enjoy science, but I can't say it's helped make me a nicer person.

    --
    random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
    1. Re:Science only answers scientific questions by alucinor · · Score: 1

      To add to that, I feel sorry for people who think science ~can~ reveal everything about us ... because then all we are as people is just a bunch of soft machinery. I take offense that I'm just a robot, thank you very much! :)

      --
      random underscore blankspace at ya know hoo dot comedy.
  587. Sure, if you deliberately misrepresent the debate. by eufreka · · Score: 2, Interesting
    It really is all in how you frame the debate.

    People create loaded buzzwords like Creationism and Intelligent Design with loaded connotations that far exceed the necessity of an agreed-upon denotation.

    Then they whip out the philosophy or whatever...

    Too bad it is not relevant.

    Read on for a more proper STARTING POINT for meaningful discussion.

    And God bless you.

    Here's a little quoteout from http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-god.html

    3. Evolution and God Q5. Does evolution deny the existence of God?

    No. See question 1. There is no reason to believe that God was not a guiding force behind evolution. While it does contradict some specific interpretations of God, especially ones requiring a literal interpretation of Genesis 1, few people have this narrow of a view of God. There are many people who believe in the existence of God and in evolution. Common descent then describes the process used by God. Until the discovery of a test to separate chance and God this interpretation is a valid one within evolution.

    Q6. But isn't this Deism, the belief that God set the universe in motion and walked away?

    While it could be Deism, the Bible speaks more of an active God, one who is frequently intervening in His creation. If the Bible represents such a God in historical times there is no reason to assume that He was not active in the universe before then. A guiding hand in evolution could exist, even in the time before humans came around. Just because people were not there to observe does not mean that there was nothing to observe.

    Q7. So if God directed evolution, why not just say he created everything at once?

    Mainly because all the evidence suggests otherwise. If God created the universe suddenly, he created it in a state that is indistinguishable from true age. If he did create it that way there must be a reason, otherwise God is a liar. Whatever that reason may be, a universe that is exactly like one that is old should be treated as if it were old.

    Q8. By denying creation, aren't you denying God's power to create?

    No. Because God did not create the world in seven days does not mean that he couldn't. What did, or did not, happen is not an indication of what could, or could not, have happened. All evidence suggests that evolution is the way things happened. Regardless of what could have happened, the evidence would still point to evolution.

  588. Obviously... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Science is for godless fags.

  589. There is no such thing by BeatlesForum.com · · Score: 1

    as separation of church and state. The US government cannot promote and/or establish a religion. That's it.

    --
    When millions disappear from earth, it's not aliens, it's the rapture.
  590. Re:Not quite (Close but not quite) by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    I agree. And in a lot of cases, "facts" are really only 95% probabilities over a large sample set.

    There is still a good chance the facts could be off in a minor way and a tiny chance the facts could be off in a major way. If the first 99 black birds we test are crows, we can't conclude that all black birds are crows or that the next black bird we test will be crows.

    Our test may be biased- perhaps small black birds are being ignored or crows liked our bait more. Pure random chance could be the reason we got 99 crows out of 10,000 black birds when only 1000 of them are crows.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  591. Y Kant Fundie Spell? by Sleet01 · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but I find it difficult to take seriously the ramblings of a person who can't even spell the movement he or she purportedly associates with correctly. If there really were a God, would that God truly allow his (or her) followers to blunder on in such ignorance? I should hope not!

    Additionally, "YHWH" is a tetragramma_TON_, not a tetragrammon. Similarly, "SPLCHK" is a septagramma_TON_ meaning, "the spell-checking function that exists."

    I like that 'no man is without excuse to be without faith'; obviously this means that no man is with an excuse to be with faith, right? Good thing for us athiests!

    Keep on proving a credit to your faith, dude.

    --
    "A scientist is one who actively pursues science;
    a creationist is one who actively pursues ignorance."

    --
    -- Let him who is without spelling error ignite the first flame --
  592. Not so intelligent design. by iamghetto · · Score: 1

    By the article mentioning the AUSCS (Americans United for the Separation of Church and State) involvement and the various posts I'm seeing mentioning "fundamentalists", its seems as the though the theory of "intelligent design" is being singled out, when it actually has nothing to do with this.

    There is nothing religious, nothing that violates the seperation of church and state in the ideology of intelligent design.

    What is being referred to as "intelligent design" is really -Creationism-. Creationism is based on the bible, the church, etc. Intelligent design is not.

    From what I understand, the theory of intelligent design falls somewhere in between creationism and evolution.

    Intelligent Design doesn't involve any hocus pocus, or any god doing his best david copperfield impression. Intelligent Design agrees that the world and the life on it was formed over time through natural processes. Where they different from evolution is when it comes to humans. They believe that something happened, someone intervened to essentially "humanize" the apes. Its there answer to the missing link, and apparent answer man & apes coexistence.

    But this someone who intervened is not believed to be "God". Its believed to some other extraterrestrial civilization.

    While it might seem unlikely that another species genetically modified apes into human beings, I'd have to say that its far more likely theory than creationism. Afterall, the chance that the universe if filled with intelligent life is far greater than the chance that the earth is 6000 years old. :)

    And although we have yet to prove there is intelligent life out there, the true intelligent design theory if true, would still hold up the science of evolution and our biological ancestry while explaining how civilization seems to appear rather abruptly.

    Proponents of the Intelligent Design theory look to the old egyptian and sumerian writings as a somewhat historic basis for their beliefs. The writings are oldest records we have, and they frequently talk about "gods" coming down from the sky to educate them. We assume they're myths, but I guess you never know...

    Either way, I'm an evolutionist. And what's being talking about in the article is -CREATIONISM- not Intelligent Design.

    1. Re:Not so intelligent design. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Its believed to some other extraterrestrial civilization....

      The problem here is just pushed back a level. Where did this conjectured extraterrestrial civilization come from? Postulating an eternal, self-existing creator is a much more reasonable way out. Science cannot prove or disprove God, but it is a matter for faith only.

      --
      All theory is gray
    2. Re:Not so intelligent design. by iamghetto · · Score: 1

      I understand that is essence it only passes the buck. The intelligent design, to my understanding, does allow for evolution. Under those precepts, its perfectly acceptable that an advanced civilization evolved naturally elsewhere.

      The only reason why some people believe the intelligent design theory is because they believe that there are inconsistencies in the evolution of us as human beings. Like I said, I believe they think the main inconsistency with human evolution is our so called "missing link" as it relates to our evolution from apes.

      That's in affect the whole catalyst for the I.D. theory. So in that sense, I don't think the theory is inteaded to pass the buck. Another advanced civilization could evolve on its own, they just don't believe that we have.

      To that extent, since we have seen evolution in action, we know that its a process that could potentially create intelligent beings. We as us having an "eternal, self-existing creator" has no basis in anything but mystery. We're unaware of any process where such a thing exists, heh.

      For that reason, to me, logically, intelligent design (basically intervention) is a little more plausible. There is just no reason to postulate the existence of god, other than to explain things that we can't understand. Where as there are reasons to believe that an extraterrestial civilization could've evolved... because again, we've all seen at least the concept of evolution in action. :)

      I've never seen god in action, have you? :) Like you said, its matter of faith.

    3. Re:Not so intelligent design. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...evolved naturally...

      As we observe "nature" it is very evident that there are very definite "rules" by which these "natural" processes operate. The reason science is possible at all is because by learning about these rules, we can predict and modify some of these processes to our advantage. Once these rules or laws are established and at least partially understood we can postulate how these laws might have shaped what we observe in nature and the laboratory.

      The big question really isn't how we or everything else we observe came to be by following these rules or laws, but how these laws came to be in the first place. As far as we can tell, these laws, commonly called the laws of physics, appear to operate consistently not only here on earth, but also in the most distant observable reaches of the cosmos.

      The relationships and characteristics of these laws are so exact, that if any of them were altered, in some cases only one part in a million or less, we the observer, and no other physical life forms could not exist. The binding energies of carbon are the only element we know of that allow the construction of the extremely complex protein molecules advanced physical living entities are observed to have.

      The Bible is a book that tells us outright that physical life forms, are at the bottom of the scale of life. We are told of a transcendant, non-physical intelligent entity called God, (Elohim in Hebrew) who exists outside of, and is not subject to these laws, but created these laws along with the time-space-matter-energy universe they control. Furthermore, this God of the Bible came here to Earth, where in the human form of Jesus Christ, He voluntarily subjected Himself to these laws of physics He had formulated, even to the point of being subject to and suffering death. He did all this in order to enable us have a relationship with Him beginning right here and now, while we are still subject to these laws of physics, including entropy which guarantees the death of our physical body. The promise is, and that must be taken by faith right now, that He desires for us also to transcend the limiting laws of physics and be forever joined to Him.

      Science and our limited intellect cannot go that far, and that is why the Bible tells us that "without faith it is impossible to please God". The Bible tells us that we are non-physical entities that live for a short time in physical bodies, wherein we may freely decide by faith, whether we want to live in the presence of the One who is self-existent and eternal, or apart fom Him. Being apart from Him is what the Bible labels Hell.

      --
      All theory is gray
  593. Re: what is a day? by swordfishBob · · Score: 1

    From what I've heard, the old-Aramaic (or old Hebrew?) text of Genesis doesn't really translate as "there was evening, and there was morning, the Nth day", but "there was chaos, and there was order, ..."
    Hence we can say the 6 days may not have been 24 hours.

    On the age of the universe, it's a question of an assumption. Does the universe have a size? There's a collection of theory and mathematics and scientific observation etc that boils down to this question. If the universe is infinite (but is expanding while infinite) then it appears to have originated in a "big bang" - which happened everywhere at once. Ask people to describe the "big bang" and they mostly describe an explosion from a small place to blow out to a big universe - that's not a big bang, it's a white hole. It's supported by all the same observations, maths, etc; the difference being that the universe has a size.

    Now, if the universe has a size, and originated as a white hole, then gravity was immense in the middle regions while the whole was blowing out. Knowing how gravity alters time, that makes it possible for the extremes of the universe to be many orders of magnitude older than the near-middle regions.

    The age of the universe is used to validate claims of the age of the earth (which doesn't hold for the white-hole case), which is used to support arguments of the age of fossils - which are otherwise "measured" (estimated and calculated by extrapolation and assumption).

    ----------------
    Back on topic, sure, teach evolution, and call it a theory as any scientist should. Even call it a well-supported theory. But don't call it fact. that's a fundamental part of teaching science - distinguishing between fact, observation, theory.

    --
    -- All your bass are below two Hz
  594. God / Programmer Analogy by Asakura_Joe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't understand why a large (or at least a loud) group of programmers like the ones here don't give Intelligent Design more credit. In particular, there have been a few arguments along the lines of "how would the designer evolve?"

    Look at the designer as a programmer. Heck, I'll use myself as an example. Lets say that I sit down at my really fast computer and create a little artificial world, a la The Sims. The world is populated by intelligent agents (humans) as well as less intelligent agents (animals). Nothing too crazy yet, right?

    The designer has complete control over the virtual world. The agents don't. They can only percieve other constructs within this world, and obviously have no idea that there's a fat guy with crumbs in his beard tapping away at a computer making all of this possible.

    I tell the constructs that I created them, maybe mention the few parts of myself that are comparable to the game world just so they can put it in their own perspective, and they're cool with that for a while. Eventually they bitch, but I smite them a few dozen times and watch the world progress.

    If these guys came up with their own little reasoning system that violently argued that I couldn't exist, I'd have a good laugh at them in their folly. They'd argue along the lines of "there are BILLIONS of 1's and 0's around me! Of course, over time, a few of them would randomly become the code that is me!" These little AIs would have no concept of what happened before the "Big Bang" (I turned powered on the computer), or how I could live outside of their rules of reality(which I laid down).

    If I really wanted to teach them something, I might log in as Jesus_Of_Nazareth01 and hack that character a bit so it's not as constrained by the rules the other AIs have to follow. That'd be fun. Heck, it goes a ways towards explaining the God/Son paradigm.

    If these people started noticing that monkeys shared similar structures to human agents, I'd roll my eyes and wonder why these AIs had against code re-use.

    1. Re:God / Programmer Analogy by jasonp1014 · · Score: 1

      hehe... that's an amusing way of looking at it.
      I'd mod this up if I could.
      I'm totally against ignorant fundamentalists trying to discount scientific and rational thought, and trying to stick themselves where they don't belong, but that doesn't mean that I think there is actually something to the idea of what you could call "non-arbitrary genesis of life".
      Maybe that's too high-level a subject to teach in HS. Leave it for the university philosophy and physics courses.

    2. Re:God / Programmer Analogy by Asakura_Joe · · Score: 1

      There is a whole bunch of information on both sides of the argument, and I'm only familiar with some of it. I like http://www.answersingenesis.org/ as well as http://icr.org/ for alternative viewpoints. Some of the better authors on the ID side are James Perloff, Dr. William A. Dembski, and A. E. Wilder-Smith.

      It's worth reading just to find out what the non-crazy ID people come up with. Scientists have a bad habit of not questioning what is already accepted (how many models of the atom have we had in the last 70 years? How much bitching was there when we discovered that there was no Aether, and that Phlogiston was a myth?). Intelligent ID-ers like the ones mentioned above do bring a very critical scientific eye to areas of science that is mainstream scientists as dogmatic.

      I'd just be happy if high schools would realize that there are some well-educated and intelligent ID-ers out there, instead of dismissing us as uneducated rednecks.

    3. Re:God / Programmer Analogy by Asakura_Joe · · Score: 1

      Intelligent ID-ers like the ones mentioned above do bring a very critical scientific eye to areas of science that is mainstream scientists as dogmatic.

      ...of course, it helps when we write sentences in english instead of whatever that was that I just wrote. BRAINFART. Tangent: I got my undergrad in electrical engineering at a very conservative christian school (which also has a pretty decent engineering program). I was a devout evolutionist while I attended there. Later on, I went to a well known secular school to get a masters in applied biomedical engineering. It was there that I started buying into the ID side. When I saw how complex and beautifully intricate the inside of a single cell could be, the idea that it just kinda happened due to random mutations (almost all of which decrease genetic information, by the way) seemed impossible to me.

    4. Re:God / Programmer Analogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cute, but false.

    5. Re:God / Programmer Analogy by eluusive · · Score: 1

      Just want to thank you for posting rational ID arguements on slashdot. These are some arguments I have come up with myself, such as programmer/god and code reuse. I tried to explain this to an evolutionist and they completely ignored the idea of code-reuse. It seems many times evolutionists are "religious" about their viewpoint. Any time I point out logical flaws in evolutionary theory to most undergraduates here, they show they don't actually have a good idea of what the theory is, nor are they capable of discussing it rationally. Usually they get extremely pissed off. I also than you for your arguments AGAINST the possibility of evolutionism ( there are many ). Such as: as you said "almost all of which decrease genetic information, by the way"

    6. Re:God / Programmer Analogy by Asakura_Joe · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the thanks! I'm glad I'm not the only one that noticed the vitriol that most people have against ID and Christian fundies in general.

  595. More resources by Mr_Huber · · Score: 1

    Not bad for the length of the article. If you want to understand this all in more detail, I suggest visiting the talk.origins FAQ website. Here is their introduction to Evolutionary Biology. And here is the talkdesign.org (a daughter site devoted to ID) FAQ on refuting Intelligent Design.

  596. Define "hyper evolution" and "spot evolution". by khasim · · Score: 1

    You have pointed to an example of micro evolution.

    No. "Micro evolution" refers to changes made below the species level. Any change that still allows the two species to inter-breed can be called "micro evolution".

    The evolution forms in question are macro/spot/hyper evolution, and as I stated at present, there is no example of these.

    I cannot find any references for

    "spot evolution"
    or
    "hyper evolution"

    "Macro evolution" is when a new species branches off. That is demonstrated by the fruit fly experiment.

    With respect to vision, poor vision is a weakness.

    Simply being a "weakness" does not mean it will be have any effect on evolution.

    Evolution is not about weakness/strength but about adaptability to the environment.

    If the point of natural selection is removing weakness then when is it going to start?

    Again, evolution is NOT weakness/strength.

    Even "fatal" genetic problems have not been selected out.

    Actually, most of them have. There aren't many genetic issues now that kill before the individual can breed.

    With respect to the fast breeding/quick changes these are still only examples of micro evolution.

    Here's a URL http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/macroevolution.htm l

    Macro evolution is about a fly becoming a higher order life form.

    No, macro evolution is about two colonies that descend from the same original colony that are not capable of inter-breeding.

    You're looking for chimps to "evolve" into humans and that takes billions of years.

    Actually, that assumes that existance within the other realm is also linear.

    If it is not, then why do you assume that this one is? If the "other realm" is cyclic, then why can't this universe be cyclic?

    And ignoring an answer which is potentally the truth is science?

    It may be the "truth", but you won't be able to demonstrate that it is.

    Which makes it a "religion".

    Imagine if aliens came to the earth after mankind was dead. Some alien scientist wonders, are all these natural or were they designed. He gets ingored because that is religion not science (assuming they have nothing similar to genetic engineering).

    "all these natural" what?

    Buildings? We carve names and dates onto them. Our DNA strands don't have (tm) after them.

    Science is about attempting to determine truth.

    No. It is about attempting to determine the facts. Reproducible facts. Facts that can be confirmed through experiments.

    If design/direct manipulation is automatically discounted as weakminded anti-science, then don't expect aliens to ever give us credit for the same.

    Hey, if they've mastered inter-stellar travel and they can't read plaques bolted into our buildings, why should it concern me?

    It also goes without saying you have just classified "scientists" who design/direct as being in the realm of religion instead of science.

    So you say that I say that a programmer who writes a program (design) is part of a religion?

    Nope. I'm not saying that.

    Desigining is not a relgion.

    The religion is believing that some intelligent thing we cannot see, feel, smell, hear, taste or detect the presence of in any other way constructed us.

    Just like the study regarding the underwater rock formations.

    There are lots of underwater rock formations.

    It is a design vs. nature question.

    Maybe. So?

  597. Genetic engineering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So if I use genetic engineering to create a viral weapon, does that count as intelligent design? How about selective breeding? I mean, evolution sure as hell didn't create the poodle.

  598. Argument for ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    First, most all the highest-mod'ed posts support the theory of evolution. Someone has to make the case for ID. So here goes.

    First, the theory of evolution does not have any special footing with regard to being a scientific theory. This is because the theory of evolution is not falsifiable. In other words no experiment can be done to falsify the following proposition: "Life on earth begain from an abiotic condition and developed into its present form via mutation natural selection."

    Second, the human form itself shows signs of intelligent design. One need look no further than Leonardo Da Vinci's Vitruvian man. The essential message of this work is that in humans, reason governs form. This is at odds with the theory of evolution, which teaches simply that form follows function.

    third, the golden ratio occurs in the proportions of a wide spectrum of living creatures, including humans. It also occurs no less than 3 times within a single period of the DNA double helix. It is hard to see why mutation and natural selection would have produced this odd "coincidence", where again in the theory of evolution, form simply follows function.

    There are many other flaws and shortcoming to be found in the theory of evolution, so many that Francis Crick himself doubted that life could have arisen on earth spontaneously. Hence, he wrote a book called Life Itself, where he espouses his theory that life developed on earth by intelligently directed panspermia.

    In sum, the only posts I am seeing are basically closed-minded, knee-jerk reactions that ID is so absurd it's not even worth thinking about. I challenege anyone to come up with a comprehensive theory that does not involve intelligent intervention that explains the origin of the golden ratio in living systems (and not just flower seed or petal arangements -- you have to account for it in DNA as well.), the elegant geometry of the human form that involves the encoding of numbers such as pi, e, and the sqrt(2).

    1. Re:Argument for ID by benna · · Score: 1

      Read this. It lists a number of ways in which evolution could be falsified.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  599. Oblig Douglas Adams by fbg111 · · Score: 1

    "Now it is such a bizarrely improbable coincidence that anything so mindboggingly useful [as the Babelfish] could have evolved purely by chance that some thinkers have chosen to see it as the final and clinching proof of the non-existence of God.

    "The argument goes something like this: `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 vanished 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 on the next zebra crossing.

    --
    Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
  600. Fundamentalism, iliteracy ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All of You who are holding The Bible, drop it and start reading older, much older books. Bare in mind that The Bible was writen a long time ago, and that in the time there was not many people literate enough to understand "the word of the prophet" if there was one. Bare in mind that over time there may have been some corrections (eg parts dificult to understand removed, or rewritten ). Remember that The Bible was handwriten for a long time, and that it migh have been censored in the past!

    There are some geological data that support theory that planet Earth was formed ( as terraformed ) but data are placeing the dates in distant past, not a few tousand yeaars ago. Some Religious fundamentalists are abuseing geology as support for their needs.

    I was suprised when the minister of education proposed a law to parlament to ban Darwin's theory of evolution! ( Yes I am from Serbia and serbian minister of education is the major a$$h0|e )

    As far as I know "The Bible" is pale shadow of religions that governed anicient cultures... There is nothing in it except for the rituals of anicient Paganism and Wicca, ( to help farmers ) and as far as I can see ( between the lines ) shadows of terraforming and settling the Earth ( if that is the truth ). The rest of it is "obey... obey... obey..."

    All I want to say is that somebody is neglecting the facts, and it is lasting for too long. It seems to me that Earth is anicient, and that Universe is huge, and that life is a major pollutant in it. If somebody wants to put "The Creator" in all that ... forget it ... there is no intelligence in it. Evolution is blind. It works by random mutation, crude selection and mutual interaction. The evidence is in every creature, in every biom.
    Life is slow. It needs time. It deos not need intelligence. Intelligence is an result of evolution.

  601. Re:He set us up the bom...er... Fruit of Knowledge by argan0n · · Score: 1
    Yeah, that IS messed up.
    Dude, The whole freaking Christian religion is horribly messed up... Most people "feel" this but are afraid to admit it. From the moment I left it (as a confused teen, 18+ years ago) my life has steadily improved. I like to think I was born-again into Reason.
    I've read most of the interchanges you've had with bflong in this topic today. I agree with your views but I must say the guy quote's the "right stuff" (for him) and is clearly convinced that the fantasies he's been taught are true.
    I've argued for years with "them" and I've found it's fruitless to talk to the delusional, they cling to their holy pacifier too tightly. If they *DO* ever fell like they've lost the discussion, they just pull the holy rip-cord:
    "I'll pray for you"
    and gently float away looking for the next mark.
    --
    argan0n
  602. Re:Atheism also a religion by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    If you want to say that the denial of religious truths is a religious truth, knock yourself out. That doesn't make it a religion.


    Nor does saying something isn't a religion make it not one. Kind of like saying there isn't a God make God diappear.

    You are correct though, Atheism isn't a religion in the traditional sense, it's just a set of religious beliefs about the nature of a deity.

    You can deny the relgious beliefs are what atheism is about, but then you would have a hard time discussin what even atheists themselves refer to as weak atheism (lack of belief in gods) and strong atheism (gods do not exist).

    Face it, if you want to profess that there isn't any God, that's fine, and is your choice, but it is still a faith statement and faith statements are religious statements and religous statements organized into formal positions are (are you ready?) religion!

    So, I guess I was wrong above when I said you were right that atheism isn't a religion, it is. Too, bad.

    Ummm, don't let the door hit you on the way out.

  603. Does God exist? Answered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I invite the exceptioally logical slashdot readers to comment on my answer to the question "Does God Exist?" posted at this webpage http://www.awkwardtruths.com/God.html

    Cheers,
    Stephen Pirie
    Author, Awkward Truths: beyond the dogmas of science, religion and new-age philosophies

    1. Re:Does God Exist? Answered by fluffy666 · · Score: 1

      "This page cannot be found"

      Well, I suppose it's kind-of philosophical

  604. Re:How to disprove evolution with four questions.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IANAM (mathematician) No, you can't....

    Really?! Well, I was quite surprised.

  605. God is what is. by General+Alcazar · · Score: 1

    God is what is. But, what is?

  606. In Favor of Intelleigent Design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think Intelligent Design and all other flavors of creationism should be taught in American schools. I think that as a favor to the world at large, Americans should be kept as stupid as possible, to expedite the downfall of pax americana.

  607. Mother Nature Ponders A Resolution by grikdog · · Score: 1

    "Next Time, No Brains For Apes!"

    --
    ``Tension, apprehension & dissension have begun!'' - Duffy Wyg&, in Alfred Bester's _The Demolished Man_
  608. We all know who created the universe anyways... by Magius_AR · · Score: 1
    It was the leader.

    The leader is good. The leader is great :)

  609. Does God Exist? Answered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I invite the exceptionally logical Slashdot readers to comment on my answer to the question "Does God Exist?" posted on this webpage http://www.awkwardtruths.com/God.mtml

    I'd also really really enjoy anyone replying with answers to my "A Few Awkward Questions" page (http://www.awkwardtruths.com/questions.html)

    Cheers,
    Stephen Pirie
    Author, Awkward Truths: Beyond the Dogmas of Science, Religion and New-Age Philosophies.

  610. That's a philosophical interpretation... by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1
    I argue that it's not. The so called Many-Worlds, probably better called the (Everett) Relative State formulation, is not a philosophical interpretation.

    In particular the Relative State formulation says that the Schrodinger equation applies at all times. The Copenhagen 'interpretation' (which is a loose umbrella that includes quite a few 'interpretations' including the canonical one taught new physicists) says that the Schrodinger equation applies until an observation is made and then a wavefunction collapse occurs. After the collapse, the Schrodinger equation applies again. So these approaches differ in a way that's quite different to a philosophical difference, The equations of motion of the two approaches differ significantly.

    In practice the difference is hard to observe...but it's not so far removed from reality that it can be dismissed as philosophy. The difference will probably become more apparent as more 'mesoscopic' experiments are carried out by ever more ingenious physicists.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  611. A MESSAGE TO MODERATORS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First of all, kudos to BytePusher for having the courage to sustain this thread. For those who are genuinely interested in exploring this subject, Slashdot is a poor place to look for a balanced perspective. I have my own biases, namely that ID is not science and should not be treated as such by scientists, schoolboard members, or anyone. But shouting at the oposition (as most slashdotters seem inclined to do) doesn't make us right. BytePusher has made an extraordinary effort to engage the majority of slashdoters and should be applauded for his effort in sustaining this dialog. Pleaser remeber, moderators, without BytePusher's response, there *is* *no* discussion - and curious /.ers won't know what the fuss is about. PLEASE make an effort to raise the visibility of creationists, IDers, fundamentalists, and the views of everyone in the opposite camp so that readers of this discussion knows what we are responding to. Personally, I think it is difficult to hide the weaknesses of ID as an alternative to evolutionary biology, but I wouldn't consider myself science literate unless I made an attempt at identifying the weakneses I observe and give the oposition a chance to address them. I'm posting this message as AC because I moded up BytePusher's response. I encourage those with mod points to seek out the oposition and do the same to bring some kind of balance to this discussion.

  612. How to disprove I.D. with one question... by The+Wicked+Priest · · Score: 1

    Who designed the designer?

    --
    Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    1. Re:How to disprove I.D. with one question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In science you never answer a question with a question. You answer a question with an answer and by experiment and observation. Your comment is pseudoscientific and merely deflects from the point of Intelligent Design. A God can be omnipresent and doesn't need a creator (unlike evolution). The better question is how does evolution explain the engineering built into humans and animals. There is a great deal of design in humans and animals whether you add the God part to Intelligent Design or not. The evolutionary biologists are terrified of this because they don't want anyone to know how fragile there theory is. Human's have very complex skeletons and structure and if evolution can't resolve this how this was designed and the complex biokenetics of humans then the theory is flawed.

      There are two types of evolution micro evolution and grand scale evolution. While small scale evolution does occur there is no provable evidence that dogs can learn to fly or fish evolve can crawl out of the sea. Only by proving grand scale evolution in a lab can you adequately resolve and test the theory. No one has shown that an fish can turn into a dog or that birds can evolve into fish. Grand Scale evolution hasn't been proved in the lab with concrete results and observation. Until this happens evolution is an unproven theory and remains nothing more.

      Some of the greatest scientist are religious and logic makes them better than their evolutionary counterpars.

      Last. Some of the greatest supporters of God are atheists.

