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Evolution Named Scientific Achievement of 2005

lazy_hp writes "The BBC reports that research into evolution's inner working has been named rtop science achievement of 2005 From the article: 'The prestigious US journal Science publishes its top 10 list of major endeavours at the end of each year. The number one spot was awarded jointly to several studies that illuminated the intricate workings of evolution. The announcement comes in the same week that a US court banned the teaching of intelligent design in classrooms.'"

943 comments

  1. And the winner for 2006 is... by Quaoar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Common sense.

    --
    I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!
    1. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Jack9 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Common sense told us the earth was flat. /obvious

      --

      Often wrong but never in doubt.
      I am Jack9.
      Everyone knows me.
    2. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by williamhb · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't bet on it. It's being reported as an award for the best scientific achievement, when it's just an editorial list of "what topics were hot this year".

    3. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Common sense died off a long time ago as part of the evolutionary process in favor of big government/business that does all of our thinking for us.

    4. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Stargoat · · Score: 1

      The ancients knew the earth was round. Hell, stand in the right place in the US Midwest, and you can see the curvature.

      --
      Hoist Number One and Number Six.
    5. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, ID is still taught in Kansas, Ohio and Georgia.

      I think the real winner of this in 2006 is the people who need a cheap labor source. After all,if you get a crap-ass education in one of these misguided school districts, it's going to be hard to get a job that pays more then minimum wage.

      Some of the backers of ID are really just aiming to keep people uneducated and within control. Liberty will eventually win out-- the Catholics tried to control education and discourse 500 years ago, and they eventually lost. Hopefully the promoters won't get as violent as the Catholics did. Somehow I don't think that Jesus would approve of torture and burning people at the stake.

    6. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Or on any shoreline.

      Just look on the horizon with a telescope -- you'll see a ship's mast come into view before the deck. Didn't this strike anyone as odd back then?

    7. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by SmallOak · · Score: 5, Interesting

      the ancient greeks did for sure. And the dimentions they gave was pretty close.
      In fact during the middle ages most people I understand thought it round as well.

      The middle-eastern view seems to be that it was flat.
      http://sol.sci.uop.edu/~jfalward/ThreeTieredUniver se.htm /it's elephants all the way down

    8. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by lemaymd · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Look who's talking about liberty and control. The courts effectively trampled on liberty with this latest decision. All that the government must do is maintain neutrality, not favoring one view over another. Thus, if both evolution and ID are taught, neutrality is maintained. If ID is banned simply because it is religious, neutrality has been violated. If evolution is banned only because it is religious, neutrality has likewise been violated.

      I said "effectively trampled on", because ID was rejected for being unscientific in this particular case. That is the fault of the defense, and I can't actually fault the judge on that count, from what I've heard at least. However, if ID ever gets a decent legal and scientific team on its side, we should make some headway. Notice I said headway, since we're the ones who are trying to open people's minds to a theory that more reliably accounts for the evidence we see than evolution does. The Inquisitors were charged with snuffing out dissenting voices, and actually murdered many Bible believers, so your analogy is certainly backwards.

      Normally I stay away from debating the evidence for literal Biblical Creationism (the only reasonable strain of ID), but this is an exceptional circumstance, since so many voices have challenged the very fact that Creationism is a falsifiable scientific theory at all.

      Literal Creationism has at least four main tenets:
        - the earth is young, probably around 6000 years old
        - God created all "kinds" of animals within 6 evening-morning days (fish vs. birds vs. land mammals vs. humans, etc.)
        - the earth was devastated by a global flood early in its history
        - all humans descended from a single couple known in the English Bible as Adam and Eve

      If it could be shown that any one of these propositions does not hold, then Biblical creationism would crumble. The fact that they are extraordinarily difficult to challenge certainly does not mean that creationism is not a scientific theory. Furthermore, all of the evidence we have ever uncovered and understand quite well supports these propositions. Note that these observations are the exact same observations used by evolutionists, just interpreted according to a different framework.

      In fact, Biblical creationism is such a superior framework that I eagerly anticipate the day when macroevolution is finally put on trial for being unscientific in comparison and barred from classrooms on that basis and that basis alone. Both evolutionists and creationists have difficulty explaining many parts of their theories and demand patience, but the relative magnitudes of uncertainty between the two theories are hardly worth comparing.

      If you want to learn more about specific pieces of the evidence, you can buy books and read papers from any number of creation institutes, it's not worth discussing them here as I've done so many times before.

    9. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Flamebait? WTF? Wrong, maybe, but flamebait my pasty ass!

    10. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Cochonou · · Score: 1

      Do not forget that the first telescopes were built around 1600, by Galileo himself. However, you can still see the effect you are describing with this apparatus, if you have a good eyesight.

    11. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by relentless1914 · · Score: 0, Troll

      MODS

      Regardless of whether you agree or not, this should not be flamebait. He made an intellegent comment that was on topic..... Man I'm so glad the moderators are not like those close-minded Christians....

    12. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Bastard+of+Subhumani · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Thus, if both evolution and ID are taught, neutrality is maintained.
      I think they should both be taught - the latter in some class other than science.
      --
      Only three things are certain; death, taxes, and apocryphal quotations - Ben Franklin.
    13. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the problem with this whole "debate" is that the language always gets twisted. if a public school ads something to its curriculum, the school is effectively forcing students to learn it. this is why outright religion classes cannot be taught in public schools. this ban does not stop ID from being taught, it stops government controlled schools from forcing children to learn it. religious school can still talk about ID, parents can teach it, but a public school cannot force its students to learn ID.
      scientists are all but unanimously agreed that ID is a bogus theory. this is because the only practical reason for the theory is to support creationism. how could the theory of ID possibly lead to medical or other developments, even if it were true? evolution is a tool in scientific research, so it has value. ID is inherantly unscientific because it did not arise to explain observations, it arose to reconcile them with the bible. so it has no place in a science curriculum. it belongs in social studies.
      besides, how do you "teach" ID. the theory takes one sentence to explain in all of its marvelous complexity. "gee this evolution stuff is really complicated, it couldnt have just happened." could someone turn that into a haiku? in order to add any more detail you have to teach the only reason ID even exists, creationism. now what kind of country teaches the bible in science classes?

    14. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Bastard+of+Subhumani · · Score: 0
      Somehow I don't think that Jesus would approve of torture and burning people at the stake.
      I hear there's ben a few heated debates between him and Allah over that.
      --
      Only three things are certain; death, taxes, and apocryphal quotations - Ben Franklin.
    15. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      Mod parent +1 Hilarious!

    16. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by ToasterofDOOM · · Score: 1

      I live in Georgia, and while we are on average below standard, my district (the oh-so controversial Cobb County) is consistently above national average. I was never taught ID, and it's not like they don't still teach evolution. I think that, even if evolution went totally against my religion, i would still support it in schools because if your faith can be thrown off by the week or so they discuss it in schools, you've got other problems.

      --
      I am Spartacus
    17. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by ChrisA90278 · · Score: 1
      Not really. People who lived near oceans could see ships and boats go over the horizon. As the ship comes in first you see it's top then as it gets closer you can see move of it. You only have to go 10 to 20 miles for this effect to happen. From the ship as you can in you can first see only to tops of the hills. I have a small sailboat and the Earth's cervature is easy to see in only a half day (four or five hours) under sail.

      In Columbus' log he says that his intent is to find a new route to the East, there was no question that the world was round butthere was a hughe question of wetter a wind powered ship that cruises at four miles per hour could sail to China with with no maps or charts before eventhe sextent was invented.

    18. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by grub · · Score: 2, Insightful


      - the earth is young, probably around 6000 years old
      - God created all "kinds" of animals within 6 evening-morning days (fish vs. birds vs. land mammals vs. humans, etc.)
      - the earth was devastated by a global flood early in its history
      - all humans descended from a single couple known in the English Bible as Adam and Eve
      [...]
      If it could be shown that any one of these propositions does not hold, then Biblical creationism would crumble.


      Please present a single peer reviewed publication which scientifically supports any of these silly claims. The common ancestor one is still up in the air but you'll find that it goes back far more than 6k years.

      Have I just been trolled?

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    19. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by lemaymd · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Check out the first article on this page: http://www.creationresearch.org/crsq/abstracts/Abs tracts42-2.htm (peer reviewed)

    20. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by grub · · Score: 1


      And where was that published? In that very own Quarterly newsletter. Please, don't insult my intelligence. Send me a link to a publication in Science or Nature or something reputable.

      I work in a research lab and have access to oodles of online journals. Guess how many published papers I find when I search for anything supporting Creationism? You guessed it: zero.

      While we're swapping links, here's one for you.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    21. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by atokata · · Score: 4, Informative
      Look who's talking about liberty and control. The courts effectively trampled on liberty with this latest decision. All that the government must do is maintain neutrality, not favoring one view over another. Thus, if both evolution and ID are taught, neutrality is maintained. If ID is banned simply because it is religious, neutrality has been violated. If evolution is banned only because it is religious, neutrality has likewise been violated.

      Wrong. Just because someone presents an alternate conjecture about the accuracy of a scientific principle does not mean that said conjecture is automatically on the same level of legitimacy as whichever principle one seeks to disprove. If that were the case, I could argue that computers run on magic, and then protest when my theory of devine computation was not taught in computer science classes. The antecedents of ID are undoubtedly religious in nature; ergo, the conclusions postulated by ID proponents are derived from sources known to be false, or at the very least untestable. I said "effectively trampled on", because ID was rejected for being unscientific in this particular case.

      ID, not being a scientific hypothesis, will *always* be rejected by legitimate scientists, due to the fact that it:
      • Cannot be tested
      • Cannot be seperated from religious dogma
      • Requires belief in the supernatural as part of its core support structure
      • Negates many scientific principles which *are* tested and well-regarded among people of learning.

      That is the fault of the defense, and I can't actually fault the judge on that count, from what I've heard at least. However, if ID ever gets a decent legal and scientific team on its side, we should make some headway.

      While what you say is probably true, I find the truth of the statement to be a sad reflection on public education, and the gullibility of American Christians. Allow me to be blunt-- ID is not science, and no amount of legal or psuedo-scientific doublespeak will make it so. Science is a process wherein the natural laws governing the universe are explored, tested, pulled, stretched, and examined. A key aspect of scientific study is impartiality; which is to say that a true scientist will not endorse any particular outcome to an experiment until that experiment has been performed and tested by many independant researchers. ID differs from science in that the key promoters of its hypothesis begin with their own surity of their ideas, and then disregard conflicting facts.

      Literal Creationism has at least four main tenets: - the earth is young, probably around 6000 years old - God created all "kinds" of animals within 6 evening-morning days (fish vs. birds vs. land mammals vs. humans, etc.) - the earth was devastated by a global flood early in its history - all humans descended from a single couple known in the English Bible as Adam and Eve

      Allow me to rebut:
      The Earth is not young. Carbon dating, fossil records, geology, atomic theory, astronomy, and many other scientific disciplines have all independantly dated the earth at more than four billion years old.
      If God did create the world, and all the things in it, in six days, then how were days reckoned before the creation of the sun?
      If God created all the animals, why were so many of them such complete failures as to become extinct?
      If all humans are descended from Adam and Eve, then why the biblical prohibition on incest? And, furthermore, I am not a genetic researcher, but I'm fairly certain that thousands of generations of familial in-breeding would result in a rather, shall we say, shallow gene pool.

      If it could be shown that any one of these propositions does not hold, then Biblical creationism would crumble. The fact that they are extraordinarily difficult to challenge certainly does not mean that creationism is not a scientific theory. Furthermore, all of the evidence we have ever uncovered and understand quite we

    22. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "dimensions"

      Please learn to spell, kthx.

    23. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by lemaymd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There is an obvious bias against creationism in mainstream science, which comes through strongly in peer review situations. I'm a PhD student, I know how the publication process works.

    24. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      What were the ancient Greeks doing in the American midwest?

    25. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by grub · · Score: 3, Interesting


      Odd ideas will get support with evidence, it was only ~10 years ago that the idea of many ulcers being caused by bacteria was laughed at. Now it's accepted as fact. Creationism has never had a shred of evidence going for it, the promoters spend their time bashing science instead of looking for proof to support their ideas. Actually if memory serves the Discovery Institute(?) was formed to get said evidence. They've come up with nothing over the past decade and instead now attack science.

      Just out of curiosity, what's your future PhD in?

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    26. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by marct22 · · Score: 1
      So you think Intelligent design is science? I would hope that in a science class, the students would, you know, maybe actually learn science... Perhaps you think in science class, kids can learn how to cook on the bunsen burners, mix up meth in chemistry, or learn the differences between Biblical creationism vs. Flying Spaghetti Monsterism.

      ID is Religion, not science.

      And pretty much all four main tenents have been proven wrong. The earth is a few billion years old based on scientific results. Life has been on this earth for millions of years, that most species today are relatively new (sharks/coelacanth being the few exceptions), but there were species before them. There have been many floods, but nothing that covered the earth within the last 6000 years. All the many billions of people of different skin colors, hair types, head shapes, statures, etc. can all be traced to one couple who was alive 6000 years ago? You just choose to not believe the facts, and it's your right to be ignore it.

      America was founded on liberty for all people, of all religions and beliefs. Liberty does not mean liberty only for Christians.

      Remember that the 1st amendment to the constitution is that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion... SInce there is no law to respect ID as a science (nor can there be), the judges must adhere to the law, and hence, must throw this out.

      The judge did not forbid ID itself, you are free to believe in this, teach it to your children at home or in Church, just not in science class. Your rights are not infringed. Teaching ID in science does infringe on my rights as a parent with kids in science class not learning science, but a religious belief that I disagree with. I don't think you'd like it if a school board passed a ruling that all classes (science, PE, math, English etc.) should teach that Adam/Eve weren't the first humans on earth, but that His Noodly Appendage created the trees and mountains, and that a midgit (sic) was the first human?

      Arrrgh!

    27. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You want ID to be taught in a science class? Then publish ID in a peer review journal and have your hypothesis be independently confirmed. This is the scientific method.

      Besides, people that work for peer review journals need to get a good laugh too. "Hey, Joe, read this one! It's on ID! It's a real knee slapper! HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!"

    28. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by lemaymd · · Score: 3, Funny

      Wrong. Just because someone presents an alternate conjecture about the accuracy of a scientific principle does not mean that said conjecture is automatically on the same level of legitimacy as whichever principle one seeks to disprove. If that were the case, I could argue that computers run on magic, and then protest when my theory of devine computation was not taught in computer science classes. The antecedents of ID are undoubtedly religious in nature; ergo, the conclusions postulated by ID proponents are derived from sources known to be false, or at the very least untestable.

      - How did the falsity of propositions based on religious sources become an axiom? That is a premise of humanism, but humanism is not known to be a correct doctrine.

      ID, not being a scientific hypothesis, will *always* be rejected by legitimate scientists, due to the fact that it:

      * Cannot be tested
      - you obviously didn't understand my original post
      * Cannot be separated from religious dogma
      - we believe that the Bible is a direct account of absolute prehistory from the only One who existed at the time. So you're right, our beliefs are rooted in that account. Can you think of a more reliable source for such beliefs? The historical accuracy of the Bible is remarkable, as has been shown by many archaeological discoveries, and is more reliable than any other document that ever existed.
      * Requires belief in the supernatural as part of its core support structure
      - Would you outlaw the supernatural from science if it does in fact exist? How do you then expect science to accurately describe the universe?
      * Negates many scientific principles which *are* tested and well-regarded among people of learning.
      - There are a great number of scientific principles which were considered to be adequately tested and were well-regarded in the past that nonetheless have later been widely ridiculed. Unfortunately, one of those, macroevolution, has made a stunning comeback in modern times. ...ID differs from science in that the key promoters of its hypothesis begin with their own surity of their ideas, and then disregard conflicting facts.

      - It sounds like you're condemning evolutionism, not creationism. We are using much different interpretive frameworks.

      The Earth is not young. Carbon dating, fossil records, geology, atomic theory, astronomy, and many other scientific disciplines have all independantly dated the earth at more than four billion years old.

      - there are many holes in such methods that rely on a uniform past as a basic premise

      If God did create the world, and all the things in it, in six days, then how were days reckoned before the creation of the sun?

      - time existed before the sun

      If God created all the animals, why were so many of them such complete failures as to become extinct?

      - there was a catastrophic, global flood

      If all humans are descended from Adam and Eve, then why the biblical prohibition on incest?

      - the prohibition of incest arose fairly late in history, after the gene pool had become corrupted through genetic
      mutations

      And, furthermore, I am not a genetic researcher, but I'm fairly certain that thousands of generations of familial in-breeding would result in a rather, shall we say, shallow gene pool.

      - our original (and current, to a lesser extent) genes contained an incredible amount of diversity

      The *key difference* in these bits of biblical lore which seperate them from real science is that the observer, the reader of the bible, assumes them to be true solely on basis of religious conviction.

      - Certainly not. I want to believe the truth, wherever it m

    29. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Literal Creationism has at least four main tenets:
          - the earth is young, probably around 6000 years old
          - God created all "kinds" of animals within 6 evening-morning days (fish vs. birds vs. land mammals vs. humans, etc.)
          - the earth was devastated by a global flood early in its history
          - all humans descended from a single couple known in the English Bible as Adam and Eve

      If it could be shown that any one of these propositions does not hold, then Biblical creationism would crumble.


      Well, since there's ample evidence against #1 and #4, and there's no evidence for #3, I guess that's it for Biblical creationism!

      I'll give you a pass on #2, since no one has ever defined what a "kind" is.

    30. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by lemaymd · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There are some significant differences between ulcers and Creation, although it is a good example of the problems that can arise in the peer review system:
        - ulcers occur all around us, Creation will never again occur.
        - ulcers are a fairly neutral topic, Creationism is not. Creationism is the basic tenet of Biblical Christianity, evolution that of Humanism.

      I will agree with you that Creationism's proponents have sometimes hurt it more than they've helped it through their methods. There's not much we can do about that now, except improve going forward. There are a number of publications that support Creationism, they just can be hard to pick out from the crowd. If you were an archaeologist that had grown up in a public school, what interpretive framework would you use? Is it any surprise that explicitly Creationist publications are difficult to find today?

      I read Slashdot, it should be obvious what I'm getting my PhD in. ;-) I'm at UIUC in CS. Every field has its own peculiarities, but peer review processes are basically similar.

    31. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by KylePflug · · Score: 1

      For that matter, what is anyone doing in the American midwest?

    32. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by lemaymd · · Score: 1

      The first amendment issue is an interesting one. It first came up afaik when Madalyn Murray O'Hare sued over prayer in schools. (Btw, her son that she used as the basis for her suit is now the head of the Religious Freedom Coalition. He has a fascinating autobiography.) Even their lawyer admitted that the separation of church and state is not contained within the first amendment, it is just commonly construed in that way. In fact, the first amendment has been used as the basis for more Christian persecution in this country than anything else. Removing all vestiges of Christianity from the government actually establishes atheism, or humanism, as the state religion. Basically, the courts have gotten this backwards: The first amendment was intended to prevent the state from restricting religious expression, not to prevent religion from influencing the state. If you doubt me, just look at the background of those who fled to this country to avoid religious repression. When the government starts forcing people to go to the Church of England, that's religious repression. Likewise, when the government says you can't pray in school, that's religious repression. Now, when the public school says you have to pray a specific prayer in the morning, I can't support that either, so I'm not actually opposed to the outcome of the Murray case, but it served as the precedent for other incredibly damaging verdicts. Are you honestly happier with the way our schools look today with all vestiges of Christianity eliminated? They'll only get worse if this trend continues. The reintroduction of ID to the classroom is the only glimmer of hope I can see right now.

      Now, I do think that evolution should be given equal air time with ID until people are convinced that it is not scientific in comparison to ID, so that the state is actually neutral. Otherwise, if it were the only thing taught, that would currently be an establishment of religion, just like the sole teaching of evolution is an establishment of Humanism. Things are so complicated in public schools...

    33. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Jack9 · · Score: 1

      You missed the point (as did some of the mods I see). Careful and diligent observation can contradict common sense. The difference between scientific fact and common sense includes an objective tool of measurement. This is where the proof comes in. Common sense is often wrong and has always made for historical comedy.

      --

      Often wrong but never in doubt.
      I am Jack9.
      Everyone knows me.
    34. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by marct22 · · Score: 1
      You do understand what science is, right? ID is not science. Science is verifiable. You have a hypothesis, test it, see if your hypothesis is right, and that someone else can verify it. Every test of evolution has proven that evolution exists. Evidence of it exists in many sciences, from the various disciplinces of biology, botany, zoology, etc. Proof that the earth's been around for billions of years is found in again, biology, geology, planetary science, etc. ID? It's basic idea is that "I cannot figure out how this system became the way it is, therefore some intelligent designer created it". Just because one lacks the the intellect to figure something out is no basis for science. ID does NOT belong in science classrooms. Is it science to say "Wow, that rock looks like a camel. I cannot see how that happened, God (oops, an ID) willed it into that shape"? Can you prove that an ID did it? No. If someone like a geologist comes up with an alternate theory that wind and water erosion eroded what was a hill into a pile of rocks and dirt that has a vague camel shape, do we dismiss the geologist? Especially when he/she can show how water/wind can erode a hill?

      You do understand that the US consists of many different peoples with varying beliefs, right? Not everyone is a Christian, right? Now you may wish everyone follows your beliefs, but it is NOT in your right to impose your beliefs on everyone else. That is called a theocracy or at worst, a dictatorship.

      To me, school is a place where we go to learn stuff that makes us better and more productive American citizens. Math and science to understand physically how the world works. English/grammar/spelling to communicate with my fellow Americans. PE to learn to keep healthy. History to learn what happened before, to understand other peoples whom I may meet, and to learn about mistakes made, lessons learned so that hopefully, one can apply this knowledge to future decisions. With all that, hopefully a student will grow up and help contribute to make America stay strong and competitive.

      Today's schools, kids are taught stuff at a faster pace just so we can compete with other nations. Personally, I am very happy that kids today know more things at a certain age than I did when I was that age. Is this something you don't like?

      The 1st amendment, with respect to religion, has two pieces. 1) Congress can make no law respecting the establishment of religion, and 2) they cannot prohibit the free exercise of it. You and your kids can pray to whomever entity you wish. But you cannot make it a law to say a prayer. It infringes on the rights of students who either don't practice religion, or follow a different one. You can teach your religion at home, or in a Church, but you cannot do this in a government funded institution like a school.

      Let's say you want the best education for your kid. But the best school happens to be in a Muslim part of town. Your kid is the only non-Muslim kid in class. Every day at a certain time, all the kids get their prayer mats, and say a prayer (bowing in the direction of Mecca). Now, while your kid may be raised Christian, he/she would feel very uncomfortable. Your kid may be given the option of saying a prayer during this time, but kids being kids, they don't want to draw negative attention to themselves for fear of teasing or at least of not fitting in. Remember, in this hypothetical situation, this is the best school in town, where many of it's students graduate and go on to ivy league schools. How would you feel? Especially if you don't have the financial means to move to a different town?

      You need to start looking at things from other people's perspectives, because not everyone believes in your beliefs. Just because the government has mandated that there is no formal time in school for prayer or forbidding ID in science class doesn't mean the government is performing religious persecution. You are free to practice whatever religion you want as long as it doesn't violate the rights of other people (sacrifying virgins to your gods is not a good idea!!). The government didn't say you can't practice your Christian beliefs at all, it's saying it can't mandate that everyone must practice a religious belief.

    35. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by abirdman · · Score: 1
      Thank you. Great suggestion. I suggest ID be taught in political science classes, as an example of a debunked and now disreputable attempt on the part of the religious right to sneak the Bible and Christianity into the back door of our schools. They've become so obvious that they're losing credibility and support even from the Republicans, who have previously been supporters (because that whole toxic crowd votes).

      Evolution is the attempt to create and understand a working model of reality. Its value is to allow predictions and to check them against known facts. ID is a value judgement, with deep strains of anti-intellectualism and, of course Fundamentalist Biblicalism. It isn't even remotely science.

      The fact that Evolution can't be proved does not mean we should turn instead to fairy tales. ID is fast becoming a thoroughly discredited political move by the religious right. I'm guessing in 20 years it will be completely forgotten, and there will be some new religious pabulum we'll be fighting against.

      --
      Everything I've ever learned the hard way was based on a statistically invalid sample.
    36. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by abirdman · · Score: 1
      many voices have challenged the very fact that Creationism is a falsifiable scientific theory at all
      This is crap. Just from reading your post, it's clear that ID proponents can't tell whether they're talking about biology, chemistry, geology, cosmology, or what! This is not clear thinking. What's to keep us from interrupting music theory class with the "information" that some think the 12-tone scale was invented by a higher being (well, I guess it was-- by J.S. Bach)? ID is destined to fail as an intellectual discipline because it is neither intellectual nor disciplined. Sloppy thinking about large subjects is the mark of charlatans and philistines. Please just do what dorks throughout the ages have done, and go read your book by yourself somewhere, and let the rest of the world get on with the business of the pursuit of knowledge.
      --
      Everything I've ever learned the hard way was based on a statistically invalid sample.
    37. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by pnewhook · · Score: 4, Informative
      Common sense told us the earth was flat.

      Actually thank the bible for that one.

      The bible states numerous times that the earth is "firm" and "immovable". Therefore it cannot be a sphere orbiting the sun now can it?

      Also the bible references "earths four corners" something that's only possible if the earth was flat, and Daniel 4:10-11 references a tall tree that is visible to the farthest reaches of the earth. Also only possible if the earth was flat.

      So if you take the bible literally, then you must believe in a flat earth.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    38. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man I thought this was funny...