  613. Great Opportunity by Salamander · · Score: 1

    I definitely think they should teach ID in schools...as a case study in how to recognize pseudo-science. Many students don't know enough about falsifiability or Occam's Razor or whether they should work from premises to conclusions or vice versa. Let them compare and contrast the scientific basis of evolution vs. the intellectual muck that is ID, and their critical-thinking skills should improve significantly. Counterexamples can be useful things.

    --
    Slashdot - News for Herds. Stuff that Splatters.
  614. Re:Evolutionary Naturalism Vs Intelligent Design by Hungus · · Score: 1

    Ad homonym is not a viable form of argumentation, If you see Plantinga as Hogwash and hand waving then you are either A) ill prepared for any jaunt into philosophy and thus would be ill advised to read anyone save base references or B) Have not actually read the argument. However given that you are likely both (slashdot cant take the formatting required to prove such within a reasonable doubt) You then put me in a position to devise a list of natural philosophers and limit it (while any such a response is certain to garner a reply along the lines of "well what about so and so"). You can also try doing a simple search at your local college library for the original paper and then adding "in response to" as part of your query. You can try similar searches online, but given the fact that there are no standards as to who can publish online your results may be more incongruous.

    If you have a reasonable argument showing that the defeaters as described in "An Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism" are in fact not defeaters, or that there is some hole in the argument I would be glad to hear of them and discuss them.

    For those who do not know who Alvin Plantinga is, he is The John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy at Notre Dame and a sometimes lecturer at Biola, Stanford et al. You may of course take a look at his faculty bio page at Notre Dame

    --
    Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
  615. Kansas Kangaroo Court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Dover, Penn. case is old news. Just wait until later this week when the Kansas State Board of Ed. holds their kangaroo court into intelligent design creationism. Kansans, get ready to be the laughing stock of the world again.

  616. Submitter's summary is idiotic. by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Okay, let's assume that we're actually interested in science instead of shilling our own particular disdain for those positions we do not hold. Then let's objectively ask "does the theory of evolution explain the origin of life?" Nah, it doesn't. Evolution is a theory which explains how living things change over time, and why doing so is beneficial to the living things. It's not intended to explain how vastly complex molecules somehow formed without oxidizing and just so happened to be able to feed itself and reproduce. What evolution explains is how we got from that first living thing to now. Science describes the what and how. We let theologists come up with the why. If we are going to act superior in our logic and lack of primitive superstition, let's at least be logical and not do the same thing that our opponents do. Mischaracterizing exactly how much of the origin is scientifically understood would be the same as creationists saying that NASA found the missing day in the book of Joshua. An intentional falsehood created to bolster an argument where facts are scarce.

    1. Re:Submitter's summary is idiotic. by benna · · Score: 1

      I am the submitter and I wrote the article. I admit that my chioce of words was poor in stating that it explained the origins of life. I meant more to say that explained the past of life. Evolution, as it currently stands, does not explain abiogenisis. That said, there are some interesting theories which do try to explain it. There's no real consensus yet though.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  617. This is the 21st Century by delirious.net · · Score: 1

    A wise man once said A flower is only A sexual organ Beauty is cruelty And evolution A wise man once said that everything could be explained with mathematics He had denied His feminine side Now where is the wisdom in that? I came just as fast as I could Through the dirty air Of your neighbourhood Your name on a grain of rice Hangin' around my neck And a head like lead This is the 21st century I heard everything they said The Universe demystified Chemicals for God This is the 21st century I heard everything they said A wise man once wrote That love is only An ancient instinct For reproduction Natural selection A wise man once said That everything could be explained And it's all in the brain We lay on a velvet rug by the open fire She blew air on my eyelids I cried "What's it all about?" As she kissed my hair She said "There, there.." "This is the 21st century I heard everything you said The universe demystified Astronomy instead This is the 21st century Can't you get it through your head This aint the way it was meant to be Magic isn't dead Come to bed Come to bed And rest your heavy head my love.." And slowly, from above, She showed the answer's something that can't be written down This is the 21st century Flash to crash and burn Nobody's gonna give you anything For nothing in return There's a man up in a mirrored building And he just bought the world Would you want To have kids Growing up Into what's left of this? She shook her head, She said "Can't you see? The world is you The world is me." This is the 21st Century - Marillion Lyrics: Hogarth Music: Hogarth/Kelly/Mosley/Rothery/Trewavas (...If you could only see what I've seen with your eyes)

    --
    Don't speak about time until you have spoken to him.
  618. Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya! by SorryToHearThat · · Score: 0

    It's sad that you all have had so many interactions with under-educated or under-informated creationists. Even I have to admit some of their arguments are ridiculous. Yet, the fools who follow a thought do not make the thought wrong. If that were true, I would not even give evolution the bat of an eye. I've met plenty of fools who follow evolution only because that's what they were taught in public school. That being said, on with what isn't being said.

    Occam's Razor. Yes, the wonderful thought that the simplest answer is almost always the right one. Aside from the fact that this has been disproven by at least a few of the philosophers who followed him, let's examine the arguments here. Which is simpler, there is an eternal God, able to create an entire universe including all creatures contained there in, or that somehow that universe came to be out of a ball of energy and matter that exploded spreading out and cooling into planets in amazing precision to allow at least one of those planets to sustain life. Not only did it come together to be able to sustain life, but that life started as small amino acids that slammed together and began to become more complex creating all the species on the face of this planet (which we know as Earth) through a process of complex evolution by survival of the fittest and amazing strides by which these species found new abilities that allowed them to surpass all other species. I'm sorry, but that seems a heck of a lot more complex.

    Then we have the contention that if an eternal God could exist for eternity, then we could also. Yet, there is an additional problem there. We know we are bound by time. We even know that we do not come from nowhere, that every being had a beginning. Yet, it is contended that if every being had a beginning, then this eternal being would have to have a beginning. Not true. In fact, I am surprised by the lack of imagination, given that most of you profess a belief in evolution. If there is a Creator and a creation, that Creator MUST, by default, be more powerful and better than its creation. Consequently, if this Creator created a finite being, it would not be impossible, nor unreasonable, for it to exist, or have existed, for an infinite amount of time, especially given the presumption that it is not bound by time, another portion of the creation.

    DNA and further understanding of the human body has shown that evolution is a statistical improbability. Could it have happened? Yes, but did it happen? It'd be more likely that my library came about from an explosion in a room with a printing press. DNA points clearly to intelligent design. In fact, if you want to say that humans evolved from monkeys, then you might as well start with chickens since our DNA comes closer to their DNA than a primates. Sorry! Even the complexity and interaction of the human body, DNA aside, creates monumental doubt that evolution had even a fingernail (if that much) in this creation. It has even been figured that the possibility of evolution occuring is 1 in 10 x e^40. Wow! I really think that is something that should be taught as flawless!

    I know I'm stepping on some toes and likely to tick at least some people off. Yet, the reality is that if you want to say that evolution is viable, you HAVE to, no choice, say that intelligent design is viable. Evolution has less evidence for it than ever before. It made for a nice theory, but it never panned out. I'm not saying Christians are right. What I am saying is that there is more evidence for intelligent design than evolution. If you desire to be honest with yourself and your children, you've got to admit that much. Remember Occam's Razor. :) Yeah...

    By the way, it might be important for many of you evolutionists to note that even Charles Darwin recinded his belief in it before he passed. He doubted it substantially and eventually denied it.

  619. Re:intelligent design != God (corrected spelling) by bluewhale · · Score: 1
    You need to bo back home and pick your biology book..

    " That's like saying if a rabbit darts in front of my car, I make a minor course correction and magically become a new species."

    The idea of speciation is that under the given circumstances (like say geographical separation) two populations of stop breeding amongst themselves and start evolving separarately(multiple mutations get accumalated over hunders of thousands of years). For example the asian and african elephant populations had probably the same ancestor some many million years back, but when India separated from Africa at some point, they were geographically isolated accumalated mutations and now today they're two different species of elephants.

    " It is difficult to imagine that a species could change because it wanted to or was simply adapting to terrain or environment. Environment changes drastically in 1 billion years, to extreme ups and downs within a year. By the time a successful alteration is made a billion years later, the scenario for which it was manifested has long past."

    This is the whole point of evolution and I don't understand how you twisted it for ID. You think for example that a 'Giraffe 'evolved' a long neck because it somehow figured that with a long neck it can eat the tree tops. There was no gradual elaongation of the Giraffe's neck. At no point was a Giraffe with half the length of the modern Giraffe neck. The long neck came out of an accident(mutation whatever you want to call it) and since it helped the animal survive better(because it can graze the top of the tree without any competition for example,) it passed it's gene on to future generations.

    "How did his progenitors know they needed to mutate in order to survive? The "tendency of an object in motion to stay in motion" is too strong to stop just because it happened to. "

    same point again.. infact the progenitors can do NOTHING to enhance their/or their offsprings survival other than what they can do physically. By adaptation scientists don't mean that there's willing contribution to the process by the organism. The process occurs naturally ( guided by natural selection). There're more species that are extinct in the history of the earth than there're surviving today.

    "So, we can declare that everyone must accept homosexuality as a valid lifestyle, but must martyr all ID'ers for having such an impossibly absurd idea. Loads of sense there, Plato. "

    Finally something that can be accepted as something that's close to a valid point.

    "It is also baffling as to why "fundamentalist" is such a dirty word."

    Because the believe in ideas blindly. Has there ever been ANY proof at all that all this happened by some supreme god. Inspite of mounting evidence for evolution, they just want to play it down, because it shakes up their belief system. I understand that evolution still has a lot of explaining to do with respect to the chemical origin of life, factors which actually distinguishes life from non-life. But that does not explain why anyone would just take this big 'blackbox' that is creation and believe in it, instead of being curious( which I think is the most important human quality) and dig in for more plausible explanations.

  620. Cambrian explosion by ciphertext · · Score: 1

    That might be more what you are looking to explain. The "sudden" appearance of the fossils of several species in the geologic strata of that time period. Perhaps you are in a quandry as to where the "transistion" fossils must be located?

    --
    To know is to have knowledge....to understand is to be enlightened.
  621. God is not cruel or deceptive. by gabble-blotchit · · Score: 1
    Dear Frymaster,

    As you probably know, this argument is a variant of an old argument. The philosopher David Hulme employed it, but apparantly it may even be attributed to the ancient Greeks.

    In my thinking, the major difficulty with the argument is that it assumes there is no relationship between God and us, nor between us and cruelty (or 'evil' as it is usually described).

    Moreover it describes a version of God whose creation cannot affect him, nor be affected by him (since I guess this would impact upon his status as Omnipotent in your understanding). This kind of god certainly does not exist, nor is it the kind of god Christians believe in.

    Christians believe in a God who is as passionate about you (and me) as he is about life itself; a God who grieves when we screw up (as I often do); a God who is committed to sorting it all out and has already taken the decisive step to make that possible.

    The problem however, is with us not God. However 'omnipotent' actually applies to God, it is obvious the reason why most children starve is because of us - collectively. - whether it's because Aids or War has killed their parents or because the WTO has decided the parents aren't allowed to earn a living wage. Or because crops were wiped out because of global warming. etc.

    Either way, we are the problem. But even if God obliterates us all (an ultimate way of preventing further evil), he won't win, because what he wants is to rebuild the broken relationship with us.

    In the end, one proof of God's kindness is that he let you write your post in /. And that he let me write mine.

    -cheers from jules @P.

  622. Wake up and smell the diesel... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Obviously, you haven't heard of the late, great Thomas Gold. One of many scientists, long-agers, evolutionists, who are (or in his case, were) absolutely certain that the compressed-roadkill theories are inadequate.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  623. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by millennial · · Score: 1

    You said "under-informated." Sorry, but you lose the debate for the lack of intelligent design in your post.

    --
    I am scientifically inaccurate.
  624. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by millennial · · Score: 1

    P.S.:
    If there is a Creator and a creation, that Creator MUST, by default, be more powerful and better than its creation.
    Someone didn't watch The Matrix...
    P.P.S.:
    Could it have happened? Yes, but did it happen? It'd be more likely that my library came about from an explosion in a room with a printing press. DNA points clearly to intelligent design. You seem to be forgetting a fundamental aspect of evolution: DNA that produces unsuccessful species is discarded. Which is the same as saying that books formed in an exploding library, that were filled only with gibberish, or which did not have a coherent plot, would not be kept.

    --
    I am scientifically inaccurate.
  625. Re:Evolutionary Naturalism Vs Intelligent Design by kindbud · · Score: 1

    I did not commit an ad hominem (not ad homimym as you spelled it), because I did not impugn any idea or proposal based on the character of the person proposing it. I found Plantinga's ideas to be hogwash, hand-waving, which I'll admit I have not supported with any citations here in this thread (I could, however, do just that). But in no way is it an ad hominem. If I said Plantinga's writings are hogwash because Plantinga is a SCO Lawyer, that would be an ad hominem, whether it was true or not that Plantinga is a SCO Lawyer.

    You then put me in a position to devise a list of natural philosophers and limit it ...

    I put you in no such position. You put yourself in that position when you asserted that refutations of Plantinga's work had all failed.

    You can also try doing a simple search at your local college library for the original paper and then adding "in response to" as part of your query.

    Why should I do your legwork for you? Do you have a list, or not? You made a statement to that effect, I asked you to back it up. Will you, or will you not back it up?

    For those who do not know who Alvin Plantinga is, he is The John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy at Notre Dame and a sometimes lecturer at Biola, Stanford et al.

    For those of you who think Alvin Plantinga is undisputed, Gary Cutting is a fellow of his also at Notre Dame who has done exactly what Hungus claimed no one had: disputed Plantinga's "An Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism".

    Gary Gutting, Religious Belief and Religious Skepticism (Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 1982), pp. 79-92.

    Now I gave you what you asked for, even though I carry no burden of proof. That's just my generous character. I never asserted that someone had refuted Plantinga. It was you asserted all who had tried, failed, all I asked was for you to list those who had failed. Will you now give me what I asked for, and fulfil the burden you assumed by asserting that Plantinga's detractors had all failed, and provide me a list of them and their failed critiques?

    --
    Edith Keeler Must Die
  626. There are two parts: by Hershmire · · Score: 1

    First, you're describing "absence of evidence is evidence of abscence." That is, if I claim there is an elephant in the living room, and you look all over and find no evidence, it is safe to assume to say there is no elephant in the room. There is no concrete evidence of God*, so it is safe to assume there is no God.

    But when the Christian argues the Bible is proof of God's existence, he only begs the question. God exists because the Bible says he does, and we can trust the Bible because God wrote it? Rubbish! Not only do these theories not hold any scientific merit, they even contain major logical fallacies!

    Phew! I knew that liberal arts degree would come in handy.

    *something that should give at least some sort of indication of its existence somewhere if it wants to be taken seriously

    --
    if(!toilet_paper) roll.replace(new roll); //Stupid roommates.
  627. Re:Atheism also a religion by Alsee · · Score: 1

    Damn Anonymous Coward idiot.

    Regarding the ACLU and the rare occasion they screw up and do something right

    I cite two of *many* cases where the ACLU explicitly and deliberately defend the freedom of religion, yet you are so steeped in anti-ACLU propaganda that all you can say is that they somehow accidentally screwed up. Yeah, that makes sense. Be careful not to read the ACLU website where they make ALL SORTS of mistakes accidentally supporting and defending the right to religious freedom.

    fact still remains, the overwhelming majority of cases they represent are for squashing the rights of a Christian

    As I said, propaganda. These cases are aways about the abuse of government power. The only reason Christianity comes up is because it's generally only Christians in a majority position to attempt to abuse that power.

    Waaaa! Waaaaa! Why is the ACLU always picking on us! This is a democracy and we are a majority and we can to vote ourselves the right to use government power to oppress minorities! Waaaa! We don't like other people's constitutional right to religious freedom interfering with our ability to use our majority democratic position to hijack government power for religious purposes! Waaaa!

    A couple of years ago, the ACLU threatened to sue a Georgia School district because they had the phrase "Christmas Day" under December 25 on their school calendars.

    I just did a Google search on: Georgia "Christmas Day" ACLU.
    I searched through the top FIFTY hits. I found squat. Nada. Zero. Zip. Zilch.

    If your case actually exists, lets see a link to it and I will gladly address the merits of the case. As I said anti-ACLU propaganda peices almost invariably misrepresent the actual legal issue involved in such cases. The only question is whether they misunderstand these cases and inadvertantly misrepresent the case, or if they deliberately misrepresent the cases for inflamatory propaganda purposes. Get me a legitimate link and I will gladly address it.

    You then proceed to go on some pointless atheism rant. Some stupid bable about proving or disproving god. I said the belief that there is no god is a religious belief. I really don't know why you see any need to rant on the subject, other than you probably didn't even read that far in your haste to demonize the ACLU and atheists. I said it is unconstitutional to attempt to hijack government power for the purpose of promoting or suppressing any religious belief - including the belief that there is no god.

    Yep, evil me for saying the US government is forbidden to promote atheism. Evil me for saying the government is forbidden to infringe your (presumably Christian) religious freedom.

    If the ACLU is going to strip religion from the public square

    Flat out bullshit.
    The ACLU sucessfully defended baptisms in a public park, and in part responded with the following:
    "This kind of confusion over religious expression in public places is not uncommon," said ACLU of Virginia Executive Director Kent Willis. "Government officials often seem not to understand that private religious expression is protected in public forums. Afraid of violating separation of church and state by permitting religious activities, they end up obstructing freedom of religion."

    The ACLU defends our right to religious freedom - including in the "public square". What is prohibited is the POWER OF GOVERNMENT being used to establish religion in the public square. You are however perfectly free to pray in the public square, free to have a group prayer session, free to have a religious parade (with the ordinary permits for any parade), and free to preform baptisims.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  628. Explain Mary Schweitzer's fresh T Rex bones to me by leonbrooks · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ...and I might be ready to consider your assertion that "Scientists have clear evidence of the evolutionary process throughout history via these fossils".

    Leaving aside the fresh, stretchy, squishy organics within Mary's "68 million year old" fossilised T Rex leg bone for a moment, what the fossil record does actually show us - viewed from a Noturalist or Materialist perspective, of course - is stasis and isolation, plus in the case of the Cambrian Explosion, masses of body plans happening in a timescale instant.

    Entombment for fossilisation must also happen very, very rapidly before scavengers can eat or scatter the remains (at every scale from micro to macro). This tends to point not at mild and moderate ID, but way past it to Creationism.

    "Modern" birds have been found in stratigraphically older layers that dinosaurs, did you know that? Phut goes the dinos-to-birds theory you had in mind only a few seconds ago. Lucy was widely hailed as a missing link between ape and man, then more quietly un-hailed as being more different from either apes or humans than they were from each other. Such is the fate of all of the homonids so far, other than the frauds and the many which have been reclaissified as either fully human or fully ape. And the harder you look at these things, the worse it gets.

    Another point (if I had the time I could post hundreds of kilobytes on this alone) is that it's not limited to the fundies. Consider leading Atheist Antony Flew, who after careful examination of the evidence now rejects evolution.

    There's so much you have to not know in order to remain an evolutionist - so many observations that have to be either discarded or at best accorded the whackiest justifications - and yet somehow the idea is supposed to have an unquestioned monopoly in science teaching? Why? Could iot be for religious reasons?

    One of the scariest aspects of the origins debate is that outside ID, much of the organised opposition includes people like industrialists who take the view that since God's going to burn it all down in the end anyway, there's no particular point in taking care of nature! D'oh?

    Again, there's reams and reams of stuff that you have to not know (about the Bible, in this case) to be able to hold that view.

    The wilful ignorance is terrifying, and doubly terrifying because it's typical on both ends of the spectrum.

    Hello? Is this thing on?

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  629. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 1

    I look forward to seeing your human level AI generated using your evolutionary algorithms.

    I've got an idea. How about you go into a university and ask a scientist to explain how volcanos work and how one could have entombed the city of Pompeii and turned people into statues.

    Then tell him you look forward to seeing him erupt a volcano and bury an entire city and thousand of people -- in his lab.

    Yep. And then you should walk off in a superior attitude that you showed him. Yep, damn scientists claiming they know how volcanos work and explaining how it works and showing off stupid laboratory proofs that all of the stuff in the explanation actually works, but then they can't even erupt a volcano in the lab an engulf an actual city! What frauds!

    Oh, and dont even get me started with those gravitationist frauds! Not only can't they put a billion stars in galactic orbit in the lab, they can't even make a single stinking little black hole in the lab.

    Those godless gravitiations shouldn't be teaching their "theory" in public classrooms. Damn atheist conspiracy.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  630. Islam and Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't it amazing that Islam is the only religion that does not contradict science

  631. Re:Separation of Church and State by shaitand · · Score: 1

    "All true. But if "intelligent design" consists of the belief that the Universe was designed and/or created by a supreme being of some sort... which religion does that favor? Many, probably most, if not all, religions have creation mythology, and creation myths tend to involve supreme beings."

    My post was in direct response to the parents claim that seperation of church and state is not present in any of our nations legal documentation.

    The religions favored are those that believe in a supreme being. Many believe that all religions are merely tall tales and do not want their children taught they are anything else. But that is beside the point. The point here is not seperation of church and state.

    The point here is that the school is creating a policy to lie to students in science class. It is bad enough that they do this is in American History. Intelligent design has no evidence to support it, therefore Intelligent design would rate as a hypothesis.

    However, since there is plenty of evidence to support the theory of evolution; ID is not even an EDUCATED guess.

    Remember, ID is NOT creation. ID is an alternative solution to evolution. Evolution has nothing to do with the origin of the universe. Evolution is how things progress AFTER creation. If you believe in natural selection, you can not believe in ID. The two can not be reconciled. If you believe that simple pieces can interact in complex ways (i.e. ants, bees, bird flocking, the rat neurons they slapped in a peatrie dish that figured out how to fly a flight simulator). You can not believe in ID, again, because the two are contrary to one another.

    The ONLY support for ID is the logic premise (as opposed to physical evidence) that simple pieces can not interact in ways that result in complex behavior.

    Soooo what about neural nets? We CREATE them, but only as far as putting lots of simple pieces together and then feeding them input. They begin to form chains and recognize voice patterns on their own without a guiding program. That is an example of evolution with a creator. ID argues that this concept is impossible, that a complex behavior like voice recognition would require intelligence guiding each and every little component. Every chain in the neural net would have to be crafted by hand... but... they arent.

    I believe a lot of people still have this 1950's concept that Evolution is contrary to creation and that simply is not true.

  632. Absolutely! by leonbrooks · · Score: 2, Insightful
    religious dogma has no place in a scientific inquiry
    I vote that we start by outing the religion called Atheism in the debate.

    No fair claiming that the religion of no god equals no religion.

    And no, you don't need to have robes or rosaries to be a religion any more than you need to have television advertising to be a software developer.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Absolutely! by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      It's hard to live without beliefs. For instance, I believe in cause and effect. I believe that my past experiences with physical laws are directly related to how they operate now. I believe that I was not just created a second ago, complete with memories.

      Atheism is a baseline "belief" - a group of beliefs that are pretty much required to live through day-to-day life.

      Now, there are "evangelical atheists" who will go out and "spread the word" that there is no god - I wouldn't want them in schools either, since they're asserting as fact something they couldn't possibly know.

      So in short, scientific thought may require some beliefs, but it's the "least religious" set of beliefs out there, and based on principles that all but the nuttiest can agree on.

  633. Alternate fundamentalist view by lemaymd · · Score: 1

    I'm really happy to see this discussed again, this debate is finally warming up again in the 21st century!

    I consider myself a strong Biblical literalist, and as such I must say that I strongly disagree with several of BytePusher's characterizations of "fundamentalists". I don't want to demean him, I'm just chipping in my two cents to provide an alternate view of our externally and broadly defined group.

    True Christian fundamentalists by definition believe that the God of the Bible is the intelligent Designer and Creator of the universe. The inspired account of this Creation resides in Genesis, and that account contradicts the concept of macroevolution. (I hate to repeat this obvious point: microevolution is undeniable fact. The only problem arises when vastly different creatures like whales and elephants or monkeys and humans are purported to be ancestrally linked) Genesis has an uncanny way of stating that Creation occurred in 7 literal days: "And there was morning, and there was evening..." Furthermore, macroevolution intrinsically requires death and suffering, whereas Genesis cannot tolerate their presence since God pronounced everything to be good until the fall of man.

    Fossils provide strong evidence for a worldwide flood. Creationists and evolutionists see the same evidence, they simply interpret it differently. The difference is, when you interpret it in the light of the Bible, it actually makes sense! :-) We have no problems like those of the evolutionists with their "missing links". You might still be wondering about the ages of "millions of years" tacked onto various fossils. Consider first that these dates are modified frequently, plainly revealing their inaccuracy. Secondly, dating methods are widely abused and use statistically improper extrapolation techniques. See the resources below for details.

    As always, I encourage you to check out http://www.icr.org/ and http://www.answersingenesis.org./ Some of the materials they endorse are simply amazing to read. "Darwin's Black Box" in particular is a really fun and interesting book. (I should be getting paid for this. ;-) )

    1. Re:Alternate fundamentalist view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fossils provide strong evidence for a worldwide flood.

      Only if you try really, really, really hard to ignore all the facts that inconveniently get in the way. A worldwide (recent) flood would produce a single layer snapshot of drowned creatures. Real fossils show a progression of layers through time holding collections of very different creatures, from simple through to complex. Good evidence for macro evolution, and completely demolishing creation as described in Genesis.

    2. Re:Alternate fundamentalist view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey don't confuse me with the facts, while I try hard to bear false witness.

  634. Common Misunderstandings.... by Dozix007 · · Score: 1

    I am not a religous fundamentalist, nor do I believe in some sort of fanatical magic of any sort related to evoloution. However, I would like to point out the the Darwin theory of evoloution is inaccurate. This was published a number of years ago from various studies showing that there were large leaps in the evoloutionary line (stepwise in nature), rather than subtle steps as Darwin would advocate. These findings never ever gained any ground because of the overwhelming effect the Darwin vs. Religion debate has had. I am not saying anything reguarding God or Religion, just that the Darwin theory is incorrect, and there is no fossil record to support it. I would just like to point out how our "Oh so impartial" scientists and the "oh so great" ACLU are not always impartial or great. Some scientists chose Darwin as a battle ground vs. religion (which I see no reason for it to be, as religion can be quite compatible with Darwansim, can anyone say Deism ?) and will entirely refute any theories which would contradict Darwin. This is idiotic as it impedes scientific research as well as the legitimacy of science.

  635. Re:Evolutionary Naturalism Vs Intelligent Design by Hungus · · Score: 1

    I have never claimed no one disputed it. Try again, this time after you take a basic reading comprehension course.

    --
    Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
  636. Biased title? by lemaymd · · Score: 1

    Does the title on this article seem inherently biased to anyone else? ID tries to unify and explain hard evidence, just as evolution does, so I think it deserves the full title of "science".

    1. Re:Biased title? by frizzbit · · Score: 1

      Science is about HOW you go about discovering things not just about trying to explain things.

  637. Unchanging + Simply Existing = Animate? by buddhaseviltwin · · Score: 1

    Most fundimentalists consider God to be even outside time. Unchanging, simply existing.

    Unless you are claiming God is inanimate and never makes internal transitions from state to state, especially to yield external results then it sounds like you've turned "unchanging" into a nice weasel word that means you can still be animated but transcend time anyway.

    Now before you respond to elaborate, I'm sure you're quite capable of resolving this rather easy "contradiction". It's EASY to come up with a hypothesis to fit ANY set of parameters when your imagination is untethered rather than restricted to what is sensibly observed and tested.

    It's even easier when you're allowed to redefine words and assert the new logical implications of those redefinitions as fact.

  638. great idea by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 2, Funny

    I fully agree - if students were actually exposed to ID, it would do more damage to religous fundamentalism then an army of scientists talking evolution

  639. separation of church and state is not valid... by midnighttoadstool · · Score: 1

    ...in this case.

    The concept of a 'State' is a novelty, relatively speaking.

    The primary and natural educational perogative is to the parents. If the parents want their children to learn X or Y or Z then so long as the parents exercise that perogative with the intention of attempting to teach truth then time and reality (Truth itself) will work out the errors they teach. And if time doesn't succeed in the first generation, then maybe in the succeeding generations. And we had just better learn patience.