    39. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by pnewhook · · Score: 1
      Both evolutionists and creationists have difficulty explaining many parts of their theories and demand patience, but the relative magnitudes of uncertainty between the two theories are hardly worth comparing.

      Simply because when a creationist is challenged with a concept that cannot be explained, the answer invariably is "well God is all powerful and therefore he ...(fill in the blank with an illogical work of God that removes the uncertainty in question)".

      When you have a magic hole filler like that of course your theory will be complete!

      In discussions with creationists about evolution, it quickly becomes clear that they have a simplistic and incorrect understanding of the science backing up evolution, and use this flawed understanding to try and cast the theory in doubt.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    40. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by winwar · · Score: 1

      "And one can buy a great many books about things like Hobbits, Zeus, Odin, Vishnu, Buddha, and, sure enough, Jesus. Just because there are books does not make a thing true, and no amount of repeating an untrue thing ever will."

      What do you mean Hobbits aren't real? I just saw a documentary on them by Peter Jackson! :)

    41. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      The bible states numerous times that the earth is "firm" and "immovable". Therefore it cannot be a sphere orbiting the sun now can it?

      No, but it could be a sphere with the sun orbiting it. And for many earthbound purposes, this is as sensible way to model it. We still say "the sun is rising", e.g.

    42. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Onan · · Score: 2, Informative
      All that the government must do is maintain neutrality, not favoring one view over another. Thus, if both evolution and ID are taught, neutrality is maintained. If ID is banned simply because it is religious, neutrality has been violated.
      Much like Pascal's flawed wager, that argument might hold water if evolution and intelligent design were the only possible answers.

      The government can maintain neutrality in one of two ways: either teach every single religious faith that is or has ever been held by any group of people, or teach none of them at all. Given that the former would require a standard education to take about nine hundred years, there really only seems to be one viable approach.

      Remember, that neutrality for which you ask means that the pink bunny in your head doesn't get treated any differently than the green bunny in the head of some splinter Incan sect.

      ...we're the ones who are trying to open people's minds to a theory that more reliably accounts for the evidence we see than evolution does.
      Uh, theistic creationism doesn't "account for" anything. It simply pushes all the questions off onto a scapegoat which it then completely declines to explain.
      Literal Creationism has at least four main tenets: ...
      Did you maybe miss the part where the Bible starts off with two completely different and mutually exclusive stories of creation? The seven-days story and the garden-of-eden story are both very specific about the order in which events happened, and they are not compatible.

      If the Bible cannot even be reconciled with itself, how can you possibly expect it to be taken seriously as a reference on anything else?

      The bible is a lovely collection of folk stories. And I'm grateful to R for putting it together, but in about the same way that I'm grateful to the Brothers Grimm. I don't think either work is particularly well suited to a science classroom.

    43. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Wrong! In Isaiah 40:22 God is said to sit above "the circle of the earth" (the Hebrew word for circle can also mean a sphere). Corners of the world is used as figures of speach even today. Go back to the original Hebrew and Greek before making such claims. Somewhere else in the Isaiah 34:4 and Revelation 6:14 the world/heavens is decribed like a scroll that turns suggesting it turns on an axis. Man where did you get your translations from?

    44. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by wkitchen · · Score: 3, Insightful
      - Would you outlaw the supernatural from science if it does in fact exist? How do you then expect science to accurately describe the universe?
      Yes, I absolutely would "outlaw the supernatural from science if it does in fact exist". Science deals only with natural phenomena and natural causes because only natural phenomena and causes can be tested and explored via the scientific method. If supernatural causes do in fact exist, then that would mean that science only explores a subset of what exists. And that is perfectly fine, because that subset is what it is good at. The supernatural, whether it exists or not, is opaque to the methods of science. If some natural phenomena have supernatural causes, then it will leave those causes as an eternal mystery because it simply does not have the ability to test them.

      And to the second question above, science needs only to describe the natural aspects of the universe. That's what it's for. If you're looking for explanations that include the supernatural, then you need to look to something else because science is the wrong tool for that job. And to force the supernatural into science, is to render it a tool unfit for any job.
    45. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      - I heartily agree that religion and science should coexist, but I go even further and argue that they should agree with each other. What good is religion if it's not based on something we can observe? How then would we be able to differentiate between any of the religions? Why did I choose to believe the Bible rather than some other creation story from another religion? The reason your analogies are correct is that the spiritual world is superior to the physical and can't be influenced using such direct means as you suggested. However, the spiritual can certainly influence the physical in direct and powerful ways.

      Religion based on observable, repeatable fact is not religion. Religion is faith-based, and the proof to a religion's believers of that religion's truth is embodied in miracles or signs, which are (usually) personal experiences. If you believe in Christianity so much that it is fact to you, so be it, but your religion is not provable to anyone else.

      The scientific method isn't impervious and perfect, and it's not intended to be that way. It's the best way that humans have of explaining observable, repeatable phenomena. Inferring that a rational human would believe something of human origin to be perfect belies a lack of understanding for the system by which science proves and disproves the world we live in.

      Furthermore, a scientific defense of creation would require that creation be repeated for the benefit of those watching. How exactly do you propose that scientists become God and re-create the universe?

      I spent my entire childhood and teenage life as a frequent member of a Southern Baptist church. I do not think that the Bible is an infallible text which, in its present state, was written by the hand of God. I find it absurd to believe that someone trying so hard to prove God, as it were, is so willing to limit His existance to such an extent, and to wave your hands in the air and make excuses for something which by its very nature exists beyond human knowledge.

    46. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by nimblebrain · · Score: 1

      You're funny :)

      Talk about misrepresenting the government's position, and then wrapping yourself up in the robes of the oppressed!

      You can't scream about "fairness" when the backers of intelligent design try to do an end run around the science community, the science process, good pedagogy and teachers to strike at the soft, sympathetic elected officials to sneak themselves into grade 9 classes.

      Creationist tactics reek of contrived dualism: the utterly incorrect "if you're wrong on X then we must be right" view. If evolution were in some fantasy land 'disproven' tomorrow, that would not make literal biblical creationism automatically right. Neither would creationists in this day and age tolerate a grade 8 science class being taught about body thetans. Creationists are not interested in "fairness".

      However, if ID ever gets a decent legal and scientific team on its side, we should make some headway.

      Not just "scientific team", but if it ever gets decent science on its side like the Discovery Institute was supposed to do in 'Phase I: Scientific Research, Writing & Publicity' and was supposed to be the basis of everything that followed. But they got lazy, wanted a shortcut, and moved straight on to Phase III: Cultural Confrontation & Renewal.

      If it could be shown that any one of these propositions does not hold, then Biblical creationism would crumble.

      Horsepuckey. They have been proven wrong, and the response has been to just move the goalposts off the field, or as seems to be more common, just keep repeating exactly what you have just stated. It's a slick ruse, occasionally having to concede a point, and then to just stick it right back in as though nothing happened.

      If you want to learn more about specific pieces of the evidence, you can buy books and read papers from any number of creation institutes, it's not worth discussing them here as I've done so many times before.

      I have done so with many, and they repeat the same, tired mistakes. I find it interesting the way they present it, though. They use good logic in many spots, and then pull a switcheroo or an assumption out of the air at step 1, 5, or 10.

      One of Dembski's latest on "specified complexity" is entirely like that. Strings out his math like a master. Then, in the last pages' worth of his paper, he lies about evolution. His entire mathematical proof is that you can't target a particular, exact spot in a mathematical space with a random walk; it needs explanation. In equating evolution with this, he implies that every generation would be using a 'random walk' with the express intention of producing you . My, my, jolly good, Dembski, you're such a smart man, but you lied on the last page to try to prove a false point about your opponents.

      Papers like the ones Humphreys puts out are done in layers. The most "reasonable sounding" ones are the most public-facing, but they heavily rely on his other papers. When you check out his other papers, especially a couple of layers deep, you get gems like The Creation of Planetary Magnetic Fields which tries to prove that the Earth was a sphere of water, as he interprets in Genesis, and on the difficult steps, he invokes God in an utterly untestable manner...

      In normal circumstances, the number of molecules in each of the four groups-three ortho and one para - is roughly equal. All the magnetic moments cancel out, so that water normally has no net magnetic moment of its own. However, God was under no requirement to create the water molecules in their normal order. For example, He could have created all the molecules with their proton magnetic moments lined up in a given direction

      --
      Binary geeks can count to 1,023 on their fingers :)
    47. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by IllForgetMyNickSoonA · · Score: 1

      I was doing a *lot* of peer reviews during my work as assistant prof. on the university (also CS). I am not able to see why you brought "the way peer reviews are done" into this discussion. Just to mud-up the water? Just to somehow find the reason to mention that you're a PhD student?

      There is absolutely nothing in the peer review process that makes it somehow anti-religious, except that it includes a bunch of intelligent and educated people reading your paper before allowing it to be published. That's the reason "religiously inspired" ideas never get published in anything of any scientific reputation. Perhaps you meant exactly that, though...

      Regarding your original statement: it's just hilarious! If anything, the state protected the science from getting diluted by religion.

    48. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by IllForgetMyNickSoonA · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is like saying "There is an obvious bias against claims not backed by any logic, arguments, or observations in peer review situations". Well DUH - that's what peer review process is all about: separation of scientifically worth material from the... let's say "rest of the material"

    49. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by balster+neb · · Score: 1

      So if you take the bible literally, then you must believe in a flat earth.

      It seem that's what these people believe. I wish this was another joke site, but they appear to be dead serious.

      Just check out the forums.

    50. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by pnewhook · · Score: 1
      Wrong!
      No I'm not wrong. The bible is contradictory which is why it is impossible to be taken literally. That was my point.
      Corners of the world is used as figures of speach even today
      You cant say that the bible is the literal word of God, but then say in the parts you don't like it was a figure of speech. You can't have it both ways.
      Man where did you get your translations from?
      King James. Yours?
      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    51. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by pnewhook · · Score: 1
      --The bible states numerous times that the earth is "firm" and "immovable". Therefore it cannot be a sphere orbiting the sun now can it?

      No, but it could be a sphere with the sun orbiting it.

      But not when you take the other references into account.
      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    52. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by pnewhook · · Score: 2, Funny
      It seem that's what these people believe. I wish this was another joke site, but they appear to be dead serious.

      Yup. Intelligent Design proponents claim to be following a literal interpretation of the bible, but they are not really.

      If you really want to take it literally you have to go hardcore - go flat.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    53. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I read Slashdot, it should be obvious what I'm getting my PhD in. ;-)

      I didn't even know you could get a PhD in Goatse.

    54. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Informative? I don't think so. Is there a mod for -1 Ignorant?

      This is exactly the problem with discussing ID or any theistic topic on slashdot. Take a quote or 2 from the Bible and take it out of context (or take the one line quote literally) and the bible sounds absolutely absurd.

      The Bible is not to be taken literally.

      Jesus said "Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life" John 6:54

      Please do not take this to mean that the Bible endorses cannibalism.

      Unfortunately, so many slashdot readers are accustomed to reading technical documents that are to be taken literally, it seems that they are unable to decipher other texts that aren't.

    55. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      That's exactly my point (which you've obviously missed)- the bible cannot be taken literally.

      So for ID proponents to say the earth is 6000 years old and was made in 6 days because Genesis tells us it is so is absolutely absurd.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    56. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by gothzilla · · Score: 1

      You should really read decisions for yourself before believing the lies the Christian right tells you about them.

      The judge's decision had nothing to do with the comptetency of the defense legal team and everything to do with the evil acts of the school board, from using threats to coerce other members of the board, creating rifts in the community, and lying their asses off. The board went above and beyond to show the community that it's motives for pushing ID were religious, and many were documented.

      ID was rejected for not being science because it is assumption based, again by no fault of the defense team. ID requires an assumption to exist so it cannot be science. There is not one single piece of evidence that points to a creator, only a lack of knowledge which we are filling in with actual science as time goes by.

      Please be careful who's drivel you listen to. The school board even admitted they didn't understand ID at all and admitted they didn't bother learning what it was. They believed lies told by the Christian right in it's efforts to destroy science and inject religion into public schools.

    57. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      >No, but it could be a sphere with the sun orbiting it.
      But not when you take the other references into account.

      OK, let's see. Your other refs were:

      • "earths four corners" something that's only possible if the earth was flat
        Revelation 7:1 ... I saw four angels standing at the four corners of the earth, holding back the four winds of the earth...
        Revelation 20:8 ...go out to deceive the nations in the four corners of the earth...
        Revelations is a vision, a prophecy; there's a great deal there that has no basis in physical reality, as even the most literal fundamentalist would agree. In any case, the angels could be simply forming a square surrounding the earth.
      • Daniel 4:10-11 references a tall tree that is visible to the farthest reaches of the earth. Also only possible if the earth was flat.
        Daniel 4:9 Here is my dream; interpret it for me...
        Okay, it states it was Nebuchadnezzar's DREAM.
      These are so flimsy I think you must be trolling.
    58. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Tellalian · · Score: 1

      If all humans are descended from Adam and Eve, then why the biblical prohibition on incest?

      Good point. If the Bible were true, and we're all products of incest, you'd think there'd be a lot more gullible, dim-witted people walking arou...oh wait, never mind ;)

      And one can buy a great many books about things like Hobbits, Zeus, Odin, Vishnu, Buddha, and, sure enough, Jesus. Just because there are books does not make a thing true, and no amount of repeating an untrue thing ever will.

      In a perfect world, you'd be right. However, the unfortunate reality is that if something's repeated enough times, and with enough conviction, people will start believing it. Just look at Bush's strong rhetoric against Iraq at the onset of the war, and how around 50% of Americans came to believe Saddam was personally involved in 9/11.

    59. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      You missed a bunch, namely Numbers, Ezekiel, Job, and Isaiah. Not all of these are visions.

      Also in Matthew, the description of the temptation of Christ during his fast: "the devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and sheweth him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them". One can only see all the Kingdoms if the earth was flat.

      Not trolling; just showing that it is ridiculous to try and take all of the passages of the bible literally as the ID proponents claim to do.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    60. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If all humans are descended from Adam and Eve, then why the biblical prohibition on incest?

      Actually, Adam and Eve are the first humans that God created. Not necessarily the only ones. That's a common misinterpretation (literal interpretation) of the Bible. The Bible tells a small part of the story, there are definitely gap and omissions. It would be impossible to tell the whole story in a single book.

      But that is irrelvant since "incest" did not even exist at that time. Concepts like incest and adultery etc... did not exist until later.

    61. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      That's exactly my point (which you've obviously missed)- the bible cannot be taken literally.

      No, you're misunderstanding: this isn't a debate over whether the entire Bible is literal or not. Use some common sense. The Bible is full of stories, analogies, metaphors, poetry, and literal truth. Most of the time it should be pretty clear to an intelligent person which is which.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    62. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by pnewhook · · Score: 1
      Most of the time it should be pretty clear to an intelligent person which is which.

      EXACTLY. which is why a sane person when he reads Genesis realizes that it is just an analogy to how the universe was created and does not interpret 'day' to mean a real day. Example, since the Sun wasn't created until the fourth 'day', how is it possible to have 'evenings' and 'mornings' for the first three days?

      Genesis is not meant to be literal. As you say any intelligent person can see this. So trying to discredit areas of science and introducing pseudo science such as Intelligent Design to try and prove the literal biblical view of the earth being 6000 years old is a stupid waste of time at the least, and corrupting the minds of youth against science at the most.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    63. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I'm getting my PhD in... CS

      Ah good, a fellow programmer. In fact I find that CS provides some of the most powerful support for evolution (which is of course merely in addition to the physical record and physical evidence supporting it). It is amazing being able to witness the process of evolution in action, to watch complex information being created and self-organizing right before your eyes, to get an deeper understanding of exactly how it works and how powerful it is. To understand evolution as an information processing system.

      Evolution as a process fundamentally consists of a repeated cycle of replication (with a small degree of mutation/variation) alternating with selection. It becomes almost infinitely more powerful if you include recombination... the mixing of genes from two or more "parents" to create each new "individual".

      The mutation introduces noise... raw material... and the selection process then filters that noise into directed information. The very first round of selection immediately filters out any "fatal" mutation. Any mutation that gets passed down even a single generation by definition carries an implicit information tag saying "this is a non-fatal mutation". Over further generations the more beneficial and less costly/harmful mutations increase as a percentage of the population, and the less beneficial more costly/harmful mutations reduce to a lower percentage of the population. So not only do you build up a library of nonfatal mutations, you then tag each mutation in that library with a percentage number measuring the value/cost of that mutation. A huge library of sophisticated information.

      The sexual recomination stage can then use that huge library of mutations with their measured cost/value to do an almost infinitely powerful search for valuable combinations. I'm not goinng to get into the explanations of of implicit parallelism and schemata and the multi-armed bandit problem here, but if you do go into it you can see how there is an astronomically large power multiplier in implicit parallelism, and that evolution just so happens to use the mathematically optimal search strategy as defined in the multi-armed bandit problem. There is a lot of information theory lurking below the surface, and it provides far more power than is commonly recognized.

      If you haven't done so, I suggest you explore and experiment with evolutionary algorithms. It is a very powerful (though specialized) technique to have in your programming algorithms bag of tricks. You can't or wouldn't want to use evolutionary algorithms on most types of programming tasks, but where they *are* appropriate they are often about the only approach that works at all. Evolutiony algorithms open up an entire range of problems that you would otherwise be unable to tackle at all.

      For some tasks, evolutionary algorithms *have* and *do* provide solutions better than any human expert design.

      Wikipedia has a a good introduction to genetic algorithms, and many good links to other refference sources.

      From an information processing point of view, it is a vivid demonstration that evolution is perfectly capable of producing the range and complexity of life we see today.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    64. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I didn't mean that your statement was ignorant. I was actually agreeing with you but extending that slashdot moderators usually interprete anything that makes the bible sounds silly, childish, or foolish to be "Informative".

    65. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Look who's talking about liberty and control. The courts effectively trampled on liberty with this latest decision.

      The liberty involved is the right of Religious Freedom, and that right means the roight of us to be free of the force of government being used against us for the purpose of favoring one religious or religious belief over any other. As the judge said, the ID'ers on the shool board were explicitly abusing their powers for the purpose of getting official government support of their religius beliefs, and doing so was a violation against the sutudents and publics rights against government power being abused in thgat way.

      All that the government must do is maintain neutrality, not favoring one view over another. Thus, if both evolution and ID are taught, neutrality is maintained.

      Well I seem to recall a big hullabaloo about Christians imprisoning Galileo for life for suggesting that the sun was the center of the solar system.

      So according to you, science teachers should spend equal time teaching that the earth is unmoving and is the center of the universe, as some Chistians claimed according to their LITERAL reading of the Bible.

      According to you, science class should give equal time to the foundations of each feild of science as universally (99.9%) accepted by actual professionals and PhDs in that feild, and an equal share to every teaching of each religion on the subject, including an equal share of time for the six brand new religiouns made up and followed by me and my 59 friends (each of those six new religions and conflicting stories being professed by ten of us).

      ID was rejected for being unscientific in this particular case. That is the fault of the defense

      It's not the fault of the defense. The ID movent has spent years preparing for and manufacturing this test case. They had an army of laywers and had unlimited time to prepare and they dredged all of science for support, and they came up empty.

      It is the fault of the fact that there IS NO scientific theory of ID that has made any testable and verified predictions. A theory is not scientific if is does not make any falsifiable predictions, and even if id did make such predictions it would have zero weight until a substantian number of such predictions had been tested and confirmed.

      In any case, highschool classrooms are not a legitimate battleground for science.

      we're the ones who are trying to open people's minds to a theory that more reliably accounts for the evidence we see than evolution does.

      Fine, then quite trying to use highschool classrooms and public relation campaigns as a battleground and the legislature as a battleground, and write a damn scientific paper presenting your evidence. However I think you'll have a hard time bringing anything genuinely new to the table, andthing that has not already been addressed and found invalid, as you're coming a bit late to the proper battlegound.... the scientific community. This battleground has been dealling with this subject for newaly one hundred and fifty years now, and all of the arguments have been made and all of the evidence has been presented and evaluated by genuine experts in a hundred different fields, and the battle is pretty toroughtly dead by now.

      But heay, if you really have something new to contribute, please do. Let the experts in the appropriate feild see if it holds up. Submit it to real scientists in the appropriate field for genuine expert peer review in the field.

      Literal Creationism has at least four main tenets:
      - the earth is young, probably around 6000 years old


      Ah yes, essentially every scientist in every field is an absolute moron.

      Those idiot geologists are too stupid to see the difference between a canyon (the Grand Canyon) carved out in a few days during a flood or carved in the 4000 years after a flood, and a canyon slowly carved over the course of 6 million years. Not to mention the millions of years of geolog

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    66. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Umm.. your implying an awfull lot here without taking the same historical geography into context. The Americas, both poles and probably austrailia weren't even know about at that time or possesed alone a kindom with all thier glory. Supposing a mountain was high enough that all of the kindoms of European and asia, africa can be seen from it, it would include all the known lands and kindoms at the time it was writen.

      Literal interpretation has to be view in the context it is in. An exeeding high mountain might not be high enough but then again when most people fast, they become dilusional and see "visions" too. Is it even possible this is metaphorical language when the paasage is taken into context with the rest of the chapter. Jesus is fasting, the devil is tempting (and we know he lies from other passages) him, and the passages seem to be jesus refuting that temptation.

      The 4 corners of the earth, was described to me that it referenced the four directions of the compass. North, south east and west, If you set out to the four corners of the earth you are sending someone in each direction. If land ends at a sea (the ocean) you have basicaly stoped at the end if you arent aware of anythign existing beyound that sea (referncing kindoms). It is possible if you don't have ship capable of going around the world, you could reach the four corners of your domain without the earth being flat. I havn't explored the other mentions you refered to but even in a literal sence, this doesn't realy say the earth is flat.

      As for the bible being the literal word of god, My understanding is that's only refered to in the old testement. It was supposedly commanded to be writen by god thru man. Anything around or after the time of jesus is theoreticaly a history book and doesn't carry this distiction. Also translations of the bible may have went wrong too. Even at the time of jesus, the bible was writen in a ancient laguage not spoken. In order for him to read it, it had to of been translated at least once. I am in agreement with you. Taking the bible in the strick literal sence is foolish. There has to be room for error. Simple things like nuumbers can often be wrong. Alot of the words take on different meanings depending on the words around them so if one is out of context, the whole passage could have gon wrong.

    67. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by 1u3hr · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You missed a bunch,

      Since the ones you cited earlier were stated to be dreams, I don't see why I should bother to chase up more. Basically, I don't think the Bible says anything about this; the shape of the planet just is not a matter for theology. You keep stating the Bible says the world is flat, you're the one who has to support that.

      One can only see all the Kingdoms if the earth was flat.

      Firstly, I think if you saw the hemisphere centred on Israel, you could see all the kingdoms of the earth at that time, except perhaps the Mayans. Secondly, you're assuming light travelled in straight lines. If Satan can lift Jesus up to a mountain, he can refract light to show him the entire world in a Mercator projection (with four corners) if he wants to. Though again, this is most likely meant to be undrstood as a vision rather than objective reality; as to get high enough to see even half the globe would leave Jesus rather short of air to breathe.

    68. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Schickie · · Score: 1
      ...Not necessarily the only [human] ones [created]...

      Perhaps, but surely we can determine an upper bound? (Let's see now, one-rib, two-ribs, three...)

      ...incest and adultery, existence thereof...

      Well of course not you dummy! How could Adam & Eve do I&A ? With whom ? (The snake??)

      ... But wait, now that I thinks deeply on it, and I deeply thinks a lot...given that A&E are permanently united in parasitical bliss and if one or t'other were to go off one day or night and, well, you know, do a touchy-feely on self, would that count? (And thine forehead shall be branded indelibly with both Iota* and Alpha*, thine begatted progeny debased and thine eyesight shall be at risk. - Arbuthnot 6:13)

      *(Apparently Arbuthnot's hebrew was all greek)

      Finally, will some literal interpretationist please please, and with a minimum of dazzling science (no worries there) explain that damn (sorry) apple to me? Was it a Granny Smith?

    69. Re:And the winner for 2006 is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really. You can only say that if the word used in the original text refers to the planet we live on, which it almost assuredly does not, since they had no idea they were on a planet. :) To ancient cultures, "the earth" probably just meant whatever lands they had managed to see and explore. Translated text taken out of its context? Nope - that's not anything you want to make assertions with.

  2. As the headline on fark.com said.... by maddogdelta · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nominated for 2006, GRAVITY!!!!

    --
    -- There are 10 kinds of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
    1. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by Syrrh · · Score: 1

      Aw, don't be silly. The award is for 'scientific acheivement'.

      Not inventions. Duh.

    2. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 4, Funny

      You mean "intelligent falling", right?

    3. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by Uranium194 · · Score: 1

      Do to recent talk about Gravity and its potential for great award achievement, the Law of Gravity has been repealed. We are sorry for any inconvience this may cause.

      --
      There are 3 kinds of people in the world: Those that can count and those that cannot!
    4. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

      which year are we celebrating electro-magnetism?

      --
      try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    5. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by Hard_Code · · Score: 2, Funny

      There are 11 kinds of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't and those who make jokes about it.

      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
    6. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you mean: 'divine intervention'? ;)

    7. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    8. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by Skreems · · Score: 1

      > Nominated for 2006, GRAVITY!!!! you joke, but if that project that's supposed to detect gravity waves or particles or whatever it turns out to be actually works, you may well be right.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    9. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by bergeron76 · · Score: 1

      Scientifically speaking, the correct equivalent would be "intelligently weighted floating".

      --
      Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
    10. Re:As the headline on fark.com said.... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      My favorite quote:

      "Anti-[Intelligent]-falling physicists have been theorizing for decades about the 'electromagnetic force,' the 'weak nuclear force,' the 'strong nuclear force,' and so-called 'force of gravity,'" Burdett said. "And they tilt their findings toward trying to unite them into one force. But readers of the Bible have already known for millennia what this one, unified force is: His name is Jesus."