    Otherwise its down to who is right or wrong on any particular issue. That question is philosophically very tricky. The film 'The Matrix' is a modern illustration of one dimension of that problem.

    The alternative is a BBS ('Big Brother State') taking one particular line on what it considers to be true, and the rest of us had better believe it. Philosophically the State's position on a particular issue is arbitary unless an omniscient (and benevolent) entity happens to be controlling the state.

    The manipulation of law by means of church/state separation to remove one or another party's assertion of truth is a step in the direction of a BSS. The same applies to the emotional manipulation involved in the unbalanced and bogus assertion that "the interests of the child are paramount": no they are not.

    So I say, at least for the time-being, that the State should trust those that love their children the most and are most suited to parenting them and who themselves have been children. That State has never been a child, nor has ever had children, except in the driest and most clinical sense.

    And therefore : let the parent's dicate.

    1. Re:separation of church and state is not valid... by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      It is interesting to see someone state the truth about Separation of church and state since it NEVER appeared in the constitution at any time. EVER. It was 'FOUND' there in the 1940s by a hateful Klansman on the Court named Justice Hugo Black. This man successfully defended a man who murdered a Catholic priest, and atheists loved it. That is where separation of Church and state came from:the hate-filled mind of a Ku Klux Klansman.

    2. Re:separation of church and state is not valid... by ganv · · Score: 1

      Actually the language of a wall separating church and state goes back to Jefferson and probably before, although it is not in the constitution (it is "establishment of religion" there)--however I do agree that fundamentally it is a bad distinction. How are we ever to decide which beliefs should be allowed to influence state decisions? What if someone imposed separation of environmentalism and state? In the end we have to come up with a pluralism that let's all beliefs participate in the operations of the state equally.

  640. Over 2500 posts - is that a record? by frizzbit · · Score: 1

    Anyone know?

    1. Re:Over 2500 posts - is that a record? by benna · · Score: 1

      It needs to surpass 2722 to get on the top 10.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  641. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by noelbon70 · · Score: 1

    Forget the literal interpretation. Forget the Bible as science. Now that we've cleared the pallete of that, we have other work to do. You can't understand the Bible if you haven't studied it. Have you studied it? If you glance at a C++ manual and you get the "gist" of it, do you really understand anything? No.

    Now lets move on. What's important to consider is what the story is saying. That was the original intent. Can't you tell the Bible wasn't a science book? It's full of contradictions if you read it like science. In the exact same way, XML for Dummies is obviously the worst poetry! It's so full of non-rhyming couplets! Phrases that really make no sense! And what's up with the rhythm? XML for Dummies obviously can't be trusted as a source of Poetry because it's obvious it doesn't make sense. Those XML fundies are nuts. You can't argue with them! (end sarcasm)

    When I read this list, as someone who has studied the Bible even a little in college (I got A's) I can say many of you are like the fictional narrator above. This is addressed to you. You are slamming it. However, you are slammning it because it's being used by certain groups in ways it wasn't meant to be used. And you are correctly reacting to it. If you were poets, and a group of zealots force-fed XML for Dummies as the gold standard of Poetry, you'd rightly be rankled. Nor would you understand XML. You would be rightly rankled, motivated to lobby against XML for Dummies as the Standard Poetry Book For All Students. You might even win and get the fundies kicked out. Hurrah! You still don't know anything about XML at this point.

    I am saying that there is something else here to discuss, beyond the goofy science, and rancor. Surely you get the idea of Pharisee, don't you? You are being forced a version of things by modern Pharisees. And you are rankled. Indeed. You are upset. I get it.

    Ok. So what does the Bible say if it's not talking about science? What is the "gist" of the Bible? Do you really know? I mean, using your brain, using your reason, are you sure you know? If you are all upset about ID, I tell you the truth, you don't know the half of it. If you are upset, that is the indicator that you don't see the real issue. Forget what you think are contradictions. The Bible is full of seeming (meaning, you can read them in plain english) contradictions and inaccuracies. And it obviously doesn't give a rat's ass. If you are testing my new wallpaper print for geometric accuracies, you'll find a lot wrong. But I drew it by hand!! If you are hung up on inconsistencies, I would say you are like someone who is debating the value of a rat's ass. There is more going in the Bible than the rat's ass you are rightly transfixed on. Or maybe misled to think that is the issue. It's not. Keep your protractor off of my Picasso! Now maybe you get it.

    You are right. Bible bad science.

    But there is this crazy idea that God loves you somehow stuck in there between the spilled guts and smashed brains. God loved Abraham. God loved these assanine people that just didn't get it. And when they didn't get it, so the story goes, he ups the antee (sp?), all the way up, and "fails". But did he really fail, according to the story?

    Isn't it scandalous to think that God loves you? Yuck. Here I go. "There he goes," you say. Just stop and think for a second, if you can stop the green spinning head long enough to get what I'm saying. I'm saying the Bible says that God loves you. No matter what you (head spinning) are upset about (green puke flying) or what you think is all f$#$@& up in the Bible, it's actually saying that God loves you. I would like to cordially leave this on that thought. The rest of the Bible is a complex footnote to that central idea. Much abused, seldom thought about, rarely reacted to.

    Surely, all by itself, that's a nice idea, isn't it? You have to give me that. That's not a nice idea? Just think for 7 seconds. That's all I ask before you slice and dice me, which I'm excited to endure because I already made my point and I can't take it back.

    Doug

    --
    Founder: OxbowSEO.com
  642. wow, burning computers at new egg, appropriate for by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    a flame fest.

    But one question for all of you who assert science has all the answers, what was before the big bang?

    In the end, we choose a place to end the recursion. Some find God there, some find random chance. The funny thing is that we basically all of us worship whatever we find there.

    Worship? WORSHIP AND SCIENCE DON'T HAPPEN IN THE SAME HEAD!!!!!!!!!!

    yeah, right.

    But ending the recursion is the wrong answer. It does not make things simpler. The are no turtles under the earth.

  643. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by SorryToHearThat · · Score: 1

    Someone didn't watch The Matrix.
    I did watch the Matrix. However, it seems someone is mistaking fiction for reality. (Clue: it's not me!).

    You seem to be forgetting a fundamental aspect of evolution: DNA that produces unsuccessful species is discarded.
    As well, I did take into account that "DNA that produces unsuccessful species is discarded." Hence the calculation of 1 in 10 x e^40. That's the likelihood of getting 1 good piece of DNA from this theoretical evolution. That's pretty bad odds to me. Hence, it would be more likely (as I said) to believe that my library came about as described since a book takes less intelligence and ability than human DNA, let alone the rest of the body.

  644. Titan by cahiha · · Score: 1

    petroleum has a non-biological source. The gist is that non-biological methane is converted into longer-chain hydrocarbons by bacteria deep in the crust.

    Well, if it's converted by bacteria, it does have a biological source.

    In any case, the widespread existence of hydrocarbons, including complex hydrocarbons, in space suggests that oil and gas can be generated in vast quantities by means other than decaying trees and dinosaurs.

    1. Re:Titan by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Well, if it's converted by bacteria, it does have a biological source.

      The guys who made up the theory call it "abiogenic", and they just mean that the material itself isn't decayed plant matter. I'm not crazy about the terminology (or the theory) myself.

  645. Powder keg by Daniel294 · · Score: 1

    Evolution and schooling has always been an issue to avoid. However, this recent event along with the lawsuit in Tenessee is nothing compared to what happened in the 1920s.

    A law was passed making teaching evolution illegal. A TN teacher, named Scopes, violated the law. The result was recently called "the trial of the century."

    William Jennings Brian was an ardent fundamentalist. He was a three time presidential canidate. He also made one of the most famous political speeches in American history, saying that "Americans shall not be crucified on a cross of gold." Although he lost that particular campain to McKinley, he was still was one of the most promenent figures at the turn of the century. His triumph was when he was appointed Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson, although he resigned before WWI started.

    Anyways, Scopes taught evolution and was caught. In effect, the ensuing trial was the first mass media circus (probably bigger than the current Jackson trial). Brian helped out with the prosecution, although he was on his deathbed.

    Scopes was convicted amoungst uproar of the people. After the trial, Brian died of the exhaustion from the case.

    The moral: Evolution and schools should not mix. Neither should religion. We would be better off not to even touch the issue.

    -Daniel

  646. Semi off topic but a damn good read by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Check out "WHAT DO YOU BELIEVE IS TRUE EVEN THOUGH YOU CANNOT PROVE IT?"

    The 2005 Edge Question has generated many eye-opening responses from a "who's who" of third culture scientists and science-minded thinkers. The 120 contributions comprise a document of 60,000 words.

  647. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

    When I was in college, I had the privilege of taking a course called Philosophy of Religion, where we debated issues like this all the time. In the course notes, the work of others, 'real' philosophers, was made available to us. The answer I'm giving below is from one of them, though I can't cite him because I don't have the notes with me.

    The reason Intelligent Design stops with God is because God is an infinite being. In the Bible (limiting ID to Christianity because this is the context it was discussed in), all of the properties of God are also infinite or zero. God is omnipotent (all-powerful), all-good, etc. By following the observed infinite traits of God, it logically follows that God's existence is also infinite -- either God has always and will always exist, or God never and will never exist. Given that ID presumes the existence of God, it must be that God has always existed.

    I'm sure the philosopher explaned it better, and I fuzzily remember some stuff about necessary and contingent beings (God and Everything Else) but we're testing the limits of my recalling ability as it is.

    If someone is interested in the information, I can look it up.

  648. Wow! You're a genius! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The mother and father did not *create* their child. They screwed, and the *result* of their screwing was the child. All they did was commence a biological act that resulted in the existance of another being.

    Your question assumes that the mother and father have the power of creation. The fact of the matter is that they only provide the "seeds" for a creation to happen. Nobody has the power to give life. The most that people have is to partake of an act that *usually*, but certainly not always, results in another life.

    Are you suggesting that you somehow have figured out the great mystery that so many before you have labored over (ie: the mystery of life)? If so, then you're either loony or you're the only person out of billions that has.

    I'm placing my money on the former...

  649. Psuedo-Scientific? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "...All the statements of empirical science (or all 'meaningful' statements) must be capable of being finally decided, with respect to their truth and falsity; we shall say that they must be 'conclusively decidable'. This means that their form must be such that to verify them and to falsify them must both be logically possible. Thus Schlick says: '...a genuine statement must be capable of conclusive verification'; and Waismann says still more clearly: 'If there is no possible way to determine whether a statement is true then that statement has no meaning whatsoever. For the meaning of a statement is the method of its verification" (17)


    This is a prime example of psuedoscience. These statements do not even meet their own criteria (neither being conclusively decidable nor verifiable). They are, by definition, as unscientific as anything the author of the article is attempting to address.

    Promoters of Intelligent Design, or any theory, should not consider trying to meet such a definition. This is where the most confusion about this subject lies... it is not in real science, but in such contradictive definitions that many scientists attempt to promote their ideas upon.

    I believe this to be the truth of the universe: that we humans cannot know everything. Every time a physicist finds an answer to a problem, he or she creates new questions that are solved in a similarly recursive fashion.

    And, foremost, what is love? It is the one thing that scientifically cannot be explained, and thus is tossed aside. Why? We have examples of love, and we know love when we give it to others. The Christian God made this the very foundation of our existence, yet scientists, in their fury to prove themselves right and others wrong, have left it completely out of the equation.

    Love, in itself, is irreducibly complex. It cannot be said to be caused by another action. There are historically numerous examples of love without cause. Jesus, the Christ, exhibited this by giving his life for others with absolutely no reason to do so except for love.

    And a fundamental truth is that when something cannot be explained, it is not because it is wrong, but because we cannot comprehend. Why do we not give God a chance? It is not he who needs our acknowledgement, but us who need his love.
  650. i'm not fond ot the ACLU by 56ksucks · · Score: 1
    First of all if any of you knew what Creationists truely believe you'd see that the fossil record does support creationism. The difference is that both camps view the world with their own set of assumptions and beliefs. We both have the same facts we just assume different things about them. Therefore to both camps the facts seem to fit our view of the world. Which is why we can argue for hours over the same facts and not understand why the other can't see it our way.

    Second of all, Seperation of Church and State is a myth. The first amendment does not say that there is a seperation of church and state nor does it disallow government agencies from acknoledging an all mighty God. It says:

    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.

    it does not say that the government employee or agentcy can not mention or acknoledge a creator.

    Therefore, since schools aren't congress and teaching creationism isn't passing a law respecting the establishment of religion and could be considered free exercise and free speech then it is NOT unconstitutional. The first amendment is not vague. It's plain english! The ACLU should change their name because restriction the rights of the majority of americans their constitutional right to free exercise of religion and free speech is no way protecting civil liberties.

    Furthermore i'm offended that this would be slashdot worthy. Not only by the content but also by the assumption that geeks must be athiests. I for one am not. I not only believe in a mighty creator but one of mercy and love who gives his mercy freely to anyone who would come and take it, and his love to everyone unconditionally.

    --

    ---- "Excuse me. Where's the children's gun section?"

  651. religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Religious people are stupid, end of story.

  652. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
    Evolution IS, and has always BEEN a theory.
    Why do you persist in misunderstanding what the word "theory" means?
  653. Philosophy, not pseudoscience by js290 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Intelligent design is philosophy, aka Teleological Argument for Existence of God. The Fundies know they don't want to have someone go philosophical on their asses. They won't argue the nature of God, arguments against the existence of God, problem of evil, etc. in their own churches. The main problem is you won't find qualified philosophy teachers in high school. Why can't religion just be a private thing?

    --
    "Tempers are wearing thin. Let's just hope some robot doesn't kill everybody." --Bender
    1. Re:Philosophy, not pseudoscience by benna · · Score: 1

      It should be a philosophy, but they promote as a science, hence pseudoscience.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    2. Re:Philosophy, not pseudoscience by ganv · · Score: 1

      The real reason this debate becomes so vitriolic is that the main interesting questions are philosophical ones. Claiming that intelligent design is parallel to experimental science is clearly wrong-headed--but claiming that science has established the fact that living organisms developed from non-living material is just as wrong headed. We don't have any clear ideas how this might have occurred--it is simply required for a certain philosophical position to be consistent and so it is believed to have happened. I can not see any way to run a high school science class on evolution without bringing up some of these essentially philosophical and religious questions, hence there is no way these issues can be just a personal and private thing. Most of the reason students are interested in evolution is because of its philosophical implications for the question of who we are and where we came from. So why not discuss intelligent design and contrast it with other philosophical positions about the meaning of life rather than contrast it with evolutionary science. There is no way to separate a scientific theory from its philosophical underpinnings--that is a major conclusion of the last 50 years of philosophy of science. As long as we scientists continue to proclaim that evolutionary theory can be taught without discussing the various philosophical positions related to it, we leave ourselves wide open to a very reasonable attack by the "fundies"--that this is just imposing the established philosphy or religion--and they will keep responding by trying to impose their own philosophy and religion.

    3. Re:Philosophy, not pseudoscience by js290 · · Score: 1

      My philosophy professor said the best time to teach philosophy is to grade school kids when they are rational and constantly asking "why?" But, how many grade school teachers are prepared to take on this task? How many high school teachers? They do more baby sitting now than teaching. Being critical is too difficult. Fortunately there is college where you can study science and philosophy. But, how many people are brave enough to suffer through a Philosophy of Religion class... reading Anselm, Kant, Augustine, etc? The Bible, Koran, Torah has all the answers, right? Here's a link to a good show on religion... http://speakingoffaith.publicradio.org/

      --
      "Tempers are wearing thin. Let's just hope some robot doesn't kill everybody." --Bender
    4. Re:Philosophy, not pseudoscience by ganv · · Score: 1

      There is a good question--how to recruit elementary and high school teachers capable of teaching philosophy and evolution. There are things that could be done--like paying good teachers in proportion to the actual value they contribute to society--but when you compare the median income of elementary teachers and lawyers you realize we have a long way to go to achieve this. In the end, I conclude that it just isn't possible to have a truly pluralist elementary educational system in which different philosophical positions are contrasted. The kids are not yet able to deal with fundamentally conflicting assumptions about what is true. The real solution is going to have to be to break up the public school monopoly and allow different elementary schools to teach within different philosophical systems. In high school, a pluralist system seems conceivable. Ironically, it is at the college level that a pluralist environmnet is most educationally benefical, and this is the one setting in which the American systems encourages choice between institutions with differing ideologies.

    5. Re:Philosophy, not pseudoscience by js290 · · Score: 1
      The kids are not yet able to deal with fundamentally conflicting assumptions about what is true.
      I think the kids are ready and willing to deal with the hard questions; they're always asking "why" and "how." It's the teachers and parents who are not...
      --
      "Tempers are wearing thin. Let's just hope some robot doesn't kill everybody." --Bender
    6. Re:Philosophy, not pseudoscience by ganv · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but have you ever tried to explain to a six year old that there are competing theories about "why?" I have found they can quickly lose interest. Up to a certain age, I suspect that kids need quite a bit of certainty.

  654. Dylan Proves God Requires Intelligence by tjstork · · Score: 1

    God said to Abraham, kill me a son.
    Abe said, Man you must be putting me on.
    God said, no.
    Abe said, what.
    God said you can do what you want Abe, but, uh, next time you see me coming, you'd better run.
    Abe sell well where you want this killing done.
    God said on Highway 61.

    --
    This is my sig.
  655. Embrace Intelligent Design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The simplest way to counter the ID movement
    is to embrace it. Teach that with ID theory,
    there can be one, two, or even a whole slew
    of Gods (read Greek and Norse mythology for
    examples of these multi-god worlds). Soon
    enough, the ID movement will let up, having
    lost the battle -- unless they can somehow
    argue that it could only have been a single
    Intelligent Designer that made the world...

  656. It's a TRAP! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    The bible holds both that God is sovereign and that man has free will.

    Free will before tasting of the fruit of knowledge? How does that work?
    You're free to choose, but you're not allowed to know what it is you're choosing, and you are still held accountable if you make the wrong choice. Unspeakably cruel.

    --

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

  657. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the next door neighbor's incredibly attractive asian girlfriend

    Less talk, more pictures.

  658. The core issue by elandqui · · Score: 1

    As a Christian who happens to have an interest in science, being a grad student in math, I could respond to the hundreds of accusations being thrown at God or provide scientific evidence to support God as the Creator, but I think that would be a waste of time. I will note that the scientific method was developed by Christians and the scientific revolution in Europe was begun by people (e.g. Newton) wanting to worship God by understanding His Creation. So science and Christianity are intimately linked in that sense.

    While this debate is interesting, I would be surprised if anyone on either side of the creation/evolution debate is swayed to believe otherwise. This is why putting in my own arguments in favor of creationism would be a waste of my time.

    In particular, you who do not belive in God and are hostile to Him use evolution and other anti-God arguments as a cover for your own insecurity. It shows. Inside you have no peace, but rather fear. You are afraid that God does in fact exist, and are afraid of what might happen to you if He does. You try to eliminate that fear by providing many arguments that God cannot exist, or that if He does, then He is evil or simply doesn't care. But that doesn't work and the fear remains so you try shouting louder. Many of you look to evolution as a way to take God out of the equation and calm your fear, but it hasn't worked, and it's not going to work. In the Bible it says that fear has to do with punishment, but perfect love drives out fear. Your fear is there because you are have done wrong and haven't been forgiven by God. God sent Jesus as the Passover Lamb to be sacrificed as a guilt offering as punishment for all of mankind's sins so that you don't have to deal with fear and guilt any more. God is that perfect love that will drive out your fear if you want Him to. You just have to ask, and if so, you will be a new creation, and then you will see why we believe what we believe and understand the creationist's perspective.

    -- Eric

  659. Intolerance of the "believers" by NapoleonDynamite · · Score: 1

    It never ceases to amaze me how people of a certain system of belief can be so incredibly close-minded that they refuse to give credibility to another opinion. Tolerance is at an all-time low, and these people are the most intolerant people on this earth! They constantly spew forth their hateful preaching, name-calling, and insults just to pass off their deeply-ingrained belief system that was dictated to them from intolerant leaders of their dogma. Their "science" is nothing more than a theory that supports their own world view, and without that theory, they are forced to believe that the opposition just might be right. That thought terrifies them. That thought brings them to the point in their life where they have to face their own mortality and realize that if they are wrong and the opposition is right, then they have a God to face who will judge them for their utter hatred for the very thought that He might exist. But as He has said since the beginning, the blindness is truly deep. May He remove that blindness from your eyes so that you can see that He is the God of true science, and that your studies into science will reveal to you the mechanisms by which He made all of His creation, including you. OK, let me have it!

  660. Science = God (?) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parent:

    "Claiming divine intervention in the creation of life is like claiming the mostly-elliptical orbits of the planets, or the statistical decay of subatomic particles, are proof of God."

    I'm surprised we don't see more people arguing that the very fact that we need a structure like science to understand the universe implies an intelligent designer.

  661. No it isn't by dcam · · Score: 1

    Free will before tasting of the fruit of knowledge? How does that work?
    You're free to choose, but you're not allowed to know what it is you're choosing, and you are still held accountable if you make the wrong choice.


    You are assuming that man needs knowledge of both good and evil to make a choice. The bible makes pretty clear that knowledge of evil means that there is no choice: you choose to sin. Check my comment history on this article for more on this.

    You are not following what I said in the previous comment. Free will and God's sovereignty go hand in hand.

    I think you also need to examine this in context. Consider what God did to repair the damage. He sent his son to die on the cross. It seems a pretty expensive trap to me.

    To forestall what I think you may say:

    I am not sure what knowledge you have of the theology of the trinity, but at its simplest the three (Father, Son & Spirity) are one and also are 3. This is a closer relationship than we can imagine or understand. This is not the case of God picking some random person to take the fall, this is his own son, God himself. What is more, when Jesus died on the cross he took on the sins of the entire world. God and Sin are at opposite ends of the spectrum. God defines good, how can he have any part in sin? So when Jesus took on those sins, he was separated from God.

    Why would you do this?

    --
    meh
  662. Your argument falls down at 8a :P by Lifewish · · Score: 1

    (Also at 6a unless you can find some supporting evidence. And you might want to have a word with a few of the other Christians who seem less than certain about the omnipotence and omnipresence of God)

    --
    For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
  663. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by Yunzil · · Score: 1

    I was taught Evolution in school AND Creationism. I made up my own mind for what worked for me. If that makes me ignorant, intollerant, etc. then I am going to have to live with that.

    No, it just makes you wrong. :)

    Evolution occurs. We know it occurs. We've watched it occur in the lab and in nature. No serious scientist doubts that it occurs. All they are arguing about now are the precise details.

  664. Magnitude of intelligence?? by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

    One thing I've never seen discussed in ID is the *magnitude* of the intelligence we're talking about.

    The unstated assumption is that the intelligence is superhuman.

    So take the design of the human body. Extremely sophisticated, right? But with our merely human intelligence, in the course of several hundred years we've gone from square one to the knowledge of the functioning of our own molecules. For some time now we've been improving on our own design, band aid fashion, with drugs, therapies, prostheses, etc.
    Soon enough we will reinvent or dispose of the body entirely.
    So if the intelligence in ID had billions of years to design the human body, and we're bettering that in less than 1000 years, then the intelligence of ID must be on the order of 10^-6 relative to ours, yes?

  665. Can you tell my religion teachers didn't like me? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    I think you also need to examine this in context. Consider what God did to repair the damage. He sent his son to die on the cross. It seems a pretty expensive trap to me.

    Yay! Let's buy back the cruelty with... MORE cruelty!

    First he sets up Adam and Eve with a trap, then punishes them for falling for it, then makes up for it by having ANOTHER kid and letting him get nailed up by the descendents of the first one. Pain on top of pain.

    This is not the case of God picking some random person to take the fall, this is his own son, God himself.

    Masochistic too...

    --

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

  666. Re:Occam's Razor and Grey Matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The sad reality is that when such computation and molecular neurobiology is done, we will only discover that those who advocate "intelligent design" (or whatever the hell that is) will be found to be missing some critical piece of grey matter needed to intelligently design a cogent argument regarding intelligent design.

  667. Yes by dcam · · Score: 1

    Can you tell my religion teachers didn't like me?

    Yes. I don't particularly mind you.

    However I do find this conversation mildly frustrating. Largely because you seem to come to it with a preconcieved notion and are then viewing everything through that lens. No doubt you could accuse me of doing the same.

    Anyway, to the point. Crime demands punishment. At the risk of invoking Goodwin's law, Hitler requires some sort of punishment for what he does. I steal something that is yours, I should be punished. Are we here to debate the need for punishment for justice to exist?

    --
    meh
    1. Re:Yes by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Largely because you seem to come to it with a preconcieved notion and are then viewing everything through that lens. No doubt you could accuse me of doing the same.

      Right on, daddy-o!

      My notion is that the Bible is a man-made tool for mind control.
      Yours is that it is the encrypted True Word of the all-father.

      Here's the thing: If I saw a talking bush that burned without consumming itself, I would be amazed, but I wouldn't assume that the bush created life, the universe, and everything.
      And a few tricks involving batrachians and microbes would impress me, but would not lead me to think that the one resposible for them existed before time and encompasses all that there is.

      Likewise, Noah's story screams of "self-fullfilling prophecy": He built a wood-floored barn and wellcomed all the frightened animals that fled the incoming waters, then floated to safety while the rest of the people, who mocked his unusual barn, drowned.
      Therefore: God likes him and inspired him to build the arc and led the animals to him! He is choosen! Not lucky, but preferred above all other of the Lord's creations!

      In short: I don't take at face value the badly translated and oft copied and re-copied and re-translated interpretations of events of ingnorant, long-dead farmers. Those are myths, not beautifull truths. Embelished hearsay, history buried in storytelling.

      If there is really One True God, I'll deal with Him and the fact that he gave me a sharp mind with a penchant for sarcasm, instead of giving me blind faith, when Judgement comes. For all we know, figuring out the core of truth in the misdts of all the mumbo jumbo of the bible is another one of his lil' tests.

      --

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

    2. Re:Yes by dcam · · Score: 1

      I am now slightly frustrated. Largely because you fail to address key points and merely assert things.

      In short: I don't take at face value the badly translated and oft copied and re-copied and re-translated interpretations of events of ingnorant, long-dead farmers. Those are myths, not beautifull truths. Embelished hearsay, history buried in storytelling.

      Clearly you haven't actually spent any time verify whether the bible is in fact badly translated, embellished and hearsay. But don't let your lack of knowledge in the area from spouting off.

      If there is really One True God, I'll deal with Him and the fact that he gave me a sharp mind with a penchant for sarcasm, instead of giving me blind faith, when Judgement comes.

      You will "deal" with him. You won't like it though.

      I'll continue to use the sharp mind and tendancy towards cynicism he game to continue to serve him.

      --
      meh
    3. Re:Yes by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Clearly you haven't actually spent any time verify whether the bible is in fact badly translated, embellished and hearsay.

      I will, as soon as I get a first edition copy and access to native speakers.

      What? Can't? All destroyed? All dead? Oh dear!

      --

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

    4. Re:Yes by dcam · · Score: 1

      This is a stupid comment and you know it.

      We don't have first edition copies of Caeser's Gallic wars, yet that is a recognised historical document. I've read a translation.

      We don't have native speakers for Latin, or ancient Egyptian for that matter. That doesn't stop us from understanding the language. While we not understand it perfectly, it is understood. What is more both of the original languages for the bible (Hebrew and Koine Greek) have modern derivates.

      You clearly have little experience with studying history.

      --
      meh
    5. Re:Yes by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      This is a stupid comment and you know it.

      I didn't see the need for the reply to rise above the level of the question.

      --

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

    6. Re:Yes by dcam · · Score: 1

      Is this how you normally argue a point? Glib remarks and insults?

      --
      meh
    7. Re:Yes by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I've been dogging ScratchMaDouche for quite a while now. I made a comment, and he jumped all over my ass for it, for no reason. So, I continue to remind him that he's a fucking hypocrite.

      An apology would get rid of me forever, but he's just an arrogant prick who can't apologise.

      Since he can't utter the words "I'm sorry", the guy only deserves abuse.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    8. Re:Yes by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Is this how you normally argue a point?

      Argue WHAT point? There's nothing to argue, you just think whatever's in the bible is right, I don't. You're not gonna change my mind, I'm not gonna change yours, this conversation has stopped serving a clear purpose long ago.

      --

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

    9. Re:Yes by dcam · · Score: 1

      Argue WHAT point?

      Well that is one of my issues with what you have been saying. You keep changing the topic. So for some unknown reason you switched the topic to a discussion on the accuracy of the bible and the translations we have on hand now. So I point out some errors with what you are saying, and you then choose to insult me.

      I was assuming that it was possible for someone who is not a Christian could hold a rational conversation. The irony being that no doubt you would accuse me of precisely that.

      this conversation has stopped serving a clear purpose long ago.

      I'd agree with that, but I was giving you the benefit of the doubt.

      --
      meh
    10. Re:Yes by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I'm telling you dude, this guy is a jerkoff. He's too arrogant to apologise to anybody for being a jerkoff. You should not give him the benefit of the doubt, he doesn't deserve it.

      BTW, I'm an atheist, and I can hold a rational conversation. (though of course he says that I can't ROTLMAO) Don't let this jerk be representative of all atheists.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    11. Re:Yes by dcam · · Score: 1

      Thanks. I realise that he is bascially wasting my time now...

      I like to give people the benefit of the doubt, at least the first time. After that is a different story.

      I'm not taking him as necessarily representative of all athiests (I assume that is what he is), but I did think it was interesting that the charges that are so often aimed at Christians, could be better applied to him in this case.

      Thanks.

      --
      meh
    12. Re:Yes by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I did think it was interesting that the charges that are so often aimed at Christians, could be better applied to him in this case.

      Ah, it was a trap, cute! That explains why you call me stupid, then complain I was the one to do it to you.

      You and that Profane guy (who's in love with me, he follows me around, sends me messages I never read but sends them all the time, and has made numerous explicit homosexual advances at me in replies) can be friends!

      --

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

    13. Re:Yes by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      YOU called me ignorant and my post stupid.
      I simply stated that the post YOU called stupid was at the level of the post it was in reply to.

      So, you have a problem, I gave you the benefit of the doupt for a rational conversation, but no: You insult, and then claim to have been insulted.

      "The irony being that no doubt you would accuse me of precisely that." Grow up.

      You keep changing the topic. So for some unknown reason you switched the topic to a discussion on the accuracy of the bible and the translations we have on hand now. So I point out some errors with what you are saying, and you then choose to insult me.

      by dcam (615646) Alter Relationship on Wednesday May 04, @08:04PM (#12437013)
      Is this how you normally argue a point? Glib remarks and insults?

      This is a stupid comment and you know it.

      Clearly you haven't actually spent any time verify whether the bible is in fact badly translated, embellished and hearsay. But don't let your lack of knowledge in the area from spouting off.

      --

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

    14. Re:Yes by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I can tell you love me by the way you ignore me. *kisses*

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    15. Re:Yes by dcam · · Score: 1

      Ah, it was a trap, cute!

      No. Unless rational conversation is somehow a trap.

      That explains why you call me stupid, then complain I was the one to do it to you.

      I called your comment stupid, if you want to infer that I think you are stupid that is your call. I think that intelligent people can make stupid comments.

      --
      meh
  668. Re:Atheism also a religion by MrNixon · · Score: 1

    Hitler was born and raised a Catholic. In Mein Kampf he says ""... I am convinced that I am acting as the agent of our Creator. By fighting off the Jews. I am doing the Lord's work."

    Stalin, Pol Pot and Mao Zedong were, admittedly, but Mussolini was raised Catholic and gave up his beliefs for Fascism. Franco definitely was not.

    Make sure you get it right.

  669. Re: Testability of Darwinism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "you also cannot prove or disprove the evolutionary theory"

    This is patently false, as Darwin himself pointed out. To disprove Darwin's central thesis all that you would have to do is find a single species (individual) that has evolved (originated) as a true altruist, ie one that foregoes reproduction at its (genetic) expense in order to facilitate the reproduction of genetically unrelated individuals. No one has ever discovered such a species and his theory correctly predicts that one will never find one.

    Although there may from time to time be episodes that appear to be "true genetic altruism", they appear to have no way to maintain themselves in a population. If natural selection were not occuring, one would expect to see at least a small number of such genetic altruists in a population. This of course, is quite distinct from kin-selection, in which a genetically related individual sacrifices itself for the benefit of a related individual.

    Darwinian "theory" is a "scientific theory" because it has repeatedly survied such a test and is consistent with the reality that we observe, even though other logical possibilities can be envisioned and in principal could be observed, if they existed.

    One must keep in mind that in science one does not prove hypotheses, one only test them. Proof is reserved for the mathematicians as only in mathematics is there absolute truth or its absence.

    Unlike Darwinism, "Intelligent Design" is incapable of being tested and hence is not a science. The "intelligent designers" rest their entire argument on the notion that because something that is complex it must therefore have been created by some intelligence, presumably because its more intelligent than the creators of the intelligent design theory. Unfortunately, for them, there is nothing in their own theory that would allow them to decide what, if anything, would consitute such an intelligence. One could just as logically posit that rather than God being the source of all the "intelligent design" it is just my pet rock. After all, you'd have to be pretty stupid not to recognize that my pet rock actually has all the powers of God. If you don't think so, then explain what it is about God that I can not argue is also true about my pet rock. If you can't do that, then the notion of God is no more useful than my pet rock. Of course, you would also have to explain why only one such God is useful as I have two pet rocks, both of which have all the powers of God.

  670. AAALLLLMOST THERRRREEE..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few hundred more comments and this is in the Hall of Fame, and me too!

  671. let's take it absolutely literally then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While taking the bible literally then lets take it absolutely literally.

    God is omnipotent. That means all powerful. For some reason people have run with this and decided it means that God can do anything they can imagine. But, if there exists no power to do something then even God cannot do it. Nowhere in the bible does it say God can do anything imaginable.

    God is omniscient (all-knowing). See above... If there is something that cannot be known then even God does not know it. Just because we imagine that something can be known does not mean it can.

    Therefore, all this conjecture about what God can do and can know is exactly that. On the other hand, people who want to argue those things are true, as well as benevolence, can always just counter most arguments with, "well, that's because it cannot be done".

    But most importantly, nowhere in the Bible does it say that God is all imagining. Therefore, God must not be.

  672. American Theocrats telling more lies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    American Theocrats are actually NeoTheocrats, as
    they want to replace the commandment that "thou shall not bear false witness" with the one that says "thou shall not speak ill of a fellow republikan", even when he is bearing false witness.

    It is ironic that the NeoTheocrats use the bible as their holy grain, yet expect to enter the gates of heaven, when 1) their new religion seems to require them to bear false witness and 2) they seem to consistently ignore Jesus, who clearly stated that "a camel shall sooner pass through the eye of a needle than a rich man enter the kingdom of heaven".

    Evidently, American NeoTheocrats believe that they can enter the pearly gates, if they are willing to offer St. Peter a corporate tax break, some stock options, and more lax regulations (which obviously appear to be necessary for them to gain entrance given their extreme immorality with respect to environmental issues; not to mention their turning a blind eye to the killing a lot of Iraqi children by mistake and other misdeeds).

  673. Re:school boards, intelligent design, liability is by Physician · · Score: 0

    Yes because we all know that employers are only looking for people who believe in fantasies, ie evolution.

    --
    Does God treat us as servants or friends? Check my homepage.
  674. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by Physician · · Score: 0

    And what experiments have shown one organism turning into another? Contrary to the lies that scientists so-called would have you believe, the fossil record is not complete and shows at best, the flimsiest of evidence for evolution. On the other hand, it does show remarkable and massive evidence of a worldwide flood.

    --
    Does God treat us as servants or friends? Check my homepage.
  675. another request for ANY evidence of evolution by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

    Instead of questioning religion why not just present scientific evidence of evolution? If there ever were any there would never be any debate of the topic. The fossil record completely disproves ANY evolutionary process. The cambrian rock strata has more species, fully developed species, than are alive today. The precambrian rock strata has almost none. It demonstrates beyond the shadow of a doubt that life appeared suddenly. The complete chain of intermediate species of all life forms would appear in the fossil record by the millions if not billions if evolution had ever happened. So far NO intermediate species have appeared alive OR in the fossil record. The size of our sun decreases by about 5 feet of nuclear material a day. Go back a few thousand years and the sun is slightly larger, but not enough to be a problem for life. Go back a few hundred thousand years and the sun is so large that the surface of the earth would be hot enough to liquefy iron. Not conducive to life, wouldn't you say? The big problem for anyone believing in evolution isn't religion, but science. For anyone not understanding the scientific method lets do a quick review. In order for something to be considered real it must be scientifically testable, observable, or proveable. All real things have one of these, usually all 3, but they must at least have 1. Evolution has NONE! Of course this won't faze the atheist who has latched onto the only religious belief in his life since he does not like the alternative, so he HAS to shout down any opposition. Any real scrutiny or demands for actual scientific proof at any level for evolution and the atheist goes diving under his bed hacking sobs at the fact that in the back of his unscientific mind he has swallowed a lie. Its no big request at all. Just simply present some actual scientific evidence for evolution and that is it. Should be a cake walk if evolutionary theory had science backing it.

    1. Re:another request for ANY evidence of evolution by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Your use of the term "fully-developed species" is completely arbitrary, if not nonsensical. It presupposes a standard of development.

      Your interpretation of the cambrian fauna and flora is also misleading. There are more *groups* represented than currently exist, but not more species. There aren't any insects there, for instance, while there are plenty of insects species today. Even flowering plants and vertebrates don't exist in the Cambrian strata.

      Also, your description of the pre-cambrian fossil record is out-of-date.

    2. Re:another request for ANY evidence of evolution by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, A trilobite (an anthropod if you're curious)must be fauna or flora huh? I guess a trilobite is a lower order than a microbe or plant?? And you say **MY** description of the fossil record is out of date? Man I would be sickofthisshit too if I were you since you don't know anything about it. Hurry back to the TV with your Spock ears on because the Captain is in trouble and needs your help!

  676. Too much faith in America by RomulusNR · · Score: 1

    My subject line is ambiguous. I mean it both ways.

    A lot of people here have managed to exist in environments where they can manage to surround themselves with intelligent, rational people. As a result, they presume that this is the norm.

    It is not. America is largely a nation of hicks, and those that aren't hicks at heart are largely paranoid and easily manipulated with fear.

    Us secular minded folk? I figure, nationwide, we number around 10-15%. Rationally minded folk, I give us 25-30%. The remainder of left-of-center sentiment appearing in polls and election results I attribute to team mentality.

    Urban centers, and in turn the polls which focus inordinately on them ignore middle America. Unfortunately middle America is expanding, and its mentality spills into the suburbs within the metro areas of the urban centers. Drive a few short miles out of any urban center and you will run into dense suburban areas that have a political polarity that drifts away from that of the center.

    We associate urbanity with progressivism and intellectualism, and look at the thriving metropolitan areas that are sprawling around them and assume it is the growth of progressivism, but it is not. It is the growth of complacency, narrow-minded self-assuredness, and Rockwellian presumption, feeding off those urban centers.

    There isn't some silent progressive majority. We're fooling ourselves, and actually insulting ourselves, to think that. Unless we can convince the complacent that they are less safe in their obedience and servitude of God and Country (i.e. President and Congress, not any principled notion of what our country stands for -- principles are so 90s!), the dominant paradigm holds pretty much all the cards.

    --
    Terrorists can attack freedom, but only Congress can destroy it.
  677. Re:Absolute Idiocy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Atheism is the belief that there is no god(s). If someone does not believe in god(s), then they don't have any need or use for religion. For them religion is useless and without practical or theoretical purpose or consequence. To claim that no relgion is relgion is pointless.

    Generally speaking atheists tend to believe that the mysteries of life, the universe, and everything can be understood ultimately by application of reason rather than faith. For the religious, at some point (different for different religions and different with respect to different issues), faith is substituted for reason and all questioning stops.

    Atheists go on questioning everything, including themselves. Since the world is full of many complicated and seemingly unanswerable questions, it is not surprising that it is not a popular philosophy of life. Also, few like people who keep asking too many questions and hence they tend to be selected against. However, it does explain why so many atheists are attracted to science.

  678. When? by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    I'm honestly curious.

    AFAIK, speciation is one of the most hotly contested issues right now - especially since there's no hard and fast definition of "species" anymore.

    The historical relationships between species are obvious both morphologically and through inspection of DNA - but the mechanism that causes a distinct population to split into two genetically distinct and self-maintaining populations would (I think) take thousands of years to "observe".

  679. Re: Sure, so can my doorknob! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your not saying anything about "God" or "Gods" that can't be said about my doorkob. I've noticed that my doorknob is both omnipotent and omniscient and does such wonderous things just as efficiently as your God or anyone else's. I simply can't understand why others haven't noticed but I'm sure that eventually I can find someone who agrees with me so that I can start a chuch of the doorknob to get a tax break.

    Could it be that its because such omnipotent and omniscient beings like my doorknob just don't seem to really have any observable properties of relevance to anything?

  680. Re:Pros and cons? by downwa · · Score: 1

    Dr. Walter Veith, B.Sc. (Hons), M.Sc. (cum laude), Ph.D., noted for his biological research, a distinguished professor from South Africa:

    Would you expect anyone who believes in creation to be well published? Of course not, because of the prejudice against it. However, as long as the articles written don't give away the beliefs of the author, but only deal with facts, some creationists manage to get published in spite of the bias in the system. Of course, most would rather sneer at creationism than provide a counter argument.

    Read this for more background:

    http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v22/i1/pr ofessing_creation.asp?vPrint=1

    --
    Life's a lot like money-- you spend it, then it's gone. Spend wisely.
  681. Re: Not really. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All that you would succeed in doing is to allow more children to grow into adults who would then have more children, who would grow into adults and have more children, ... and more children and more children until some of the children would not have enough to eat because at some point there would be too many children. Thus, by encouraging these children to be born and survive you will ultimately have only caused more starvation and as a result your soul to be cast into hell for enternity.

  682. Re: No its not about time. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its all about money. What they are really interested in is your money (and sometimes your wife).

  683. Stop peddling perpetual motion machines. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You already sold me one and it didn't work!

  684. It's just like Lysenkoism in the ex-USSR, China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and North Korea, which has killed millions of people by trying to take shortcuts to development..

    Really, this is all about control.. God has little todo with it..

    Also, read a bit about the rights war on education.. Here's a good web page on it..

    http://billmon.org/archives/001752.html

    Totalitarian regimes always are run by megalomaniacs and they tend to have grandiose plans for science.. preferring schemes that 'transform' society while neglecting the boring basics..

    One example.. Mao didn't know anything about science, or industry, but he wanted to transform society.. He had the most power in the peasantry... so they had to do it..

    Want to know more? Read Jasper Becker's 'Hungry Ghosts' - about the worst disaster in human history.. the huge famine he caused in 1958-1962, when many Chinese parents ate their children..)

    But he knew he would need to depend on the intelligentsia to do it.. and he didn't want them to have that much power.. (thats what this is all about, taking power away from the nonbelievers..even if it means destroying society's means of living as a side effect..)
    So, his suggestions resulted in bureaucrats trying to force people to plow fields six feet deep and have two harvests a year.. the end result? 30 million people died while food rotted in warehouses and was exported..

  685. Re:Disagree! by Otto · · Score: 1

    If this is your position, it seems to me that you'll have a very difficult time reconciling the vast difference, that often exists between what people say, and what they actually do.

    No. People are often hypocritical. No news there.

    I can accept the notion that anyone can say that they believe something, but it's not quite the same when it comes to being Christian.

    Why not? If you say you believe a thing then you clearly believe that thing or you are lying. Are you suggesting that the statistics are wrong and most people who say they are Christian are lying about it? For what purpose?

    Merely calling myself a Christian, or implying that I'm Christian by virtue of what I say I believe, doesn't make me a Chrstian any more than calling myself the President makes me the President.

    Whether or not you are the President does not depend on your belief system. Whether or not you are Christian does.

    I'm not quite getting why this is such a hard thing to grasp here. Of course somebody can be a Christian and still act like they're not. But that just makes them a hypocrite, it doesn't change what they do, in fact, believe. Actions speak louder than words, but words reflect belief and belief is what determines a person's religion. Belief = Religion.

    --
    - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  686. evolution is too easy by iamnotanumber6 · · Score: 1

    i think the only argument you could really give me about the existence of a "Creator" would have to be causally related to the existence of "beer".

    but seriously - somehow to me there's something about the darwinian theory of evolution that seems too simplistic.

    i just don't think it explains things. not that it's wrong per se, but just not deep enough. like the way that newtonian physics pretty much explained things well enough for most people - until einstein came along.

    i'm open to considering a more complex theory. on the surface, a phrase like "intelligent design" is interesting. now, i sure as hell don't believe there's some guy in the sky with a long gray beard who designs everything. and both the words "intelligence" and "design" seem to me to be human characteristics that won't really help us understand the true nature of the genesis of life.

    but if you start looking at the complexity of dna and how it is coded - just as a starting point - well... i would have to agree that darwinian evolution theory should *not* be taught as an indisputable fact by high-school teachers. i'm *not* saying creationism should be taught in its stead. i'm saying that open-mindedness and the concept that "we're not quite sure" would be the most valuable lesson, particularly for those students who might be excited by pursuing the unknown. i think there is so much more to be learned.

    and, for that matter, there is an awful lot to be learned by the study of religion, even if it is not taken literally.

  687. Re: God is not cruel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    God is ominpotent and ethernal, thus:

    1, He has no fear, because noone can kill him or restrict his freedoms.

    2., God is truthful, because without fear there is no reason to lie or deceive.

    3., God is very little interested in humans' earthly life, because his aim is to have most of us with him in the heavens. A child who starves to death probably has better chance to become one of the lambs grazing up there then a SUV-driving stock broker.

    4., People find #3 more or less unacceptable and try to do something about it, which God does not oppose, because practicing brotherly love helps people become eligible for heavens.

  688. Um, it's rock *now* by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Your point was, again...?

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  689. Responding at an AC, but want to make this point by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Atheism is the belief that there is no god(s).
    Let's run that past the heads once more: "Atheism is the belief<click>"

    Again? "Atheism is the belief<click>"

    Last time, to make sure we got the point: "Atheism is the belief<click>"

    You answered your own question. Belief == Religion. Well... technically, belief is a subset of religion, since religion is more likely refer to the outward, material signs of belief (robes, chanting, cathedrals, auto da fe, fundy-baiting on slashdot, etc), which doesn't help your case at all. The Jargon File definition is amusing, though.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  690. Um, no. by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    In creationism, the creator is the cause. The act of creation is more or less an inevitable result of being a creator. Without a definite cause behind it, there's no particular reason that a universe should set about forming planets or philosophers to populate them - and fact, it's a real statistical knife-edge. Better than Death got his scythe in Reaper Man.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  691. Gotcha! (-: by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    There exists a universe which consists of energy in various forms, including matter. This universe follows basic, fundamental rules, and the application of those rules to the energy and matter is capable of explaining life and human intelligence.
    This is the point at which the wheels fly sideways into opposite gutters and your little red philosophical wagon grinds to a sudden halt on the bitumen.

    The application of said rules says that the vast majority of the absolutely minimal set of chemicals required are extremely difficult to form but break down extremely readily. If you tot up all of hte requirements, we need at least a few thousand orders of magnitude more atoms in this universe, and some miraculous way of recombining them all jig-time. Not a few thousand times, a few thousand orders of magnitude. Pardon the bold, but I really don't want you blipping over that point.

    If you don't believe me, have a look at what Stanley Miller (of Urey and Miller fame) has been failing to attain, nay, outright prove unobtainable for the past, what, four decades now?

    You also need to consider why the universe should follow any particular set of rules. Hint: the Anthropic Principle isn't as helpful as it might at first seem.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Gotcha! (-: by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Horsefeathers. Stanley Miller's work has not come close to proving that organic molecules could not form in the conditions that prevailed under early Earth conditions. The simple fact is that we don't precisely know what conditions prevailed, or how those molecules formed. But our ignorance of precise details is not proof that they did not or could not form. We have very strong evidence that complex organic molecules do form naturally. The evidence comes in the form of meteors, such as the one which fell near Murchison, Australia in 1969. The meteor was rich in organic molecules. Either such molecules form naturally, or they were formed by some sort of life in outer space. Neither explaination fits well with creationism.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    2. Re:Gotcha! (-: by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
      Hello from Australia.

      Er, we have no idea what the original conditions are like but we know that those molecules formed. How? An act of faith?
      We have very strong evidence that complex organic molecules do form naturally.
      Yes, that's correct. Velikovski would have been pleased.

      Sadly, not just any old complex organics will do, they have to be the right ones; and complex is also relative. "Complex", in this case, is at the level of some of the simplest amino acids, which is light-years short of any significant part of anything living, and even so some of the simplest necessary aminos can't be formed "by accident".

      After the Miller-Urey experiment, Stanley's so far spent the rest of his life trying to make the other necessaries, and has so far discovered that (1) you can't; and (2) the conditions for his original experiment have never existed.

      All of these explanations fit either Creationism or Intelligent Design far better than they fit Naturalistic Evolution.
      --
      Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    3. Re:Gotcha! (-: by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Er, we have no idea what the original conditions are like but we know that those molecules formed. How? An act of faith?

      Well, no. You must have missed the part where I said we have strong evidence that they can form. Oh, wait, you didn't miss it because you quoted it the very next statement!

      Sadly, not just any old complex organics will do, they have to be the right ones...

      Unproven conjecture. Life may very well be possible with many different sets of molecules. The particular ones we utilize may be simply chance. We don't know.

      "Complex", in this case, is at the level of some of the simplest amino acids, which is light-years short of any significant part of anything living,

      We're talking about fragments of a meteorite. The meteorite is proof that complex organic molecules can form from natural processes. It isn't a comprehensive collection of all molecules that can possibly form.

      even so some of the simplest necessary aminos can't be formed "by accident".

      Proof? That Stanley hasn't formed them in his lab? No one has ever created a volcano in a lab either. Do we assume that they can't exist?

      After the Miller-Urey experiment, Stanley's so far spent the rest of his life trying to make the other necessaries, and has so far discovered that (1) you can't; and (2) the conditions for his original experiment have never existed.

      He has discovered no such thing as (1), any more than the thousands of man hours that went into attempts to fly prior to the Wright brothers proved that flight couldn't be achieved. Stanley is attempting to compress phenomenon that occurred over millions of years and in oceans of water into a test tube. That may or may not be possible.

      There are mountains of evidence that point towards a natural progression of life over billions of years. The simple fact that we can't yet explain every facet of its occurrence isn't evidence that it didn't happen, nor is it evidence for any sort of Intelligent Design.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

  692. Um. That's not what ring species show. (-: by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    That's what you get for only reading one point of view on a topic, and not even understanding that. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Um. That's not what ring species show. (-: by clonan · · Score: 1

      Actually a ring species is an animal that split it's migration. At the end of the migration the two (sub) species are unable to interbreed and therefore can be defined as seperate species. However each animal can still breed with the animal one step back in the migration path. Therefore while the end of the ring counts as different species there is still gene transfer between the two through the intermediate species.

  693. It certainly does by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    The fact that it hasn't been disproven should mean something to you.
    Specifically, that any disproof is promptly ruled out of court for not resting on Materialist axioms.

    Now explain Mary Schweitzer's fresh but fossilised T Rex bones to me again?
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:It certainly does by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Okay, they're not at all "fresh", but have gone through a fine-scale replacement process rather than the normal large-scale mineral replacement that we're all used to.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4379577. stm

      So, is your beef with evolution in particular, or with science in general?

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
  694. Parochial schools already are... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...at least here in Australia. It provides a perfect opportunity to explain why evolution can't work.

    Evolution is not science, because it is based on faith. That faith is usually called Materialism or Atheism. The axioms underlying the pillars of evolution such as isotope-ratio dating schemes have to be taken on faith because we have no way to measure them directly. They are regularly shown to be wild, and every so often a scientist finds a new way to demonstrate that assumptions about the starting conditions can't possibly be right, but this doesn't stop the methods and their results (the politically correct ones, anyway) from being constantly trusted and accepted as true and immutable. This is because evolution grew from religion, the "no gods" religion, not from observation.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Parochial schools already are... by cpotoso · · Score: 1

      In three words: you are crazy (and adding a couple more: and uninformed). If you think that the "axioms ... of evolution" are "isotope-ratio dating schemes" you really really really are very misinformed. Evolution is based on a HUGE set of observations, not "isotope-ratios" alone. (in any case, observations are not "axioms", so that you know a bit about epistemology). Moreover, being a Ph.D. in Physics, I can tell you *with certainty* that we *DO* know the decay rates of isotopes with very very very very good precision. And no, you do *NOT* need to wait 5000 years to check whether something has a half-life of 5000 years... you can do very simple statistical analysis over shorter periods of time... Now: you probably are going to say that mathematics and statistics are unverified axioms... In any case: keep teaching whatever you want in your church, and keep your garbage out of public schools.

  695. Re:artificial intelligence by radu124 · · Score: 1

    I totally subscribe to that, and then the first self-aware machine we create will kill all the creationists because they refuse to believe it has a conscience, then all the other people because it ran out of creationists, but by that time it won't really matter because all of us geeks will already be in digital form in order to enjoy virtual sex.

  696. Actually, it _is_ logically consistent by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    If you have a Designer, what's so unthinkable about that Designer having themselves been designed?

    The only reason for not so postulating is that the naysayers aren't arguing against design, per se, they're arguing against Christianity.

    Christianity's Designer (Christ, by definition) has never AFAICT mentioned Himself in terms of being designed. This is the only real constraint I have ever run across on recursive Designers. Atheists shouldn't be using it, because they're arguing on Christianity's terms.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Actually, it _is_ logically consistent by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      It's unthinkable because it is impossible to answer the question "what created life" by postulating an intelligent designer designed by something else: that requires an infinite number of designers. All it does is push the problem back another level.

      Unless you suppose some sort of "Back to the Future" style happening, where a future designer goes back in time and creates his own great-great-great-grandfather designer.

  697. Re:entropy by radu124 · · Score: 1

    Don't agree to the entropy stuff. Just because we've never seen it decreasing doesn't mean it never decreases.

    I'm no expert physicist, but I think black holes violate the entropy rule. As there is no energy escaping a black hole it would be supposed that it should have absolute zero temperature, but that is not likely the case considering the amount of energy it absorbed.

    Is there someone who could explain this paradox?

  698. You make my point! by anomaly · · Score: 1

    Naturalism is unable to speak to origins because they are untestable. Materialistic dreams about origins have no more place in science classses than does any other philosophy.

    Because naturalists DEMAND their non-scientific philosophy be a part of curriculum, I'm going to work to have my philosophy have a part in that curriculum, too.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:You make my point! by Hast · · Score: 1

      I have already addressed these points in another reply to one of your posts. In short, testable doesn't require that you go back in time but that you can recreate the same (or similar) conditions and create life in that situation.

      If you want to reply please do so in the other thread as that will keep the discussion more on track.

  699. Re:The deal with these fundamentalists by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

    To assume that invisible pink unicorns don't exist just because their existence cannot be proven is flawed. Gee, that's fucking stupid.

    No, see I don't *have* to prove anything doesn't exist. By default it doesn't exist until you can show otherwise. Do you believe in the aforementioned invisible pink unicorns? If so, ha! If not, why not? They haven't been proven not to exist, after all.

    In any event, something can only be proven to not exist if the definition of the thing precludes it's existence. For instance, invisible pink unicorns can't exist because they cannot be both pink and invisible at the same time. QED. Of course, religions with deities prefer to define them as vaguely and with as many meaningless statements as possible. Crap like, "God is all around us", or "God is outside of time". Makes it rather hard to pin down the precise delusion. Fortunately, most of them have some crap about Big Daddy being both omniscient and omnipotent, which does the job on it's own since neither ability can exist in the physical universe. Quantum mechanics puts all kinds of limitations on what you can know and omnipotence is ruled out by "Can god create a rock so heavy he could not lift it".

    Also useful is the source of the claim. Let's see, people who believe in god have also made a number of other _falsifiable_ claims about the real world, very nearly all of which were shot down. If everything they say about things we can test turn out to be bogus, why should I take their word on the even more outrageous stuff?