  3. o rly by danzormczor · · Score: 0

    what about stem cell cloning? oh yeah, that was all a lie. scientists are all evil, am i right

  4. In other news... by Silverlancer · · Score: 3, Funny

    Gravity to be named the top scientific achievment of 2006. Expect the contest for 2007 to be between the invention of Algebra and the discovery of atoms.

    1. Re:In other news... by OctoberSky · · Score: 1

      No I nominated Chris Columbus for "Finding America" I mean, no one knew it existed before he got here... Not even the Native People who lived here.
      They were all "Hey, where the hell are we?" until Columbus showed up.
      After Columbus they're all "Hey, why is everyone dying?"

    2. Re:In other news... by emjaycue · · Score: 3, Funny

      Won't ever happen. As everyone knows, gravity is just a THEORY.

    3. Re:In other news... by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      Whenever anyone brings this up, I always draw the following analogy: Christopher Columbus is like Microsoft. He wasn't the first to discover America and his efforts didn't necessarily end up with good results, but he made it popular to the masses. You could probably substitute AOL in there, too.

    4. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, I first read that as "Not even Natalie Portman who lived here"

    5. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Gravity is not a theory, it's a falsehood. Things just return to their natural state when they are removed from them. Solids will fall to earth, water will trickle back to the river, and when taken underwater, air will try to rise to the surface.

      Lordy i feel a rapture coming on!

    6. Re:In other news... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Actually be never discovered "America". He discovered the American Continent. Specifically the Bahamas and Cuba. He never touched foot on what we now call America.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    7. Re:In other news... by zerofret · · Score: 1

      Gravity doesn't exist. The Earth just sucks.

  5. Hmm... by gorzek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not that I support Intelligent Design (I think it's hokum, personally), but I can't help thinking this decision is politically-motivated. Doesn't mean it's not deserved, but it sure is convenient, coming on the heels of the ID court decision.

    Aw, what do I know?

    1. Re:Hmm... by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Actually the intelligent design people were told this was goig to happen by a higher power(CIA informants working for Bush) So they were trying to fill the headlines up to drown out this news.

      How many people can I piss off or on today.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    2. Re:Hmm... by gorzek · · Score: 0

      Hm, maybe ID is right. Only a truly Intelligent Designer could create such stupid people.

    3. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There have been some pretty big developments, particularly in comparisons of chimp and human genomes, which is going to give us an enormous understanding of just what, at the genetic level, makes us human. That being said, I do think the victory of reason over Medievalism in Dover (though a limited one), has played a part.

      The saddest part is that no matter how vast our understanding of evolution becomes, there will always be those who, for religious or logically unsound reasons, or just out of plain ignorance and misplaced incredulity, will reject it, and there will be those that wish to misrepresent or out-and-out destroy science simply to prop up their too-deeply held superstitions.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:Hmm... by Scoria · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, it's simple. There is no scientific evidence that would support Intelligent Design. Intelligent Design is not a valid scientific theory, as it is not even remotely predictable. It's also unlikely that one could validate Intelligent Design through observation.

      Meanwhile, the theory of evolution is supported by both strong scientific evidence and observation. It is also predictable.

      One is the product of science, and belongs in a science class. The other is not.

      --
      Do you like German cars?
    5. Re:Hmm... by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      I think you mean predictive, not predictable.

    6. Re:Hmm... by gorzek · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What I find saddest about the ID movement is that they have the wrong-headed idea that evolution rules out an Intelligent Designer. Nothing about evolution implies it is random and undirected. While each generation is certainly full of mutations that have no purpose, over the long run all species evolve traits that assure their survival, a form of genetic "intelligence" itself.

      ID proponents would be better served examining how evolution *validates* their viewpoint. Just because evolution doesn't specify an Intelligent Designer doesn't mean there isn't one, just that we can't prove one scientifically. For some reason, being unable to prove something scientifically means, to some people, it just doesn't exist.

      I'm not a Christian, and I don't have a firm belief in any kind of God, but ID supporters are clearly looking at evolution the wrong way.

    7. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course it was. The award is supposed to go to one news item. From sciencemag.org's web site:

      Each year, the editors and news staff of Science look back at the big science stories of the past 12 months, and dub one of them the Breakthrough of the Year.

      Yet they lumped several smaller related events so evolution could win.

    8. Re:Hmm... by Scoria · · Score: 1

      Yes, you're right. It has been a long day.

      --
      Do you like German cars?
    9. Re:Hmm... by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      FTA

      Colin Norman, news editor of Science, said the choice was based solely on the merits of the research, not the battle over intelligent design.

      I still agree with you, politically motivated, I wish they could have shown a little more tact and rather than putting up a headline such as "ID you suck, naner naner". I wish they would have been a little more specific to the study that received credit for the award.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    10. Re:Hmm... by Asakusa · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Understand that some people live by faith or belief in something greater than "man is an animal". It doesn't make a difference to you does it? So how can it be "sad" if the people who believe in the Jesus, Hail Mary Mother Ghost of Alah or whatever, are happy believing in such?

      I personally am not Protestant or into Judaism, but I don't wholly subscribe to the idea that I'm just meat. Finding out how about how my body did develop is a vital activity, on the other hand.

      --
      The prisoner of hope is sustained and encouraged by his hope, even as he is confined by it.
    11. Re:Hmm... by SmallOak · · Score: 1

      "Colin Norman, news editor of Science, said the choice was based solely on the merits of the research, not the battle over intelligent design." "Winner: Evolution in action. Genome sequencing and painstaking field observations shed light on the intricacies of how evolution works." Right now it will be impossible to determine one way or the other. When things get this escalated, one would have to be a specialist in both evolutionary theory and genetics to determine if this was really a good year. I was also thinking that ID only works in context of a 'Abraham god' (jew/chistian/muslim). In the context of Buddhist, Shinto, or many others it does not work at all even as an concept cause the gods don't work that way.

    12. Re:Hmm... by MrCoke · · Score: 1

      These are indeed strange times if countering pseudo-science with sound scientific data is called 'political'.

    13. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2, Funny

      It must be Friday- time for another flame war on ID vs Evolution.

      You can't pick Evolution over ID as a scientific theory based on the evidence or on the testible hypothesis or on falsifiable hypothesis- the two are completely equivalent on those criteria, because the evidence used is exactly the same evidence. "God did it" and "Random Chance did it" are both theological statements that are logically indistinguishable from one another.

      You claim that ID is not predictible- but since it predicts the exact same outcomes that evolution does, that would mean that evolution wasn't predictable either. You claim that ID cannot be supported by observation; yet religious visions have occured throughout human history, and actually, since ID insists that God used evolution as a method, the natural world observations for ID and evolution are also exactly the same. You claim that ID is not supported by strong scientific evidence- but where's the strong scientific evidence for randomization, the one key difference between atheistic religious evolution and Christian religious Intelligent Design?

      If ID is not science, then evolution certainly isn't either. If evolution is science, so are the scientific portions of ID. But of course, the worshipers of Popplar and demarcation methods such as falsifiability will never actually see that...

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    14. Re:Hmm... by koekepeer · · Score: 1

      nice paradox in your post - stupid people, created in his own image.

    15. Re:Hmm... by gorzek · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But ID and evolution are not equivalent. One *assumes* an Intelligent Designer. The other does not. That evolution doesn't *require* such a Designer doesn't mean one doesn't exist, only that the theory does not rely on one.

      Your argument actually collapses on itself, because you have essentially said ID does nothing but add a layer of complexity to evolution--a layer that is unnecessary, does not aid our understanding of the evolutionary process, and does not alter observational results.

      That is exactly why I oppose ID being taught as an "alternative" or "replacement" for evolution. It is not, it is simply an ill-conceived modification designed to inject monotheistic dogma into a realm where it has no place.

    16. Re:Hmm... by cliffy2000 · · Score: 1

      if it has no mechanism for being false, it's pointless. it may or not be true, but there's no reason to discuss it.

    17. Re:Hmm... by Nato_Uno · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Interestingly enough, personal beliefs aside, I think the *evolution* people are looking at ID the wrong way, insisting that "ID proponents are all religious whackos!" and "ID rules out evolution!".

      There are prominent examples of *non-theists* who are proponents of ID (like Michael Behe and Francis Crick, for example - Google is your friend).

      It's interesting to me that this whole thing has become a religious debate. I read the sticker that the Kansas school board wanted to attach to the textbooks and didn't think it was all that offensive - just pointed out that there are holes in evolution and that it should be approached with an open mind - much like Behe and Crick (and others) have said, too... although Crick was pretty well abused for his panspermia position, too, so I guess it's not all that surprising. I guess the worst thing you can do is suggest the scientific community might be *wrong*... >)

      Nato

      --

      Have fun,

      Nathan 'Nato' Uno
      http://web.unos.net/
    18. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The root problem with Intelligent Design is that it is compatible with all possible observations. Or, to put it another way, it has no explanatory power. In that alone it is meaningless to science. If you can't make predictions, if you can't formulate tests to falsify it, if any data gathered or potentially to be gathered, fits within the model, then you really don't have a model at all. ID was formulated intentionally in this manner, because it's part of the Big Tent strategy that the Discovery Institute and its allies have formulated. It's a political and legal strategy to get as many diverse groups whose only real commonality is "God did it" (where "it" can mean anything from special creation to theistic evolution).

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    19. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Random Chance did it"
      While randomness comes into it, evolution describes the non-random survival of randomly varying life. Evolution is exactly not random, you have been mislead. You do not understand evolution. I would suggest you take the time to read the most rudimentary book on the subject. I would recommend River out of Eden by Richard Dawkins.

    20. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you read the Dover ruling, Judge Jones mentions this, and points out (and this applies to Kansas as well) that evolution is singled out for this sort of "just a theory, got holes" treatment. No other aspect of biology, no other scientific theory is forced into the same corner. The argument that there are holes in theory of evolution is correct, but then again, all theories have holes in them; unanswered questions, some data that doesn't fit neatly and the like. So it goes directly to motivation. The only reason that evolution is singled out is because those trying to get these stickers put on textbooks and those wanting pamphlets read in science class are trying to undermine the teaching of evolution. If this was an issue of intellectual and academic honesty, then every bit of science taught in a public school would have its own sticker or pamphlet explaining that there are holes in said theories. But as this is a religously motivated attack, evolution is singled out.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    21. Re:Hmm... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > nice paradox in your post - stupid people, created in his own image.

      I.D. proponents skirt around issues like that all the time. The "in his image" thing is biblical, and the designer doesn't have to be The Bible's god. Until they convince someone of that, then it's their god again, suddenly.

    22. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Whether you are right or wrong about "we're just meat" argument has nothing to do with the debate. Evolution, like all scientific theories, has nothing to say on these philosophical and metaphysical matters. Why not complain about quantum mechanics or hydrodynamics, because they work on purely naturalistic premises? Evolution has nothing to say on God or the meaning of life, but then again, neither does any other scientific theory.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    23. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      You can't pick Evolution over ID as a scientific theory based on the evidence or on the testible hypothesis or on falsifiable hypothesis- the two are completely equivalent on those criteria, because the evidence used is exactly the same evidence. "God did it" and "Random Chance did it" are both theological statements that are logically indistinguishable from one another.
      p Except that evolutionary theory does not say "random chance did it". You are basing your premise on a strawman of evolution. Evolution is merely "the genetic makeup of a population changes over time".
      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    24. Re:Hmm... by hesiod · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > So how can it be "sad" if the people who believe in [x], are happy believing in such?

      If one finds happiness in slavery, is he still a slave? Is it still wrong to treat him as a slave? Even if not "wrong," is it still sad?

    25. Re:Hmm... by CastrTroy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is where ID really fails in my mind. They say that because we don't fully understand evolution, and because of the gaps, that it must of been an intelligent being who did it. This sounds a lot to me like Mercury dragging the sun accross the sky in a chariot as an explanation because we didn't understand why the sun moved accross the sky. Just because we don't understand something fully, does not give any proof that an intelligent being was at work. This explanation has been used throughout history for things we don't understand, and it has been proven wrong. Unless there is real evidence that an intelligent being is doing something, which there never is, then you can't say that something is happening because of the intelligent being.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    26. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 0

      But ID and evolution are not equivalent. One *assumes* an Intelligent Designer. The other does not.

      The other assumes an Unintelligent Designer instead- Random Chance.

      That evolution doesn't *require* such a Designer doesn't mean one doesn't exist, only that the theory does not rely on one.

      And yet, the way it's been taught in the last 50 years- it does rely on one. It relies on random mutation as a driving creator. So does ID by the way- except in that case it's God doing trial and error testing. Without a creator, intelligent or unintelligent, pushing change- both ID and evolution would find a stable state and the changes would simply stop.

      Your argument actually collapses on itself, because you have essentially said ID does nothing but add a layer of complexity to evolution

      Nope- because God is no more complex than the concept of a random and indeterministic universe. The two concepts are equally complex.

      a layer that is unnecessary, does not aid our understanding of the evolutionary process, and does not alter observational results.

      Incorrect- without that motivating layer, whether intelligent as in ID or random as in evolution, there's no way for natural selection to happen. Life in the universe as we know it would reach a steady state- and never again evolve.

      That is exactly why I oppose ID being taught as an "alternative" or "replacement" for evolution. It is not, it is simply an ill-conceived modification designed to inject monotheistic dogma into a realm where it has no place.

      Then the idea of a random, indeterministic universe, which is ALSO a monotheistic, or maybe a better word would be ANTI-theistic, dogma, should not be injected into that realm either- in which case you can't teach evolution. The basic theory *does* require a motivator- the only argument is over what that motivator is.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    27. Re:Hmm... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I think you mean predictive, not predictable.

      Excuse my ignorance, but what is the difference? Is it that with the first it's the science that makes a prediction, whereas the second means people can predict what it will "say?" People drive the scienctific process, so I don't see a practical difference between them.

      Dictionary.com: predictable & predictive. It has the exact same definition for both (same page, presumably because of the same root word).

    28. Re:Hmm... by Sebilrazen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not that I support Intelligent Design (I think it's hokum, personally), but I can't help thinking this decision is politically-motivated. Doesn't mean it's not deserved, but it sure is convenient, coming on the heels of the ID court decision.

      Whilst some may consider my forthcoming mélange of colloquialisms a troll, I plough forward with abandon. (Gotta love those word a day calendar things)

      Why shouldn't a Science magazine do an end-zone dance about the court decision? Every time a vestige of the dark ages is spotted in the light it should be smote from existence. Mind you I'm not referring to religion, I'm referring to the incessant dogmatic diatribes full of fire and brimstone and mindless ramblings of people whose sole reason for disagreeing something is 'because,' that's it, no argument, no intelligent debate, just 'because.'

      --
      "There are no facts, only interpretations." --Friedrich Nietzsche.
    29. Re:Hmm... by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 2, Informative

      In this context:

      predictable is a result that could be predicted
      predictive is a theory that makes predictions

      One is a characteristic of a result, the other is a characteristic of a theory.

    30. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      if it has no mechanism for being false

      It has a mechanism for being false- like the theory of evolution, ID denies entropy in a local area. Without a God, or without Random Chance, there'd be no reason for mutation to happen to begin with, and life would reach a steady state of no change that fits the local climate.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    31. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      While randomness comes into it, evolution describes the non-random survival of randomly varying life. Evolution is exactly not random, you have been mislead. You do not understand evolution. I would suggest you take the time to read the most rudimentary book on the subject. I would recommend River out of Eden by Richard Dawkins.

      Without random mutation- without randomly varied life- you can't have natural selection, and thus, you can't have evolution. Likewise with ID, without God you can't have guided mutation- and thus no natural selection- and thus no evolutionary test bed for new life forms. A method of variation is a precondition of both theories- without that method of variation (God or an indeterministic random universe, whatever you want to call it because of your own bigotry) natural selection, and therefore evolution, never happens.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    32. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I dont support ID, but I think your line of reasoning is specious. Implicit in what you are saying is that science is the sole way of arriving at the truth, and anything that is not scientific is not an acceptable way to experience/understand reality.

      About the evolution theory being supported by observation, again you are saying that if something is not observable by the senses (and the instruments which are extensions of it) then that thing has no reality. By this definition, yes all religion is unscientific - but to me that's not a negative thing. You seem to have the additional connotation that whatever is not science or outside the purview of science is simply not an acceptable method to understand this universe - sounds rather unscientific by to me to exclude something by definitional fiat.

    33. Re:Hmm... by arvindn · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Quotes from the Dover court decision:
      For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the religious nature of ID [intelligent design] would be readily apparent to an objective observer, adult or child...

      The evidence at trial demonstrates that ID is nothing less than the progeny of creationism...

      ...we have addressed the seminal question of whether ID is science. We have concluded that it is not, and moreover that ID cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious, antecedents...

      The breathtaking inanity of the Board's decision is evident when considered against the factual backdrop which has now been fully revealed through this trial. The students, parents, and teachers of the Dover Area School District deserved better than to be dragged into this legal maelstrom, with its resulting utter waste of monetary and personal resources. (emphasis mine.)

    34. Re:Hmm... by smooth+wombat · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You claim that ID is not predictible- but since it predicts the exact same outcomes that evolution does,

      Er, no it doesn't. ID makes no claim other than an unidentified supreme being started the ball rolling. However, ID doesn't even provide evidence to support that such a being exists. It starts by assuming a being does exist. That's not a prediction. That's a statement of fact unsupported by anything.

      Further, if one is to believe what ID supporters say, "Things look they were designed", then that is patently false. Just because something looks like it was designed does not mean it was. I submit for your viewing pleasure the underwater rocks of Bimini.

      For decades people assumed that they were a road from a long ago civilization. However, once the rocks were tested they were found to be naturally occuring phenomenon.

      ID makes no testable predictions. Even the Discovery Institute, the driving force behind this farce, provides no evidence to support their claim. None. All they do is try to point out supposed flaws in evolution, flaws which are repeatedly answered and shown not to be true but they keep spouting the same lies in the hopes the public is too stupid to realize they're lying.

      In fact, you do the same thing. You keep saying there are flaws yet provide nothing to support your claim. That's not how the scientific method works. If you think your idea deserves attention you have to provide evidence to support your claim. To date no one, and I mean no one, has ever provided any evidence to support ID. They immediately turn around and say, "Well evolution doesn't provide evidence for 'X'" where X is whatever the flaw of the week is. Trying to poke holes in a current theory does not make your claim valid.

      ID isn't science. Get over it.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    35. Re:Hmm... by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      "God did it" and "Random Chance did it" are both theological statements that are logically indistinguishable from one another.


      Evolution is not the same thing as "random chance". The course of evolution is guided by natural selection, which in turn is guided by other physical laws.


      You claim that ID is not predictible


      The problem with saying "God did it" is that it explains everything, and therefore explains nothing. Try it: Why did the sun rise this morning? God did it! Why is the sky blue? God made it that way! Why do people have ten fingers? Because God designed them so!


      As you can see, saying "God did it" is a non-answer in that it doesn't give the questioner any more understanding of the Universe than he already had. Understanding the theory of evolution, on the other hand, lets you make predictions, for example: species with fewer adaptive traits will tend to die out, and species with more adaptive traits will thrive. That is a claim that one can test to see if it is true or false. There is no similar way to test for the presence or absence of God's will -- no matter what test you attempted or what results it gave you, an ID proponent could just say that you got those results because that's what God intended. That's why evolution is science and ID is not.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    36. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Except that evolutionary theory does not say "random chance did it". You are basing your premise on a strawman of evolution. Evolution is merely "the genetic makeup of a population changes over time".

      But without random chance, it doesn't change over time, it doesn't change AT ALL. Inertia exists in the universe- you need an *external* influence to create a change. That influence is either random or intelligent; but the influence IS neccessary, or else the rest all falls apart.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    37. Re:Hmm... by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      Few people claim that science is the "sole way of arriving at the truth". The strongest proponents of science only claim that it is the best way that human have developed so far, as evidenced as the amount of knowledge discovered by science vs. the amount discovered by other methods.

    38. Re:Hmm... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > In the context of Buddhist [...] it does not work at all even as an concept cause the gods don't work that way.

      Depends on your "flavour" of Buddhism. AFAIK, Zen Buddhism wouldn't have an opinion either way, unless the evolution was somehow "experienced." I could be wrong, though: it may be that since evolution as a concept cannot be experienced, it does not exist.

    39. Re:Hmm... by gorzek · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The other assumes an Unintelligent Designer instead- Random Chance.

      Most mutations are the result of damage caused by disease, radiation, and transcription errors. Combining genes (as in sexual reproduction) can also produce unexpected effects. None of these rely on a designer, and "randomness" is an essential feature of our universe (per quantum mechanics).

      And yet, the way it's been taught in the last 50 years- it does rely on one. It relies on random mutation as a driving creator. So does ID by the way- except in that case it's God doing trial and error testing. Without a creator, intelligent or unintelligent, pushing change- both ID and evolution would find a stable state and the changes would simply stop.

      Except randomness is not an agent, it's a concept. It implies someone with intent is responsible for our evolution. Natural processes have no intent.

      And why would God need to do trial-and-error testing to begin with? I should think He'd already know what to do.

      Evolution never stops because the environment is not stable. Natural selection occurs in response to an ever-changing environment. If a group of people were isolated in an environment devoid of any change--in terms of population, knowledge, climate, anything--they would only evolve to optimally survive in that environment, then stop. We do not live in such a world.

      Nope- because God is no more complex than the concept of a random and indeterministic universe. The two concepts are equally complex.

      But randomness is observed, as we see the lack of a pattern. You can't observe God, which makes the idea useless to science.

      Incorrect- without that motivating layer, whether intelligent as in ID or random as in evolution, there's no way for natural selection to happen. Life in the universe as we know it would reach a steady state- and never again evolve.

      See my statements above about constantly-changing environments.

      Then the idea of a random, indeterministic universe, which is ALSO a monotheistic, or maybe a better word would be ANTI-theistic, dogma, should not be injected into that realm either- in which case you can't teach evolution. The basic theory *does* require a motivator- the only argument is over what that motivator is.

      I don't understand how the lack of mention of God makes something anti-theistic. At best, it makes it agnostic--it does not know if a God exists, nor does it attempt to prove one.

      The burden of proof is on Intelligent Design to show us why evolution could only have happened with the aid of a Designer. ID proponents have yet to provide such evidence, while evolution has demonstrated amply that random mutation results in natural selection, without the need for a higher entity guiding the process.

      As I said before, ID assumes a being with intent. Natural selection does not. And don't confuse random input with random output. The results of evolution are anything but random, which is the whole point of natural selection.

    40. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      Yacking pseudo-scientific bafflegab doesn't prove your point at all. Here's the rough of it all. You are not a clone of your parents. Most of the variation comes from a *random* mixing of genetic traits from the two. And even worse, it's guaranteed that at least some small part of your genetic makeup comes from mistakes in the recombination. Even in single-cell asexual reproducers, mistakes in transcription occur. In fact, such mistakes are inevitable. Thus you have the random element, just as you have a random element in storms, in crystal growth, and in damn near any phenomona you care to mention.

      Perhaps you should actually sit down and read a little on evolutionary theory, on genetics and reproduction, rather than trying to make clever sounding sentences that include the word inertia in them.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    41. Re:Hmm... by ezzzD55J · · Score: 0
      that it must of been an intelligent being

      hmm.

    42. Re:Hmm... by njcoder · · Score: 1
      I think ID proponents shoot themselves in the foot. If you look at life on here and conclude that it is so complex that there must have been some sort of intelligent designer who created it. If this were true, the entity/being that was this intelligent designer would also be complex and there must have been an intelligent designer that created our intelligent designer. This disrupts the notion that god is at the top of the food chain.

      Whether God, aliens or some magical watchmaker had a hand in creating life is irrelevant. It is something that cannot be proved or disproved. At least not at this time. While there is no definative proof that we evolved from monkeys or fish or an ameoba, there is compelling evidence that shows that life grows and adapts. Putting God in the mix interferes with the seperation of church and state. There is no place for God in science unless we can prove that God exists, not just use it as an assumption. That doesn't mean that we can't have God as part of our lives and our beliefs. Even the late Pope John Paul II said evelution was more than just a hypothesis and the Vatican's astronomer opposes intelligent design as a science and says it doesn't belong in a classroom. The current Pope seems to agree with ID but if it were up to me, I wouldn't back one theory that supported on theological premise and poked holes in another more important one.

    43. Re:Hmm... by raftpeople · · Score: 2, Informative

      You seem hung up on the term "random".

      The "randomness" could very well be introduced by normal physical means (such as radiation from Sun altering molecules within cell, which we know does happen). The use of the word "random" merely means that the causative effect is so minute and detailed that without tracking every single particle in the Universe, we can think of it as "random" from our macro point of view.

      Now there is the issue of randomness within quantum mechanics, but I assume you are also arguing that our understanding of QM is wildly incorrect also.

    44. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't pick Evolution over ID as a scientific theory based on the evidence or on the testible hypothesis or on falsifiable hypothesis- the two are completely equivalent on those criteria, because the evidence used is exactly the same evidence.

      You are completely wrong. Yes, the evidence is the same, but you ignored the "falsifiable" part. ID is not falsifiable, because, hey, who knows what the designer wanted? What test could you possibly make to tell something that was designed from something that wasn't? All it would take to falsify evolution would be to find a modern mammal fossil in undisturbed Pre-Cambrian strata, or for there to be vast difference in DNA across apparently similar species.

      You claim that ID is not predictible- but since it predicts the exact same outcomes that evolution does

      ID doesn't make ANY predictions, or at least any testable ones. Fill in the blank: If human beings were intelligently designed, we should be able to check that by __________________.