    Oh please. I've read creationists' 'debunkings' of evolution. It's more like getting a lesson on logical fallacies, selective quotation, and deliberate mirepresentation of evidence. The whole improbability of molecular abiogenesis? Creationists like to point to the odds against a modern piece of DNA forming by chance, never mind the fact that the only people even discussing that possibility are creationists. When you run the numbers on a simple piece of self-replicating proto-protein, it turns out given an ocean-sized vat of amino acids, the formation of life is not only less improbable, it's downright likely!

    Yes, a lot of brilliant people believe in god. The thing is, even briliant people seem to turn into complete morons when it comes to theology. Cynics, skeptics, wickedly deep and insightful people, people who are the tops in their professional fields, when you ask then about god they just turn it all off and say they believe in the whole mythology, no questions asked. It's *amazing* what indoctrination can do when you start it early enough. It's no coincidence that one's religion is more inheritable a trait than hair color. The vast majority of believers never question their faith, never apply the same rules of skepticism and requirements of proof that they do for everything else, they just take what they were brought up with and don't ever question it.

    --
    Dyolf Knip
  700. Re:The deal with these fundamentalists by TufelKinder · · Score: 1

    To assume that invisible pink unicorns don't exist...

    My point was simply that until you know everything and are able to explain everything scientifically -- which if you're honest, you'll acknowledge you cannot -- that there is the possibility that God or a Prime Mover of some sort is responsible. An absolute denial of God is an indefensible position to take logically, as most people are unwilling to claim that they know everything.

    You (apparently) disbelieve in invisible pink unicorns, but you believe that something came from nothing? You think that nothingness, by pure chance, turned into the universe we see today? Yet, the likelihood that there are invisible pink unicorns is higher than the idea that the laws of nature were violated in creating the laws of nature. (2nd Law of Thermodynamics, how did nature progress from a less ordered to more ordered system, without outside influence?)

    Explain that to me, since you have absolute knowledge of the non-existence of God, there shouldn't be anything you can't explain.

    You're right: The vast majority of believers never question their faith, never apply the same rules of skepticism and requirements of proof that they do for everything else...

    And you, just like any other believer, refuse to consider questioning your faith.

    --
    If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. -- George Orwell
  701. that's only a judaic rooted phenom by BitterAndDrunk · · Score: 1
    Only religions that are rooted in Judaic history (Islam, Christianity of all flavors, Judaism) follow this line of reasoning.

    I could be missing one or two outliers, but it appears to be a function of the dualistic nature that these theologies exhibit, and non-dualistic religions don't have this eternal punishment clause.

    Actually, Hinduism/Buddhism are rather appealing in this manner, as it's more about living correctly to reap rewards here, rather than living correctly to avoid punishment later.

    --
    You better watch out, there may be dogs about . . .
  702. Re:Atheism is not a religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The term supernatural is usually included in the definition of "religion" and atheist don't believe in the supernatural. Look up the definiton of "religion". We define what each word means, and that can change, but for the purpose of clear communication/debate we should go with the usual definition.

    Reasonablity is the sticky point when trying to prove a negative. It's not reasonable to say there's no gold in China because we know that gold is found in many places. I believe this gets into the "argument from ignorance" issue which says something is true because it has not been proven false. Usually not an acceptable statement. You can say there's a tea cup orbiting Mars. No one can prove your wrong, but we all know it is highly unlikely.

    Burden of proof is another common debating phrase. It is also used in US law. In the scientific world the burden of proof is usually on someone who says something exist. The scientific view would be that it does not exist until proven it does. I'm curious as to why you think the burden of proof is on the atheist.

    This web site attempts to cover these issues in a brief format.

    http://www.doesgodexistanswer.net/

  703. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by millennial · · Score: 1

    The possibility of man creating a machine that creates a superior being to man is not fiction - it's just a possibility.
    Evolution is not random. The set of features that help a creature survive are not random. They are defined by the conditions in which the creature must survive. To place a probability on something evolving is unscientific. Either it will or it won't. For any given characteristic, there may be a 100% chance that it will exist SOMEWHERE. The determining factor is whether that characteristic is passed on.

    In other words, your reasoning falls apart because the chance that a human being would evolve is 1:1. Otherwise, we wouldn't be here.

    --
    I am scientifically inaccurate.
  704. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by 2marcus · · Score: 1
    Um. Where do we start. How about with "EVOLUTION ISN'T RANDOM YOU IDIOT!" There's this little process you might have heard of called "natural selection"? Eg, the chance of my rolling eight 10 sided dice and coming up with all ones is 1x10-8. If I have 100 chances, it is approximately 1x10-6. However, if I have 100 chances, where every time a 1 is rolled, I _keep_ that one, suddenly my chances become 99.98% that I'll get to those eight ones. I acknowledge that this an an oversimplified example, but I think it serves its point, namely that if you can use selection processes, you can throw your standard probability calculations out the window.

    Now, perhaps you were talking about the probability of the _first_ self-replicating molecule. While abiogenesis is NOT evolution, the talkorigins site does address some of the common abiogenesis probability arguments. Namely, that the simplest self-replicating molecules do not have to be hundreds of base pairs long, and again, once you've gotten one self-replicator, the magic of natural selection plus billions of years plus billions of self-replicators can get you some pretty neat things.

    Now, can I prove that God or some alien didn't step in and tweak a step in the evolution process? No, I can't. But the point is that we don't need to appeal to the supernatural to explain anything we currently observe. And the advantage of scientific over supernatural explanations is that science enables us to make predictions. For example, science will predict that where synonomous codons exist (eg, UUU and UUC both code for phenylalanine), two closely related organisms will use the same coding more often than two distantly related organisms. Intelligent design would predict absolutely nothing useful about this issue. And the fact that time and time again, the predictions of science turn out to be right shows that either evolution is right or God really wants to screw with our heads.

  705. Testing theories by anomaly · · Score: 1

    scientists with testable theories

    Scientists' theories about origins cannot be tested using the scientific method.

    religious nuts who won't or can't submit their loony theories to any test at all

    Let me ask you this. What tests should be applied to a philosophy or set of teachings?

    As a fundamentalist Christian, I have a set of tests that I apply to the Bible and to the teachings of Christianity. I do not neglect reason or intellect in my study of Christ's teachings. My understanding of fundamentalism is "one who adheres to the fundamental teachings of the historic Christian faith."

    For example, with respect to Christian belief, some of the components I have examined include: eyewitness evidence for Christ, documentary evidence about Him, corroborating evidence along side scripture, archeological evidence, rebuttal evidence, psychological evidence - Christ's psyche as described in scripture, and the evidence of changed lives of people in the past, and people I know today.

    Finally, one critical test af any world view is 'can it be lived out?' Can anyone do it? Can I do it? What are the social, political, economic, and psychological consequences of living with strict adherence to the teachings of any philosophy? What is the logical outcome?

    No tests at all? What other tests do you propose?

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Testing theories by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      "No tests at all? What other tests do you propose?"

      Those are fine tests and I'm glad they work for you. They are not scientific tests though.
      They can not be duplicated or falsified by others who do not believe as you do. I can not prove your tests false (nor can you prove them true) so they are not science.
      This is not to say I do not respect your beliefs. They just should not be dressed up as science.

      One thing sticks out that I feel I need to bring up though. Eye witness reports are historically shaky. Ask any police officer who gets several different accounts right after a crime from witnesses standing by. That aside, there is no way to get eye witness reports from 2000 years ago without the witness. Written/translated reports do not equal eye witness reports that one could subject to questioning.

      Sorry for the rant but this issue of dressing up superstition as science really pulls my string. Don't even get me started on people who search for Noah's Arc! (hint: there has never been a global flood that covered the whole Earth in water)

    2. Re:Testing theories by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      You may respect his views. I don't.

      Apropos eye witness accounts, I have personal knowledge of exactly how reliable they are. Recently, while between contracts, I was driving taxis to get some cash flow. I picked up a passenger who was drunk and surly when she got in, and got progressively surlier as the trip progressed. When she got out of the cab, she threw a can of Diet Coke at my head, which needed 10 stiches to sew up. The point of my story is that, when I reported it to the police a mere 5 hours later, the best description I could come up with is that she was a middle-aged overweight Aboriginal woman, about 5'5" tall, and weighing about 13 stone. I couldn't even remember what she was wearing. If I can't accurately describe an event 4 or 5 hours later, it's highly unlikely that "eye witness" accounts of events that supposedly occurred nearly 2000 years ago have any resemblance to the facts of the matter.

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
  706. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

    If your software evolution can't reach an arbitrary level of complexity, then it doesn't really prove anything about evolution on the large scale, does it?

    It reaches a certain point and then gets stuck. Looked at one way, it indicates evolution shouldn't work. Organisms should reach a local maximum of efficiency and never move on, because changes would make them less efficient vs. their neighbors.

  707. So there are about 2000 comments . . by narsiman · · Score: 1

    I checked the stats on Dover.

    Population (year 2000): 1,815, Est. population in July 2002: 1,878 (+3.5% change)
    Males: 902 (49.7%), Females: 913 (50.3%)

    This isnt even a meaningful population count for discussion.

    Its nearest city is Lancaster a town famous for its Amish community.

    Nearest city with pop. 50,000+: Lancaster, PA (37.5 miles, pop. 56,348).

    Thanks. That region is quite red now and voted for Bush unanimously. For all I care it is as good as Kansas. Move on to the next meaningful discussion.

    1. Re:So there are about 2000 comments . . by Sigma+7 · · Score: 1

      Population (year 2000): 1,815, Est. population in July 2002: 1,878 (+3.5% change)
      Males: 902 (49.7%), Females: 913 (50.3%)

      This isnt even a meaningful population count for discussion.


      So a population of 1878 isn't meaningful population. Might as well say that 1879 isn't meaningful either - it's just one additional person to a meaningless population.

      This means that 1879 isn't a meaningful population. Might as well say that 1880 isn't meaningful either - it's just one additional person to a meaningless population.

      As established above, 1880 isn't meaningful.... [Repeat until population reaches 20 billion.]

      That region is quite red now and voted for Bush unanimously


      The fact that the region is now communist and voted for bush isn't relevant.

      The discussion is really about the school board bashing one common theory in favour of another theory - for religious purposes. If they really wanted it for academic purposes, they would also expain potential flaws in their replacement theory (e.g. An intellegent design wouldn't have been created with mass stupidity as an average result, unless we were a failed experiment or were genetically engineered by aliens to be harvested for food. Neither of these cases is very good in the religious aspect.)

      Intellegent design may be a good theory, since those two choices are still plausable. However, it should never be presented as fact, and must be discussed as a theory (just like they're doing with evolution.)

  708. Explain what we observe by anomaly · · Score: 1

    the evidence of the creation of the universe (natural or otherwise) is all around us.

    You are right. In this we violently agree. The Bible says: "The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament shows his handiwork"

    As a creationist, I believe we must examine the evidence and learn what we can from it. God gave us intellect, curiosity, reason, and I believe that He expects that we should use it to learn about our universe. The scientific method has proven to be a helpful framework for describing the cosmos. As a Christian, I should, must, and DO embrace good science. This is my duty to God.

    Creationists and materialists have the same evidence. We have different theories about the meaning of that evidence. Our preconceptions define what we allow ourselves to posit about the root cause or the meaning. This is true for the creationist and for the materialist. Lewontin's statement that scientists have an 'a priori commitment to naturalism' suggests that non-natural processes are precluded, regardless of their validity as an explanation.

    These explanations about meaning are derived from something. For the scientist, it starts with an idea, a hypothesis. This idea comes from some basis.

    can apply Occam's Razor to try to find the least unlikely one

    The problem is that Occam's razor is a 'rule of thumb' not an absolute measure. Many unlikely things are actually true, in spite of their seeming disconnection from being likely to be true.

    science doesn't deal with absolutes...Scientific knowledge is always changing

    This is correct. What is troublesome to me is that scientific information is presented as if it is Truth with a capital T.

    I submit to you that naturalism and materialism are insufficient frameworks for exploration of the human experience. That materialistic philosophy has no place in science class, yet it persists.

    This is my beef with the 'scientific community.' They rail about the thoughtless, foolish faithful, while they worship in a cathedral built to honor materialism and naturalism. We're all biased. They should acknowledge that.

    In addition, philosophy belongs in the philosophy classroom, and science belongs in the science classroom. Today they are intertwined and the only politically correct philosophy in science class is that which agrees with the scientist.

    This is simply wrong.

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Explain what we observe by Hast · · Score: 1
      I submit to you that naturalism and materialism are insufficient frameworks for exploration of the human experience. That materialistic philosophy has no place in science class, yet it persists.

      This is my beef with the 'scientific community.' They rail about the thoughtless, foolish faithful, while they worship in a cathedral built to honor materialism and naturalism. We're all biased. They should acknowledge that.

      You keep restating this but have not submitted any further argument for why it is so.

      You state that scientist "worship" naturalism and materialism.

      I explain that naturalism is something which springs from science; not the other way around. Furthermore I explain that science only can deal with things that can be proven. That materia exist can be proven; that non-materia exists isn't proven. As such non-material hypothesis can't be proven neither true nor false with science; as such they have nothing do to in a science classroom. (Or rather, they shouldn't be taught to be science.)

      While you can "believe" in science and create a reliogion around it science in itself isn't a belief. It is rather the opposite and only deal with what can be proven true or false.

      I'm not quite sure what it is in this that you object to. Because it seems like we are just talking around each-other right now. (OTOH I doubt either one of us will convert the other, that's not really my plan though. ;-)
  709. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > However, it seems someone is mistaking fiction for reality. (Clue: it's not me!).

    My kingdom for some mod points... +10 hilarious.

  710. What are evolutionists afraid of? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, reviewing these comments shows me that evolutionists sure seem threatened by the idea admitting the possibility of the involvement of a Designer in the creation of the universe.

    What's the problem with presenting the view that there are many indications of intelligent design? I've tried to consider why there have been so many vociferous remarks by evolutionists. My guess is they fear:

    1. That students will stop believing in evolution if presented an alternative on equal footing.
    2. Religious people (as portrayed in fiction books, movies, and TV) want to force a specific creation story to be taught in school
    3. Maybe they fear that God might be real and are trying to convince themselves that he's not through their arguments

    I believe that each person will someday in his or her life be confronted by God and have the opportunity to make a decision as to whether they are going to believe or not. Those who don't want to believe will probably say they just couldn't make themselves believe. But I think, in the end, the truth will be clear when they stand before God.

    If you are truly a seeker, tell God "If you're real, then reveal yourself to me so I can believe" and see what happens.

    Best Wishes to All.

  711. The theory may well be wrong... by jimbro2k · · Score: 1
    Evolution is pretty much an obvious fact.
    The THEORY of evolution is Natural Selection: The theory that tries to explain the observed fact of evolution.

    And yes, even reputable scientists do not completely agree on natural selection. Other (natural) forces are also at work.
    Besides, just because a theory has problems, does not mean that it is false.
    It should be perfectly fine to discuss the problems with the theory of evolution (natural selection) without dragging in other, much more speculative explanations like Intelligent design.

    ID does not rise to the level of an alternative theory because it is not really testable - it is truly a speculation. Worse, even if true, it means that the universe is unpredictable, because if it is God who causes every sparrow to fall, and who keeps the planets in their orbits, and who decides the results of DNA combinations, then you can predict nothing, since He may change his mind at any time.
    So, if you want to live in a universe that is at least a little predictable and understandable, you must ignore ID, even if you believe it to be true! At least when you are trying to breed roses, racehorses or trying to design spacecraft.

    --
    There is not nearly enough love in the world, but there is far too much trust.
  712. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by jasonp1014 · · Score: 1


    According to Evolution the minute variations that happen every generation *are* random. True the ones that don't foster life drop off from DNA but according to Evolution the variations have no intelligent design or guide to them they're just a bunch random draws of the deck to see what works.

    Evolution as a theory to explain how species evolved might make sense but it doesn't explain the genesis of life itself.

    What it and those abiogenesis probability arguments don't get to at all is how did a bunch of inert stuff suddenly form into even the simplest of single cell living animals?

    What gave it the instinct to live? Consciousness?

    The jump to inert material to living organism is a quantum jump that can't be crossed by random incremental changes even for infinity.

    The completely athiestic scientific viewpoint is to just write this enormous discrepancy as just "coincidence", "random", "it just is".

    All those terms could just as well be described by "magic" or "divinity".

  713. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by Sigma+7 · · Score: 1
    I did watch the Matrix. However, it seems someone is mistaking fiction for reality. (Clue: it's not me!).


    Your original argument:
    If there is a Creator and a creation, that Creator MUST, by default, be more powerful and better than its creation.


    This is easily proven incorrect. For example, let's say that two "average" parents copulate and produce a pro-wrestler or some other extremely exceptional person...

    The problem with statements such as the one you presented is that it only takes one counter-example to prove it wrong. Even if the example doesn't prove anything, it can easily be combined with other known and established material.

    BTW, most science fiction authors take the opposite belief, where a "creator" (in most cases, a human) can create something that is suicidally dangerous. It may be something simple such as a group of super-soldiers that making a coup and taking control of the world government, but it could instead be a rogue Sentient Hyper-Optimized Data Access Network that creates a new super-virus to facilitate conquest of a planet.
  714. OT A winding discussion of religion by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

    me: Congrats on missing my fundamental point...I guess all that zeal got in your eyes....JUST FUCKING PLAIN OLD WRONG...It is bigoted (unless you're a Christian of course) to say that Christianity is 'ascendant', i.e., supreme to all other religions by nature...You thought it was cute to quip...

    you: Why so much venom? Yes, I'm a Christian, but I'm not blinded by zeal, stupid, or bigoted. It seems like you don't like Christians very much. Why? If this isn't the case, then what are your views on religion? Whatever they are, you seem to feel pretty strongly about them.

    First, I was raised a Christian. And for the most part, I like Christians very much (my wife is Christian). I understand that on some level prostletizing and "spreading the gospel" and presuming "my God is better than your god" is one of the demands of said faith (which I guess in some aspects is similar to Islam although Islam's God is your God).

    With that said, people consider me a secular humanist though in my life I have attended Unitarian churches and studied Buddhism. This is a long way to say that I don't get my spirituality from one book.

    I love Christianity to an extent -- a demand to help the poor, to turn the other cheek, to love thy neighbor. I can't recall if the Bible permits slavery, but regardless I'm not sure Christ would try to own another man. What I don't love is Christians who dress themselves in religiosity while at the same time acting against the word of their Lord. The problem is many Christians will cop out on me, "It's ok for me to not be humble or to act out aggression against others because Jesus will forgive my sins." To me, this is tantamount to claiming "I can have no faith at all, but claim Christianity because it's the one that takes merely a token gesture to appease my guilt." These soft-belied, fair-weather Christians are Christian by default but don't live by the Gospel. If American Christians lived by the Word, how could we act with wars of revenge? How could we let people die of starvation in our own, some might say Christian, country? How can we continue to be xenophobic?

    The usual argument to this is that "tsk tsk those aren't real Christians then," or "all faiths have bad guys." I hope this is not your rebuttal. Both of these are undisputed. I guess what saddens me is that unconditional forgiveness for sin provides no motivation beyond our already fallible moral compass. I apologize this feeling came across as venom. I hate dishonesty (well if I can 'hate' anything). These forms of 'white' hypocrisy sour me against the faithful. If one is to claim they are religious they must prove it in action, they are hollow Christians if they choose to act without regard and ask forgiveness later.

    E.g.: How can a divorcée be a Christian [having broken a vow they swore before God]?

    Finally, I don't see how [a minority of] Christians [in power] can want to have it both ways. If we were to live in a religious state by a set of laws determined to be Christian then wouldn't these fair-weather Christians be punished in droves? The adulterers... The blasphemers...

    Maybe this disconnect is why Christianity is so popular -- Christianity does not force right-living as an assurance of transcendence (I acknowledge that the other faiths from the region accept this as well to varying degrees, e.g., Allah, The Forgiver). Compare these demands to other faiths that have had more adherents over time where your actions are judged in light of karma, affect of ancestral disgrace, societal dissonance. (Aside: heh, these rely on personal responsibility as neo-cons call it). I always find it amusing to think, in the eyes of some Christians, how all those billions of Buddhists are now burning in hell because they lived for centuries before God's savior appeared. They were all sinners right, because of the Original Sin. Thankfully Islam rejects original sin and is therefore compatible with other right-living faiths (and hence the religious tolerance of

    --
    Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    1. Re:OT A winding discussion of religion by yetanothertechie · · Score: 1

      I appreciate your candor and your honesty.

      I suppose that's always been the biggest problem...people's inability to live up to the life required when one becomes a Christian. Of course, that's precisely the conundrum continually addressed throughout the Bible: we're saved by Jesus, because there's no way we can be righteous on our own.

      That being said, it does seem as though some people who call themselves (even consider themselves) Christian don't try very hard to "walk the walk". This saddens me a great deal.

      Even before I became truly committed to Christ, it was clear to me that accepting the faith would mean a monumental, fundamental, shift in my life. Simply put: if Christianity is true, then it must have a profound impact on your life. You can't continue to live as though nothing has changed. To be honest, I think this is one thing that held me back for a while - knowing that to truly commit myself to Christ meant a complete change in my outlook. Call me selfish.. ;-)

      In fact, a digression, if you will indulge me...

      My own spiritual journey has taken my whole life (to this point). I was raised Christian, but had serious questions about the reality of the whole thing. Christianity, God, what about other religions...the whole deal. I had to find out whatever I could on my own.

      I started with one supposition: I was sure that there was truth. Something was true...not necessarily one religion, or any religion, but something was true.

      I began serious research, reading many, many books, talking with experts, researching. I spent years doing so.

      Starting with the existence of God, to His nature, to His approach and plans, to His relationship to us, to our nature, and so on.

      I became convinced intellectually of the truth of Christianity. It put me in a bind. Being convinced, I could do nothing but accept it. Which, as I said before, would mean a complete shift in my life. Being stubborn and selfish, I was loathe to let go of the reins of my life, and give them to God. I was certainly aware of the "upside" so to speak, intellectually at least - eternal life and goodness, as a gift - but boy did I have a hard time letting go. Selfishness has always been a problem for me. Not in the sense of not giving to others, but in my own mind insisting that I was the "man"...I was the god of my life.

      Thank God he doesn't give up on stubborn people. Just last year I made the commitment and became "born again". (I don't particularly like that phrase because it carries the connotation of "right wing, wacko, fundamentalist zealot"). Anyway, I was baptized and in my own mind truly committed to Christ and gave him my life.

      Now that I've done so, I know not only intellectually but experientially the reality of what it means. My journey now continues as a committed Christian. Now I learn to live the way God wants me to live.

      To your point about people who call themselves Christian acting in un-Christian ways..it saddens me too. It's hard for me to hear and read about it. It hurts.

      I'm always wary of agendas and actions that are clothed in religion, particularly Christianity. It's critically important to live according to God's will, and not be misled.

      So what does that mean in my life? Simply that I pray for guidance, and do my best to live as Christ's follower. I think about his teaching, and I try to live it. I'm far from perfect, and I certainly don't take His forgiveness as a license to act in an un-Christian way or to sin.

      I love Jesus for what he's done for me, and everyone. I want to please him, and I want to do whatever I can to spread love and peace to others. There's so much pain and difficulty in the world. I want to help.

      Perhaps this is the same thing that animates most Christians. The difficulty then becomes how to put it into practice. It's so easy to slip back into "human" ways of thinking...being sure that you are right about so

      --
      Facts are stubborn things.
  715. DNA too complex is right. by TCQuad · · Score: 1

    Intelligent design is simply stating that certain things in life - like DNA - are simply too complex to have been formed by some amino acids randomly millions of years ago.

    You're probably right. To go from amino acids to DNA is highly improbable. The fact that the ribosome is a ribozyme (RNA enzyme) supports this observation as well.

    What is much more likely is that RNA (which can be catalytic) went to DNA (which is more stable due to the lack of the 2'-OH) and protein (which can be more varied) in some progression.

  716. Re:school boards, intelligent design, liability is by argan0n · · Score: 1

    Right, as opposed to Myths, i.e. Jehova.

    --
    argan0n
  717. Separation of church and state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Barring whether or not one theory is any better than another, the separation of church and state is not a law, and it is not something that can be sued over.

    The only reference to the separation of church and state comes from a letter that Thomas Jefferson wrote to the Danbury Baptist Association in 1802.

    The letter merely tries to imply that the national government should not "do anything that might be misconstrued as the establishment of religion" (http://www.usconstitution.net/jeffwall.html). The mere existence of a competing theory does not constitute "the establishment of religion", even if it was a law someplace.

    So, until more information becomes available to me, it seems inconceivable that anybody or any organization could have the grounds for suing a state-run school when it merely brings two competing theories to the table. The issue of competing theories is in a different post.

  718. Are they even competing theories? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Furthermore, the argument that the "Intelligent Design" theory needs to explain the origin of the Intelligent Designer applies also to the "creation by evolution" theory. There is no good theory at this time to explain the origin of the universe from the "creation by evolution" theory's perspective, either.

    Looking at the fundamentalist's explanation, it seems they have reconciled the existence of the Creator. What do the evolutionists believe is the origin of the universe? And the "Big Bang" doesn't cut it.

    There are several flaws in the Big Bang Theory, the first of which is that it is beyond the scope of current science. The creators and elaborators of the theory all begin with the premis that the universe is expanding. That is an experimental fact. The doppler shift measured from the expected radiant energy distribution of stars indicates that we and the stars are moving apart. And that happens for any star that you look at in any dirrection! Everything is moving away from us! So the universe is expanding... That means that at some time previously the universe was smaller. And still futher back the univers was even smaller. As you go back further and further into the so called Deep Time (before recorded history) all of the galaxies from every corner of the universe would have to be in one region. That requires a finite universe...not infinite. Our current understanding of quantum physics, chromodynamics, electrodynamics, etc... lends itself of a model of the this universe that is very hot and very dense. The region gets hotter and denser until...all physics become a singularity. That is, physics breaks down. It doesn't work. And there are those who say that this is because the Big Bang is an unknowable singularity event, but this happens before time=0. It is speculated that all of physics came to be (that is all the laws that govern nature and the universe) at the moment of inception. Before there was nothing, durring the singularity there was "?", and after the singularity there was physics.

    But the uncertainty concerning the time around the Big Bang is not the most significant downfall of the theory, for the avicate may say that we just haven't figured out the laws that govern the inception of the universe. And that string theory or a unified field theory may hold the answer. But consider this, if the universe was confined to a single region and the laws of physics holds... then the universe must have had some angular momentum. There are wonderful spiral galaxies and solarsystems all of which are spinning. Physics says that angular momentum must be conserved, so the total angular momentum today must be the same as the total angular momentum of billions of years ago. (there's no friction in space) The universe was small and spinning apparently, but as it grew it began to "fling" particles (galaxies), and because physics was around back then all the galaxies also had some spin to them. In fact they all spun exactly the same dirrection. That's not what we see though, there are galaxies spinning clockwise and cournterclockwise and even at a right angle to the spin of the others. It's crazy. The current theories of cosmology leave a lot to be desired. There is no way to validate the predictions of these theories, so they are all simply conjecture. There is no science in them, but only pseudoscience - the same pseudoscience that is labelled onto the "Intelligent Design" theory. And it is clear that if I can cast doubt on them, then their kung fu is not strong. This is not by any means a complete list of the theory's shortcomings, but I don't want to write you a book right now. Maybe later...

  719. Re:The deal with these fundamentalists by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

    You really are proving my point. An otherwise intelligent person who will swallow the most outlandish claims and entertain the most unlikely possibilities, all because it's got the word GOD attached to it.

    Where did the universe come from? I don't know. There are a great many scientists actively trying to answer that question, but strangely, very few are willing to say "God did it" and leave it at that. The only people claiming to understand the universe are the ones who answer every question that requires effort with "It was god".

    Oh, but you want a Prime Mover, some sort of underlying force that drives the universe? Ok, explain to me why it needs to have intelligence. Explain to me why it would give a flying fuck about me and what I think. Explain to me why it would be qualitatively any different from any of the other forces we recognize today. Gravity is a underlying force that wields great power in the universe, appears to be present everywhere, has no limits to its reach, performs a valuable service in keeping us alive (keeps the sun lit up, keeps the earth intact, keeps us and the atmosphere on the ground), was the first force to become recognizable as such in the very early universe, and is wholly unknown in terms of why it works. Shouldn't I worship gravity? It's got a helluva lot more going for it than anything you've offered.

    Anyways, all of this is irrelevant to the topic at hand, Evolution, which has been shown more than a few times not to need members of the Q Continuum to come along and spice things up.

    Now, please get this through your thick skull. I do not have faith. I do not believe in fairies, goblins, fire-breathing dragons named Pete, or any of the _thousands_ of deities guys like you have dreamed up over the past few millenia. I am as certain that this god character does not exist as you are that Santa Claus does not exist. But what am I talking about? You actually *do* believe that there's a magical being at the top of the world that watches everything you do, manages to be in many places at once, rewards good people and punishes bad ones, and keeps a small army of similarly magical creatures as helpers, even though there's a far more likely, rational, mundane, and above all, accurate explanation for how those presents got there. You want to play games with "Well, maybe it could happen", you go right ahead. You never know, maybe I *could* actually own a bridge in New York! But stop acting as if you have any sort of empirical or scientific basis for your beliefs. You believe in god because you want to, not because there's any reason to.

    --
    Dyolf Knip
  720. Here's the difficulty by anomaly · · Score: 1

    First I want to assure you that we are in total agreement with respect to the nature of science.

    I'm not sure how I can more clearly explain that the whole study of origins is non-scientific in nature. As such, it seems to me that it does not belong in science classes. Do we agree on that point?

    You keep restating this but have not submitted any further argument for why it is so.

    When 'people of faith' express convictions about what conclusions should be drawn from certain facts, many times they are belittled by scientists because there is a presumption that natural causes are the ONLY viable explanation for the facts. It's the interpretation that is troublesome, and this type of interpretation is prevalent in so-called scientific information.

    As an example, I recently watched a program on TV called 'the search for the ultimate survivor' - supposedly a tale about the path that mankind followed to make it until today. Again and again, information was presented as absolute fact - even when the producers themselves admitted in the program that the data supporting those conclusions was minimal. At the head end of the program, they acknowledged that all human fossils found everywhere would not even fill the back of a pickup truck. During the program they told numerous cgi-enhanced fanciful tales about the lives and cultures of peoples - in one case I think it was something like parts of 8 skeletons were found, and they went on and on about the culture and types of creatures that evolved from this or that line of hominids. They did not let their lack of concrete data prevent them from speculating about what, how, and WHY!

    I have seen this type of rampant speculation in Imax movies, on public television, in books and movies, in textbooks ad nauseum. The fact that these things are presented as fact is what is troublesome to me.

    You are right when you say that science is not about absolutes. It is about unfalsified hypotheses. What is ultimately frustrating to me is that these productions and documents fail to acknowledge this fact. In our culture, science is often presented as the arbiter of truth, when in point of fact, it can only deal with the physical world. It can establish facts about material conditions, but cannot legitimately extrapolate the cause of those facts. When so-called scientists move from describing the material world to defining the meaning around the facts, they are injecting philosophy into science - and that is in my mind a corruption of science. On what basis can one say that an atheistic explanation is superior? What if theism is true?

    I doubt either one of us will convert the other, that's not really my plan though.

    My goal is not specifically to convert you, although I do believe that my world view is true, and that you would benefit from becoming a follower of Jesus Christ.

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Here's the difficulty by Hast · · Score: 1
      I'm not sure how I can more clearly explain that the whole study of origins is non-scientific in nature. As such, it seems to me that it does not belong in science classes. Do we agree on that point?

      No, we do not agree on that point.

      I have tried to make my arguments on the matter clear but you haven't really addressed them with anything but repeating that "science only deals with materialism and is therefore flawed".

      If you deal with things like beginning of the Universe then things get hairier. Typically these hypothesises are based on mathmatics and physics. In order to test it you do things like try to use the hypothesis about the beginning of the Universe to make predictions that would still be valid. You then try to verify if these predictions are true.

      Naturally this doesn't prove that the original hypothesis must be true. But if there is no other way to explain the predictions then it is used.

      Intelligent Design and similiar ideas make no predictions. As such they are useless to science as they can not be tested and you can't use them for anything but as a good bedtime story.

      As an example, I recently watched a program on TV called 'the search for the ultimate survivor' - supposedly a tale about the path that mankind followed to make it until today.

      Well most stuff on TV is sensationalistic crap. That's hardly the fault of science. ;-) And many people have problems understanding fundamental aspects of science, such as that it doesn't claim to be THE TRUTH, but mearly the best available explaination.

      In our culture, science is often presented as the arbiter of truth, when in point of fact, it can only deal with the physical world.

      Not quite. It can only deal with things that are testable and thus possible to prove. That's not necessarily the same thing as as only the physical world. As I have pointed out before, if non-physical phenomena can be proven then they will be added.

      My goal is not specifically to convert you, although I do believe that my world view is true, and that you would benefit from becoming a follower of Jesus Christ.

      Thanks but no thanks. I have already spent a lot of time with Christians (during an exchange year to the US) and while I like them and all that it doesn't make me want to become one.

      In fact, since I have the benefit of an education in religions (which is mandatory in Sweden) if I did become religious it would probably not be as a Christian. On an aside here I could note that I believe that the US school system would benefit greatly from being taugh religion in school. Just not in science class and all major religions should be covered.
    2. Re:Here's the difficulty by anomaly · · Score: 1

      science only deals with materialism and is therefore flawed

      I did not say that. My position is that science is constrained by the scientific method. It can posit, test, examine, and conclude the "what" but not whether there is ultimate meaning, or what that meaning might be, if it exists. It is unable to verify or reject the untestable.

      You then try to verify if these predictions are true

      How? How can you verify a theory about the origins of the universe without either observing or creating a universe?

      On an aside here I could note that I believe that the US school system would benefit greatly from being taugh religion in school. Just not in science class and all major religions should be covered.

      I agree. Our society is definitely deficient in well-rounded education. I think that an overview of each major world religion's beliefs should be taught so that we are more culturally aware.

      It can only deal with things that are testable and thus possible to prove. That's not necessarily the same thing as as only the physical world.

      Agreed. I was careless in my terminology.

      it doesn't claim to be THE TRUTH, but mearly the best available explaination.

      In terms of definition, you are correct. In terms of societal behavior, I disagree. People believe that science is the arbiter of truth. Some scientists errantly believe that, too. "A new study released today shows that..." why does this make news? Because it's sensational, but also because it's the only thing that is accepted as Truth. For example, if I said "The Bible says..." What's your response?

      it doesn't make me want to become one

      Fair enough. I'm not a hunter/gatherer looking to club people over the head with Faith. I'm curious, though. What if Christianity is true? Would you want to know? Would you consider changing your mind about wanting to follow Christ?

      Respectfully,
      Anomaly

      --
      But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    3. Re:Here's the difficulty by Hast · · Score: 1

      science only deals with materialism and is therefore flawed

      I did not say that. My position is that science is constrained by the scientific method. It can posit, test, examine, and conclude the "what" but not whether there is ultimate meaning, or what that meaning might be, if it exists. It is unable to verify or reject the untestable.

      "That's not a bug, that's a feature."

      If you could do all that you want science would lose a lot of it's usefulness as it would no longer serve as a basis of "things we know are pretty likely true". There are already other types of academia which fulfill your likings, such as philosophy. And keep in mind that science branched from philosophy because they (the scientists) wanted a more solid base to base future reasoning on.

      You then try to verify if these predictions are true

      How? How can you verify a theory about the origins of the universe without either observing or creating a universe?

      If you make a hypothesis about the creation of the universe that will have consequences that are still valid. One of those are the existence of the universe of course. This means we can make predictions about things that we can test today and test those.

      But really most of the ideas about the creation of the universe are on a more mathematical nature and we can't test them yet. It is still typically ideas that are extrapolated from our current knowledge of physics. There are some that are just wide speculation and more of the nature of philosophy than science.

      it doesn't claim to be THE TRUTH, but mearly the best available explaination.

      In terms of definition, you are correct. In terms of societal behavior, I disagree. People believe that science is the arbiter of truth. Some scientists errantly believe that, too. "A new study released today shows that..." why does this make news? Because it's sensational, but also because it's the only thing that is accepted as Truth.

      The thing is that science really is the arbiter of truth in that it is a system designed to reject non-truths. If we have a hughe pile of ideas we can use science to remove those that we can show are false. This doesn't mean that those remaining must be completely true, but it does mean that we can't really tell that they are false neither. And remember that with science you don't get to add an idea to the pile unless you ensure that it is possible to test the idea first. (Ie adding "There is an invisible pink dragon in my garage." is not allowed.)

      Furthermore, keep in mind that if there is a study showing something then this means someone has at least made an effort to test it. These days many studies involve statistics though, and as such it's easy to get fooled by them. (Statistics is hard, and even knowledgeable people can be fooled by it.) BTW I'd say that media by large are completely clueless about science. They are OTOH clueless about most things so you should watch TV with care.

      For example, if I said "The Bible says..." What's your response?

      Most likely something along the line of "That's nice, what's your point?" If you start pressing the point of using the Bible as a source of knowledge I'll probably move on to comment on how the Bible condone rape, murder and a lot of other really bad stuff.

      it doesn't make me want to become one

      I'm curious, though. What if Christianity is true? Would you want to know? Would you consider changing your mind about wanting to follow Christ?

      If Christianity (or any other religion) is proven true then it would no longer be a faith. From my experience with "Good Christians" I follow a lifestyle that is pretty much that of a follower of Christ. The main differences being that I don't pray or go to church. It would seem like a sensible God would be mainly interested in that you are kind and helpful of others.

      So currently I say I follow a moral and ethical code and try to be helpful and kind to other humans and mindful of their problems. Changing that to "following Christ" isn't that much of a change.
  721. Re:The deal with these fundamentalists by TufelKinder · · Score: 1

    An otherwise intelligent person who will swallow the most outlandish claims and entertain the most unlikely possibilities, all because it's got the word GOD attached to it.

    And many otherwise intelligent people will reject any possibility if it has the word "God" attached to it.

    I'm willing to acknowledge that there is some foundation for your beliefs because I've studied the opposing viewpoint. Your refusal to offer the same consideration is evidence that you have no idea whether or not I have empirical or scientific basis on my side because you would never consider studying or reading anything that argued against what you already take on faith.

    You and I will seek to prove with the same evidence what we already believe. The difference is that I'm honest about it and am happy to inspect and consider new evidence, while you are unwilling to acknowledge anything that disagrees with your point of view as evidence at all.

    What's wrong with giving students an opportunity to consider all the evidence and making an informed decision? Why the obsession with excluding facts from the discussion just because they don't agree with your conclusions?

    --
    If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. -- George Orwell
  722. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 1

    If your software evolution can't reach an arbitrary level of complexity

    It's going to be limited by the resources I throw at it, and by how long I run it, and the complexity of the target enviornment. You might as well say that gravity cannot explain the orbits of the planets because I can only produce a small amount of gravity in a laboratory. If you thrown more mass at it and you get more gravity. When you've got an entire planet to work with - either for evolution or for gravity - you are going to get bigger results. Especially over multi-million or multi-billion year timescales.

    The piont is that it proves that the process of evolution actually works. That it can CREATE INFORMATION and create structure and create complexity. Most of those who attack evolution go on and on about how mutation is random and destroys information, how they think it cannot create information. But it can and it does - through the selection and reproduction process.

    It also provides an excellent laboratory to study all sorts of other effects and mechanisms of the evolution process, and to make predictions about the biological world. The ability to study things like punctuated equilibrium. That "steady state" where nothing appears to be happening - it is actually a time of growing diversity - a time of accumulating an entire library of nonfatal mutations. A huge resource of information. And then when there is a disruption in the envirnment, or when there is a "breakthrough" mutation or a breakthrough pairing of mutations giving a signifigant advantage, then that library is searched. The signifigant change or pairing of mutations is randomly mixed with those other mutations over the next several generations. A search for even better combinations, and a search for ways to FIX any downsides to the original mutation. Many new mutations - such as a new toxin or a new bone structure - they may have benefits but are random and ill formed or ill supported. They may even be a net harm. Evolution often taks a step backwards and produces a crippled individual before it can move forward in a new direction. The library of non-fatal mutations ts searched for fixes and support structures. A some other useless (but harmless) mutation may suddenly be quite valuable in light of the new signifigant development. A period of rapid change. Plus the the population itself is a substantion part of any individual's enviornment - a rapid change in the population means that the individuals are living in a changed environment and subjected to different selection pressures. This further increases the temporary rate of change.

    And when that happens a few better more sucessfull individuals may displace the entire previous population, or seperate from the original population. The effect is that The new indivuduals and the new population are fairly closely related, decendants of the same few individuals with the signifigant mutations. The new population has not most of the original diversity. This new population spends some time shuffling the available mutations to optimize to the new change, but mostly stabilizes to build up diversity again.

    Whether you watch it on a computer screen, or in the fossile record you see much the same thing. Extended periods of stability or gradual adaption in some direction, and random bursts of disruption that can split or radically alter a population.

    You can see how complex adaptions can be created by first stepping backwards through a crippled individual, allowing constructs that would be difficult reach through pure "improvement" steps.

    You can see how most "breakthough" changes and improvments are not the result of some super-duper-mutation, but most often the result of the mixing and matching of useless and mostly harmless mutations. Stumbling across a pairing or triplet of useless mutations that combines to some signifigant effect.

    It is truely amazing watching how evolution produces self-organising information out of chaos. It's kinda like how the chaos of

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  723. Nearly 3000 replies in 36 hours WOW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only n-1 to go.

  724. Re:school boards, intelligent design, liability is by Physician · · Score: 0

    If you knew the number of people that I do who have encountered angels (both good and bad), sometimes in life saving situations, you might not be so quick to stick with believing only what you can see.

    --
    Does God treat us as servants or friends? Check my homepage.
  725. "Write this down, Aaron..." by DoctorFrog · · Score: 1

    "The Universe was created 14 billion years ago, and for the first..."

    I put down my scroll. "Moses? 14 billlion years?"

    He nodded. "Absolutely. I'm inspired." His eyes flamed with certainty.

    Well, you can't argue with my brother's inspirations, not when he's on a roll like that. "Go on, then, but let's move it along."

    "Okay, so about four and a half billion years ago the Sun, Moon, Earth and planets were formed. Life started about two billion years later, with the formation of..."

    Well, there's a limit. "Look, Mose, we've got a mostly illiterate audience - we're going to have to read this out loud to most of them. Can't we edit this a bit? Just hit the high points."

    He pouted a bit, but nodded. "Okay. Let's see... Okay. In a steamy African valley, some ten million years ago... What? I can't trim it much more than that, Aaron!"

    "Please. Moses, bubbe, please! We've got six blank scrolls and two flasks of ink. Sacrifice a little accuracy, trim the backstory to a week or so, and let's get into the boy-meets-girl part. There is a girl, right?"

  726. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by ezeri · · Score: 1

    Evolution has made MANY predictions, and every single time it has passed with flying colors.

    Thats some crazy world you live in, either that our you realy are here with us and you just need to go back and check your facts, go ahead, ask the nearest biologist for some examples of failed evolutionary predictions.

    Sure we're still working out a few details of the tree, but the overall structure is extremely distinct.

    If by a few small details you mean enormous holes that seem to be more prevelant than the connections, the ok, I'll give you that.

    Evolution predicts that mutation and heredity and selection in a population is sufficient to CREATE INFORMATION and produce great complexity and optimisation.

    Your inventing realities here if you think this one has come to pass, the creation of information has never been observed, only the oposite. Your example is more an argument for ID than evolution.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
  727. Heinlein by DoctorFrog · · Score: 1
    Or possibly someone's been reading "Life-Line" by Robert Heinlein, published in 1939 and still in print in various collections, including at least one published this year. IOW, among the most famous and seminal short stories in the genre, one any serious reader of SF is pretty likely to know about.

    Now, who in the hell is Donnie Darko?

    (Rhetorical question, I can Google...)

    1. Re:Heinlein by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Or possibly someone's been reading "Life-Line" by Robert Heinlein, published in 1939 and still in print in various collections, including at least one published this year. IOW, among the most famous and seminal short stories in the genre, one any serious reader of SF is pretty likely to know about.

      Wow, why am I suddenly reminded of Comic-Book guy...

    2. Re:Heinlein by DoctorFrog · · Score: 1
      It's a fair cop. :)

      Of course, Comic-Book Guy probably would have known who Donnie Darko was! ;)

  728. Since it's not to test people's faith... by epee1221 · · Score: 1

    ...then why are the fossils there?

    --
    "The use-mention distinction" is not "enforced here."
  729. Re:He set us up the bom...er... Fruit of Knowledge by ckaminski · · Score: 1

    That is one of the more interesting takes on the whole thing I've read to date. Thanks.

  730. Separation of Church And State by Jammin_redhead_ed · · Score: 1

    The number one problem I have with the "separation of church and state" argument is the failure to recognize the idea of evolution as a religion itself. Most fundamentalists would think it to be atheistic and that such beliefs in evolution can be viewed as a religion itself. Religion, simply put, is a system of beliefs with "boot-and-carrot" features such that people are directed to do one thing or another in order to avoid the "boot" and acquire the "carrot." The system of belief promoted in schools is evolution. How it is anything other than a belief is difficult to comprehend in that there does not appear to be correlations strong enough to point to evolution as a fact. It hardly seems to be anything more than an untested hypothesis because it is not something that can be tested. The scientific method is defined in Merriam-Webster as " principles and procedures for the systematic pursuit of knowledge involving the recognition and formulation of a problem, the collection of data through observation and experiment, and the formulation and testing of hypotheses." The boot: Believe in something other than evolution can lead to people being considered to be stupid, unknowledgeable and simpletons" The carrot: Acceptance by the more powerful groups in the scientific community. -entry cut short due to time constraints-

    --
    See pics of me at http://photos.yahoo.com/chiromyu and get to know me at http://www.livejournal.com/users/sweet__kitty
  731. Dear Eric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    It's interesting that you should mention Passover as an example of God's love. Passover is a celebration of the day Jehovah killed, and presumably sentenced to Hell, all the non-Israelite firstborn in Egypt.

    I think the hostility you sense is because there are many of us who find it chilling to hear mass murder described as "perfect love". It's not god we're afraid of, it's people like you. Sorry to be so blunt, but it's true.

  732. Thats why I left Chritianity by gilby · · Score: 1

    I have seen many of these things that Christian have vastly different views than other Christians. I also didn't really buy into the stories told to me in Sunday School, so I was a little protected from the belief system.

    Thats not to say that I don't view Jesus as a good historical figure, I do, but in the same way I view Budda, Muhammad, Confucius, Martin Luther King Jr., and Ghandi.

    That said, I am planning on becoming a Buddist, but just because he created a simple, good, moral framework, and Buddism supports education and the dispersment of knowledge.

  733. Odd, that, because... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...it's precisely what Wickramasinghe & co did in codifying panspermia - in an attempt to avoid the intelligent design implied in abiogenesis.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  734. I call bullshit by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    From the article:
    Mary: "It still has places where there are no secondary minerals, and it's not any more dense than modern bone; it's bone more than anything."
    Translation: it's not fossilised at any level.

    Dr Matthew Collins: "My suspicion is this process has led to the reaction of more resistant molecules with the normal proteins and carbohydrates which make up these cellular structures, and replaced them, so that we have a very tough, resistant, very lipid-rich material - a polymer that would be very difficult to break down and characterise, but which has preserved the structure," Translation: this can't be what it obviously is, so I'll speculate wildly in the hope of looking knowledgeable and Orthodox.

    Don't be sad, you're the first person on any forum anywhere who has even tried to answer that one.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:I call bullshit by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Are you a chemist? A geologist?

      "It still has places where there are no secondary minerals."

      Translation: some parts of this one sample appear to have gone through some weird polymerization, rather than what we consider to be normal fossilization. If you honestly think this refutes the entire body of evidence for evolution, and indicates instead that only Intelligent Design could explain this one rotting carcas, since (in your belief) it must have happened within a very short duration of time - then I say you're entirely too eager to throw out the baby with the bathwater.

      "My suspicion is this process has led to the reaction of more resistant molecules with the normal proteins and carbohydrates which make up these cellular structures, and replaced them, so that we have a very tough, resistant, very lipid-rich material - a polymer that would be very difficult to break down and characterise, but which has preserved the structure."

      Translation: He's an honest scientist, because he prefaced that entire thing with, "My suspicion is," and by the way, he's a freaking expert in this field so his suspicion is worth more than your strong conviction, and you haven't explained why his suspicion is implausible you just refute it out of hand and accuse him of being arrogant and dishonest.

      So, tell me, Mr. Genius - what's wrong with his conjecture. Be specific. Tell me exactly what's wrong with his suspicion that this process has led to the reaction of more resistant molecules with the normal proteins and carbohydrates which make up these cellular structures, and replaced them, so that we have a very tough, resistant, very lipid-rich material - a polymer that would be very difficult to break down and characterise, but which has preserved the structure.

      But don't forget, this weird process has only occured in places in this sample - not the entire sample. The rest of the sample has apparently fossilized just like we would expect it to.

      So, the burden of proof is on you - by what process did the majority of this supposedly fresh carcas fossilize instantly?

      I bet you have an answer, but you'll just be speculating wildly in the hope of looking knowledgeable and rebelious.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
  735. That's better, but still not quite right by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Rings don't have ends.

    Ring species offer a continuous series of variations leading back to the starting point. Think of a genetic Mobius strip. Species from opposite points on the ring typically won't (not necessarily "can't") interbreed.

    That shows differentiation, the filtering and selection (reduction) of available information, but speaks not at all to the generation of the novel, useful traits (increase of information) required by evolution.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:That's better, but still not quite right by clonan · · Score: 1

      Also, we have not been discussing the actual genetic differences between the different sections of the ring.

      Using the Californian salamander as an example, there most deffinetly IS novel genetic information created.

      On the western branch the most southern species has genetic information that does not exist in any other sub-species of the ring. The only way this could happen is if the information was created as the species "evolved".

      Your theory only has merit if the progentior species are more complex than the decendants....which they aren't.

  736. Whoops, you missed by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Isotope ratios are observations. The dates derived from them are not observations. You can tell me exactly what the decay rate is now, but you can't tell me with certainty either what it was in the past nor what the starting conditions were. Either lack makes the derivations useless for dating.

    Evolution is based on a huge series of non-observations.

    At the risk of confusing you yet again, we could list some direct, physical non-observations like transitional fossils, but the whole point is that your "certainties" are extrapolations to unknown starting points through uncharted waters.

    The original calibration for ancient radio-isotope dating was the geological column and its index fossils. The original geological column was pulled out of someone's ass, assigned arbitrary dates based on imagination and then modified based on field data to be less embarrassing. Meanwhile, the ranges of most index fossils (e.g. ammonites) have been extended and extended, often to uselessness.

    The "age" assigned to Mary Schweitzer's fresh T Rex bone inside fossilised thigh bones was 68 million years. Fresh bone. After billions of days at (more or less) room temperature? Here, pull this one, it plays Jingle Bells.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Whoops, you missed by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Radioisotope ages are calibrated by laboratory measurement of half-lives. Yes, nuclear physics could have drastically changed over time, but the mechanisms that caused this would have had serious effects on things like nuclear fusion, and when we look at distant stars, and the composition of interstellar gas, old things look much like current things.

      The original estimates of geological ages was based on assumptions about the rate of deposition in sedimentary rocks, based on estimates of deposition rates today. There are obviously large uncertainties, but this is hardly "arbitrary".

      There is nothing about the T. Rex bone that is "fresh." "Not rock" != "fresh off the butcher block".

    2. Re:Whoops, you missed by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
      Yes, nuclear physics could have drastically changed over time
      Or the starting conditions could be way different than have been so far surmised, or there could be any number of ways of dicking with nuclear physics that we know nothing about. Flood of an otherwise insignificant particle? Shrug. Point is, nobody was there with a video camera, all that we have today is assumptions.

      This is illustrated by the totally wild dates which often result when rocks of a known age (as in, someone was there) age are dated. The isotopic clocks should read roughly zero, and don't. This demonstrates quite simply and clearly that radioisotope dating doesn't work for the null case, so why would you rely on it for more complicated cases? She's a no make a sense.
      There is nothing about the T. Rex bone that is "fresh." "Not rock" != "fresh off the butcher block".
      "Stretchy" and "squishy" is a heck of a lot fresher than it ought to be. The ability to squeeze fluid out of some of the tubes involved is a whole lot different from merely "not quite rock yet". Even gas diffusion effects would have dried that up or effectively fossilised it long ago, if it was indeed from 68Ma ago.
      --
      Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  737. In response by anomaly · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let us be clear. My religious beliefs are not science. I never have claimed that they are.

    I believe that you are mistaken when you say that the tests I apply to my faith cannot be proven false. What if archeological evidence directly contradicted what is recorded in the Bible? What if the Bible was directly contradictory about substantive points of teaching?

    (Some may be quick to suggest that'the Bible is full of contradictions' but that is an uninformed position. Those supposed contradictions are apparent contradictions, and further study shows them to make sense in context.)

    If you discard the written accounts of Christ as unreliable, you must disregard those about EVERY other figure of antiquity. There are orders of magnitude better evidence for the Bible than any other work of antiquity. Do you believe in George Washington? Why would you suggest that the accounts about his existence are more reliable than those about Christ?

    there has never been a global flood that covered the whole Earth in water
    From a logical perspective, in order for you to say authoritatively that there 'has never been' something, you must have all knowledge about that thing simultanously. What records from the beginning of the earth are you using to assert that point? Also, let me ask you this. What causes fossil formation? Is it not a process where recently deceased creatures are covered with dirt/mud? Is it possible that the fossil record available in the cambrian explosion is a result of a generalized event which a) destroyed a large number of creatures, and b) covered them with watery mud?

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:In response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are ways other than mere age that texts can be "unreliable."

      In particular, scripture is used as a tool to convince people to believe in religious doctrine. Thus, there is a motivation to alter it in ways that make it more convincing.

      Most texts about George Washington aren't trying to convince you that he rose from the dead to save all mankind. Any contemporary evidence pointing *against* Christian doctrine, on the other hand, would have been eliminated, in particular through the process of determining "canonical" works.

      That bias is why non-believers don't particularly take scriptural evidence seriously. If the Koran contradicts Christian scriptures, which are *you* going to believe? Remember the Koran is newer.

  738. Obvious Fact???? by getting+by · · Score: 2

    "Evolution is pretty much an obvious fact"

    One (of many) problems with evolution that continues to worsen is that it remains incapable of explaining how anything could evolve that doesn't make biological sense when incomplete.

    The wings of birds are the classic example: what good is half of one? Other examples abound. This is a problem that evolutionary theory has promised a solution to for a long time and not delivered. Worse even than visible examples like wings are the complex chemical reactions and molecular structures that living things are made of.

    This is the principal point of Darwin's Black Box (these micro-processes are the black boxes), a book too technical to be satisfying reading for the layman but that convincingly argues that many of these micro-processes make sense either complete or not at all.

    There are no plausible accounts of how they could have evolved from other simpler processes because as one hypothesizes back down the hypothetical chain of complexity, one comes to a point at which the process simply won't work if it gets any simpler. At this stage, the process couldn't have evolved from anything else because there is nothing simpler for it to have evolved from. And at this stage, the process is still far too complex to have been thrown together by any known non-living chemical event. At one time, knowledge of the complex processes of living things was limited enough, and hopes for the discovery of intermediate processes that they could have evolved from wide-open enough, that evolutionists could ignore this problem. But as biological research has progressed, this gap too has been filled with more and more inconvenient facts.

    As in the case of the other problems challenging evolution, the key thing here is the intellectual direction: research is consistently making the problem worse, not better.

    1. Re:Obvious Fact???? by sickofthisshit · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is a classic strawman. Incomplete wings allow some amount of inefficient gliding, like flying squirrels. Better wings allow for soaring and powered flight. This is also how you get gradual development of the eye.