      You claim that ID cannot be supported by observation; yet religious visions have occured throughout human history,

      Religious visions are not scientific. Sorry.

      since ID insists that God used evolution as a method,

      I thought ID wasn't supposed to be religious.

      but where's the strong scientific evidence for randomization

      What?

      If ID is not science, then evolution certainly isn't either. If evolution is science, so are the scientific portions of ID.

      Wrong and wrong. Please play again!

    45. Re:Hmm... by arevos · · Score: 1
      The other assumes an Unintelligent Designer instead- Random Chance.

      No it doesn't; it just assumes that an intelligent designer doesn't directly interfere with natural selection.

    46. Re:Hmm... by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Duffman: New feelings brewing inside Duffman... What... WOULD JESUS DO?!

    47. Re:Hmm... by blueskies · · Score: 1

      It's sad when they allow their faith to intervene in such ways that contradict physical reality. At that point it is no longer faith in the general sense of the word.

      There is nothing wrong with faith, but faith needs to be non-falsifiable. That's why it is called belief and not called fact.

    48. Re:Hmm... by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Too bad your argument is a strawman.

      Evolution says nothing about the origin of life on Earth. It does provide for the possibility of abiogenesis, and there are many theories as to how this work, but they aren't part of evolutionary theory. Evolutionary theory simply tells us that organisms change (because their DNA changes) over time in response to their environment, and that the primary two mechanisms of this change are variation and natural selection.

      Thus, evolutionary theory *is* testable, even in a lab -- you can take a fast-breeding species like the common fruit fly, apply artifical selective pressures, and watch the allelle frequencies[1] shift in real time compared to control groups. Dog breeding is another example; humans use a the natural mechanisms of evolution, but add in their own constraints in the selection and variation departments.

      If you could prove, experimentally, that some other mechanism accounted for this; or even that it wasn't the combination of selection and variation that prompted observed shifts in allelle frequencies, then you would easily be able to disprove evolutionary theory as it currently stands, and would open up new realms in modern Biology.

      Intelligent Design, on the other hand, says absolutely nothing about any of this; instead, it makes a claim about the origin of life that is by definition unfalsifiable, as it is vacuously true. Beyond this, discussion of ID as science is moot, because falsifiability is a prerequisite for ANYTHING to be considered a scientific theory. Want to prove me wrong? Give me a test scenario where ID can be invalidated through experimental results; after all, I just gave you one for evolution.

      [1] For the non-genetically inclined reader:

      Allelles are, if you will, defined points on the strand of DNA. Each group of allelles governs a set of physical traits, and each group of allelles can be populated by different genes, giving rise to different traits. For example, a single allelle governs the RH factor of your blood, so depending on what gene gets stuck in that allelle, which is determined by your parents' genetics, you are either RH+ or RH-. Since these points are well-defined, and produce physically observable characteristics, it is relatively easy to see the genetic change in a population over time, and link that change back to changes in the way the allelles are populated.

      To the genetically inclined: I know this is a simplistic explanation, but I think it's adequate for the purpose of this post.

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
    49. Re:Hmm... by drwr · · Score: 1
      The other assumes an Unintelligent Designer instead- Random Chance.

      Actually, it doesn't. The Theory of Evolution makes no presumption about what deity or lack of deity started the whole thing. Like any scientific theory, it is merely an attempt to explain the cause-and-effect of observable phenomena (in this case, the diversity of species).

      It is perfectly reasonable to subscribe to the religious belief of your choice, while also accepting this theory. In this context, the Theory of Evolution is simply an attempt to explain the exact mechanism by which God created the diversity of species on the Earth.

      David
    50. Re:Hmm... by CloakedMirror · · Score: 1
      You do not understand evolution. I would suggest you take the time to read the most rudimentary book on the subject.
      This is what is so fascinating about /. You can make completely absurd assumptions about what another writer knows, simply by taking a phrase out of context. Your suggestion that the person you quoted take time to read a rudimentary book about evolution is perhaps the most presumptuous thing I have seen.
      Evolution is exactly not random, you have been mislead.
      When you attempt to use the theory of evolution as the means by which life came into being, you have no choice but to suggest that it was random chance. If it was anything else then you would be suggesting that there must have been some sort of intelligence behind it.

      The exercise of determining intelligent design versus a purely random occurrence would seem to be an interesting exercise. We could start out by randomly mixing chemicals in various environments that were devoid of any other life, and see how close we get to creating a single cell life form. Then, as we look at the mathematics behind it we could perhaps begin to calculate the odds that this occurred without anyone, or anything, to do the mixing. If it is as straight-forward as the pure evolution crowd proposes then all we need to do is artificially create a few strands of DNA, RNA, etc. and let them go at it. Eventually, they would surely come together into some form of bacteria.

      Given enough time and impetus to evolve, they might even be able to make more intellectually enlightened statements than you have.
      --
      Evolutionary thinking will move you down the road, revolutionary thinking will put you on a new road!
    51. Re:Hmm... by SmallOak · · Score: 1

      it's an interesting thing. Buddhism does not does not have that kind of cosmology.

      In the Tibetan school that I was following the creation of 'matter' was due to sprits getting corrupted by dualism. Because of that differentiation occured and matter came to be. The spirits got facinated by matter and go caught in the wheel of re-birth.

      I've never heard a Zen teacher talk about origins.

    52. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Most mutations are the result of damage caused by disease, radiation, and transcription errors. Combining genes (as in sexual reproduction) can also produce unexpected effects. None of these rely on a designer, and "randomness" is an essential feature of our universe (per quantum mechanics).

      Replacing one religion with another doesn't help a bit. Quantum Mechanics is not predictible, and thus fails at the test of being a science by your own rules.

      Except randomness is not an agent, it's a concept. It implies someone with intent is responsible for our evolution. Natural processes have no intent.

      A lack of intent is as much a theological concept as having intent; logically the two are completely equivalent. They do carry an emotional difference however, which is my theory on why the disparate concepts arose.

      And why would God need to do trial-and-error testing to begin with? I should think He'd already know what to do.

      Why would he know how to be a parent any more than the rest of us? That's a pretty big assumption you're making as to the definition of the word God.

      Evolution never stops because the environment is not stable. Natural selection occurs in response to an ever-changing environment. If a group of people were isolated in an environment devoid of any change--in terms of population, knowledge, climate, anything--they would only evolve to optimally survive in that environment, then stop. We do not live in such a world.

      Well, that's the other half that drives natural selection certainly. But that doesn't mean you can get rid of the first half.

      But randomness is observed, as we see the lack of a pattern.

      No, we THINK we see a lack of a pattern. Not being infinite, we cannot tell if what we see is actually a lack of a pattern, or a small part of a larger pattern.

      You can't observe God, which makes the idea useless to science.

      Neither can you actually observe randomness, since a random spot is indistinguishable from a larger pattern.

      See my statements above about constantly-changing environments.

      Useless because it fails to identify the cause of the change- it's just another theological argument.

      I don't understand how the lack of mention of God makes something anti-theistic. At best, it makes it agnostic--it does not know if a God exists, nor does it attempt to prove one.

      But that's the problem isn't it: it does attempt to prove the lack of existance of one.

      The burden of proof is on Intelligent Design to show us why evolution could only have happened with the aid of a Designer. ID proponents have yet to provide such evidence, while evolution has demonstrated amply that random mutation results in natural selection, without the need for a higher entity guiding the process.

      Too bad random mutation is in and of itself a higher entity, or else by occam's razor that would be true.

      As I said before, ID assumes a being with intent. Natural selection does not.

      And as I said before, an intent is indistinguishable from a lack of intent- and the argument isn't with Natural selection anyway at all, because both ID and evolution assume natural selection as a fact.

      And don't confuse random input with random output.

      I don't. I personally don't believe in either.

      The results of evolution are anything but random, which is the whole point of natural selection.

      Yep- which is why you need an intelligent designer setting up the rules :-)

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    53. Re:Hmm... by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Implicit in what you are saying is that science is the sole way of arriving at the truth, and anything that is not scientific is not an acceptable way to experience/understand reality.

      That is correct. All other ways of determining facts are more flawed than science. Divine revelation for instance, is flawed because the results are not repeatable or consistant. What "god" reveals to you may be directly contradicted by what "god" reveals to me. I am not prepared to believe that a statement and its contradiction are both true, so revelation cannot be relied upon as a way of investigating nature.

      Science is the only acceptable way to relate to reality, almost by definition. If there were other ways that were as reliable, then they would be scientific. If divine revelation yielded reproducible results that were never contradictory, then you'd see protocols for the proper use of divine revelation in a laboratory setting. It would be science.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    54. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      The "randomness" could very well be introduced by normal physical means (such as radiation from Sun altering molecules within cell, which we know does happen).

      And who set up the universal constants that allow the Sun to radiate? Sorry, all you've done here is move it back up a notch.

      The use of the word "random" merely means that the causative effect is so minute and detailed that without tracking every single particle in the Universe, we can think of it as "random" from our macro point of view.

      And thus, requires an intelligent designer who CAN track and influence every particle in the universe- and all we're discovering is his laws for doing so.

      Now there is the issue of randomness within quantum mechanics, but I assume you are also arguing that our understanding of QM is wildly incorrect also.

      Actually, I'm just arguing that human beings are too finite to get anything correct. Ever.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    55. Re:Hmm... by TIMxPx · · Score: 1

      Why would an omnipotent, omniscient designer have to interfere with a process that he started? Surely God would know the outcome of any process before its beginning and would plan appropriately. The educated creationists believe that God directly created "kinds" of animals, each kind individually, and these kinds show a high degree of design. The distinct kinds of animals are also supposed to be purposeful - there are livestock, horse, cats, dogs, rodents, etc., each group fulfilling a different function. Many creationists (and ID proponents) believe that those kinds had the genetic material that flowed into different species in a fairly short period of time, all according to the plans of the designer. If you happen to be a Bible believer, you will find that God's work of creation is finished for the moment.

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world: That averages about 660,000,000 of each kind.
    56. Re:Hmm... by pomo+monster · · Score: 1

      It's suspicious, sure, but there actually have been a number of recent developments in the study of evolution that might merit its declaration as the scientific advancement of the year. This week's Economist actually includes a well-written, comprehensive survey of discoveries and new theories in human evolution (a.k.a. anthropology). Stuff about understanding the importance of evolution in fields like psychology, sociology, and even literature. Well worth the read if you have the time.

      Some of the articles therein may be subscription only. Maybe the Economist Troll will stop by to give us the full contents, no? Maybe too much to hope for this holiday season?

    57. Re:Hmm... by Bodrius · · Score: 1

      I don't know why this would be different in US schools, but I think most other modern educational systems have a generalized sticker in the curriculum: typically titled "Introduction to the Scientific Method" or something like that.

      Not only was evolution singled out in its theory-ness, but ID was singled out as 'the alternative'. Spaghetti Monster theories aside, there have also been other alternatives with considerable scientific research that were dismissed in favor of darwinism, and within the logic and bar proposded by the ID challenge should be given equal consideration. It would only be fair, once the evidence/methodology bar is lowered to accomodate ID.

      When the very definitions of science imply such a disclaimer about theories, the one sensible criticism for impartiality to all alternative theories is to demand that these principles be properly taught to the student.

      --
      Freedom is the freedom to say 2+2=4, everything else follows...
    58. Re:Hmm... by blueskies · · Score: 1

      Nope- because God is no more complex than the concept of a random and indeterministic universe. The two concepts are equally complex.

      Prove it. Scientifically prove that the two concepts are equally complex. Every other argument you make falls apart unless you can equate those two concepts.

      Once you throw away all those "unimportant" details it is oh so easy to see how simple everything is.

    59. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Actually, it doesn't. The Theory of Evolution makes no presumption about what deity or lack of deity started the whole thing. Like any scientific theory, it is merely an attempt to explain the cause-and-effect of observable phenomena (in this case, the diversity of species).

      Then you'd better ban the words "random mutation" from the science classroom as well, if you want to stay away from deities.

      It is perfectly reasonable to subscribe to the religious belief of your choice, while also accepting this theory. In this context, the Theory of Evolution is simply an attempt to explain the exact mechanism by which God created the diversity of species on the Earth.

      Ok, so you believe in teaching ID.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    60. Re:Hmm... by Syrrh · · Score: 1

      *If* Intelligent Design proponents said that life evol- er, 'developed' over the billions of years that paleontology supports, then it's got possible validity. I'm not familiar enough with the ID theory since it's horsesh- er, 'scientifically untenable', but that's NOT the impression I got (it would make ID inseparably identical). The only aspect of ID I've heard is that they expect life to have developed pre-packaged and it simply popped into existence. Not RNA/DNA or bacterial level, fully-formed organisms, as they appear right now.

      If a giant purple tentacle monster randomly appeared with no ancestors and previously biologically unheard-of abilities to read minds, transmute lead to gold, and reproduce through mail-order pregnancy, then ID theory will have its coup. Until then, there is NO basis for its ideas.

      Meanwhile, evolution *can* be observed. Sure, it takes thousands of generations to occur, but we don't have to examine tortoises here. Not being much of a science buff anymore, I haven't heard of specific experiments being performed. Bacteria too simple to count? Fine. Yeast. Planaria. Fruit flies. Algae. There's plenty of eukaryotic single- and multi-cellular critters to perform tests on that can reproduce in less than a day. Just because it hasn't been set up in a lab doesn't mean it's guesswork, minor speciation changes like Darwin's finches are simple to observe, even if we're not watching right when the change actually happens.

      And if I'm totally off-base and ID is only trying to explain the origin of the basic mechanics of life, then what's the fuss? Evolution has nothing to do with biogenesis. It's not even an alternative, it's a complementary process.

    61. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Yacking pseudo-scientific bafflegab doesn't prove your point at all. Here's the rough of it all. You are not a clone of your parents. Most of the variation comes from a *random* mixing of genetic traits from the two.

      And thus you quote pseudo-scientific theology at me- randomness does not exist in a deterministic universe.

      Perhaps you should actually sit down and read a little on evolutionary theory, on genetics and reproduction, rather than trying to make clever sounding sentences that include the word inertia in them.

      And perhaps you should actually sit down and read a little bit about how cults operate before accepting as fact such idiocy as an indeterministic universe. Repeating dogma is neither interesting nor instructive.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    62. Re:Hmm... by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are so far off base that it's not funny.

      Ok, repeat after me: Mutation means nothing. It is an insignifigant force that basically means Jack to evolution. Mutations usually die off, and rarely get to reproduce.

      The two key mechanisms for evolution are variation and selection.

      Variation means is that in every population, there is some degree in the variation of physical traits. Tails vary in length, animals vary in height, there are variations in hair color and patterning, and so on.

      Selection means that some members of a population are, for some reason or other, better suited at producing a larger number of viable offspring. This could be because they are more attractive to mates, or because they are better at getting food, or maybe they are better at defending against predators. Whatever the reason, some members produce more kids than others, in spite of the hazards of their surroundings.

      Now, here's the kicker, and how this all works. When two members of a population mate, their genes basically get mixed together to produce the offspring. While the mixing is random, the genes supplied aren't, and so the offspring will tend to enjoy the same genetic benefits that the parents did -- when two tall people produce kids, their children tend to be tall. Likewise, when two members of a population have a lot of luck in producing kids, then their kids will likely also have good luck, and so their genes tend to spread more.

      This is how evolution works. There's no magic, nothing more than a statistical shift in genetically-determined traits, which occurs in response to natural selective pressures.

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
    63. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I'm just arguing that human beings are too finite to get anything correct. Ever.

      Well, Intellegent Design certainly supports that theory.

    64. Re:Hmm... by FreakyAntelope · · Score: 1
      the theory of evolution is supported by both strong scientific evidence and observation.
      As my Biology teacher pointed out, there is more evidence for evolution than evidence that the Civil War ever took place.

      Admittedly, I can't cite a source, but the diversity of life can be taken as evidence, there must be a whole lot of it.

    65. Re:Hmm... by TheCodeFoundry · · Score: 1
      The saddest part is that no matter how vast our understanding of evolution becomes, there will always be those who, for religious or logically unsound reasons, or just out of plain ignorance and misplaced incredulity, will reject it, and there will be those that wish to misrepresent or out-and-out destroy science simply to prop up their too-deeply held superstitions.
      And there will always be those who believe that those who have deeply held religious convictions, not just about evolution or ID, but about anything else in religious nature, as hokem and superstition, never realizing that by dismissing out of hand a being or deity greater than themselves is the upmost in intellectual arrogance. Dismissing the idea that there could be anything greater than yourself takes more mental gymnastics than acknowledging that we, as human beings, don't know everything about our world or universe. For everything just to be a complete accident, random happenstance, takes more arrogance than acknowledging that there could be purpose to life.
    66. Re:Hmm... by conJunk · · Score: 1
      Just because we don't understand something fully, does not give any proof that an intelligent being was at work

      much like spam!

    67. Re:Hmm... by C10H14N2 · · Score: 1

      The basic theory *does* require a motivator- the only argument is over what that motivator is.

      The problem here is you're defining creation, which science has yet to unravel -- but at least admits to not knowing. There is thus currently no conflict between the notions of vertical causality and theistic creation--you just have an anthropomorphized version of the same idea. The problem comes when science is perfectly willing to say "there was an external cause that we cannot yet fully explain" and religion steps up and says "No, see, the cause was this guy named Hank. I've never seen him, but I know he's there 'cause this guy Carl told me he runs the town and wants to give me a million dollars, but if I don't kiss his ass, he'll beat me up."

      Uhm...

    68. Re:Hmm... by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      But that assumes that the climate never changes. Which we all know doesn't happen.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    69. Re:Hmm... by drwr · · Score: 1

      Then you'd better ban the words "random mutation" from the science classroom as well, if you want to stay away from deities.

      Huh? What's so athestic about the word "random"? From dictionary.com:

      random (2) Mathematics & Statistics. Of or relating to a type of circumstance or event that is described by a probability distribution.

      That definition says nothing about whether God is involved or not. Certainly God can create events that can be described by a probability distribution; I would say that He creates these kinds of events all the time. They're all around you. Using the word "random" to describe such events does not imply that they happened in the absence of a deity.

      Ok, so you believe in teaching ID.

      Sure. Feel free to teach ID, or any religious dogma of your choice, in whatever church or private school you belong to. I absolutely believe in freedom of religion, and that includes the freedom to study and teach your religion of choice. But this dogma doesn't belong in public schools, which have a duty not to impose a particular religion on students.

      David

    70. Re:Hmm... by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      When you attempt to use the theory of evolution as the means by which life came into being, you have no choice but to suggest that it was random chance

      Wrong. We have no choice but to suggest that nobody knows exactly how it works. The essence of scientific reasoning is the ability to say "we don't know", and not jump into the intellectual cowardice of superstition.

    71. Re:Hmm... by Angostura · · Score: 1

      "God did it" and "Random Chance did it" are both theological statements that are logically indistinguishable from one another.

      As I sit and watch an antibiotic-resistant strain of bacteria make a little colony on my petri-dish, I am - according to you - faced with two identically probable causes. Either God manifested in the incubator and decided to save a particularly worthy bacterium and it's off-spring, Noah-like... or a random mutation conferring antibiotic resistance allowed the bacterium to thrive through a process of natural selection.

      All the sophistry in the world isn't going hide the fact as to which is the most probable cause.

    72. Re:Hmm... by IgLou · · Score: 1

      I absolutely agreee with you but... (there's always a but isn't there?) I have a bigger bone to pick with the whole thing.
      As soon as you say "Intelligent Design" in a classroom you go from teaching science to teaching faith. The purpose of evolution (I think) is not to describe why things are the way they are but how. When you get into the why it's a slippery slope going from science into philosophy/faith, in my opinion. That subject doesn't belong in a science classroom.

      Oh wait, make it two bones... because "Intelligent Design" goes against my belief. God didn't create the universe, rather she inherited it from her sister fell in and lost the owners manual. (Free karma to anyone who has a clue what I'm talking about.)

      --

      Oops, how did this get here?
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    73. Re:Hmm... by Jaxoreth · · Score: 1
      If you can't make predictions, if you can't formulate tests to falsify it,

      Right, but you don't need to be able to falsify it, because it's TRUE. :-)

      --
      In general, it is safe and legal to kill your children. -- POSIX Programmer's Guide
    74. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Huh? What's so athestic about the word "random"? From dictionary.com:

      It's not ATHEISTIC- it's THEISTIC!

      Of or relating to a type of circumstance or event that is described by a probability distribution.

      Exactly right- probility distristributions are a theological construct describing human ignorance.

      That definition says nothing about whether God is involved or not. Certainly God can create events that can be described by a probability distribution; I would say that He creates these kinds of events all the time. They're all around you. Using the word "random" to describe such events does not imply that they happened in the absence of a deity.

      I completely agree- instead it implies the existance of a diety.

      Sure. Feel free to teach ID, or any religious dogma of your choice, in whatever church or private school you belong to. I absolutely believe in freedom of religion, and that includes the freedom to study and teach your religion of choice. But this dogma doesn't belong in public schools, which have a duty not to impose a particular religion on students.

      Thus you'd agree with me that evolution has no place in public schools under that rule.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    75. Re:Hmm... by nullChris · · Score: 1
      The saddest part is that no matter how vast our understanding of evolution becomes, there will always be those who, for religious or logically unsound reasons, or just out of plain ignorance and misplaced incredulity, will reject it, and there will be those that wish to misrepresent or out-and-out destroy science simply to prop up their too-deeply held superstitions.
      Seriously. Out of sheer masochism, I started listening to AM talk radio on the commute to/from work. It is shocking. The radio personalities, and their callers are from a completely different universe.
    76. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      For any other science that I know of, if you have data that doesn't fit your theory then you have to go back and rewrite your theory.

      This is true of evolution as well, and in fact evolutionary theory is constantly being tweaked, like all other scientific theories.

      Please also note that it is often unclear whether it's the theory that is problematic or whether it's the experiment (see cold fusion for a notorious example).

      The truly sad part is that people like yourself are so narrow minded (and you have the gall to talk about how narrow minded religious groups are) that you would rather kids were taught old and outdated evolutionary theory,

      You mean, like being taught old and outdated Newtonian mechanics? I mean really, that junk was disproven a century ago.

      rather than opening up the discussion to other ideas.

      The only "other ideas" in biology that compete with "old and outdated evolutionary theory" are "new and modern evolutionary theory". High school texts typically lag behind the cutting edge of science: as they should. It takes time for the scientific debates to settle down and various theoretical proposals to be well understood. Science starts in journals; after a bit, some filters down into graduate/professional monographs; after a while longer, undergraduate texts, then finally to high school texts. This process is shortcut when the evidence in favor of new ideas is overwhelming, but usually it takes time, as I said.

      The Catholic church versus Galileo has nothing on today's evolution zealots.

      Yeah, yeah, persecution complex. Give me a fucking break. Evolution is an extremely well established scientific theory, progresses in the same way that other theories do, and is treated no differently than any other theory with similar amounts of supporting evidence.
    77. Re:Hmm... by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      Um the definition of the root word "predict" is, of course, the same. If you scroll down:

      predictable
      adj : possible to foretell

      predictive
      adj : of or relating to prediction; having value for making predictions

      And that is what we are looking for.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    78. Re:Hmm... by gorzek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Replacing one religion with another doesn't help a bit. Quantum Mechanics is not predictible, and thus fails at the test of being a science by your own rules.

      I'll assume you don't know much about quantum mechanics. QM tells us that while the motion of particles is random at a certain scale, their interactions ARE predictable. In fact, that is what QM does: it describes the interactions of particles. (I'll avoid a tangent discussing the school of thought that there is no such thing as particles, but rather a universe of intricate power-relationships. Google is your friend.)

      A lack of intent is as much a theological concept as having intent; logically the two are completely equivalent. They do carry an emotional difference however, which is my theory on why the disparate concepts arose.

      Lack of intent is not theological, it is observational. The randomness we have seen implies a lack of intent. If we saw patterns, we might assume intent. But the inputs to evolution are random. More specifically, they are random variations of a pattern. Natural selection culls disadvantageous mutations.

      I think the real reason people get so hot and bothered about evolution is that it indicates we're Just Animals. There is no miraculous proof of a Creator. Evolution essentially tells us we aren't special, just lucky and adaptive. Some people can't deal with this, and have to believe in invisible men in the sky to give their lives meaning. I have no problems with people doing that, as long as they don't try to make everyone else believe the same way.

      Evolution, as it is now, ignores theistic issues. Is there a God? Is there not a God? Evolution doesn't care, and doesn't attempt to prove it either way. This is the point IDers miss. Apparently, they can't leave well enough alone, but feel injecting a Higher Power into it is necessary. I don't think it is, and neither does most of the scientific community, or the US federal government.

      Why would he know how to be a parent any more than the rest of us? That's a pretty big assumption you're making as to the definition of the word God.

      I assume you're talking about other than the Judeo-Christian God, then. In which case, I might ask you to define "God" as it pertains to you.

      Well, that's the other half that drives natural selection certainly. But that doesn't mean you can get rid of the first half. I don't understand that statement. Care to clarify?

      Neither can you actually observe randomness, since a random spot is indistinguishable from a larger pattern.

      That is actually a worthwhile point. The only way we can deal with that is to continue gathering data until we begin to see a pattern. For the time being, though, we don't see one, so we don't assume one. That's science: explain what you can prove, keep looking into what you can't.

      Useless because it fails to identify the cause of the change- it's just another theological argument.

      What cause have we failed to identify? If you want to talk about causes, then what caused God?

      But that's the problem isn't it: it does attempt to prove the lack of existance of one.

      No, it doesn't. The only implication is that God is not required to understand the explanation. Do you need God to understand how gravity works? Do you need God to do trigonometry? No. So, why do you need God to explain the evolution of life which, while we like to romanticize it, is essentially the cooperation of numerous chemical machines toward their mutual survival? I know most people like to wax poetic about what life is, but in terms of physics and chemistry, life may be complicated, but it is not impossible to comprehend by any means.

      Too bad random mutation is in and of itself a higher entity, or else by occam's razor that would be true.

      Only because you seem interested in anthropomorphizing it, which is a mistake. "Intelligence" itself is a construct. You have to get beyond such things.

    79. Re:Hmm... by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      No, we THINK we see a lack of a pattern. Not being infinite, we cannot tell if what we see is actually a lack of a pattern, or a small part of a larger pattern.

      This makes any belief in the presence or lack of pattern a matter of faith.

      Science is based on observation. If we observe no pattern, then we can act on the assumption that there is none, until such a time as scientific observation yields different results.

      I don't understand how the lack of mention of God makes something anti-theistic. At best, it makes it agnostic--it does not know if a God exists, nor does it attempt to prove one.

      But that's the problem isn't it: it does attempt to prove the lack of existance of one.


      You're seem to believe that the concept of randomness is anti-theistic, in which case your disagreement is with much, much, more than evolution. You couldn't possibly "lose" this argument, because you've already decided that observable evidence means nothing. In short, you're not talking about science.

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
    80. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people I know who believe in evolution do so based on a lot of what could be defined as faith, without any real knowledge.

    81. Re:Hmm... by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The point is that ID brings nothing to the table. It explains nothing.
      And so it is nothing but a waste of time in science class.

    82. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction: Helios drove around the sky in a chariot, which was the sun. Hermes/Mercury was the messenger god.

    83. Re:Hmm... by CloakedMirror · · Score: 1
      Wrong. We have no choice but to suggest that nobody knows exactly how it works. The essence of scientific reasoning is the ability to say "we don't know", and not jump into the intellectual cowardice of superstition.
      Perhaps if this was the way it was taught then we wouldn't even be having this discussion. However, it isn't taught that way. From what I can tell, the vast majority of high school science teachers, and text book authors, don't have "nobody knows" as part of their vocabulary.

      Instead, they continue to teach evolution not as Origin of Species, but as Origin of Life.
      --
      Evolutionary thinking will move you down the road, revolutionary thinking will put you on a new road!
    84. Re:Hmm... by drwr · · Score: 1

      Exactly right- probility distristributions are a theological construct describing human ignorance.

      I begin to understand the balance of your argument (although I don't really understand how you can make the above claim). If I accepted that the mathematical concept of a probability distribution were, in fact, theological in nature, then I would have to agree with you that the Theory of Evolution, and in fact, most scientific discoveries since the middle ages, were therefore theological in nature, and should not be taught in public schools.

      But I think this is as silly as claiming that the concept of, for instance, multiplication is theological in nature. Probability distribution is just a tool for describing the number of times a certain event is likely to happen in a given sample. It's purely a mathematical concept. If you can't see the difference between an abstract, mathematical concept, and a theological statement of belief, then I suppose our discussion has found its logical terminus.

      David

    85. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      And thus you quote pseudo-scientific theology at me- randomness does not exist in a deterministic universe.

      That's a rather unanswered question, but to paraphrase Hawkings, even if it is fully deterministic, it doesn't matter anyways.

      And perhaps you should actually sit down and read a little bit about how cults operate before accepting as fact such idiocy as an indeterministic universe. Repeating dogma is neither interesting nor instructive.

      Your little playground taunt/tantrum isn't terribly impressive, nor is your pathetic attempt at a rhetorical reworking of the word "cult". You don't demonstrate your point by simply turning into a hamfisted propagandist.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    86. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It is fundamentally impossible to not have evolution if you have genes + mutation + time. Most people have accepted genes that pass down through inheritance, most of those people accept that those genes can on rare occasion change seemingly spontaneously. Time is much less well accepted by those of fundamentalist religious persuasion. But, that is why it is taught, generally, as fact. I ask the question. How much genetic similarity is necessary in two obviously different species for fundamentalists to break down and say there is much commonality? Chimpanzees exceed 95% genetic match with humans. Can you really say we are not in some manner related?

      As far as Galileo, I am unaware of any "evolutionist*" zealot that have locked up and threatened to kill Michael Behe if he did not stop his assertions.

      As for myself, I cannot say that I believe in evolution. I say I hold the opinion of evolution. And frankly, those stickers are absolutely redundent as suggested. It is a shame that the real principles of scientific inquery are not better taught.

      *Evolutionists -- Perhaps I should get on the horn with some slick term maker and start calling a section of the population "Evolution-deniers"

    87. Re:Hmm... by OneSeventeen · · Score: 1

      ID, when viewed as a personal belief in how things came to be, thrives by lack of evidence (at least for Christianity).
      But I'm not sure where ID comes into this conversation anyway...

      Evolution is a Scientific theory with enough evidence to be taught as a strong theory in schools. ID is a non-scientific theory with no physical evidence.

      If I became an expert Linux developer, and was familiar with every line of code in the kernel, I could not (short from reading the commentary, that has no effect on the compiled code) tell you what programs were used in the writing of the code, nore could I tell you why Linus decided write the kernel.

      Science is the observation of what exists, and is based on what exists in our physical world. Based on that, there is no way to prove intelligent design. If it was provable, then Christianity would be a mere acknowledgement of scientific fact, and the relationship between Man and God would be equivalent to the relationship between Man and Gravity.

      As a Christian, I look at Christianity as a faith based relationship with God, using the Bible as a foundation for that faith. I strongly feel Christianity itself should be taught in Christian schools, churches, etc. I also feel it should be taught by Christians acting like Christians, and providing reliable witness.

      I feel that in science classes, science (and nothing else) should be taught. That includes refuting intelligent design. Refuting a religious belief has no place in a science class, while providing scientifically provable facts does.

      As a Christian and an Elementary Teacher, if my wife is able to say "Your drawing looks very good!", she should also be able to say "Merry Christmas" and other non-scientific statements that are not being offered as fact.

      Please stop making every scientific conversation an anti-Christian/anti-religious conversation, as they are not related.

      The Bible does not say evolution does not exist, and neither does it say why the sun appears to move, or other scientific facts. The Bible makes its intent clear, and shows a peek into the spiritual aspect of the world, which once again has nothing to do with a science class. As a Christian, I feel science is the study of the physical evidence all around us, and as I learn more about science, I learn more about what God created. Once again, Faith != Science, and Scientific Research != proving faith-based beliefs false.

      --
      "Now the trouble about trying to make yourself stupider than you really are is that you very often succeed." -C.S. Lewis
    88. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And thus you quote pseudo-scientific theology at me- randomness does not exist in a deterministic universe.

      Correct. We'd be up shit creek without a paddle in a deterministic universe (though predicting the future would be rather easier).. it's probably fortunate then that we do NOT live in a deterministic universe, really.

    89. Re:Hmm... by MS-06FZ · · Score: 1

      Sounds like "Song of the South"...

      --
      ---GEC
      I'm but the humble pupil, seeking to snatch the scratchbuilt pebble from the master's fully articulated hand
    90. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can make completely absurd assumptions
      Evolution is not a theory of chance. Anyone saying it is, does not understand it. Therefore the assumption is not absurd.

    91. Re:Hmm... by iabervon · · Score: 1

      What I actually object to is the personification of whatever process is responsible for genetic change. Calling this God, with all of the semantic associations that word has, makes certain suggestions which are not clearly laid out.

      For example, implies that religious people wishing to do the Will of God ought to use antibiotics to speed the spread of drug-resistant bacteria, because bacteria gaining drug resistance is clearly a genetic process. There is the assumption that all acts of creation must align with the religious concept of goodness, even though our understanding of disease is that some genetic changes are made to facilitate the slaughter of innocents.

      Furthermore, there is the idea that the process running genetic variation has an understanding of human thought. There is, so far as I can tell, nothing to suggest that humanity is any more comprehensible to whatever creates life than the other way around.

      Now, if you remove from ID the suggestions that a study of religion would reveal something about genetic change, it is probably a fine idea: clearly massive trial and error is a possible design process, and generate-and-test and genetic algorithms are studied as artificial intelligence. If ID advocates were willing to accept the possibility that the intelligent designer is an idiot savant with a special aptitude for protein folding and long chains of dependencies, but lacking the ability to use language, recognize emotion, or form unified plans, then ID could be a well-supported theory. But you shouldn't assume that whatever is responsible for the structure of the human eye could play a competant game of go.

    92. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      I'll assume you don't know much about quantum mechanics. QM tells us that while the motion of particles is random at a certain scale, their interactions ARE predictable. In fact, that is what QM does: it describes the interactions of particles. (I'll avoid a tangent discussing the school of thought that there is no such thing as particles, but rather a universe of intricate power-relationships. Google is your friend.)

      So in other words, you've just flipped definitions on me, and are now claiming a deterministic universe given enough information. Welcome to ID.

      Lack of intent is not theological, it is observational. The randomness we have seen implies a lack of intent. If we saw patterns, we might assume intent. But the inputs to evolution are random. More specifically, they are random variations of a pattern. Natural selection culls disadvantageous mutations.

      If your inputs are random, so are your outputs- GIGO affects everything. But if your inputs are deterministic, then predictions become possible- but deterministic inputs imply an intent EVEN IF WE CAN'T SEE WHAT THAT INTENT IS.

      I think the real reason people get so hot and bothered about evolution is that it indicates we're Just Animals. There is no miraculous proof of a Creator. Evolution essentially tells us we aren't special, just lucky and adaptive. Some people can't deal with this, and have to believe in invisible men in the sky to give their lives meaning. I have no problems with people doing that, as long as they don't try to make everyone else believe the same way.

      No, my problem is with the implication of an indeterministic universe- at which point any attempt to discover anything becomes useless, because random input DOES create random output.

      Evolution, as it is now, ignores theistic issues. Is there a God? Is there not a God? Evolution doesn't care, and doesn't attempt to prove it either way. This is the point IDers miss. Apparently, they can't leave well enough alone, but feel injecting a Higher Power into it is necessary. I don't think it is, and neither does most of the scientific community, or the US federal government.

      Depends on whether you believe freedom of includes freedom from- I don't. You have no right to determine what is neccessary and what is not for somebody else.

      I assume you're talking about other than the Judeo-Christian God, then. In which case, I might ask you to define "God" as it pertains to you.

      That force which created the particles that went into the big bang, and influenced them into the physical laws that came into existance a planck later.

      I don't understand that statement. Care to clarify?

      Environmetal changes alone are not enough to create a new species- only to exterminate old species. You either need a deterministic universe continuing to create changes- in which case God is implied, because otherwise you wouldn't have a deterministic universe- OR you need an indeterministic universe to continue to create changes.

      That is actually a worthwhile point. The only way we can deal with that is to continue gathering data until we begin to see a pattern. For the time being, though, we don't see one, so we don't assume one. That's science: explain what you can prove, keep looking into what you can't.

      Except you have assumed that there isn't one to such an extent that you automatically reject any data that shows there is a pattern out of hand. If that's science, then the looking part needs some work.

      What cause have we failed to identify?

      The pattern, or the lack of one. But that's understandible, because in the end, that's theology.

      If you want to talk about causes, then what caused God?

      My point is that without the cause, you can't actually distinguish evolution from ID- both are equivalent theology, neither is science.

      No, it doesn't. The only implication is that God is not required to understand t

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    93. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When you attempt to use the theory of evolution as the means by which life came into being, you have no choice but to suggest that it was random chance. If it was anything else then you would be suggesting that there must have been some sort of intelligence behind it.

      False dichotomy. But it comes from slurring the meaning of "random". Natural selection, for instance, heavily biases the evolutionary process. That's the sort of thing people usually mean when they say that evolution "isn't just blind chance". On the other hand, a biased random process is still random.
      We could start out by randomly mixing chemicals in various environments that were devoid of any other life, and see how close we get to creating a single cell life form.

      This would tell us very little about how abiogenesis may or may not have occurred in the past, giving the time and space limitations of a laboratory environment.
      Then, as we look at the mathematics behind it we could perhaps begin to calculate the odds that this occurred without anyone, or anything, to do the mixing.

      That would also be extraordinarily difficult to calculate from first principles. It's for sure that nobody knows how to do that calculation today.
      If it is as straight-forward as the pure evolution crowd proposes then all we need to do is artificially create a few strands of DNA, RNA, etc. and let them go at it. Eventually, they would surely come together into some form of bacteria.

      As the previous poster said, "You do not understand evolution. I would suggest you take the time to read the most rudimentary book on the subject."

      Yeah, eventually they'd come together into some form of bacteria, if you had an entire planet's worth of chemicals mixing for a billion years, under the correct environmental conditions, isolated from the Earths' current biotic environment (which is now inimical to the early life that were the predecessors of today's organisms). It sure ain't gonna happen by mixing together some organic chemicals in a jar in a lab and waiting a few years.

      The people who spend the most time whinging about the probabilities involved in evolution seem to have little grasp of the magnitudes of the numbers involved.
    94. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful
      A big reason that this one is picked out, or picked on, has to do with the way it is being taught. As a parent (in Kansas, no less), I can tell you that evolution is usually not taught as theory, but as fact.

      Observed phenomona often are. We observe heritable traits in populations changing over time. Do you also wish to have the Earth circling the sun taught as a "theory". Beyond that, the whole Kansas stunt demonstrates a purposeful attempt to confuse two usages of the word "theory". How is a bit of propagandistic wordplay a legitimate expression of the nature of a major scientific line of inquiry?

      For any other science that I know of, if you have data that doesn't fit your theory then you have to go back and rewrite your theory.

      Maybe someday you ought to vist PubMed and look at the abstracts. Evolutionary theory, like all theories, is in constant development. Why would you think differently?

      The school systems often put forth the argument that high school students are not grounded well enough in the ideas of scientific theory to be able to grasp the nuances of evolutionary theory.

      Which is in and of itself rubbish. The basic outlines of the Modern Synthesis are far less complex to outline than the intracies of the cosmology.

      The truly sad part is that people like yourself are so narrow minded (and you have the gall to talk about how narrow minded religious groups are) that you would rather kids were taught old and outdated evolutionary theory, rather than opening up the discussion to other ideas.

      Even if your accusation were correct, Intelligent Design isn't science. It does not mean any of the requirements of a scientific theory. It is a legalistic stunt meant to sneak Creationism past the Establishment Clause. There is no research program into ID. It offers no predictions, no means of testing. The single known publication in a journal was through a nasty little editorial trick. In short, no scientists are doing any research into ID. Not even Behe is submitting ID to any journals, and most of the "work" on ID is in fact, oddly enough, being done by people who aren't scientists at all.

      So you're right, I don't want my kids taught a rewording of Paley's old watchmaker argument. There is nothing new in ID, so even in that part of your argument, you get it wrong. As Judge Jones recognized, ID is nothing more than a restating of Creationism. Hell, even the only actual ID textbook was simply a search-and-replace of Creationism with ID.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    95. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      That's a rather unanswered question, but to paraphrase Hawkings, even if it is fully deterministic, it doesn't matter anyways.

      Hawkings is only useful when contemplating the realm of human experience.

      Your little playground taunt/tantrum isn't terribly impressive, nor is your pathetic attempt at a rhetorical reworking of the word "cult". You don't demonstrate your point by simply turning into a hamfisted propagandist.

      I'm just matching my technique to my oponent.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    96. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      You seem to have the additional connotation that whatever is not science or outside the purview of science is simply not an acceptable method to understand this universe - sounds rather unscientific by to me to exclude something by definitional fiat.

      I exclude whatever is not science based on its results. I have not seen one single useful prediction made by someone based on an unscientific approach to understanding the universe, wheras science shows its predictive power daily.

      --
      I am trolling
    97. Re:Hmm... by CloakedMirror · · Score: 1
      You mean, like being taught old and outdated Newtonian mechanics? I mean really, that junk was disproven a century ago.
      You really need to keep up on your reading. Perhaps I'll find the article later, but there's been some interesting data showing that Newtonian models of motion do a better job of predicting some of the planetary motion. Then again, I'm not sure that you are capable of understanding the physics behind it. Perhaps if you go back to school you can catch up with the rest of the class.
      The only "other ideas" in biology that compete with "old and outdated evolutionary theory" are "new and modern evolutionary theory".
      So, I assume you would rather teach something that is known by scientific evidence to be false? You see, the system of checks you so laboriously documented for me is meant to keep false positives from being brought into the community. It is meant as a means from keeping us from stating that we know something that we don't know. However, as you describe its use, we also use it to perpetuate teaching the things we know are false.
      Yeah, yeah, persecution complex. Give me a fucking break.
      Glad to see that my legacy of using derisive language to attempt to demean someone that has alternate views is alive and well. Too bad you don't know how to put someone down without resorting to expletives. At least when I used to put down those that I considered my intellectual inferior I could use language that was civilized. Perhaps your bloodline will evolve to that point some day; or perhaps it will be found to be as inferior as you represent it and natural selection will take care of it for us.
      --
      Evolutionary thinking will move you down the road, revolutionary thinking will put you on a new road!
    98. Re:Hmm... by RichardX · · Score: 1

      I submit for your viewing pleasure the underwater rocks of Bimini.

      Another great example is the Giant's Causeway in Ireland, which looks for all the world like it's been carved or purposely laid down in a particular pattern (but of course, hasn't)

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    99. Re:Hmm... by hweimer · · Score: 1

      Replacing one religion with another doesn't help a bit. Quantum Mechanics is not predictible, and thus fails at the test of being a science by your own rules.

      This is utter nonsense. For example, quantum mechanics allows a precise calculation of the gyromagnetic factor of the electron, which is the most accurately measured natural constant at the moment.

      --
      OS Reviews: Free and Open Source Software
    100. Re:Hmm... by Syrrh · · Score: 1

      Evolution shouldn't be taught as fact? Well, shit. Guess that means gravity needs a disclaimer too... electric universe theory and all that. Chemistry class? Never mind that it's a pretty exact science, actual atomic composition is ALL voodoo.

      Yeah, there are some faults. In everything that's taught in grade schools. Do you thnk there should be corrections in language classes about every possible alternate meaning of words when their inflection is changed?

      It's not perfect, but it's close. ID is not perfect, and is no closer to the facts, so it gets pushed aside. If someone really wants to dig into the details later they can, but that doesn't belong in an entry-level class on the subject.

    101. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      I'd like you to point out where I ever dismissed the notion that there is a purpose to life, or that there is some higher power. This isn't about that, it is about some wanna-be theocrats who tried to use ID to push Creationism into a public school science class.

      Science cannot answer these questions, it isn't even designed to. It's purpose is to offer testable predictive models of nature based upon data. It isn't about the meaning of life or God. Why should that bother anybody? There is nothing in evolution that is incompatible with these notions, any more than there is anything incompatible between these notions and Quantum Mechanics or General Relativity or plate tectonics, hydrodynamics, germ theory, heliocentrism, and any other scientific theory you can name. So why on Earth would you even bring this objection up?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    102. Re:Hmm... by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      What does random mutation have to do with any God? And secondly, you're taking his second statement incorrecly. What he is saying is that IF YOU SUBSCRIBE TO CREATIONISM, evolution can fit with it nicely. ex God made life, and it is His hand that creates the variations. The Theory of Evolution is not a microbiological theory in the way that it does not describe how said "random mutations" happen. The theories that explain them in non-religious-kook terms were formed well after Darwin's time. Therefore, Evolution Theory simply states what many have told you before - Some organisms "get lucky", and pass off their genetic luck to their offspring. Sometimes, it doesn't work. Sometimes, it does. There's a lot of "get lucky" instances in 4,000,000,000 years.

      Furthermore, ID should NOT be taught in any public classroom. Separation of Church and State. Pick up any history book and look at any country that let the religious kooks tell everyone "God did it" or "God demands that we act this way." and see where it got them.

    103. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      I begin to understand the balance of your argument (although I don't really understand how you can make the above claim). If I accepted that the mathematical concept of a probability distribution were, in fact, theological in nature, then I would have to agree with you that the Theory of Evolution, and in fact, most scientific discoveries since the middle ages, were therefore theological in nature, and should not be taught in public schools.

      Actually, I go a step further than that- that this proves only that the separation between theology and science, and thus between church and state, was a false one; the real danger is the separation of government and business.

      But I think this is as silly as claiming that the concept of, for instance, multiplication is theological in nature.

      It was originally. Theologies are just models for describing what we see.

      Probability distribution is just a tool for describing the number of times a certain event is likely to happen in a given sample. It's purely a mathematical concept. If you can't see the difference between an abstract, mathematical concept, and a theological statement of belief, then I suppose our discussion has found its logical terminus.

      I hope so- but something tells me it hasn't. Abstract is the key word here- all abstract concepts have their basis in religious belief.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    104. Re:Hmm... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      You really need to keep up on your reading. Perhaps I'll find the article later, but there's been some interesting data showing that Newtonian models of motion do a better job of predicting some of the planetary motion.

      You mean like Mercury's orbit?

      So, I assume you would rather teach something that is known by scientific evidence to be false?

      What is "known by scientific evidence to be false" with respect to the theory of evolution? Be specific.

    105. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Informative
      Well, if a kid is taught that all scientific theories are tentative in nature, then it wouldn't be an issue. There's no doubt that many public schools have a problem teaching science, but the Dover and Kansas stunts have nothing to do with that. Evolution was singled out for this sort of treatment because it, unlike, say, the study of electro-magnetism, because in the minds of certain groups of Christians, says something they don't want to believe. It derives from evolutionary theory that all organisms, including us, have evolved from some other ancestor, and since they believe that to not interpret Genesis literally, or at the very least, not to mention that God had some hand in it, is somehow a recipe for the destruction of their beliefs. But then again, that plays into the religious motivation, and no matter how much Behe and his ilk may object to that, that's the state of affairs. Behe's solution appears to be to mutilate the very definition of science, so that, and he even admitted it during the Dover trial, astrology would become a science.

      It really isn't the job of the state or of the scientific community to prop up untenable beliefs, nor is it their job to insert the Designer into holes in a theory real and imagined.

      What Behe and his ilk want is no different than having a cancer researcher say "we can't be sure why these types of tumors metastasize, so it's quite possible that demons have some part in it".

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    106. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      But that assumes that the climate never changes. Which we all know doesn't happen.

      No, climate change alone lacking a motivation for mutation can only kill, not save. Extermination, not speciation; species exist because of either random or deterministic mutation.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    107. Re:Hmm... by CloakedMirror · · Score: 1
      The people who spend the most time whinging about the probabilities involved in evolution seem to have little grasp of the magnitudes of the numbers involved.
      Well, at least you bring the term abiogenesis into the discussion. If it were not for the fact that I am growing bored with this conversation, I would love to follow that line. Unfortunately, evolutionary theory is commonly taught as an explanation for the creation of life. Most of the people responding here don't seem to dispute it, and certainly haven't had the intelligence to bring abiogenesis up. Then again, they probably have decided that I am some junk-scientist (or even !gasp! a religious nut), since I have the audacity to question the altar of evolution.

      In any case, I will continue to chuckle at the people who are accusing one group of blindly following their belief, as they do the same with their own...

      MERRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!
      --
      Evolutionary thinking will move you down the road, revolutionary thinking will put you on a new road!
    108. Re:Hmm... by Belseth · · Score: 1
      The timing was political but nessaccary. After a hundred years of accepted fact Evolution was being questioned. People needed to be reminded that Evolution isn't a theory but an established fact and there is a difference. Intellegent Design doesn't even qualify as a theory.

      The biggest news to me was labs reproducing all the basic components of a cell with materials and conditions that would have existed 4.5 billion years ago. Utimately the real argument isn't Evolution but origin of life. I had a debate with a bible thumping cousin. All he could do was spout the party line about gaps in the theory and such. I pointed out that there have been complete evolutionary histories for animals, Whales being the first. By the end I had him douting what he had been told. The real problem is lack of education. That's the very reason they want to dilute what education there is. If you can create doubt about Evolution you can open people up to the myth of Intellegent Design.

    109. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Replacing one religion with another doesn't help a bit. Quantum Mechanics is not predictible, and thus fails at the test of being a science by your own rules.

      Of course it's predictable. It comes from our observations, the double slit experiment being the most famous example.

      A lack of intent is as much a theological concept as having intent; logically the two are completely equivalent.

      If you're talking about the universe itself having an "intent" then ok. It doesn't matter whether or not the universe has an intent. But to suggest the driving force is the intent of an intelligent being is introducing something extra and unnecessary.

      Why would he know how to be a parent any more than the rest of us? That's a pretty big assumption you're making as to the definition of the word God.

      Capital-g God as traditionally defined is omniscent, and would thus know everything there is to know about parenting.

      No, we THINK we see a lack of a pattern. Not being infinite, we cannot tell if what we see is actually a lack of a pattern, or a small part of a larger pattern.

      We've applied every test we know to all the data we can collect and there's no pattern. The only place such a pattern could be is outside the universe itself, and such a pattern would by definition have no observable effects in our universe. So we ignore it per occam's razor. As far as this universe is concerned, things are random.

      Neither can you actually observe randomness, since a random spot is indistinguishable from a larger pattern.

      But a spot that looks random rules out a large number of possible patterns. With every observation we make the probability that there's a pattern becomes less. Of course we can never be certain, but that's usually the way in science.

      But that's the problem isn't it: it does attempt to prove the lack of existance of one.

      No it doesn't. It merely explains the process without reference to God. Regardless of whether God exists or not, evolution is how speciation works.

      Too bad random mutation is in and of itself a higher entity, or else by occam's razor that would be true.