      The other mechanism is changed purpose. Bones that used to be part of the jaw get adapted for hearing. Feathers that are useful for insulation become adapted to flight.

      The problem for ID is why ostriches still have wings that *are* useless. How intelligent is that?

      The fact that ID proponents keep trotting out these strawman arguments simply reinforces the impression that ID is about being willfully unconvinced by evolution, rather than having a truly more compelling idea of their own.

    2. Re:Obvious Fact???? by getting+by · · Score: 1

      Typical for your ranting. Ostriches don't have just one bone, nerve ending, muscle, ect.... on one side... the willful thinking is on your inability to look at this subject with some common sense.

      There has recently emerged a major trend in biology that has been suppressed in the mainstream media: evolution is in trouble. More importantly, this has absolutely nothing to do with religion but is due to the fact that the ongoing growth of biological knowledge keeps producing facts that contradict rather than confirm evolution.

      Open the possibilities and try reading a couple of books - These two books - Michael Denton's Evolution: A Theory in Crisis and Michael J. Behe's Darwin's Black Box - describe this phenomenon.

      In order to be convinced one needs to have the facts which you do not seam to be able to obtain other than from the media and HS science class. Try digging in for your self and not relying on others to tell you what is true and not.

      This discussion is not about religion...it is about evolution and can it stand on it's own...no it can't.....

    3. Re:Obvious Fact???? by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      The ostrich has complete, non-functional wings, because it is DESCENDED FROM flighted birds that had complete, functional wings, but EVOLVED to be large enough that the wings were no longer useful for flight, and therefore BECAME non-functional.

      That is, admittedly, a theory, but what is your alternative?

      Everyone can see the ostrich has wings, and are clearly birds, but can't fly. Evolution explains this sensibly. ID does not offer any explanation at all, except "God had a weird sense of humor or inscrutable plan". Yet, because we don't have crystal clear evidence preserved from events which happened tens of millions of years ago, we are supposed to "worry" that evolution can't explain birds' wings.

      Pardon me if I don't share your concern.

    4. Re:Obvious Fact???? by getting+by · · Score: 1

      No pardon needed...everyone has their thoughts on this type of issue. You seam to miss the point again...

      The point is that evolution is JUST a theory and is full of big big holes. These holes are not taught as such and evolution is presented over and over as fact...your words "Obvious Fact".

      Funny how going through all these strings, very few have acknowledge this. I am very comfortable with individuals stating that they do not know or have been hearing or taught this or that...but to straight out take on the media hipe and get sucked in like this is just plain lazyness on individuals parts.

      We all know this happens with the media and with science issues all the time, but why do people take on such a passion for something they have not investiaged on their own?

      Another Concern of Evolution:

      The quantity, quality, and range of the recovered fossils is impeccable. But the more that is dug, the more there are findings of the same forms over and over again, never the intermediates.

      This problem is that the fossil record increasingly does not, honestly viewed, support evolution, a fact that famous Prof. Steven Jay Gould of Harvard has described as "the trade secret of paleontology." Evolutionary theory claims that there once existed a whole series of successive forms of the various organisms alive today. These supposedly changed by infinitesimal amounts with each generation as they evolved into the present varieties, so the fossil record should show these gradual changes. But it doesn't. Instead, it shows the sudden emergence of new species out of nowhere, fully complete with all their characteristics and not changing over time. It is almost entirely devoid of forms that can plausibly be identified as intermediates between older and newer ones. This is popularly known as the "missing link" problem, and it is massively systematic across different species and time periods. Worse, this problem is getting worse, not better, as more fossils are discovered, as the new fossils just resemble those already found and don't fill in the gaps. In Darwin's day, it was easy to claim that the fossils were there but had not been discovered. Problem is, we now have hundreds of thousands of well-catalogued fossils, from all continents and geologic eras, and we still haven't found these intermediate forms.

    5. Re:Obvious Fact???? by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      I did not use the words "Obvious Fact"

      Jimbro2k did, you stupid fuck.

      Stephen Jay Gould (spell his name right) wrote multiple books, including his magnum opus, supporting evolution. Your arbitrary definition of "intermediate forms" is yet another classic strawman.

  739. Much, much evidence against evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've done a lot of research on ID/evolution, and here are some points i'd like to make. Note: when I started reading this thread, there were 3000+ posts already; I could only skim it. So please bear with me if I'm repeating anything.

    I'm getting much of this information from In the Beginning, an excellent book about Creation Science. It lists 135+ evidences against evolution, and introduces Hydroplate Theory, a theory that attempts to explain the Flood and just about ANY geological feature you can think of, and many you can't.

    First, some points I picked up on the thread:

    1. Where did the fossils come from?
    The fossils were laid down during the flood. An interesting experement was done once in which they took some dead animals of various different types (reptile, amphibian, bird, mammal, etc) and placed them in a tank of water. As they sunk, the "lower" animals were the first to sink, followed by the "higher" animals (e.g. Sorted by amphibian, reptile, mammal, bird, etc.). This information came from the book but can't seem to find it. If I can find it, I will post the web address.

    2. Macroevolution/Microevolution
    It is a established fact that life forms adapt to their enviroment; if they did not, they would go extinct. But this does not mean they can turn into an entirely different species; there are limits to how far a life form can change. This is why you do not see, e.g. horses breed down to the size of weiner dogs. Book references: http://www.creationscience.com/onlinebook/LifeScie nces2.html, http://www.creationscience.com/onlinebook/LifeScie nces6.html,

    Now some points of my own:

    1. Problems with the fossil record
    Despite the thousands and thousands and thousands of fossils found, NOT A SINGLE TRANSITION FOSSIL has been found. All "early man" fossils have been shown to be either a hoax (Piltdown Man), Modern man (Neaderthal), primate/ape (Lucy,or not even close to human! (Nebraska Man). Fossilized human footprints have been found right next to dinosaur footprints!
    References:
    23. Fossil Gaps
    Notes for above. This is especially interesting, as it is evolutionists saying most of this.
    24. Missing Trunk
    25. Out-of-Place Fossils
    26. Ape-Men?


    2. Bacterial Flaggela
    Flaggela are an amazing machine bacteria use them to move around. They can spin up to 100,000+ RPM, stop on a dime, and rev back up in the other direction in a fraction of a second.
    Bacterial flaggela are made up of 40+ distinct parts, most or all of which must be present for it to operate. There is no way such a thing could evolve, as the other parts are useless without the others.
    Some have said that it evolved from a pump that shares similar parts. But it only shares about 10 parts with it. Where did the other 30 come from? And where did the pump come from?

    3. Origin of life
    Life is so complex, that to create even a single self-replicating RNA sequence or a protein, is so unlikely as to basicaly be impossible. References:
    28. Chemical Elements of Lif

    1. Re:Much, much evidence against evolution by AveryT · · Score: 1

      Interesting how your "research" consists almost exclusively of links to one website.

      It is amusing how these creationist wackos totally misunderstand the scientific method. They point to unanswered questions as evidence that the theory of evolution is flawed. They don't get that science is not about knowing all the answers, it is about building a model (aka theory) approximating reality and successively refining it by proving or disproving hypotheses experimentally. Proven hypotheses are incorporated into the model, disproven ones are thrown out, and the model improves.

      The "theory" of evolution is built upon thousands of proven hypotheses, with none proven that discredit it. How many hypotheses behind Creation Science have been experimentally verified? We may never know *all* the answers, but no competing theory even approaches the credibility that the theory of evolution has.

    2. Re:Much, much evidence against evolution by AveryT · · Score: 1

      I'll explain flagella could have evolved (I'll even spell it correctly) if you'll explain how an intelligent designer could have come up with the French.

      The defense rests.

    3. Re:Much, much evidence against evolution by benna · · Score: 1

      I have to say my hope for humanity has been greatly diminished by the comments to this article. I never realized how many people just don't understand science.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  740. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 1

    ask the nearest biologist for some examples of failed evolutionary predictions

    Link please.

    I will gladly discuss this point with you once I have some idea what you are talking about.

    Hand waving that the proof of your argument is out there somewhere, but that you have no idea what it is is not exactly an effective argument. If you have some argument to make, great. If you have some example to cite or evidence to present, great. If you want to cite some unidentified experts and some unspecified examples they supposedly have... well don't be supprised when I ask for a link.

    I hadn't spent time at www.talkorigins.org before, but a Google search turned it up and it contains numerous perfectly falsifiable predictions of evolution. Evolution is a scientific theory and does make falsifiable predictions. Predictions which have held up.

    >the tree, but the overall structure is extremely distinct.

    If by a few small details you mean enormous holes that seem to be more prevelant than the connections, the ok, I'll give you that.


    I don't know what you're referring to, but I'll tell you what I'm reffering to.

    I'm talking about the existance and absence of genes in various species, and the branching of a gene into two or more substantially identical genes (often with entirely different functions).

    For example all mammals carry fundamentally the same X/Y gender chromosome. If you look across all mammals you will see other chromosmes and individual genes appearing or dissappearing or branching in a tree pattern.

    For example all whales carry the genes for legs. If you look at an X-ray of a whale you'll see rediculously small leg bones buried inside the body. The bones are so short they don't reach out as far as the skin. They are still fundamentally the same leg genes, the major point being mutation in genes controlling the growth and size of the legs.

    Well, that makes perfect sense under evolution. The more you study whale genes and other species genes, it more clear evidence there is of a tree structure and of whales and humans being subbranches of the mammal branch. That at that branch point we both had legs, and that those useless genes (actually harmful genes as far as whales are concerned) got carried down from that branch point. You can see that whales and cows share more genes than whales and humans. When you look at horses and whales and cows and humans and dolphins, there is a clear tree pattern to what genes are present and absent.

    And that tree pattern extends outside the mammal family as well. Humans and fish share many important genes, genes that do appear or do not appear in other classes of animals. Genes that appear and do not appear in a tree pattern. Dolphins and fish share essentially no genes that are not *also* shared by humans. The dolphin branch may be curving in a "fish-like" direction, but they cannot pick up any new genes that first appeared on the fish branch, they cannot recover genes that both humans and dolphins lost on the early on the shared mammal branch, and dolphins are 'stuck' carrying many mammal genes even when they are ill-suited to aquatic life.

    A perfect example is that fish and humans and dolphins all have genes that produce proto-gills in the embryonic stage. Something we all share from an early broad branch that does not appear anywhere outside that broad branch. After the fish-mammal fork, the genes to finish developing this proto-gill into a fully functioning gill were lost. It was lost prior to the human-dolphin split. Dolphins cannot simply recover this lost gene to grow very useful gills. The dolphin branch may be evolving closer to the fish branches in many ways, but they are clearly on the mammal branch of the tree and the functional gill gene was lost at the begining of that branch. Genetics clearly reveals this tree structure.

    If we assume for a moment that Intelligent Design were an actual scientific theory... well if anything whales

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  741. Bullshit, all of it. by benna · · Score: 1

    see topic.

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    1. Re:Bullshit, all of it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit, all of it

      <sarcasm>Oooh, now there's an original and intellegent statement. That certainly rebutted all my arguments. And in four words, too! I only wish I had your linguistic and research abilities when I wrote that post.</sarcasm>

      Seriously, that didn't say a whole heckava lot. At the very least, you could have said why it's bullshit.

    2. Re:Bullshit, all of it. by benna · · Score: 1

      I did. I wrote the article.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    3. Re:Bullshit, all of it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did. I wrote the article.

      By "the article" I hope you're not refering to the post you responded to, as that would mean you are a liar.

      1. You did write the post
      That means you believe all that evidence against evolution is false. By stating it as fact, you lied.

      2. You didn't write the post
      You lied saying you did.

    4. Re:Bullshit, all of it. by benna · · Score: 1

      No, I wrote the article on kuro5hin that this is linked to in the summery.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    5. Re:Bullshit, all of it. by DrSank · · Score: 1

      Can you say WHY you think it's bullshit? As far as I can see, it makes sense. Please counter the arguments above, "all of it".

    6. Re:Bullshit, all of it. by benna · · Score: 2, Informative

      The fossil record claims are false and over simplified. See here, here, here, and here.

      There are plausible evolutionary models for Flagellum. See here.

      Abiogenesis statistics are bullshit and its not like an entire prokareotic cell needs to be be the first self-replicating molecule. See
      here.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    7. Re:Bullshit, all of it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, sorry. I thought of that later, but i guess i wasn't paying attention.

  742. Re:Infinity & Whistling Fish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well fish do make a lot of noise if you listen to them over a hydrophone...but anyway.
    There is a problem with what sort of evidence each of these modes-of-thought will accept.
    In Science, the evidence is that of experiment and more weakly observation. A hypothesis is framed and an experiment/observation made in support of a theory or model; case in point Evolution.
    In Mathematics until a solid logical proof is presented, something is at best a conjecture; regardless of the number cases that are support the conjecture.
    In Religion the belief that something is true is a matter of faith and/or revelation. That a person believes in a transendent or immanent god(s) is based either on the acceptance of 'revealed' teachings or personal revelation.

  743. What a disappointing discussion by LovedByGod · · Score: 1

    After reading through many of the posts here I feel like I am back in collage studying liberal arts!!! For a bunch of supposedly "scientific minded people" you sure do argue politics and philosophy a lot.

    For example:

    I hear people saying ID is just a belief system with no scientific backing, wrong!!!

    I hear people saying evolution is a proven fact; FACT IS, in 140 years there is not one shred of evidence of a single species evolving into a NEW species!!! Darwin would be disappointed in the current state of affairs because he expected the fossil record to show the transition and in 140 years we don't have a single fossil that proves transition!!!

    Where are the scientific discussions to back up what people are saying, I can't find any.

    I also find it interesting that the PhD's that are proposing ID are chomping at the bit to go to the black board and put it all on the line; you know, real scientific discussions using real numbers and facts, and the secular scientists are running scared using lame excuses why they cannot participate.

    I personally have had my fill of these message boards filled with professional debaters that never prove things one way or the other, facts are facts, and I want to see the real thing, a cage match between the ID scientists and the secular scientists.

    Our universities are a joke when it comes to perusing the truth, we qualify what the truth is, discoveries that contradict evolution, an old earth or anything else that gives the Bible credibility are immediately discarded and ignored. Scientists have been given the answer to there question before they start their research, this is not science.

    We keep hearing, it is common sense and we just need that one break thru and we will have the answer!!! Unfortunately the answer might be wrong; which means, the break thru ant going to happen!!!

    Carl Sagan applied his belief in Hinduism and his formal education to convince us to spend billions of dollars monitoring the universe for some background noise that would prove the universe is expanding at a rate that is physically impossible, let alone his total contradiction of the Law's of Thermodynamics. I can't believe all the "scientists" that bought that load of manure.

    I could go on an on and on, bring on the scientific discussion and stop poo pooing the ID scientists. Do the research; you will be amazed at how much scientific research has gone into ID and how many of the worlds most educated scientists are behind it.

    Secular scientists where is your champion, send out your uncircumcised philistine!!!

  744. Re:Atheism also a religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone knows the ACLU is a complete bunch of idiots. Some of the most ardent supporters of evolution in high school are atheists.

    Teaching evolution in schools is directly about atheism and even the attack on intelligent design as pseudoscientific speaks very highly of an atheistic minority trying to impose evolution and secularism on a religious majority.

  745. atheist howling for his lost astronomy book by piedmont67 · · Score: 1

    Yes, reports made by NASA, they're always making stuff up like that. Sorry if you flunked astronomy, but if you don't believe me just ask any astronomer. Also, I really like your comment about a "mindless extrapolation of one measurement of the arbitrary past" The historical past is not arbitrary, although to make a measurement of the pre-historic past you need something to measure in the present. In order to believe evolution, you make a mindless extrapolation of no measurement to a VERY arbitrary pre-historic past. Just stick to your childish insults since science now scares you as something that will demolish evolution. Science has put the theory of evolution on its deathbed now and will soon pull the plug on it for good, so stay away from it unless you want to hear the truth.

    1. Re:atheist howling for his lost astronomy book by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody "made up" the shrinking Sun observations, but they were later withdrawn because the methodology behind them turned out to be faulty.

      There are plenty of ways to extrapolate that are NOT mindless, and hardly "arbitrary."

      What you call and quote as "science" has nothing to do with the honest and objective analysis of observations, but with your cherry picking any result, no matter how sketchy or questionable, and taking it as rock-solid "scientific proof", as long as it, according to your flawed analysis, is contrary to an old universe or evolution.

      You need to get your science from a more realistic search. Take a look at the major peer-reviewed journals, such as Science and Nature, and tell me how many of the thousands of papers published in those journals points against evolution.

      Not some silly journals designed to collect whatever garbage observations support "flat earth" theories, but real honest-to-god journals.

  746. You are getting closer... by clonan · · Score: 1

    Not true....

    A ring species is called such because it "rings" an uninhabitable area with subspecies that often cannot interbreed with the other side but can breed backwords and get to the other side.

    A more appropriate name would be a Fork species...however due to the geographical convergence of the tips of the migration the actual distribution of the animals looks like a ring.

    A ring species is simply a sample of evolution in which the ancestor species are still alive.

    There is no biological or physical way that two divergent evolutionary pathways can reconnect into a single breeding species.

    A species like you describe could only occur through direct human genetic manipulation and not through and evolutionary/naturalistic way.

  747. Re:intelligent design != God (corrected spelling) by thehomeland-org · · Score: 1

    Has there ever been ANY proof at all that all this happened by some supreme god.

    The Bible is evidence. You may choose not to believe it to be true, but it would be likewise foolish for me to assert that (while untrue) since the evidence claimed by proof from the historical record is written by a bunch of evolutionists that it is therefore flawed since it doesn't take the bible into account. This is the same argument from scientists against using biblical evidence. The exponentially high number of people who assert it as so is also entered as evidence -- particularly those with bio/chemi/genetic education.

    Because the(y) believe in ideas blindly.

    Firstly, as I mentioned "fundamentalists" exist across the board, not just in religion. How is that only the religious sort are blind followers? Fundamentalism is simply the claim that certain elements of something are, as far anyone is capable of comprehension, true or perceptively/verifiably correct. The belief that organisms and creatures mutated and outlived other mutations are fundamentals of macroevolution, yet there exists a distinction that spiritual matters are unprovable and highly improbable (by science) and that certain scientific matters like evolution are likewise unprovable by the spiritually aware. The fact that science classrooms refuse to allow ground for ID discussion is borderline dictatorship thanso democracy, since they know they're right. Religious classes most definately welcome evolution discussion, knowing they are right. Why is it that we allow discussion, but science doesn't? This is a classroom for learning, right? Merely stating "because of the overwhelming evidence" as an excuse is allowing students to make that assertion on their own (learning), it is predeclaring the solution to an equation before it is given a chance to be solved, like refusing to allow a control situation in an experiment. Show us in the classroom why, according to this absurdly abundant evidence, ID is implausible, and allow the students to make their own assertions. Math teacher don't merely require students to know that "two and two equal four" (a fundamental) but show why it is so. Equal representation in the classroom between Evo and ID make sound logical sense, since evolution (according to science) will win anyway.

    I was blinded by science's rationale (no 80's pop references intended) until I was a junior in college (1999), before I knew Christ. Being saved changes a person drastically and feels like new sensory perceptions have been awakened. I can't possibly imagine living without it now, likened a bit to Neo being unable to see the code anymore. Having known the ability to see the code, and no longer being able to see it would be very frustrating, as well as disheartened for those who had never seen it and continue to believe they live in one perceptual world since it's the only thing they can compare it to. On a self-propelled rational-reasoning level, you will call your beliefs, ones you thought were immutable, into question after having been saved, as I was the most hard-nosed blue-pill atheistic science freak I knew and vehemently against how those religious nuts could possibly think science wasn't the answer.

  748. Re:intelligent design != God (corrected spelling) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, it is exceedingly hard to prove 2+2=4 with mathematical rigor. Exactly how do you define "2", for instance.

    Of course, even so, it is much easier to prove 2+2=4 compared to proving 2+2=5, which is what the creationists want equal time for.

    Sorry about that knowing Christ thing. If it made you doubt evolution happened, it must have screwed you up pretty bad. You probably should have tried pot instead.

  749. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by ezeri · · Score: 1

    Just a quick one, the whole eugenics movement.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
  750. oh, please. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Your argument is circular - the effects and results of the mutations should not be confused with the process of mutation itself; even if you restrict your consideration to those mutations which leave a viable organism they are still random in the mathematical sense.

  751. Re:Nearly 3000 replies in 36 hours WOW by benna · · Score: 1

    This post pushes this story into 6th place.

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  752. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 1

    Just a quick one, the whole eugenics movement.

    That's like saying slavery has something to do with botany. Like citing cold war Mutually Assured Destruction policy to discredit the science of the atomic nucleus.

    You're trying to cite a social movement or social policy to discredit science. That makes absolutely no sense.

    Science does not and cannot say we "should" do anything. Science does not say we "should" build nuclear bombs or "should not" build nuclear bombs. Science does not contain or provide goals. Science does not contain or provide priorities. Science does not contain or provide motivations. Science does not contain or provide judgment.

    Within science there is no such thing as a "preffered" or "better" or "more valuable" outcome. All outcomes are of equal value - value as nothing more than data points.

    All social movments and social policy are based on priorities and goals and motivations and judgements that lie entirely outside of science.

    Should we build a nuclear power plant? Should we sterilize the retarded? Science can certainly be used as a resource towards making those choices, but science does not and cannot make choices. Those are human choices. And yes, some people certainly can make rotten choices based on rotten priorities and rotten motivations and rotten goals and rotten judgment. The science is still perfectly valid no matter what goals and choices people choose to make.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  753. "Global warming" is religious pseudoscience... by stankulp · · Score: 1

    ...what goes around, comes around.

    --
    We must be alert to the danger that public policy could become captive to a scientific-technological elite. - Eisenhower
  754. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by ezeri · · Score: 1

    The Eugenics movement was founded on the huminist evolutionary hypothosis that since Africa was the origin of human life, blacks, being from Africa must be a more basic form of human life, and thus the experiments were carried out to show that they had lesser inteligence, more primitive physiology, etc. This hypothosis was of course found to be very wrong, and thus is one example of a hypothosis that was wrong. If you want another one, in a more "scientific" field, then the predictions of the magnetic fields of Uranus and Neptune, as measured by Voyager II, this is also one that the "non-scientific" creationists got right, woops. If you want more examples, just keep asking, I'll keep providing.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
  755. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 1

    Someone making up a rediculous hypothosis with absolutely no basis in the science of evolution in no way discredits evolution. Anyone who thinks or claims that evolution predicts africans being inferior doesn't understand evolution, and they almost certainly have little or no grasp of science. I could make up a hypothosis that africans are inferior based on black holes, but that in no way discredits the theory of gravity. They are both obviously rediculous attacks.

    If you want a example of a valid prediction and potential falsification of evolution...

    Evolution predicts that we will not find any species with a vestigil organ/structure (such as an ostridge's wings) without an ancestor possessing a properly functional version of that organ/structure (an ancestor with wings enabling actual flight). Whales have vestigil legs buried inside their bodies, so either whales had an ancestor with functional walking legs or evolution is falsified. And yes, the fossil record has many examples of intermediate forms smoothly leading from prehistoric walking land mammals to modern whales.

    You can dig up many other legitimate scientific predictions of evolution on the talkorigins.org website by searching for "prediction" and/or "falsification".

    the predictions of the magnetic fields of Uranus and Neptune

    I'm not familiar of that example, but that sounds like good science. Presumably someone had a model for gas giant magnetic fields, made a prediction on that model, and that model was presumably falsified. That doesn't discredit science, that shows science WORKING. The theories of gravity and evolution and relativity and chemistry are in no way diminished when something else is falsified.

    It's hardly unusal for some new speculative and previously untested model is falsified on it's first test. Untested and speculative theories are obviously not appropriate for a high school classroom, other than perhaps as a lesson that untested theories have no scientific weight and often turn out wrong. Scientific theories gain weight and acceptance and value by making falsifiable predictions that are then upheld and by accumulating evidence and surviving critical review and by being useful. Those are the teories that belong in a science classroom. Things like plate techtonics and evolution and relativity. All thoroughly tested and thoroughly supported and rock solid science accepted by virtually 100% of the scientific community.

    Evolution is no less valid and solid science just because some non-scientists do not fully understand it or simply dislike it, and evolution is no less valid if you cite some crackpot who says something that has nothing to do with the actual science. Oh, and above all... anyone who claims that evolution says that there is no god is an idiot. But as far as I can tell it's only some creationists making that stupid claim. They love to claim that evolution is some attack on religion and an attempt to push athism. Idiots. The majority of all Cristians believe in God and accept evolution. Even the last Pope said that there is absolutely no conflict between evolution and Christianity/God/Bible. It's only in the US that there's any signifigant fundamentalist Chrisian movement trying to wage some war between science and religion.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  756. No change there by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Translation: some parts of this one sample appear to have gone through some weird polymerization, rather than what we consider to be normal fossilization.
    Go back and read what he said, not what you wish was there. Not only is his statement entirely suspicion (ie, not based on even a cursory personal examination) but the whole thrust of Mary's report is that the fresh organics did not polymerise at all and did not fossilise either.

    Repeat after me: there is no evidence at all for weird polymerisation, it is just wishful speculation from someone who hasn't examined the sample.

    There was not one sample, but at least two separate samples at that site.

    This is far from the only elephant in evolution's room, it's merely recent and obvious. It only takes one clear demonstration that evolution cannot work to disprove this Atheist's creation myth, and you're facing such.
    you haven't explained why his suspicion is implausible
    The onus is on you to show his random suspicion to be plausible, is it not?

    There's a whole herd of elephants in evolution's room, stampeding around, and the snowballing of speculation which you've participated in here is exactly how that peculiar blindness is achieved.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:No change there by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Okay, let's start with the article you directed me to read. If you're upset with what is said in the article, is it my fault?

      What seems certain is that some fairly remarkable conditions must have existed at the Montana site where the T. rex died, 68 million years ago.

      I don't see any evidence in that line that evolution cannot work.

      Then, as the remaining bone material gets buried deeper and deeper in the mud, it gets heated, crushed and replaced by minerals - it is turned to stone. The form, and nothing else, is all that is left of the original. On the outside, the hindlimb fossil designated MOR (Museum of the Rockies specimen) 1125 has this appearance.

      Okay, so on the outside, it looks like stone. Sounds good for evolution.

      But when Dr Mary Schweitzer, of North Carolina State University, dissolved away the minerals, she found something extraordinary inside.

      Who has wishful thinking, here? It did fossilise. (This is in direct conflict with when you said, and I quote, it "did not fossilise".)

      She discovered transparent, flexible filaments that resemble blood vessels. There were also traces of what look like red blood cells; and others that look like osteocytes, cells that build and maintain bone.

      So, you're saying if it quacks like a duck? Wow, that's a pretty grand claim of Dr. Schweitzer! Except, oh wait,

      Dr Schweitzer is not making any grand claims that these soft traces are the degraded remnants of the original material - only that they give that appearance.

      That seems to be directly counter to - EVERYTHING YOU'RE SAYING. You're refering to Mary's work, and completely ignoring what she's saying about it.

      If you want me to read a different article, feel free to reference it. Because the one you sent me to doesn't support your position at all.

      Also, even if everything you said is true, just because gravitation breaks down at the quantum level, or at extreme conditions of relativistic speeds, is that A) a clear demonstration that gravitation cannot work which disproves this Copernican sun-centered myth, or is it B) an example that observed phenomena do not always extend to every situation?

      I say "B", and I know for sure that evolution is alive and well.

      The onus is on you to show his random suspicion to be plausible, is it not?

      *sigh* Imagine a murder trial: I have an alibi. You have to show that my alibi is implausible before I'm going to spend any extra effort on your bizarre theories.

      So, please, tell me in specific terms why the explanation already on the table is implausible.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
  757. Yes, Gotcha! (-: by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Life may very well be possible with many different sets of molecules.
    Unproven conjecture. Living cells are not simple little tinker toys, boy.