      Randomness is a much simpler idea than God. You need some idea of randomness, or a pattern if you exist, to understand the universe, because it occurs everywhere. Now, you can say this randomness is real randomness or a pattern coming from the mind of God. But in the latter case, we look for the simplest possible God which could do this - and that's a God which does nothing but generate something that looks like a bunch of random numbers. Which by my standards is not intelligent - I have seen a PCI card that can do it.

      Yep- which is why you need an intelligent designer setting up the rules :-)

      That's another debate.

      --
      I am trolling
    110. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I agree that education is a big problem, but an equally problem is that some Christian sects (and some Muslim and a very few Jewish ones as well) have essentially decreed that anything that goes against their particular literalistic Creationism beliefs are wrong, or worse evil. In the United States, this fundementalist ideology, when merged with anti-Liberalism, reactionary politics and preachers and politicians who have gained a good deal of influence by stoking the flames of anti-secular fear mongering (war on Christmas, secularism == atheism, evolution == immorality), has produced a climate that is poisonous to science. People need to be taught at a young age that science has nothing to say on God and nothing to say on metaphysical beliefs in general. The other reality is that any world view which flies in the face of what we can observe isn't going to survive. Creationism and Biblical literalism simply lead to false views of the world around us, and the fact that the only arenas that Creationists have any ability or standing to fight their little culture war is the courtroom and the media is pretty much an admission of that.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    111. Re:Hmm... by nterese · · Score: 1

      guess i don't have so much of a problem teaching the possiblity of design along with evolution, more just the "intelligent" design. doesn't seem to fit with everything else i've observed.

    112. Re:Hmm... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Can you name any of this purported data that invalidates Darwinian evolution? Which "gaps" make the Theory of Evolution "old and outdated"?

      Are you falling into the trap of confusing the colloquial definition of "theory" for the scientific definition? The Theory of Evolution is the basis of modern biology. You want to throw out modern biology because you think Evolution is not a fact? Do you have similar problems with the Theory of Electromagnetism being taught as "fact"? Does the fact that light exhibits behavior of a wave in some instances and as a particle in other instances invalidate the "old and outdated" Theory of Electromagnetism?

      Are you also aware that ID teaches that the idea of speciation is wrong, that the various species were created essentially whole in an instant by an "Intelligent Designer? That is, birds did not develop from dinosaurs, but magically appeared with feathers, beaks, etc.

      As John E. Jones III wrote in his judgement in Kitzmiller v. Dover:

      To be sure, Darwin's theory of evolution is imperfect. However, the fact that a scientific theory cannot yet render an explanation on every point should not be used as a pretext to thrust an untestable alternative hypothesis grounded in religion into the science classroom or to misrepresent well-established scientific propositions.


      You really need to get a hold of the full text of the judgement. It's quite an interesting read.

      The Catholic church versus Galileo has nothing on today's evolution zealots.

      The people that you call "zealots" seem to fall into non-mutually exclusive two groups:

      1) Those that do not want the government to endorse a certain religious viewpoint.

      2) Those that do not want children to receive a substandard education.

      If you want to see zealotry in action I again highly recommend that you read the actual judgement. John E. Jones III outlines the zealotry of the school board and takes them to task for their zealotry.

      To this date, no one has proposed a plausible alternative to the Theory of Evolution that hold up under the Scientific Method. Those people that you call zealots are generally those people that insist on reason, logic, critical thinking, and most of all, facts. If a devotion to facts makes one a zealot, then, please, call me a zealot.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    113. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really need to keep up on your reading. Perhaps I'll find the article later, but there's been some interesting data showing that Newtonian models of motion do a better job of predicting some of the planetary motion. Then again, I'm not sure that you are capable of understanding the physics behind it.

      Condescension is not a good strategy for you here. I am a physicist. Most of my training is in gravitational physics.

      That being said, you may be garbling an account of Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND), a dark matter alternative theory which describes the motions of stars in galaxies. Since Newtonian mechanics has been conclusively disproven in favor of relativity, MOND cannot be accepted as more than a low velocity, weak field phenomenological approximation, unless it is cast in a form compatible with relativity. Bekenstein has made such an attempt, but anyway, that's neither here nor there. The point is that Newtonian mechanics is not going to suddenly rise from the grave and replace relativity. Relativity may turn out to be wrong, but Newtonian mechanics is already known to be wrong.

      So, I assume you would rather teach something that is known by scientific evidence to be false?

      Such as? For instance, I am in favor of teaching Newtonian mechanics, even though it is known to be false. That's because it adequately describes phenomena within most of the ordinary realm of experience, and is much easier to grasp than relativity and quantum theory. Students will understand much more of their world by being taught Newtonian physics first than if you tried to skip directly to more accurate, but more advanced theories.

      <complete lack of content, snipped>

      Really, dude. Your condescension is seriously backfiring here. You were better off when you were making lame attacks on evolution. Maybe you should devote a fraction of that time debating my point that evolution is not being singled out as being above criticism, or in any other way.
    114. Re:Hmm... by OldAndSlow · · Score: 1
      So how can it be "sad" if the people who believe in the Jesus, Hail Mary Mother Ghost of Alah or whatever, are happy believing in such?

      If people's faith gives them solace and makes them better hunman beings, I'm all for it. When people's faith requires them to invade science classrooms and destroy biology instruction, I get concerned. The politically active evangelical right, for reasons I don't understand, needs to feel as if the world were out to get them, despite their enormous political power.

      Biologists don't try to change Sunday school, but evangelicals regularly try to change biology.

      Believe in the Flying Spaghetti Monster if you like, but don't burn down any Italian restaurants.

    115. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people I know who believe in evolution do so based on a lot of what could be defined as faith, without any real knowledge.

      I believe in evolution because it's been rationally explained. The introductory biology class I had in 9th grade was quite good, and was even taught by someone that had a fair amount of religious grounding. She didn't object because it's still perfectly rational to consider that the process is steered by divine influence, but relying on miraculous sudden events is preposterous. Biblical-style miracles do not happen. Sorry.

      I'd gone on to a partial biochemistry degree so I'd taken science a bit farther than most, but most everything I know on evolution is from high school or first-level biology classes. The progression from bacteria to increasingly complex organisms is easy to follow without any glaring leap-of-faith gaps.

      Maybe the problem is that you didn't pay attention in those classes or were too busy fuming with righteous indignation to listen. That's good enough reason to throw out ID, encouraging religious interference in school only retards education.

    116. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If it were not for the fact that I am growing bored with this conversation,

      Meaning: your position is indefensible so you're ducking out while you still can. I notice that you had no response to my rebuttals. In fact, all your posts are remarkably long on rhetoric, and short on actual scientific merit.
      Unfortunately, evolutionary theory is commonly taught as an explanation for the creation of life.

      Really? It wasn't when I saw it in school. What's the evidence that supports this claim?
      In any case, I will continue to chuckle at the people who are accusing one group of blindly following their belief, as they do the same with their own...

      Gee, it would be nice if you had some basis for that assertion as well. Come, tell me, who are these people, and what facts demonstrate that they are "blindly" following their own belief?
    117. Re:Hmm... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      There are prominent examples of *non-theists* who are proponents of ID

      Such as the atheist UFO-cult of the Raëlians.
      That still a religious belief, however.

      I read the sticker that the Kansas school board wanted to attach to the textbooks and didn't think it was all that offensive

      It was carefully worded that way. The problem, however, is not the wording, it's the intent. It singles out one scientific theory with a warning label!

      --

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

    118. Re:Hmm... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'm just arguing that human beings are too finite to get anything correct. Ever.

      So, you're engaging in metaphysics and philosophy. Nothing wrong with that, in and of itself. The problem is that you are trying to insert philosophy and metaphysics into science.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    119. Re:Hmm... by OldAndSlow · · Score: 1
      Actually, I'm just arguing that human beings are too finite to get anything correct. Ever.

      And so, out of your own mouth, you believe that all science is a waste of time, doomed to fail.

    120. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being grammar picky, it would have been correct to state instead "It also produces predictable results"

    121. Re:Hmm... by Andy+Gardner · · Score: 1

      Ok heres how I understand evolution and why mutation is important. There are two basic processes, introducing new genetic variation into a population, and selection affecting the frequencies of existing variation. A populationg cannot evolve without genetic variation. The priciple cause of genetic variation is the creation of new alleles and correct me if I'm wrong but mutations are the only way new alleles can be created. So excuse me if i don't repeat after you "mutation means nothing".

    122. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      You may be right. I'm sure a lot of people believe in General Relativity without any real knowledge. But that does not reflect one way or the other on whether any particular theory is sound or not. It certainly reflects on the poor state of public education, which has fallen so woefully down on the job of teaching science that some people really don't even know what a scientific theory is.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    123. Re:Hmm... by adisakp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Thus, evolutionary theory *is* testable, even in a lab -- you can take a fast-breeding species like the common fruit fly, apply artifical selective pressures, and watch the allelle frequencies[1] shift in real time compared to control groups. Dog breeding is another example; humans use a the natural mechanisms of evolution, but add in their own constraints in the selection and variation departments.

      Dog breeding for specific traits is an example of Intelligent Design using evolution (specialization and variation) as the methodology and having Intelligent Designers (i.e. human breeders) guiding those traits. I don't have a problem with the idea of limited intelligent design. We as humans are doing it now with genetic engineering on plants and developing cloning techniques on animals.

      There are at least two big problems with Intelligent Design as proposed by the religious right.

      #1) The only currently scientifically observed "intelligent design" are the activities of human beings (breeding, genetic engineering),hardly GOD or supernatural beings -- although such techniques might seem supernatural to cavemen.

      #2) When you try to use Intelligent Design as the origin of species you get into a recursive loop. The Intelligent Designer of man is was obviously too complex to occur naturally so he must have been created by an previous Intelligent Designer.... and so on. Like the argument that the world is a flat disc carried on a turtle... what is the turtle carried on? "IT'S TURTLES ALL THE WAY DOWN". Anyway. eventually you need the ORIGINAL-UNPROVEABLE-SUPER-DESIGNER (i.e. God) to explain things away.

      I believe only in micro-ID (haha - kinda like ID's proposed "micro-evolution) which I currently see being carried out by man right now and quite possibly extended to what we'd currently consider "God-Like" in the future, but barring further evidend, I will not believe in full-blown ID as the origin of all species (macro-ID with a supernatural being) until someone shows me the bottom of the stack of turtles.

    124. Re:Hmm... by mantar · · Score: 1

      But randomness is observed, as we see the lack of a pattern. You can't observe God, which makes the idea useless to science.

      Funny how we assume that something is random just because we don't see an apparent pattern. IMHO it's a fatal assumption in your logic.

      None of these rely on a designer, and "randomness" is an essential feature of our universe

      For randomness being such an abundant feature, we sure haven't been able to reproduce it... in science or otherwise. In fact, one of the fundamental requirements of science is the ability to test a theory and reproduce the outcome given a set of constant inputs. Cause and effect. Take software, for example:

      srand(time(0));
      float fFakeRandomNumber = rand();


      We have a pseudo-RNG that really all it does is produce an apparent random number. The important part is the first command... you gotta seed the RNG, and if you later seed the same RNG with the same value, you'll find that the outcome isn't random at all, it's just a cleverly designed algorithm that uses known constructs to produce known values... just in a fashion that mimics randomness.

      Listen, I'm not denying the existence of randomness... I'm just say that nothing is always as it seems.

      --
      # man tar
    125. Re:Hmm... by Fafnir43 · · Score: 1
      Disclaimer here: I believe in evolution, I'm just somewhat curious and badly educated on the subject (GCSE biology sucks). Please explain rather than flaming.

      If mutation is such a negligible factor, then how do two members of a species vary to the point at which they can no longer interbreed and become members of two different species? It seems a stretch to indicate variance alone. And how did such a wide variance in the number of chromosomes of different species arise without mutation?

      --
      To know recursion, you must first know recursion.
    126. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not evolution. That's natural selection. Evolution is the creation of new genes.

    127. Re:Hmm... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      If one finds happiness in slavery, is he still a slave?

      That's one of the fundamental questions of philosophy. I'd venture to say that's nearly the only question that matters, touching on fate/free will, epistemology, empiricism.

      You propose it here as a reductio ad absurdum, but it's not a question with an easy answer.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    128. Re:Hmm... by penguin_asylum · · Score: 1

      The cow that wants to be eaten from HHGTTG comes to mind...

    129. Re: Hmm... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > It's interesting to me that this whole thing has become a religious debate.

      It's interesting to me that the people who until a few days ago were pretending ID wasn't religion are now claiming that they're victims of religious persecution and that separation of church and state is a bad legal doctrine, and a whole chorus of religious organizations is joining in.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    130. Re:Hmm... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      Hawkings is only useful when contemplating the realm of human experience.

      Hoo boy. I can see where you're going. So let me guess, your acccessing none-human experience to give us the inside scoop on whether the universe is deterministic or not.

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

      > > I submit for your viewing pleasure the underwater rocks of Bimini.

      > Another great example is the Giant's Causeway in Ireland, which looks for all the world like it's been carved or purposely laid down in a particular pattern (but of course, hasn't)

      And the Eltanin Antenna.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    132. Re: Hmm... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > ID makes no testable predictions. Even the Discovery Institute, the driving force behind this farce, provides no evidence to support their claim.

      And the pro-religion Templeton Foundation never got a single applicant for their offer of support for ID research.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    133. Re:Hmm... by Sir+Pallas · · Score: 1

      Michael Behe (author of Darwin's Black Box) is a Catholic, which is about as far from non-theist as you can get.

    134. Re:Hmm... by jmccay · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I know I will take a mega-karma hit for this, but I am not affraid to speak my mind.
            Macro evolution still has not been proven. All they have done is take two distinct set of bones and say one came before the other. They do not have any intermediate stages or anything. To believe in evolution you must believe that life came from nothing at all with out any design. Everything about the world around us screams that it was designed, and is a machine. A machine which we keep on breaking. Only teaching evolution limits how we think about the world around us, and can keep us from finding discoveries.
            Look at stem cell research. A lot of people in the scientific community, and here on slashdot, were singing (and worshiping, at the altar of embrionic stem cell research). You looked down on those who were against it. Those who were against it and said there were other lines of stem cell research that were more promising. All the recent stem cell advances have been in non-embrionic stem cell research.
            My point is this, the draconian, pig-headed scientists who worshiper evolution may not be right. They refuse to see even the smallest problems in evolution. The follow it blindly like a religion, and for some it is safe to say it is their religion above all else. Even when pressed with obvious problems (such as how life began), the deeper you dig they eventually have to admit they don't know. It is time scientist take an open mind and start admitting they could be wrong.
            ID will not go away. There are scientists who believe in it, and the more it shows up in court, the more attention it will bring. In the long run, hopefully, the scientists who think it is worth looking into, and believe in it (not for religous reasons), will come out into the open and start speaking up. Then maybe you pig-head evolution worshipers might open your minds. Bring back competing ideas in science.

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    135. Re:Hmm... by Combas · · Score: 0

      I understand how someone who says "hey ID makes sense to me" could be viewed as a loudmouthed cry baby because I've met a few and when asked the big "why?" they proceed to list off reasons why evolution makes no sense which isnt exactly a Pro for ID but rather a Con for Evolution.

      However, having said that, I am going to go out on a limb and say that's its my opinion that believe in evolution takes just as much faith as belief in Inteligent Design.

      If you want to know why I feel that way, or just feel like proving me wrong, then read yesterdays post in my blog. Its a funny coincidence that I happened to be writing about this very thing just the other day.

      Just follow your nose. It always knows.

    136. Re:Hmm... by CloakedMirror · · Score: 1
      Meaning: your position is indefensible so you're ducking out while you still can. I notice that you had no response to my rebuttals. In fact, all your posts are remarkably long on rhetoric, and short on actual scientific merit.
      No, actually it meant that I was leaving my office and I figured I would be busy with things that are much more entertaining than responding to commentary by the dull-witted. As it turned out I finished with other items quicker than I had originally anticipated.
      In fact, all your posts are remarkably long on rhetoric, and short on actual scientific merit.
      As are your's. You regurgitate the party line well, though, so I suppose you should get points for non-originality.
      It wasn't when I saw it in school. What's the evidence that supports this claim?
      I have my personal observation as experience. I have observed what is taught in the local schools, and I have talked with the teachers who spout this babble.
      Gee, it would be nice if you had some basis for that assertion as well. Come, tell me, who are these people, and what facts demonstrate that they are "blindly" following their own belief?
      You march to this drum quite nicely. Thank-you for providing the example which you requested. Oh, I know, you believe that you have the weight of scientific evidence on your side. Your need to attack what you don't seem to be able to grasp is a bit disappointing. It's okay, though. I mean you do follow the same patterns as such great institutions as the medieval Catholic church, the Flat Earth Society, and I'm sure many others.

      When you have the capability to look beyond your own understanding of the world, and when you have grown enough to ask questions that have some merit, then perhaps you will be ready to discuss things on a level that I am willing to engage.

      Such a shame, I thought that since you were at least familiar with the term abiogenesis you might have some useful arguments. Given your response, I'm guessing you picked it up off a board, and decided to use it because it made you sound like you had an inkling of intelligence.
      --
      Evolutionary thinking will move you down the road, revolutionary thinking will put you on a new road!
    137. Re:Hmm... by the_mighty_$ · · Score: 1

      If mutation is such a negligible factor, then how do two members of a species vary to the point at which they can no longer interbreed and become members of two different species?

      Simple answer: the parent you are replying to is way off base. Quote from Wikipedia's Mutation page:

      "Mutations are considered the driving force of evolution"
      --
      VI VI VI - the editor of the beast!
    138. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      ID (real ID, not rebranded evangelical creationsim) brings a logical explanation for the origins of the universe (no, before that 'big bang' thing, which science explains perfectly well) to the table. However, it's philosophical logic that 'scientists' dont like as opposed to mathematical logic that they do like.

      Discreet mathematical statements are nothing but excercises in logic, the very same logic you learn in philosophy courses, so much so they mirror each other (differing in some places only in notation).

      'Science' is going to have to figure out what it wants to accept as sciene and what it dosent. If it wants to accept mathematical logic as science then it also must accept at least some types of philisophical logic.

      If it dosent want to accept any philisophical logic, it must uncermoniously give the boot to any branch of physics that isnt backed by physcial evidence.

      Science is broken. ID is trying to fill the gaps left by generations of 'scientific' willful ignorance.

    139. Re:Hmm... by CloakedMirror · · Score: 1
      Condescension is not a good strategy for you here. I am a physicist. Most of my training is in gravitational physics.
      You too! That's great to hear! Where did you study? Can you provide me with some of your data and/or calculations that you used in determining the inaccuracies in MOND? Just point me to a page, please.
      Really, dude. Your condescension is seriously backfiring here.
      If I recall, it was your original posting that played the condescension card. At any rate, I grow bored with this.

      Neither you, nor I, are going to change our basic philisophical attitudes, based on what we read on this site. I held your point of view for many years, and I know that nothing that was said to me during that time would shake me from my belief. Consequently, I don't actually expect you to change because of anything I say.

      BTW, I truly would be interested in whatever you can point me to regarding MOND and any other studies of gravitational motion and effects. I majored in physics at Purdue University, but moved to computers because there was more money.
      --
      Evolutionary thinking will move you down the road, revolutionary thinking will put you on a new road!
    140. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If your inputs are random, so are your outputs-

      Wrong. If I flip 10 coins (random mutation) and discard the ones that come up tails (selection), then I have a set of coins that all show heads. The input was random, the outcome was not.

      No, my problem is with the implication of an indeterministic universe

      Then I hate to tell you this, but many things in the universe are indeterministic.

      Environmetal changes alone are not enough to create a new species- only to exterminate old species.

      Incorrect. Speciation has been observed.

      My point is that without the cause, you can't actually distinguish evolution from ID- both are equivalent theology, neither is science.

      Repeating something doesn't make it true. Sorry.

      Who created those genes? The designer. Who brought the parents together? The designer. Who determined the physical laws that determine how every particle in the universe moves? The designer.

      Who designed the designer?

      At which point you freeze the classroom at what date?

      It's not frozen. The problem, which you keep denying in the face of all argument, is that ID is not science because it ignores tghe basic principles of science. Ergo, it should not be taught in a science class.

    141. Re:Hmm... by zephc · · Score: 1

      "... over the long run all species evolve traits that assure their survival, a form of genetic "intelligence" itself."

      Not necessarily, look at Pandas. PIcky about breeding, big carnivorous teeth but they eat bamboo. Panda's are pretty much doomed, an evoloutionary dead end. For ever species you see, there were probably dozens of divergences whic were dead ends. Another example is the various branches of hominids, where all but one species (humans) died off.

      --
      "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    142. Re:Hmm... by Darby · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      As a parent (in Kansas, no less), I can tell you that evolution is usually not taught as theory, but as fact.

      Maybe that's for the simple basic obvious reason that it is a 100% absolute fact.
      Don't believe it? Need proof?
      Ever seen a dog? A seedless watermelon?
      There you go. absolute positive undeniable proof that evolution is a fact.

      The fact that you and the rest of the ignorant dipshits like you who are pushing this garbage clearly don't have a clue what these words even mean yet keep blathering on about it menas that you are 100% absolutely an idiotic dipshit.

      Sorry to break it to you like that, but as long as you continue to whine about nonsense without even bothering to figure out what the issue is, you will continue to be treated as an idiotic dipshit by *all* decent, sane, rational people.

      If you could even tell the difference between evolution (*fact*) and the Theory of Evolution (potential mechanisms by which it occurs) then you would look like you weren't an absolute moron.

      You are so pathetic though, that you can't even tell the difference between abiogenesis and evolution.
      I'm sure you've been told this many times, but being the ignorant dipshit you are, you refuse to listen and continue to whine like a little bitch about shit you're too stupid to even bother learning about before you condemn it.

      So, in conclusion, fuck off. Militantly ignorant morons like you are embarassing our nation and our species.

    143. Re:Hmm... by zephc · · Score: 1

      Your argument if full of logical fallacies. Sorry, you lose. http://www.buffaloatheists.com/articles/logical-fa llacies.htm

      --
      "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    144. Re:Hmm... by milkman_matt · · Score: 1

      Who's to say they're not both right.. Maybe God was a monkey, and created us in his image from which we've evolved to what we are now! ...I'm just saaayin'

    145. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "an omnipotent, omniscient designer"

      The very notion of such an entity is a nonsense.

      If an entity is trul omnipotent, does that entity have the power (for eample) to create a rock big enough that the entity cannot move it? (If the entity cannot move the rock, then that is something that is beyond the power of the entity. If the entity can move the rock, then creating an immovable rock is something that is beyond the power of the entity).

      Ergo, "omnipotence" is a nonsense concept - it does not exist.

      Likewise for "omniscient". Can an omniscient entity think of a question which the entity cannot answer? (If the entity cannot answer a given question then the entity is clearly not omniscient - it does not know everything. If the entity can answer the question then the entity does not know enough to be able to frame an unanswerable question - and so the entity is not omniscient). Either way, the entity is not omniscient.

      Ergo, "omniscience" is a nonsense concept - it does not exist.

      Therefore - there IS NO ENTITY which can know everything and which has the power to do everything. Such an entity does not exist.

      "Your right, said God, and God promptly disappeared in a puff of logic".

    146. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You too! That's great to hear! Where did you study?

      The Penn State Institute for Gravitational Physics and Geometry.

        Can you provide me with some of your data and/or calculations that you used in determining the inaccuracies in MOND?

      I didn't say that MOND was "inaccurate". I said that it has not replaced relativity, nor does it account for gravitational dynamics better than does relativity, nor will it ever.

      MOND does fine for galactic rotation curves, but it doesn't account for the same breadth of observations as does dark matter. Even if it were better than dark matter, that still doesn't mean that Newtonian dynamics is more accurate than relativity, because (a) the galactic rotation curves due to dark matter are also determined from Newtonian dynamics, (b) relativity is already known to be more accurate than Newtonian mechanics as far as predictions of gravity go: perihelion precession of orbits, gravitational redshift, gravitational light deflection, the Lense-Thirring effect, Shapiro time delay, the Nordtvedt effect, orbital decay due to gravitational radiation, etc. etc., and (c) MOND isn't really Newtonian gravity anyway, that's why it's called "modified".

      Now, it is possible that galactic rotation curves may be explained more accurately by a modified theory of gravity akin to MOND than they are by dark matter. (I don't think this is very likely, for a number of reasons, but it's possible.) However, that modified theory must be compatible with relativity in every circumstance in which relativity has been successfully compared with experiment. That is not the case for MOND. Therefore, if you want to save MOND as a fundamental theory, you have to come up with some relativistic gravity theory which reduces to MOND in the weak field, slow motion limit (as general relativity reduces to Newtonian gravity in that limit). Bekenstein has proposed such a theory, but it is (a) speculative, (b) hasn't addressed all observational tests, and (c) is more ad hoc than dark matter is generally regarded to be (see this post for some reasons). And it still doesn't address the deficiencies of MOND regarding phenomena other than galactic rotation curves.

      My original point stands: regardless of the success of MOND, it is not going to replace relativity; as it stands, it is incompatible with all the experiments supporting relativity. At best, it will be subsumed within relativity.

      If I recall, it was your original posting that played the condescension card.

      "Give me a fucking break" is an expression of disgust at having the temerity to compare "evolution zealots" to the Church's persecution of Galileo, not condescension.
    147. Re:Hmm... by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As a Christian who believes in the Biblical account of Creation, let me say that I admire your reasoning, and I generally agree with you.

      #1) The only currently scientifically observed "intelligent design" are the activities of human beings (breeding, genetic engineering),hardly GOD or supernatural beings

      Agreed - there doesn't currently seem to be anything scientifically observable that would necessitate the existence of a supernatural Creator - if we observe something we have no natural explanation for, that doesn't prove it occurs due to supernatural forces, only that we haven't discovered the natural explanation yet. However, the absence of proof does not imply the presence of disproof: just because a natural explanation has been found for most observations, doesn't mean there must be a natural explanation for everything we can ever observe. Still, it's stupid to stop looking for natural explanations just because it's possible there might not be one, especially since history has shown that there usually is.

      I believe that God currently chooses not to reveal Himself in a scientifically provable way. Obviously this has not always been the case, and the Bible promises that it will not remain the case forever. In the mean time, I can't prove that God exists, and you can't prove that God doesn't exist. Until God chooses to reveal Himself, the question of whether or not God exists remains outside the realm of science for this reason.

      #2) When you try to use Intelligent Design as the origin of species you get into a recursive loop. The Intelligent Designer of man is was obviously too complex to occur naturally so he must have been created by an previous Intelligent Designer.... and so on. Like the argument that the world is a flat disc carried on a turtle... what is the turtle carried on? "IT'S TURTLES ALL THE WAY DOWN". Anyway. eventually you need the ORIGINAL-UNPROVEABLE-SUPER-DESIGNER (i.e. God) to explain things away.

      The Bible says God has always been, and always will be; this becomes much easier to understand once you can grasp the idea that God exists outside of time, and indeed God created time. We exist on a linear timeline moving in one direction; once a moment has passed, it's behind us. I'm not suggestion that God can turn around and go backwards on that line, rather that God is "above" the line - able to look down and see the whole picture at once, able to cause something to happen tomorrow by setting events in motion years ago without being confined to only moving forward or back. God created not only this planet, this galaxy, and all the other galaxies in the universe... but the universe itself, including the entire concepts of time and space, along with physical properties and rules that operate within the universe (e.g. gravity).

      So, where does God come from? Does God have a creator? These questions cannot be answered unless God (or someone else, I suppose) chooses to reveal that information, since by definition we cannot explore or observe anything outside of our universe. Personally I don't see much point in guessing. Either God is the original unprovable super Designer you're looking for, or there are more turtles, but if God is our only connection to the world outside our universe, then I don't think it matters; why get hung up on it?

      I believe only in micro-ID (haha - kinda like ID's proposed "micro-evolution) which I currently see being carried out by man right now

      I really like the name "micro-ID". :-)

      and quite possibly extended to what we'd currently consider "God-Like" in the future,

      I'm curious as to what you have in mind.

      but barring further evidend, I will not believe in full-blown ID as the origin of all species (macro-ID with a supernatural being) until someone shows me the bottom of the stack of turtles.

      I hope God chooses to reveal Himself to you (in His usual non-scientifically-observable way) soon, but in the mean time, I commend your skepticism and I encourage you to continue seeking answers.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    148. Re:Hmm... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Most people have accepted genes that pass down through inheritance,

      What's really slick is that the theory of evolution predicted genes. If you hold to the notion of an intelligent designer, there's no need for genes, since God forms creatures according to his will. The genetic info is all in his mind.

    149. Re:Hmm... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      How do you know something's true if you can't check if it's true?

    150. Re:Hmm... by Fei_Id · · Score: 1

      Amen!!! Oopsie ;)

      I've been battling the same crap on various forums. MANY just don't understand this fact at all. Its a common delusion that permeates everything about ID, Creationism and the ultra-right-wing religious groups.

      Mom always said there's people way out in the ditch on both sides of the fence while many others are just havin a good time cuttin the grass :)

    151. Re: Hmm... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      > I can't help thinking this decision is politically-motivated. Doesn't mean it's not deserved, but it sure is convenient, coming on the heels of the ID court decision.

      Take it as a sign that after the Discovery Institute has been pushing their pseudoscience in the public arena for a decade, scientists are finally starting to push back.

      It would be better if they didn't need to, but they do, so IMO this is a good sign.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    152. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As are your's. You regurgitate the party line well, though, so I suppose you should get points for non-originality.

      Quite to the contrary, I rebutted your (rather absurd) statements regarding evolution. You, in turn, had no response, save for attempts to tar my rebuttal as "regurgitation". This does not conceal the bald fact that you have no response of merit to any scientific discussion of your claims.

      But prove me wrong. In your next response, let's see if you abstain from condescension in favor of any kind of content that demonstrates that you, yourself, have any grasp of abiogenesis/evolution and their predictions. (Hint: "the problems are obvious and you're just parroting the party line, Pope Persecutor" does not count. I mean really... comparing me to a Flat Earther? That's as over the top as Godwin's Law. And for what? Telling you what was wrong with your little "thought experiment"? Sheesh. Do you really expect anybody to take even your mockery seriously, let alone your science?)

      I have my personal observation as experience. I have observed what is taught in the local schools, and I have talked with the teachers who spout this babble.

      My personal observation has been the opposite. I would like to see which textbooks discuss evolution as having explained the origins of life.

      You march to this drum quite nicely. Thank-you for providing the example which you requested. Oh, I know, you believe that you have the weight of scientific evidence on your side. Your need to attack what you don't seem to be able to grasp is a bit disappointing.

      Sorry, dude, condescension still isn't working for you. Now, if you please, I'd like to see your response to my rebuttal of your claim that it should be "easy" to replicate the evolution of bacteria in a lab. In fact, I would like to see any basis that claim. Do you seriously believe that chemistry predicts that this will happen in a human timeframe?

      I mean you do follow the same patterns as such great institutions as the medieval Catholic church, the Flat Earth Society, and I'm sure many others.

      More empty rhetoric and vague assertion. Now, if you want to give actual examples of how I, myself, have persecuted those opposed to my views, suppressed legitimate scientific development, ignored contrary scientific evidence, etc., feel free.

      <more drivel>

      I hate to break this to you, but you are not the witty and devastating debater you imagine yourself to be. I'm sure that was a really impressive "legacy" of demeaning repartee you once had. But if you want to keep embarrassing yourself in public, feel free. The length you devote to failed and worthless condescension compared to the lack of insight only implies the bankruptcy of your position. And amusingly, you have the gall to tell me that I have no undestanding of science, after (a) you propose a silly strawman caricature of evolution as relevant to resolving the ID/"random chance" debate, and (b) imply that experiments have shown Newtonian gravity is more accurate than relativity.

      On the other hand, if you'd like to try seriously discussing science, you might save a little face. Returning to the topic at hand, in what way do you suggest that one might scientifically determine intelligent design vs. "random chance"? Because if you think the "pure evolution crowd" proposes that it is "straightforward" to create a bacteria in a lab from chemicals, and the failure to do so implies anything about ID vs. evolution, you are going to need to rethink that claim, for the reasons I already stated, among others.
    153. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what I find funny about the people posting statements like this and getting modded up... I'll bet 90 percent of them have never read any outlines offered by ID advocates. I'll bet they are parroting, like I'll bet the pro-ID people are, other peoples opinions of things.

      McScientists are the reason the ID crowd is gaining ground in this culture. They claim to have an open mind, but their minds are only open to what authorities on the topic have to say. That's called dogmatism.

      Myself, I don't care if they teach evolution or intelligent design(although I would prefer my children not be taught anything that has been influenced by the religious right, it's not worth me getting pissed about), I would just like to see critical thinking courses offered at the earliest grades possible. It's a shame that I had to wait till college to get into a critical thinking course. That changed everything for me.

      Logic is superior to and more useful than science. Science relies on conjecture to fill in the holes, but logic forces an honesty about evidence, and by extension, an open mind about evidence. Too many McScientists do not have critical thinking or logic ingrained in their thought process. Not that I expect anyone to be Spock... But Logic is more important to a free democratic society than the theory of evolution or intelligent design, and it's one of the least taught things in public education. At least in my experience.

    154. Re:Hmm... by batkiwi · · Score: 1

      As a parent (in Kansas, no less), I can tell you that evolution is usually not taught as theory, but as fact.

      You do not understand what the word "theory" means in a scientific context.

    155. Re:Hmm... by batkiwi · · Score: 1

      Allow me to add:
      Both "Continental Drift" and "Atomic Theory" are theories, NOT "laws" (as close as a "fact" as you can come in the scientific method).

    156. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > If one finds happiness in slavery, is he still a slave?
      > Is it still wrong to treat him as a slave?

      For Crap's sake:

      If one finds happiness in being killed and eaten,
      is it still wrong to kill him and eat him?

      Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? Homer?

      .
      .
      .
      .

      (For those who are still wondering the answer is yes,
      it is still wrong to kill him and eat him. Barring
      extreme circumstances, (Donner party), It is always
      wrong to treat others anyway you would not want to be
      treated yourself. Duh.)

    157. Re:Hmm... by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Please don't forget problem #3: The "designer" must have been smoking crack.

      How else can an ID advocate explain the obvious - EVEN TO A "LIMITED" HUMAN INTELLECT! - design flaws such as our eyes, ability to choke on food, etc and so on?

      Maybe their "god" was actually a freshman engineering student that flunked out?

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    158. Re:Hmm... by toddestan · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ok, repeat after me: Mutation means nothing. It is an insignifigant force that basically means Jack to evolution. Mutations usually die off, and rarely get to reproduce.

      Variance and selection explain a lot of how species change. Why a species of moths may change color over time, or a species of birds gradually get a longer beak. It doesn't explain very well how new species suddenly come about, hence the reason the anti-evolution crowd likes to point out the "gaps" in the fossil record. The gaps are where a species will suddenly appear in the fossil record, which is determined to have derived from an earlier species, yet there are no transitory fossils to be found that are part old species, part new species. You need mutations to bridge this gap (well, unless you believe in the "intelligent design" arguement).

      Of course, you are right about most mutations being bad and dying off. But if 99.99% of mutations die off, and there is only a 0.00001% chance of an actual beneficial mutation - just give it a few million generations, it will quite likely happen.

    159. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I find sad about that decision is that it was a complete overreaction. The judge ruled that teachers could not give a fifty word statement saying that intelligent design is a theory different from evolution, it states that earth was created by an intelligent outside force, and that it is not taught in the school.

      That is overreaction.

      Quite probably, the judge didn't even think about what the school was trying to do, he just saw the words "Intelligent design" and "school" in the same paragraph and went insane.

    160. Re:Hmm... by abirdman · · Score: 1
      Why do I get the impression that parents who protest their high school kid isn't getting the "whole story" when it comes to Evuhlution vs. ID don't really expect their kid to progress past high school, and maybe get the "real truth" later in their eddication?

      ID is an anti-intellectual, fundamentalist, religious generalization designed to stifle intellectual and empirical exploration. The "real truth" is that we can only know what we explore, discover, and record. And even the concept of "know" is problematic (ever have a discussion with college freshmen and sophmores about what knowledge is?).

      Many people are content to terminate their quest for understanding by adopting some interpretation of a book (the Bible, the Koran, the Talmud, Naked Lunch, the Upanishads, the Little Red Book), but that doesn't contradict science, and it doesn't mean they should get special stickers pasted on HS textbooks. And little junior ain't gonna remember enough of his Evolution unit from bio class to challenge his beliefs within two weeks of his first job after high school.

      --
      Everything I've ever learned the hard way was based on a statistically invalid sample.
    161. Re: Hmm... by abirdman · · Score: 1

      That's a very deep observation... and I agree. It's because the Republicans (and Americans in general) have finally wised up that the ID crowd are just the same old religious zealots, and figured out their agenda isn't something they want to be associated with. ID is in the process of being flushed down the toilet of intellectually dishonest false starts, and as the flush-water swirls, they're clinging to any possible floating lifesaver. Desperate people will say desperate things-- actually they will say anything! Now they're being religiously persecuted, and hence, in some way, are both the victims of, and calling for protection in the name of, the same separation doctrine they've been trying so hard to undermine.

      --
      Everything I've ever learned the hard way was based on a statistically invalid sample.
    162. Re:Hmm... by Bogtha · · Score: 1

      What I find saddest about the ID movement is that they have the wrong-headed idea that evolution rules out an Intelligent Designer.

      It does. Evolution is the theory that life evolves to reproduce more frequently in its environment. Intelligent design is incompatible with that because what reproduces more frequently in its environment is a function of the environment and the current population, not the desires of an outside influence. At best you could say that the outside influence modified the environment and the current population in order to direct evolution, but any being capable of doing that would also be capable of just creating the beings they wanted outright; plus that wouldn't be design per se, just modifying the constraints that evolution works under. "Design" implies that the designer actually chooses what goes into its creation, not modifies the variables and observes the outcome. "Intelligent design" is fundamentally incompatible with evolution. An intelligent creator is not.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    163. Re:Hmm... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1
      The "randomness" could very well be introduced by normal physical means (such as radiation from Sun altering molecules within cell, which we know does happen).
      And who set up the universal constants that allow the Sun to radiate? Sorry, all you've done here is move it back up a notch.

      The "who set up the universal constants" is a question which is completely irrelevant to science. It belongs to metaphysics, religion or---this is the candidate I'd favor---is essentially nonsensical.

      (Most of the proofs of existence of God and/or other similar stuff are based on arguments of infinite regression, like the one you are hinting at. I have failed, since I became aware of those arguments, that they prove not much more than the lack of imagination of the one using them. For example, in your case: why can it not be that universal constants are like they are just because they are? Or maybe because they cannot be otherwise?)

      Science is merely interested in the fact that universal constants are as they are.

      Introducing an agent assumed to have set the constants at the values they have, introduces in a big melodramatic move more problems than what it solves (it solves exactly zero problems...)

      The use of the word "random" merely means that the causative effect is so minute and detailed that without tracking every single particle in the Universe, we can think of it as "random" from our macro point of view.
      And thus, requires an intelligent designer who CAN track and influence every particle in the universe- and all we're discovering is his laws for doing so.

      I have no idea where you see this requirement come from.

      The fact that something is complex by no means whatsoever requires that something else exist which can keep track of its complexity and/or control it.

      Now there is the issue of randomness within quantum mechanics, but I assume you are also arguing that our understanding of QM is wildly incorrect also.
      Actually, I'm just arguing that human beings are too finite to get anything correct. Ever.

      Well, there is no need in arguing that: that is essentially contained in the definitions of the words you are using. No one, absolutely no one, seriously pretends that humans are infinite, or that they can "get" anything 100% correctly, or anything remotely vaguely similar to that.

      Indeed, it is not difficult to construe the scientific endeavor as precisely an attempt to do as much as is possible in the face of our finiteness.

    164. Re:Hmm... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1
      But I think this is as silly as claiming that the concept of, for instance, multiplication is theological in nature.
      It was originally. Theologies are just models for describing what we see.

      You are clearly using the word "theological" in a different, significantly more general, sense that the original poster, and I am quite sure you realise this...

      I hope so- but something tells me it hasn't. Abstract is the key word here- all abstract concepts have their basis in religious belief.

      That is ridiculous.

      The abstract concept of "2", or of "gravity", or of "abstract concept" have no relation to religion whatsoever.

    165. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason it brings nothing to the table is that it can't without 500 lawers coming to the table as well. There is come interesting stuff in Christianity that could even prove evolution wrong, but even just one religious comment would be killed by the lawers.

      I mean come on people. Evolution is faith based too, has anyone in their lifetime witnessed evolution any more massive than slight changes in genes due to selective breeding (i.e. dogs) or survival of the fittest? (i.e. the spotted moths from London that is stated in many textbooks to be evolution proof)

      I'm trying to be "politically correct" (I am a Christian) but doesn't it seem that every time... well, let me give a metaphor. A man orders a potato (education I guess) without salt (ID). The cook bakes him a potato without salt, but in putting it on the plate, touches it with hands that have touched salt. The man screams and yelps "I won't eat that!!! I saw you put your hands that touched salt on it!!!"

      Heck, we all know this metaphor. Take Linux vs Windows for example. We say "Look, Linux is better! I can do this and this and this!" but then they say that they will never switch to Linux because I'm used to Windows. Both sides have good points, but one won't listen to the other.

      Whew. I hope I don't get modded -5 troll for all that typing.

    166. Re:Hmm... by Jaxoreth · · Score: 1
      How do you know something's true if you can't check if it's true?

      I was being facetious, of course. But since you asked... How can you even check if something is true in the first place? Against what standard do you test it? How do you know the standard is valid?

      My point is, all truth lives inside a context. Formal mathematics avoids truth in favor of theoremhood and proofs. Commonly held truths in other sciences are subject to invalidation by new evidence. Then, there are whole other domains, where some truths are just "of themselves so" -- no proof is required, nor can one be given. You either "get it" or you don't.

      For some people, the truth is determined by whatever's convenient to believe in at the moment. Some of these consider a set of beliefs that, no matter how irrational, guarantees their acceptance in a community to be very highly convenient.

      If you start with a context in which the Bible (pretending for the moment that there's only one) is the ultimate authority, then there's no need to argue over the truth of ID -- it says right in Genesis that God (an intelligent being) created the universe. QED.

      This context has the property of invalidating all other contexts which contradict it. But some contexts lack this property -- consider a meta-context in which all contexts are equally valid (though not necessarily useful). For that matter, consider Zen, which apparently contradicts itself.

      Some things I know to be true because I've seen them personally, others because I've been told so, and yet others because I just know. Are they really true? Depends on what kind of 'truth' you're testing for.

      --
      In general, it is safe and legal to kill your children. -- POSIX Programmer's Guide
    167. Re:Hmm... by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, personal beliefs aside, I think the *evolution* people are looking at ID the wrong way, insisting that "ID proponents are all religious whackos!" and "ID rules out evolution!".

      This comment bespeaks an incredible lack of understanding of the issues involved. Perhaps you should read up on concepts like "irreducible complexity"... ?

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    168. Re:Hmm... by GrahamCox · · Score: 1

      over the long run all species evolve traits that assure their survival, a form of genetic "intelligence" itself.

      By that argument, the wind is intelligent because air responds to pressure differences "intelligently" by moving from an area of high pressure to one of low pressure.

      Nothing about evolution implies it is random and undirected

      Genetic mutations are random. The only thing that is "directed" is a tendency towards a better fit with the environment, just as air directs itself to low pressure regions.

      Just because evolution doesn't specify an Intelligent Designer doesn't mean there isn't one

      Perhaps not, but Occam's Razor does. Since evolution can be explained without the need to bring in an intelligent designer, why bother invoking one, and all the attendent complexity and paradox that entails?

    169. Re:Hmm... by Copid · · Score: 1
      The reason it brings nothing to the table is that it can't without 500 lawers coming to the table as well. There is come interesting stuff in Christianity that could even prove evolution wrong, but even just one religious comment would be killed by the lawers.
      No, it doesn't bring anything to the table for several reasons:

      - It has no underlying model (What is the nature of the intelligence? How does it "design" and interact with reality?)
      - It produces no interesting tests (No possible observation could ever contradict a theory with no underlying model)
      - Anybody who looks into the mathematical ramblings of Dembski and the touchy feely definition of "complexity" (irreducible, specified, or any other meaningless adjective can be attached here) will note that it's clearly a piece of theater masquerading as something serious.

      There are no lawyers blocking the way to general scientific research and publication. They're only there to keep the religious nutjobs out of science education. Seriously. You can do scientific research without teaching it to children. The only reason you'd want to teach it to children before publishing any meaningful results yourself is to create a future audience of journal referees who are sympathetic to your cause. It's abundantly clear that Dover and Kansas are just an end run around doing the research and review that real scientists have to do.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    170. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's really a sad day in education when the supreme court has to decide what should or should not be taught as science. Especially when the ruling was so flat out exclusive to even the possibility of another theory! *Gasp!*

    171. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not let your kids think on their own by not letting the courts decide for them!

    172. Re:Hmm... by jwdb · · Score: 1

      Because kids aren't sufficiently developed to think for themselves about complex issues. That's why we try to teach them the right thing at a young age and hope that they'll decide for themselves whether what we taught them was right when they reach a stage of sufficient mental development.

      Religion is done in the same way (not trying to imply any other link here, though). You're brought up in the same way as your parents, and then somewhere between your teens and twenties, when you've learned how to think and have started forming your own philosophy on life, you make a decision as to whether you want to stay in said religion.

      A 10 year old is not capable of evaluating whether or not evolution is valid based on the facts - he will simply believe what his teacher will tell him. Hopefully a few years later when it's again taught in more detail, he'll go back and reexamine it with a critical eye.

      Jw

    173. Re:Hmm... by nimblebrain · · Score: 1

      Mathematical logic and philosophical logic still bring two problems to the table: they are far, far less limited than nature itself is.

      It's that tie to nature, especially in predictive form, that should be the ideal strived for. Evolutionary theories of evolutionary fact get pretty darned close as far as science is concerned.

      If it dosent want to accept any philisophical logic, it must uncermoniously give the boot to any branch of physics that isnt backed by physcial evidence.

      Strangely, I agree with you to some degree on this point. Physics is in trouble in many spots here. They can come up with numerous laws, but the theories are in trouble. Quantum computing can at least be tested against nature. String theory has been failing to do so (including failing to give us interesting inventions) for a couple of decades now - if there was ever a better example of sipping the spiked punch of mathematical logic without physical evidence, I can't think of one :)

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    174. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your inputs are random, so are your outputs- GIGO affects everything. But if your inputs are deterministic, then predictions become possible- but deterministic inputs imply an intent EVEN IF WE CAN'T SEE WHAT THAT INTENT IS.

      But some of those random outputs confer beneficial characteristics. Most don't, but some do. No determinism required.

    175. Re:Hmm... by t1gg3r · · Score: 0

      "The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48"
      Sophistry Soph"ist*ry, n. OE. sophistrie, OF. sophisterie.
            1. The art or process of reasoning; logic. Obs.
                  1913 Webster

            2. The practice of a sophist; fallacious reasoning; reasoning
                  sound in appearance only.
                  1913 Webster

                              The juggle of sophistry consists, for the most part,
                              in usig a word in one sense in the premise, and in
                              another sense in the conclusion. --Coleridge.
                  1913 Webster

            Syn: See Fallacy.
                      1913 Webster

    176. Re:Hmm... by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      The Onion. Theory of Gravity Replaced by Intelligent Falling.

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    177. Re:Hmm... by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 1

      But new species *don't* suddenly come about; the school of punctuated equilibrian got shot down a long time ago. The biggest reason that we are missing transitory fossils for a lot of species is that the fossil record is not complete -- we get lucky in some cases and get some awesome fossils, but that's pretty rare.

      I mean, we know there had to be hundreds of thousands of homo erectus living during the Ashceulean period, and we've got maybe a dozen skeletons and a small pile of partial bone fragments -- and this is just from one very recent period (around a million years ago); the only reason we know as much about erectus as we do is that they made an assload of stone tools, simple dwellings, and art, so we have better access to them than to earlier human ancestors (like the austrolopithicines).

      Couple this with the fact that periods of rapid genetic change (due to selection and variation) are going to occur when there's a rapid environmental change, and that very few environments are suitable for fossil formation, and this explains the 'gaps' in the fossil record quite nicely.

      Oh, and you're spot on about the mutations-over-time, but overall, varition and selection will have done a lot more during that period of time.

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    178. Re:Hmm... by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 1

      Right, which is why that Wikipedia article is flagged as containing errors, why Dawkins discounts mutation as being a tertiary factor in evolution, and why (as we observe) mutations usually die.

      The importance of mutation in evolution is to introduce new, random variations; usually, these things die out, but every now and then, a mutation is helpful, and given a few million years, it will become incorporated into a population. During that few million years, however, natural selection and variation do a hell of a lot more 'work' than mutation does.

      So, my point stands: Next to variation and natural selection, mutation is pretty much a non-issue.

      So, what about speciation events? Take two populations and separate them by turrain and climate; let them sit for a few million years. You will end up with populations that aren't capable of interbreeding, and thus, two species have been 'created' by divergence from a common ancestor because enough variation/selection has happened in the interim, driven by two different environments, to render the two separate populations into different species.

      My original explanation was simplified, mostly because I know that not everybody here has taken a few years of biology, genetics, organic chemistry, and so on, and I inasmuch admitted that in my original post.

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    179. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I that case I assume you would not object if your highschool spend 50% of every english class teaching Islam? Sure Islam lessons don't beling in an english class any more than ID belongs in a science class, but we should expose kids to both english lessons and Islam training, and let them make up thier own minds.

      You're aboslutely right... the courts should not interfere to prevent the force of government being hijacked by and for religious purposes. If a Muslim english teacher, or a 51% Muslim school board wants to teach Islam in english class then it would be a violation of their freedom of speach and their freedom of religion for a court to prevent them from forcing Islam on yur kids.

    180. Re:Hmm... by drwr · · Score: 1

      OK, you're right--there's more to be said. I now understand you to be saying something along the lines of "God is in everything, including the abstract, so separation of church and state is meaningless."

      While this thesis is a worthwhile subject for debate in itself--and I'd love to go into the pre-Christian origins of algebra and multiplication--it's completely beside the point.

      Here's the thing: you're completely misunderstanding the intent of separation of church and state. It's not about keeping God away from the people. It's about allowing people to hold their own religion. And here's the key point: there's more than one religion.

      Freedom of religion, as guaranteed by our Constitution, means that each citizen must have the freedom to worship his or her religion of choice, without fear of persecution from the state or from neighbors. This means the state cannot promote any one religion over any other--all religions must be treated with equal respect. This includes Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism, as well as the doctrine of atheism.

      This means that any education promoted by the state must be free of any explicit references to any one religion. Mathematics is one such discipline: a Muslim and a Buddhist can equally appreciate that 6 * 3 = 18. (Even a fundamentalist Christian is likely to agree to this.) Now, if a particular person wishes to reflect upon the divinity inherent in multiplication, that's his private business.

      The Theory of Evolution shares this property with mathematics: each person is free to intrepret the deeper meaning of evolution in the context of his own religion, but the theory itself does not impose any such requirement. It's based on mathematical principles, not doctrines from any particular religion. Note that, in spite of popular arguments to the contrary, it doesn't even reference atheism (nor, as you have argued, any kind of theism).

      See, here's the separation of church and state at work: nowhere in a science textbook will you see something like "there is no God" or "so-and-so happened all by itself, proving the absence of God" or "God caused thus-and-so to happen" or "Allah's divine wisdom showed the way for this-and-that" or "Through the grace of Lord Shiva, we now have whatever-it-is." There are no references to the Christian God, or any god, or the lack thereof (except in a social sciences context, and then it's always in reference to the people who hold a particular belief). That's the whole point. Each person is free to interpret the knowledge within the context of his or her own religion; the knowledge itself does not come encumbered by a particular religious belief.

      This is the difference between the Theory of Evolution and the doctrine of Intelligent Design. The ToE requires no particular religious belief in order to accept it--like any true science, it is independent of religion, and can be accepted by people of a variety of religious backgrounds. ID, on the hand, does require a particular religious belief: that there is a single intelligent being doing the designing. You may believe that to be incontrovertibly true, and you may find it incredible that anyone could believe anything else. But the fact of the matter is, there are a multitude of people who do believe something else, and our Constitution guarantees them the freedom to do so.

      David

    181. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I can't help thinking this decision is politically-motivated... it sure is convenient, coming on the heels of the ID court decision.

      There is a substantial production lead time for producing and printing and shipping a magazine like this, and this court decision came out just the other day. They could not have rewritten and printed and distributed the issue in the time allotted.

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    182. Re:Hmm... by jmccay · · Score: 1
      Actually, you lose because that doesn't look at the bigger picture. If you go back far enough you have 1 celled organisms according to evolution. These must evolve into something else, and eventually you have mdern day animals, insects, etc. So my argument is still correct. How do they know humans are related to monkeys? Is it because our DNA is similar or because we have similar triats? Ever consider these traits may have come from different origins? You also missed my point. If you believe in evolution, you must believe in macro-evolution. There is no if ands or buts about it. Somewhere along the lines species differentiate themselves from each other. You can't go from a one celled organism to modern day life without one species splitting into two.
            You also didn't read my argument correctly. I never said fish become birds or the like. I am simply refering to stuff like what scientist call early humans are considered a common anncestor with apes and stuff like that. Last I heard life began in the sea according to scientists. If this is true, there must be a line of evolution from a creature of the ocean to birds. I never said it would be instantaneous, or one step. Most of the critics of evolution, such as myself, are simply pointing out stuff like the "very wide" gaps in the theory of how various things evolved. There are still a lot of missing links in the evolutionary chains. Mark my posts as flaimbait, but it still doesn't change the validity of my arguments.

      Various links:
      http://www.str.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id= 5451 This is a very good article. From the article:

      There is a problem looking for this missing link because you must already be committed to the idea that a missing link exists. This is an important observation because all analysis of early hominids are based on certain assumptions. The search assumes the truth of evolution, and it assumes, because of evolution, that if there are morphological similarities (similarities in the bodies) that these similarities imply a biogenetic relationship and ancestry.

      ...
      My problem with this point is that the picture is not just suggested--the picture in this case being evolution--it is asserted as being the only possibility. Then the evidence is made to fit, much of the time, into the picture in order to affirm evolution. I think fossil men is an example of those cases.


      http://www.biblebelievers.com/powell2.html/ (a little more geared towards converting people to Christianity, but it has some interesting questions.

      http://www.allaboutcreation.org/human-evolution.ht m/

            You can do more research if you want, but I doubt you will because, like other worshipers of evolution, you think you are 100% correct. /.ers can moderate me as flaimbait all they want. It will not change the truth. I highly doubt even read the articles.
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    183. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Randomness is a much simpler idea than God. You need some idea of randomness, or a pattern if you exist, to understand the universe, because it occurs everywhere. Now, you can say this randomness is real randomness or a pattern coming from the mind of God. But in the latter case, we look for the simplest possible God which could do this - and that's a God which does nothing but generate something that looks like a bunch of random numbers. Which by my standards is not intelligent - I have seen a PCI card that can do it.

      The PCI card has you fooled to- that's not real randomness, just pesudorandomness. It's possible to be so simplistic that you overlook important evidence- and that's exactly what Occam's razor has caused you to do in this case. Your explaination just simply doesn't fit ALL the evidence, though it does fit the subset of the evidence you personally consider to be objective and scientific.

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    184. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      "ID proponents are all religious whackos!"

      The government school board officials involved had publicly ADMITTED that they were using their powers and instituting the government rule for the purpose of promoting their religion.

      There are essentially two groups behind the Intelligen Design movment, the Discovery Institute and Center for Science and Culture. Both are in fact RELIGIOUS FUNDAMENTALIST action groups. They have been collecting millions of dollars in donations to run a public relations campaign and political lobbying. They have not been doing jack-shit as far as science.

      I read the sticker that the Kansas school board wanted to attach to the textbooks and didn't think it was all that offensive

      And that sticker would have been perfectly acceptable had they also placed matching versions in every textbook on chemistry and rvery textbook on gravity, and in every single dield of science.

      The judge in the case ruled in an unconstitutional abuse of government power because it only targeted evolution and that there was no legitimate or rational basis to limit it to evolution, and because it was done for the UNCONSTITUTIONAL purpose of granting governmment favor and support to a particular religion and a particular religious view.

      Francis Crick

      EXCUSE ME?? Crick's "issue" was that he wondered at how the first cell could have arisen. An issue that is entirely outside of evolution and irrellevant to evolution anyway.

      Crick is famous for exploring the idea of "panspermia", that maybe the first cell on earth drifted in from space. Again, entirely outside of and irrelevant to evolution.

      Michael Behe

      It's funny... the ID'rs constantly rely on Behe and even use him as a witness in court, but in fact his court testimony and the experiments he has run are more in support of evolution than against it, and where he *does* actually try to attack evolution his arguments are found to be horriby flawed in many ways by the entire rest of the scientific community.

      Roughly 99.9% of professional biologists accept the fundamental theory of evolution.

      You might as well be trying to defend the Electric Universe nonsense (that's the theory that the sun is actually powered by electricity rather than nuclear fusion). Yes there are a handful of crackpots in ANY field of science. However there is ZERO genuine controversy over stellat nuclear fusion amongst astronomers, and there is ZERO genuine controversy over evolution amongst professional biologists. 99.9% of genuine professionals and experts and PhDs against 0.1% crackpots does NOT amount to a genuine scientific controversy.

      I guess the worst thing you can do is suggest the scientific community might be *wrong*

      No, the only way that science ever makes progress is from somebody presenting EVIDENCE that opens up new understanding and improves/overturns some previous understanding.

      On the otherhand there is not much worse than a bunch of yahoos with zero education and zero expertise in a field repeatedly making the same stupid and igorant arguments that have been refuted a million times before, often arguments that have been found invalid nearly a hundred and fifty years ago! My personal pet peve are the sicitifially illiterate idiots who constantly claim that the second law of thermodyamics (the law that entropy/disorder increases), who try to claim that proves evolution impossible. No, that only proves that they are scientifically illiterate.

      Highschool classrooms is not the proper battleground for this. Highschool teachers and highschool students are hardly equipped to critique and compare competing theroies on quantum mechanics or anything else. They hardly have the background and expertise in the evidence and in finding errors and flaws in experiments and complex scientific arguments.

      If you have some new scientific evidence or some new scientific argument to bring to the table, FINE! Use the scientific peer review process and let th

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    185. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      how can it be "sad" if the people who believe in the Jesus, Hail Mary Mother Ghost of Alah or whatever, are happy believing in such?

      He never said any such thing.

      If you'll re-read what he wrote you'll see he said was sad for people to attack science (for religious or other reasons).

      The current attacks on evolution are "sad" for the exact same reason it was "sad" when the Pope and the church imprisoned Galileo for life for the idea that the earth went arounf the sun, in contradiction to their then idea that the litteral Bible said that the earth did not move and that the earth was the center of the universe.

      Today a majority of Cristians do accept the science of a sun-centered solar system, and in fact a majority of Chistians accept the science of evolution.

      What is "sad" is that there are currently a MINORITY of Christians trying to attack science and evolution. Most Christians see no conflict between evolution and their religion, and mosdt Christians would not fall under what the other poster called "sad".

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    186. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      If a group of people were isolated in an environment devoid of any change--in terms of population, knowledge, climate, anything--they would only evolve to optimally survive in that environment, then stop.

      Actually if you have an interacting population then the population itself is a part of each individual's enviornment. The evolution of the population itself becomes a changing enviornment, and can in fact support unbounded continuing evolution.

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    187. Re:Hmm... by Capt_Morgan · · Score: 1

      Actually I believe evolution is defined as the change of allelle (sp?) frequencies over time

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    188. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The other assumes an Unintelligent Designer instead- Random Chance.

      One assumes an undetectable inexplicable and most importantly unobserved outside element.

      The other simply desribes observed facts and processes. The observed fact of mutation is for practical purposes "random", however the observed fact of selection is substantially NON-random. The process whereby that selection can and does create information and complexity is in fact understood and has in fact been observed.

      Evolution says absolutely nothing about God, just as the sun-centered solar system says nothing about God. And just as nuclear fusion explaining how the sun shines says nothing about God. And just as evaporation and condensation says nothing about God.

      Some idiots once tried to claim that a sun-centered solar system contradicted their litteral interpretation of the Bible that the earth was unmoving and the center of the solar system. Well, now we're seeing the exact same stupidity against evolution.

      Science explains how the sun shines and how rain falls from the sky, and how life on earth diversified. NONE of that in any way conflicts with God. I presume you accept that evaporation and condensation of water are God's choosen mechanism of creating rain, and that nuclear fusion is God's chosen mechanism of creating sunshine. Why do some people suddenly need to go on some anti-science shit-fit over the idea that evolution is God's chosen mechanism for creating the diversity of life on earth?

      What the hell is wrong with the idea that God created the universe and the laws of the universe, and that that universe and those laws (evaporation and condensation) are so perfect that the universe itself creates the rain God wanted? And that the universe and those laws (nuclear fusion) are so perfect that the universe itself creates the sunlight that God wanted? And that the universe and those laws (evolution) are so perfect that the universe itself creates the diversity of life that God wanted?

      Science simple explains how the physical universe operates to produce the things we see. The observations of the physical universe show us how those laws can produce evolution and do produce evolution and did use evolution to produce the life we see.

      Don't try to find God hinding under a rock or hiding in a cave or hiding in the cracks and gaps of science. Isn't God above and beyond the physical universe? And therefore entirely above and beyond (and outside of) science?

      motivation

      Mutation and selection are the "motivation" of evolution in exactly the same way electromagnetism and neclear forces are the "motivation" of sunshine.

      without that motivating layer, whether intelligent as in ID or random as in evolution, there's no way for natural selection to happen.

      Yeah.. and without the other laws of the universe... electromagnetism and nuclear forces as a "motivating layer"... there's no way for sunshine to happen.

      Then the idea of a random, indeterministic universe, which is ALSO a monotheistic, or maybe a better word would be ANTI-theistic, dogma

      Yep.. in exactly the same way that "random, indeterministic" evaporation and condensation producing rain are anti-theistic and disprove God.

      In otherwords, no, your claim is bullshit. There is NOTHING in evolution or anywhere in science that says God does not exist.

      The entire dispute here is that some religious activists are trying to wage a public relations campain and political campaign against one particular feild of science that they dislike - exactly the same way some idiots ran the same sort of attacks against a sun-centered solar system.

      The entire LEGAL battle here is that under the US constitution we citizens have a Right of Religious Freedom, a right prohibiting the force of government being used against us for the purpose of supporting or suppressing religion. The PROBLEM is that some people are trying to introduce non-science into science classrooms for th

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    189. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      You can't pick Evolution over ID as a scientific theory

      Sure you can, because there no one has ever come up with any ID scientific theory.

      "God did it" and "Random Chance did it" are both theological statements that are logically indistinguishable from one another.

      Evolution says "random chance did it" in the exact same way that the theory of nuclear fusion says "random chance did it" to produce sunlight.

      ID is not predictible

      GAHH!!! The correct word and issue is predictions. Quantum mechanics is perfectly valid science because it makes predictions, and those predictions have always turned out to be correct. Evolution is perfectly valid science because it makes predictions, and those predictions always turned out to be correct.

      ID is not even a scientific theory because it makes no predictions. It is unfalsifiable, therefore it can never earn strength by passing tests. The only way a scientific theory gains strength and acceptance is by making predictions and being falisifable and being tested and passing those tests. The more times a theory could have been prooven false, yet wasn't and it survived, the stronger and better supported it is.

      And if you are not aware of all of the predictions evolution has made, and if you are not aware of how they have been tested and proven correct a million times, that is merely ignorance of the subject on your part. Do some damn research and LEARN why roughtly 99.9% of professiona PhD biologists accept evolution.

      ID insists that God used evolution as a method

      Then you are talking about a different ID than everyone else, because the court battles and the organisations pushing the ID movement are constantly tring to argue that evolution could not have produced the complexity we see today.

      If you accept God used evolution as his method, then you are an average majority Christian. We teach the "method" of nuclear fusion in highschool and we teach the "method" of evolution in highschool, and we leave any discussion of God to the churches and the parents and the private religious schools. Any mention of God no more belongs in government run highschool biology classes than God belongs in government highschool classes about nuclear fusion.

      You claim that ID cannot be supported by observation; religious visions have occured throughout human history

      First of all you appear to be talking about GOD, not ID.

      Sure. And people have had mental illness and hallucinations hearing voices in their heads telling them to kill people, throughout history.

      If you want a scientific theory supporting God, supported by observation, then you create a theory that makes predictions and to list some experiments that can be repeated at will by other people. For example evolution predicts that if you do a genetic analysis of a species, or of some gene across a variety of species, that the results will fall in a VERY STRICT tree pattern. If you gather the needed test equipement and you run the experiment, you are perfectly welcome to make an observation yourself testing that predictions and thus testing that theory.

      However I have never heard anyone explain how I can run a test and experience one of these religious visions to test for God. Or at least not any sort of test that does not involve LSD or other methods better explained as ordinary non-religious hallucinations.

      That certainly does not proove God does not exist. However it does mean that God is outside of the realm of science.

      difference between atheistic religious evolution and Christian religious Intelligent Design

      Who the hell is pushing atheistic evolution anywhere?ertainly not in any highschool battles I have heard about.

      Talking about atheistic evolution is like talking about atheistic chemistry or atheistic relativity or atheistic quantum mechanics or atheistic gravity.

      Why the HELL is there is there all this argument over evolution?

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    190. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      The PCI card has you fooled to- that's not real randomness, just pesudorandomness.

      No, it's a true hardware RNG, I would presume it uses radioactivity. (If it's not, I can quite easily construct an instrument that will do this). Which is entirely indistinguishable from randomness - which is all we require of your God. Heck, your God could just be a PRNG - by definition pseudo-random numbers look like random numbers, would we notice if the universe's random events were being generated by such a thing?

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    191. Re:Hmm... by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      You know, quantum physics should have such a sticker on the books. After all, there are competing theories. Google is your friend when you ask it about Classical Quantum Mechanics.

    192. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      You are clearly using the word "theological" in a different, significantly more general, sense that the original poster, and I am quite sure you realise this..

      I certainly do realize this.

      The abstract concept of "2", or of "gravity", or of "abstract concept" have no relation to religion whatsoever.

      Actually they all do. 2 is related to the mathematical philosopher Pythagoreas, whose search for perfect numbers was a big time religion in ancient greece (more so the concepts of PI and the theorem that is named after him, but yes, mathematics was once a religion is the point). Gravity was discovered as a part of Newton's philosophical musings about the mind of God. All abstract concepts discovered before 1800 or so are similar; it's only after the American Revolution that we got the separation of Church and State, followed quickly by the separation of Church and Science. To some more than others, that was a loss, not a gain. A significant sign of this loss is that you did NOT know that mathematics was once a religion. But don't take MY word for it- look it up for yourself.

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    193. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      While this thesis is a worthwhile subject for debate in itself--and I'd love to go into the pre-Christian origins of algebra and multiplication--it's completely beside the point.

      I said nothing that would limit us to a CHRISTIAN God. Either the concept of God is greater than EVERY religion, or it is not worth anything; religions are merely models of ways to look at the universe, no different from science.

      Here's the thing: you're completely misunderstanding the intent of separation of church and state. It's not about keeping God away from the people. It's about allowing people to hold their own religion. And here's the key point: there's more than one religion.

      I have no problem with that- freedom of religion is a fine idea. But when it gets twisted into freedom FROM religion, that somehow you're protected from hearing about other religions in the public sphere or that science must exist free FROM religion, that's when I have a problem.

      Freedom of religion, as guaranteed by our Constitution, means that each citizen must have the freedom to worship his or her religion of choice, without fear of persecution from the state or from neighbors. This means the state cannot promote any one religion over any other--all religions must be treated with equal respect. This includes Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism, as well as the doctrine of atheism.

      I've got no problem with that either. Education however is NOT persecution, it binds us together as one people; thus all religions SHOULD be taught.

      This means that any education promoted by the state must be free of any explicit references to any one religion.

      No it doesn't- that's freedom FROM not freedom OF.

      Mathematics is one such discipline:

      The religion of the Pythagoreans you mean.

      a Muslim and a Buddhist can equally appreciate that 6 * 3 = 18. (Even a fundamentalist Christian is likely to agree to this.)

      Yes, and the eightfold path, the ten commandments, and the Quran all essentially teach the same morality- but you'd have them banned.

      Now, if a particular person wishes to reflect upon the divinity inherent in multiplication, that's his private business.

      And yet- you fail to see that you're only teaching half the subject by failing to mention it's religious roots.

      See, here's the separation of church and state at work: nowhere in a science textbook will you see something like "there is no God" or "so-and-so happened all by itself, proving the absence of God" or "God caused thus-and-so to happen" or "Allah's divine wisdom showed the way for this-and-that" or "Through the grace of Lord Shiva, we now have whatever-it-is." There are no references to the Christian God, or any god, or the lack thereof (except in a social sciences context, and then it's always in reference to the people who hold a particular belief). That's the whole point. Each person is free to interpret the knowledge within the context of his or her own religion; the knowledge itself does not come encumbered by a particular religious belief.

      You've apparently never read a modern textbook on evolution, where a random universe is a neccessary precondition of the whole idea. Without random mutation and variation within species, atheistic evolution falls apart. Theistic evolution, also known as Intelligent Design, doesn't require a indeterministic universe for evolution to be true. Only the second is compatible with all religions, the first denies that religion exists.

      This is the difference between the Theory of Evolution and the doctrine of Intelligent Design. The ToE requires no particular religious belief in order to accept it--like any true science, it is independent of religion,

      Bull. It requires that we accept the concept of an indeterministic universe.

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    194. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Mutation and selection are the "motivation" of evolution in exactly the same way electromagnetism and neclear forces are the "motivation" of sunshine.

      Exactly my point- without The Mind Of God, without the laws that create the universe, nothing occurs. Newton understood this- but in our separation of Church and Science, we've lost that- and it's a mighty big piece of EVIDENCE to DENY.

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      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    195. Re:Hmm... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1
      You are clearly using the word "theological" in a different, significantly more general, sense that the original poster, and I am quite sure you realise this..
      I certainly do realize this.

      Good ;-)

      The abstract concept of "2", or of "gravity", or of "abstract concept" have no relation to religion whatsoever.
      Actually they all do. 2 is related to the mathematical philosopher Pythagoreas, whose search for perfect numbers was a big time religion in ancient greece (more so the concepts of PI and the theorem that is named after him, but yes, mathematics was once a religion is the point).

      The conecept of two and "twoness" was developed way before the pythagorean school. In fact, before the pythagorean school was even formed, the greek language had three numbers: singular, plural and dual, the third one being used when nouns and their accidents have two referrents; by the time the Iliad and the Odyssey were created, this third grammatical number had become less used, and only appears in those works fromtime to time. One can immediately deduce from a widely used language having a dual number, that the people speaking that language had a well developed concept of twoness.

      Of course, very many other civilizations developed the concept of "twoness" independently of the greeks.

      You are confusing the development of the concepty of two with the ulterior process of mystification of that concept. Yes: the pythagoreans loved to mystify numbers and such, and built a religion of sorts on them. Yet numbers, rectangular triangles, and what not existed as concepts before Pythagoras and his friends.

      Let me be a little speculative here: "oneness" and "twoness" are probably among the abstract concepts that are indissolubly linked to intelligence, and it'd be hard to argue that a being with no grasp of those concepts can be described as intelligent.

      Gravity was discovered as a part of Newton's philosophical musings about the mind of God. All abstract concepts discovered before 1800 or so are similar;

      The fact that he may have stumbled upon the concept of gravity as part of his musings on God does not imply that the concept of gravity is in any way religious or based upon religion. The fact that I find a two dollar bill on my way to church in no way implies that that money is god-goven or based upon god or anything.

      it's only after the American Revolution that we got the separation of Church and State, followed quickly by the separation of Church and Science.

      Hmm. You might want to brush up your history! The separation of church and state as a concept, as an ideal, and as a implementation (imperfect as all are: look at the current USian implementation for an example...) predates not only the American Revolution, but the discovery of the American continent itself! Google for "magna carta" and/or behold it in its beautiful calligraphy.

      The world is larger and older than the USA! Anyone claiming to be a marxist (whatever the variant) should know that ;-)

      To some more than others, that was a loss, not a gain. A significant sign of this loss is that you did NOT know that mathematics was once a religion. But don't take MY word for it- look it up for yourself.

      It is certainly true that mathematics was taken up by quite a few cults, and developed significantly by them, too. Anything can be mystified. You can mistify the rain if you want, and it certainly has been; that does not make the rain religion-based, of religious nature or anything barely similar.

      Your "think for yourself, little grasshopper" style fails not to amuse me.

    196. Re:Hmm... by zephc · · Score: 1

      I don't "believe" in evolution. You contend it's some sort of faith. If i was so inclined, I could go out and test the theories put forth on my own and come to the same results.

      I will be wholly unconvinced by *any* creation myth as an adequate explanation for anything natural until someone can prove beyond a reasonable doubt that there is some sort of conscious creator who directs its will upon the world. That's right: YOU have to convince ME that your preposterous magical bearded man in the sky is in any way responsible for the world around us. I would just as soon believe we were sneezed out by the Great Green Arkleseizure. Until then, that which is explained by evolutionary theory seems to fit the evidence very well.

      Apt page-sig for this subthread: "You think Oedipus had a problem -- Adam was Eve's mother."

      --
      "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    197. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong.

      Mathematical logic can be proved. We can prove meausurements in mathematics physically, for example if our mathematical logic for predicting gravity were incorrect, we wouldn't be able to land a man on the moon.

      Philosophy doesn't have any physical evidence, and it can't be proved; there's only the power of beleif.

      Science is based on things that can be tested; if they can't be, they won't be accepted as fact. At first, the theory of plate tectonics wasn't accepted. It was a great idea; it explained things about Geology. However, other theories with a similar amount of evidence explained those things, and both didn't have much evidence. Eventually, plate tectonics was accepted as fact when the technology allowing deep sea submarines to be invented. Scientists went under the sea and actually found plates that were moving. The other theories didn't provide physical evidence this strong, so plate tectonics was accepted as fact.

      Likewise, science accepts mathematical logic because it can be proved. You can measure, physically things that mathematical logic predicts. Science doesn't accept philosiphy because it can't be proved, only believed.

    198. Re:Hmm... by drwr · · Score: 1

      I said nothing that would limit us to a CHRISTIAN God.

      I apologize for putting words in your mouth.

      But when it gets twisted into freedom FROM religion, that somehow you're protected from hearing about other religions in the public sphere or that science must exist free FROM religion, that's when I have a problem.

      Fair enough. It is a difficult balance. Yet I believe the correct balance point is much further into the neutral territory than you seem to.

      Education however is NOT persecution, it binds us together as one people; thus all religions SHOULD be taught.

      All religions? Really? Including Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Taoism, Zoroastrianism, Wicca, and Druidism? How about Satanism? And Scientology? And, for that matter, plain old atheism? And how about the dozens or hundreds of variants within each of those blanket labels, like Catholics, Mormons, and Unificationists?

      Should all of these religions be taught as Truth? It'll take a very long time to get through the science curriculum that way. Or shall we filter them all down the their common demoninator, and teach that? If we do, then we are teaching just the science itself.

      And I must argue that education in the wrong religion is indeed perceived as persecution. People use the word "indoctrination" to describe this, and get very upset about it. If people didn't feel strongly about this, we wouldn't be having this conversation. :)

      Yes, and the eightfold path, the ten commandments, and the Quran all essentially teach the same morality- but you'd have them banned.

      Again, there are more than just these three religions, and not all of them teach the same moral codes. It is the state's job to teach the morality codified within its own laws, but no more than that; the rest is up to the individual.

      And yet- you fail to see that you're only teaching half the subject by failing to mention it's religious roots.

      I wouldn't say that it's half the subject. We haven't even established that the theology of the ancient mathematicians is even relevant to the study of mathematics. But in any case, yes--it's not the job of the public schools to put knowledge in a theological context. It can't be, because there is no context that would satisfy all religions, so it has to be up to the individual.

      You've apparently never read a modern textbook on evolution, where a random universe is a neccessary precondition of the whole idea. Without random mutation and variation within species, atheistic evolution falls apart.

      OK, haven't we been through this already? It feels like this is where I came in. The word "random" does not imply "godless". Asserting that there is random mutation and variation within a species does not imply that God is not involved, nor does it imply that God is involved. It implies nothing about God one way or the other. The relation of the Theory of Evolution to God is left to the student.

      David

    199. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      >the Theory of Evolution ... is independent of religion

      Bull. It requires that we accept the concept of an indeterministic universe.


      Bull right back at you. Your claim is simply wrong