    After the Miller-Urey experiment, Stanley's so far spent the rest of his life trying to make the other necessaries, and has so far discovered that (1) you can't; and (2) the conditions for his original experiment have never existed.
    He has discovered no such thing as (1), any more than the thousands of man hours that went into attempts to fly prior to the Wright brothers proved that flight couldn't be achieved.
    No. I wasn't talking about "hasn't proven", I'm talking about "has shown that it won't work". He has walked through all of the possible alternatives and come up dry.
    Stanley is attempting to compress phenomenon that occurred over millions of years and in oceans of water into a test tube. That may or may not be possible.
    Each of the events Mr Miller is attempting to stimulate will take place in an instant, if at all. It is in the nature of the experiment that you make any one step of the process happen in that instant instead of strung out over billennia. The original process got as far as Step One for a few, very simple chemicals. It turns out that the chemical energy path from squat to Step One is pretty much downhill all the way, but the same path then turns seriously uphill for a very long time after that. It also turns out that Step One for many of the other required molecules is some distance up that hill.

    As for your heap of other evidence, as you work through the pile, you will notice that every single piece is inferred, none of the evidence is direct observation. As soon as you have an inferral, you have assumptions, one of which is gradualism and another, more basic of which is materialism.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Yes, Gotcha! (-: by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Unproven conjecture. Living cells are not simple little tinker toys, boy.

      Yeah, I got your "boy" right here.

      I have no idea what you think you're proving with those two links. That cell biology is complicated? Well, duh! But that doesn't start to prove that there's only one way it can happen. It's not only possible but very likely that if life does exist elsewhere in the universe, you'd be able to create charts that are just as complicated but completely different from the ones you linked.

      No. I wasn't talking about "hasn't proven", I'm talking about "has shown that it won't work". He has walked through all of the possible alternatives and come up dry.

      "...all of the possible alternatives...?" Demonstrate that all possible alternatives have been tried. Show your work. It's quite obvious that you're in WAY over your head here. You have no real idea what you're talking about, and spouting stuff you read elsewhere and linking to web sites you don't understand won't help you one bit.

      The evidence you deny is there. I have neither the time nor the inclination to take you through basic science, mathematics and biology in an attempt to teach you enough to understand it. The information is out there if you want to learn it. If you want to remain ignorant, that's your choice.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

  758. Oop, no, you're not... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    A ring species is simply a sample of evolution in which the ancestor species are still alive.

    There is no biological or physical way that two divergent evolutionary pathways can reconnect into a single breeding species.
    If that's your opinion, then I strongly suggest that you read up a bit more on hybridisation.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Oop, no, you're not... by clonan · · Score: 1

      I have.

      Hybridization does not work in ring species.

      Hybridization happens when two subspecies mate. This leads to a third "subspecies" with traits from both.

      This absolutly requiers that the original groups are in fact the same species AND that they can breed together under natural conditions.

      There are examples of related but non-identcal species breedings (the mule and tiglons) but these animals are sterile and therefore are not viable species. True hybridization can make some unusual animals/plants but they are all still the same species and therefore that is not a true example of genetic evolution.

      However I now understand your confusion in the grandparent message. You invision a ring species as simply a hybridization of temporarily isolated groups. This certainly happens but it is not a ring species. We will use the californian salamander as an example. It started in the northern section of the state and moved south. When the species ran into death valley it split and migrated down both sides. Because the salamanders couldn't cross the valley they progressed along seperate lines of evolution. As the two groups moved south over about 300,000 years they diverged more and more. By the time they got to the bottom of the valley and the two lines met, they were unable to breed and therefore counted as seperate species. In addition they are not able to breed with the original species that still lived on the northern edge of the valley. However they could still breed with the neighbors to the north and so genes can go back to the progenitor species and then onto the other side. Now we know there is evolution here because of the unique genetic code in the tail species. While the genetic code CAN move backwords it is a very slow process, even slower than the original evolution, therefore there is still distinct genetic differences. But both these tail species have different genes that do not occur in any other species in the ring. This novel information proves that this is not a case of hybridization but rather an excellent example of evolution in action.

      I hope this helps you understand the system better now.

  759. Hey, wait, let me get a run-up on this one... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    ...I do so enjoy saying it this way. I even have a cap with this on it somewhere...
    On the western branch the most southern species has genetic information that does not exist in any other sub-species of the ring. The only way this could happen is if the information was created as the species "evolved".
    Wwwwwwwwwwwwwrrrrrrrrrrrong!

    Thank you for that opportunity.

    Two possible paths to that situation that involve no true evolution at all, no increase in useful information, merely selection from existing genetic material, are:
    1. the Western branch are the originals; or
    2. there is a common ancestor with at least as much information as the Western branch.
    They may not be the only two.

    While we're on salamanders, where does the Korean one fit in?
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  760. So close but still no cigar! by clonan · · Score: 1

    The Eastern Branch also has unique genetic info.

    There is distinct evidence that the NORTHERN species is the oldest and that the whole group moved south NOT north.

    All the evidence shows that the closest common ancestor between the western and easter branches is the northern group which does not have all the genetic information that exists in the the two southern branches. Actually the Western and Eastern groups have genetic info that is not represented ANYWHERE else in the salamander family.

    The only hybridization that could have created this is if a totaly different species also moved south with the northern species and then interbred and died out. That is certainly a possibility however there is NO evidence that this species ever existed. Therefore it is far MORE likly that this is a case of evolution rather than a mysterious case of all the salamanders of a specific group that EVER lived getting teleported away leaving no evidence at all.

    I have no information of a Korean salamander however there is no evidence that salamanders have crossed the pacific before man brought them and this ring species existed before man came to the new world.

    I suggest you check out an intor genetics book. That will give you a much better understanding of the differences between hybridization and evolution. Or if you already have a background I suggest doing a pubmed search for Ring Species. I found what looks like an interesting article. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd= Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=1566201 1

    Please let me know if there is anything else you are not clear on.

  761. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by jfengel · · Score: 1

    And what experiments have shown one organism turning into another?

    Just for reference, the natural selection theory doesn't claim that one organism turns into another. It claims that children differ slightly from parents, and over many generations those differences lead to new species, especially when one group is isolated from another. Individual organisms don't evolve; species do.

    There are about a billion fine points to this that you and I could debate (and have already been debated ad nauseam elsewhere in this thread), but I just wanted to make sure you weren't working from a false strawman of the theory you're opposing. I don't expect to convince you that my theory is correct, or that yours isn't, but the discussion wouldn't be any fun if we didn't at least agree on what it is we were arguing about.

  762. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by jfengel · · Score: 1

    If it helps, I just metamoderated as wrong whoever it was that modded you down. I disagree with you, for reasons talked about by many other responders, but you're not trolling. I appreciate your polite, thoughtful call for intelligent discussion of the topic, sans flames.

  763. Re:Intelligent Design - A very valid alternative by PenguinBoyDave · · Score: 1

    Thank you. I really never wanted to upset anyone, and I know this can be a very sensative topic. I'm happy to agree to disagree, and don't fault anyone for thier beliefs one way or another. Good discussion is what makes life interesting.

    --
    I'm not a troll, but I play one on Slashdot.
  764. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by ezeri · · Score: 1

    You should read Darwins Origins of the Species, Darwin believed African Americans to be inferior, woops. As for the fosil layer, one thing they still haven't figured out is why there are birds at lower stratas than the dinosours, since the aperantly evolved later. As for your predictible anti-christian rant, I'm going to ignore it because it doesn't have anything to do with this.

    That doesn't discredit science, that shows science WORKING.

    EXACTLY, but that has nothing to do with my point, I was simply showing you a incorect prediction based on a evolutionary naturalist world view, since your original statement was:

    Evolution has made MANY predictions, and every single time it has passed with flying colors.

    One thing I find funny and telling is that you somehow got the impresion I was attacking science or the scientific process. I'm realy curious how you managed to get that from my post.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now. - Ed Howd
  765. Re:Summary ID by saskboy · · Score: 1

    Here's my flame of an ID'er, tonight.

    **
    "It would take intelligence to create and design a Universe, using just 3 elements... protons, neutrons, and electrons. That starts with a big bang originating from a singularity. "

    First off, electrons protons, and neutrons are NOT elements, they are sub atomic particles. An element is made up of at a minimum a proton and electron.

    Second you're tossing around mighty big words like 'singularity', which you obviously have no grasp of the meaning, or the ability to use it in your feable argument.

    Third you said, "Well, when you find the first scientist that can create a Universe like the one we live in, let me know." Just before, you said, "That can spawn life and provide an evolutionary system for that life." Anyone can see this is comical ID flailing on your behalf, since you give God 8 Billion+ years to make our world, but a scientist, a mortal, has to provide you with empirical evidence of God-like abilities, before you'd give them any credit for discovering scientific facts upon which your life hinges upon every day.

    Please, stop trying to bully scientists, high school is long over. It's time to admit that you don't know what you're talking about, and learn from the smart people, instead of telling them they're wrong about everything.

    **

    --
    Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
  766. Excellent reply! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Thank you for taking the time to produce it.

    Unfortunately, this:
    This absolut[e]ly requi[re]s that the original groups are in fact the same species
    ...is not true. Tigers and lions are quite different species, yet we occasionally have Tigons and ligers (and even wilder crosses like leopards). Dolphins and killer whales are also different, yet we occasionally have wholphins. And so on.

    The salamanders are more interesting. How do you know that it took 300,000 years for them to divide into sub-species? What makes you certain of the direction of their migration? What makes you certain that Death Valley has been as it is for a third of a million years? What makes you certain that there is no ancestor species, from which all of the current subspecies descended? How can you be sure that the subspecies are literally unable to mate, rather than simply separated by changes in breeding practices or preferences?
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Excellent reply! by clonan · · Score: 1

      Pleasure to see you again :-)

      I suggest you review the two messages I last sent. I specificly mentioned cross species breeding. These animals are extrodinarily interesting but it doesn't matter....they are not sucessful species. Mules (used as a generic term here) are almost universaly sterile. The three ocassions the have not be sterile the offspring have. Mules can only be created when the two parent species have the same number of chromosomes with roughly the same size. This allows the cell to match them up and split them correctly during mitosis. This is why only very closly related species can do this....however these mules are not an example of hybridization because the hybridized animal can't breed. Roses and other plants are actually samples of this. A show rose is extremly fagile and cannot seed. this is why rose growers were held in such high honor in the field. The only reason it was at all succesful was that man came along and cloned the rose (by taking clipings and repotting not biochemically) Most roses as we know them would not exist in nature....the same goes for Mules, Wolphins, tiglons and Ligers. It is important to note that these have NEVER been seen in the wild. Most actually require invitro-fertilization or some similar advanced technique.

      Now as per your other comments...

      Salamanders are amphibians. This means they spend a significant amount of time in water, especially marshy waters. This leads to a high level of fossilization (or in this case pseudo phosolization because there hasn't been enough time to complete the process). We have extracted DNA from these remains and can date the migration with a good degree of accuracy.

      #1 the remains on the northern side of the valley are 300,000 years older than the oldest remains on the southern side of the valley. Also I misspoke. I had intended to say before European people arrived. Actually Salamanders probably came over the land bridge with Native American ancestors....but the point is still applicable.

      #2 there is amble geological evidence that Death Valley has been essentially stable for several million years. It is a low point in a geologically stable area hidden behind a very high mountain range that has been there for 10 million years+.

      #3 We know from studies of modern species that sub-species all have almost identical lifestyles. The only differences are typically body size, coloration patterns, fur thickness (although salamanders don't need to worry about this ;-)) etc. But all subspecies typically live in the same manner. Dogs hunt in packs regardless of the sub-species (breed). Chipmunks live in trees. Californian Salamanders live in marshy waters. Therefore if there was a subspecies that embodies all the extra traits seen in the decendant species we should see fossils at roughly the same rate as all the other species. We have yet to discover a single sample. While this is not solid proff it does allow us to calculate the maximum number of animals that represent this subspecies...I beleive it is now below 500. Basically If there were more than 500 animals we should have found a sample by now. This number is so small compared to the otehr strains that the genetic impact of crossbreeding cannot explain the current dominance of the genes. This is why I spoke of teleporting all the subspecies that ever existed.

      #4 I actually don't know if they are biochemically able to mate. But a breeding practice/preference is just as strong a wall against cross breeding as biochemistry. Part of the species deffinition is interbreeding. If they don't interbreed when given the opportunity then they aren't a single species. The tail species are in close proximity to each other and there is no evisence of direct cross breeding. They have been housed in the same quarters and they don't interbreed...you can even sprinkle Ethanol into the water and play some Kenny G and they won't interbreed. They are distinct species. Actually my other e

    2. Re:Excellent reply! by clonan · · Score: 1

      Ohh, one other point I forgot to mention.

      True natural hybridization ALWAYS gives a subspecies that can still interbreed with the two parent species.

      There has not been a single example of subspecies breeding that created a new and seperate group.

      Since there are strains of califronian salamanders that cannot interbreed this cannot by true hybridization.

  767. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by SorryToHearThat · · Score: 0

    This is easily proven incorrect. For example, let's say that two "average" parents copulate and produce a pro-wrestler or some other extremely exceptional person.

    Problem. You presuppose that those parents are the "creators". In reality, there is not explanation, yet, for how that life is created. Sure, sperm swim to the egg, break through the shell and one gets in. Yet, the problem comes that we cannot even predict(we can make good guesses, but girls get pregnant who were "careful" and women who try to get pregnant, even using scientific advancements, cannot do so) such an event without conditions set up for large probabilities of success. We know a lot about the process, but we still don't know why it works when it does and not other times. Therefore, I submit that you cannot truly call those parents creators. Now, could "average" parents give birth to a person who is able to strengthen themselves or seeks to make themselves better or smarter? Sure, improvement of an individual is always possible. As well, intelligence quota can fluctuate from generation to generation depending on multiple circumstances.

    a "creator" (in most cases, a human) can create something that is suicidally dangerous

    However, we must attempt to engineer things that do not "normally" occur or, if they do occur, do so in such small amounts that they are rarely, if ever seen. In other words, we must mess around with genomes and DNA strands to create such dangerous creatures. Yet, evolution is said to have occurred naturally. So, we can rule out these creatures as a possible explanation to not needing a deity or other beginning creator since they cannot come to be without intelligent intervention.

    As well, I did include "better" in my statement. Therefore, even I would concede that we could create something suicidally dangerous. Truth!

  768. Re:Evolution isn't truth. Sorry to have to tell ya by SorryToHearThat · · Score: 0

    your reasoning falls apart because the chance that a human being would evolve is 1:1. Otherwise, we wouldn't be here.

    Unless Intelligent Design is right. :-) Then we'd be here without evolution.

    Also, if the chance of a human being evolving is 1:1, then why haven't we evolved in all the time since current man first "appeared" on this earth? Just curious!

  769. You've highlighted the wrong phrases by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    If what you say is true, then why did she say this?
    some fairly remarkable conditions must have existed
    What's remarkable about fossilisation? It's happened a lot, y'know? And if the whole bone was fossilised, what was left after dissolving the minerals?
    when Dr Mary Schweitzer [...] dissolved away the minerals, she found something extraordinary inside.
    What? She dissolved away the minerals and found minerals?

    If you still don't get it, look at the pictures. You don't seem to be reading what you're quoting. Another example:
    She discovered transparent, flexible filaments that resemble blood vessels. There were also traces of what look like red blood cells; and others that look like osteocytes, cells that build and maintain bone.
    Hmmm. Transparent, flexible? Sound like fossils to you?

    And of course she's not claiming that they are what they so obviously are. Firstly, she doesn't want to believe it herself, and secondly she'd immediately be pilloried by her peers. I notice that MSU's "Dinosaur Jack" Horner isn't exactly falling over himself to be noticed on this one, either. Now consider this:
    the T. rex died, 68 million years ago
    What? With a calendar in its hand?

    One of the skeletons in evolution's closet is that we know that radioisotopic dating can break big time - mothods often contradict each other, and get the dates for known, historical, recorded events badly wrong - in fact, the original calibration for it was index fossils, the ranges for which have all long since been extended enormously and which were first pulled out of somebody's butt to fit into a preconceived, unmeasured geological column.

    Next, you seem to be fallaciously assuming that fossilisation is slow. About 250km south of here is a fossilised water wheel. Fossils form fast. They have to. If they formed slowly, the animal would be scattered and broken down by scavengers and bacteria.

    Even opalised fossils can form fast - as can any opal. There's a bloke who makes them in vegemite jars a bit east of here. He's gotten so good at it that he's stopped, for fear of breaking the natural opal industry. He can produce black opals on demand, opals with inclusions, control the "crackiness" of them, the whole enchilada.

    Science generally only progresses when the scientists realise that something important is wrong. "It's not what you know that hurts you, It's what you know that ain't so" as Will Rogers put it.

    There's something about Mary, and that something is impeccability. She doesn't want to believe what she's seeing, but she's reporting it nevertheless. She's not been "tainted" with the faintest breath of Creationism or ID or any other suspicion of heresy in the cult of Evolution. This is going to make what she finds much harder to deny.

    What's wrong with the theory on the table at the moment is that it's a castle in the clouds. Most of the data is fine, but most of the interpretation depends upon assumptions which are either known to break in a variety of ways, or have never been proven. To further confuse the situation, many people fail to distinguish between data and interpretations. 68 million years is not a datum, it's an interpretation.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:You've highlighted the wrong phrases by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      fairly remarkable

      It's a big planet. 68 million years (yes, an interpretation) is a long time. We've been finding dinosaur bones for what, a hundred years now? We're bound to find, every now and then, something fairly remarkable, otherwise it would be a very boring world.

      Apparently spontaneous human combustion (the "wick effect") can actually happen. That's freaking weird, not merely "fairly remarkable".

      I'm just pointing out that people seem over-eager to throw out the baby with the bathwater here. If you want to make the case that evolution doesn't explain the origin of life, but does a good job of explaining the diversity of life, I'm not going to pick a fight with you. But when people attack the idea that evolution is happening today, right in front of our eyes, I get pissed. It is, and people often close their eyes to this obvious fact so they can prop up their precious creationist myth.

      Transparent, flexible

      Yeah, and? Have you seen the diversity of minerals in the world? Heck, asbestos looks pretty bizarre to me - I thought it was biological in origin until I learned more about it as a kid.

      Instead of enjoying the Socratic method here of asking irritating questions (which I agree is a valid method - valid but irritating), do you wanna come right out and state your theory? What is it, that God created the Universe in 6 days about 4,000 years ago - and what - somehow soft tissue survived for 4,000 years? I agree that the onus is not on you to solve the riddle, but I'm guessing you have a theory. How about we prop up your theory, and let's see if we can poke some holes in it.

      Your water wheel is "frozen in rock", not fossilised. Read your own articles.

      How quickly do you think fossilization takes place, and how quickly do you think it takes bacteria to break tissue down?

      most of the interpretation depends upon assumptions which are either known to break in a variety of ways, or have never been proven

      Are you intentionally being ambiguous? You have not stated which interpretations you find objectionable! Let me list for you the interpretations which are on the board, and you tell me which (if any) you think are wrong:

      1) The universe is billions of years old
      2) The earth is billions of years old
      3) The vast majority of dinosaurs died out in an extinction event millions of years ago
      4) Evolution occurs, which might go an extremely long way towards explaining the diversity of life
      5) Evolution explains the origin of life
      6) Dinosaurs are not hiding around the corner, waiting to die and have their bones fossilize at a moments notice, possibly leaving blood and tissue behind

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    2. Re:You've highlighted the wrong phrases by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
      If you want to make the case that evolution doesn't explain the origin of life, but does a good job of explaining the diversity of life, I'm not going to pick a fight with you.
      Can't have one without the other. If chemical evolution doesn't work, there is nothing for biological evolution to work from.

      If you're going to propose a kind of bizarre Creationism variant in which J Random Deity sets the ball rolling and then runs away and hides to see what happens, I'm going to start laughing again.
      --
      Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    3. Re:You've highlighted the wrong phrases by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      First, there's a huge difference between the origin of the first self-replecating organism, and the outcome of billions of years of a completely different process. In other words, you absolutely can have one without the other.

      Is a lightning strike identical to the process of a forest fire burning? No.

      If you're going to propose a kind of bizarre Creationism variant in which J Random Deity sets the ball rolling and then runs away and hides to see what happens, I'm going to start laughing again.

      Bizarre? You've never heard of Deism? It's been around a lot longer than you have. As Handy would say on The Tick, "Read a book!"

      Laugh all you want, you still haven't responded to my challenge of explaining what YOU think happened.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
  770. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 1

    I'll cover your first paragraph last. The rest of your post confused me, let me recap a little.

    Someone asserted that evolution was not science because it's not falsifiable.
    I explained evolution is valid and solid science and has made predictions and that they have held up.
    You call me crazy and claimed there were plenty of "examples of failed evolutionary predictions".
    I ask you to back it up.
    You cite eugenics.
    I point out that is not an example of a failed evolutionary prediction.
    You cite some obscure new astronomy theory that immediately flopped.
    I point out that is not an example of a failed evolutionary prediction.

    Your last post.. well I just didn't get it. As far as I can make out... you explain that your point was simply to show that a science theory be proven wrong (and you use the the bizarre phrase "evolutionary naturalist world view" to refer to "science"... doubly bizarre because your example was astronomy which predates evolution by a few hundred years), and that you're baffled how I thought you were targeting science in general.

    You claimed to be able to discredit evolution, you tried, you failed, and you turned to attacking an example of science in general, and you're confused that I point out that switch?

    My original and continuing point is that evolution is valid solid science on par with all the major theories from tectonics to relativity and quantum mechanics. That the core modern scientific understanding of evolution does make predictions, and that those particular predictions have always held up.

    If you still want to claim there's some problem with evolution and that there's some laundry list of "examples of failed evolutionary predictions", well I'd still be interested to hear it.

    As for the fosil layer, one thing they still haven't figured out is why there are birds at lower stratas than the dinosours, since the aperantly evolved later.

    I'm not sure if you're even describing an actual problem or just a language confusion.

    If you have a link to birds appearing earlier than all dinosaurs then that would be Very Big News.

    The first dinosaurs appear around 248 Mya (million years ago). They hung around branching off in all sorts of directions up until the 65 Mya extinction event. One of those branches of dinosaurs happened less than 200 Mya - some of them developed full flight. Total adaption to flight meant a radically different lifestyle. Massive change of enviornment/lifestyle means massive evolutionary pressures. Birds are just a branch of dinosaurs with a large cluster of adaptions unique to aerial life. Birds then coexist with dinosaurs up until 65 Mya. Birds are just funky dinosaurs that managed to survive the extinction. A lot like how whales are just funky mammals.

    Darwin believed African Americans to be inferior, woops

    No woops.

    First of all I said: Anyone who thinks or claims that evolution predicts africans being inferior doesn't understand evolution. Even if Darwin believed or assumed africans were inferior, that does not equal a claim that evolution says that africans will be inferior. I'd be extremely surprised if he made such a claim, because he explicitly said almost the exact opposite. He said that european civilized society and technology helping the weak and ill would reduce evolutionary pressure for those sorts of physical fitness. Essentially that euorpeans would end up 'inferior' to africans in that sense. Absolutely nothing to do with race, purely an enviornmental effect. Social interaction *is* an enormous enviornmental factor for any social animal. Humans multiply this social-interactions-is-enviornment effect a million fold.

    Secondly, ok, Darwin probably did believe/assume that "civilized europeans" were in many ways superior. By modern standards, yes Darwin was probably a bigot. By modern standards EVERYONE of his day an idiot. However Darwin not only hated slavery as a horrid evil to abolish ev

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  771. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by Alsee · · Score: 1

    As for your predictible anti-christian rant

    I call bullshit. I made no "anti-Christian rant".

    Don't try to paint me as some anti-Christian ass or cry religious oppression for complaining about particular bad acts of particular people. The fact that almost all of the people involved are Christian - some tiny fraction of Christians - does not make it an anti-Cristian attack. You may as well call me anti-asian for criticising the North Korean government for causing a famine that killed a million people.

    I'm going to ignore it

    Ahhh. You're not going to back up your charge and not even cite it for me to be able to answer. Well, if you're going to force me to GUESS what you're talking about, ok... I'll attempt go through my last post and address each and every potentially inflamatory statement. Which means this has to be rather longer than I'd like. I said:

    Someone making up a rediculous hypothosis with absolutely no basis in the science of evolution in no way discredits evolution.

    A rediculous hypothesis such as "Africa was the origin of human life, blacks, being from Africa must be a more basic form of human life...lesser inteligence". I stand by the fact that has no basis in evolution and that it is rediculous. I do not claim it has any connection to Christianity.

    Anyone who thinks or claims that evolution predicts africans being inferior doesn't understand evolution, and they almost certainly have little or no grasp of science.

    I stand by fact that it has no basis in evolution, and I do not suggest it has any connection to Christianity.

    From there it looks pretty innocent until the final paragraph...

    evolution is no less valid if you cite some crackpot who says something that has nothing to do with the actual science

    Such as a pseudo-scientist making a crackpot claim that evolution says africans must be stupid. You misread me if you thought that meant Christian.

    anyone who claims that evolution says that there is no god is an idiot

    I stand by the fact that evolution says no such thing, and that *any* person making that claim (weather Christian or scientist) is either misinformed or deluded. Creationists should therefore applaud what I said. They often complain about scientists trying to use evolution to push a claim that there is no god. Well, I'm on their side here, any scientist doing that is an idiot.

    But as far as I can tell it's only some creationists making that stupid claim.

    *Some* creationists. That EXPLICITLY only refers to a subset of creationsists, ones actually making that stupid claim. It obviously does not apply Christians in general. There are plenty of perfectly good Christians and even creationists that don't make stupid claims.

    I stand by the fact that I am not aware of any scientists making that stupid claim. They sound like unicorns to me, I hope they are unicorns, but if they exist then they are idiots.

    I stand by the claim that some creationists say evolution means there is no god, and that those who do are either misinformed or deluded. Just as any scientists saying it would be misinformed or deluded.

    They love to claim that evolution is some attack on religion and an attempt to push atheism.

    "They" explicitly refers to the same *some* creationists actually making said claim. It again explicitly does not cover other creationists, and explicitly does not cover Christians in general. There are plenty of perfectly good Christians and even creationists who don't make stupid claims.

    The majority of all Cristians believe in God and accept evolution.

    I stand by that as a factual statement. I certainly hope you do not consider it to be an attack on Christianity.

    Sadly some people *would* consider that an attack.

    Even the last Pope said that there is absolutely no conflict between evolution and Christianit

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  772. What is intelligent design? by Mingco · · Score: 1

    I thought it was some sort of new software development approach. Turns out it's just a new word for Creationism. Does evolution have a new word to counter creationism's new word yet? Maybe something like "theory of intelligent people who cannot ignore billions of corroborating pieces of evidence"?

  773. Sorry... are you _really_reaching_, or what? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Transparent, flexible

    Yeah, and? Have you seen the diversity of minerals in the world?
    Umm... yeah? And which ones replaced just the core of the marrow in these fossilised bones and no others?

    William of Ockham must be pissing himself laughing. Or spinning in his grave. Or something. Goodness me!
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Sorry... are you _really_reaching_, or what? by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Okay, Ockham, so tell me the simpler solution:

      1) One time (for two samples) in all the millions of samples we've found, a weird chemical process happened.

      2) This dinosaur fell over dead about a hundred years ago, thus disproving evolution.

      I mean, am I even stating 2) right, here? What's your theory? HONESTLY - WHAT THE FUCK IS YOUR THEORY? Answer this one simple question, PLEASE. Otherwise, I see no reason to continue my end of this discussion. Carry on, if you enjoy talking to yourself.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
  774. Yes, the wheel _is_ fossilised by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Your water wheel is "frozen in rock", not fossilised. Read your own articles.
    I was about to start laughing at this one, too, until I realised that you don't have the option of walking up to it and tapping on it.

    As well as the stone casing, both the wheel and the feed channel have both mineral interpenetration of the wood and mineral replacement.

    "Frozen in rock" would imply ice encased in stone. Not even Augusta gets snow every year (or every decade); constant ice is out of the question. People surf there basically year-round.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  775. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by benna · · Score: 1

    Is ignorance bliss?

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  776. Re:"Nothing for you to see here. Please move along by benna · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that ID people basicall think, "if there is any doubt at all, god must have done it."

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  777. Re:Who modded this insightful? Flaimbait maybe... by benna · · Score: 1

    But he's right...

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein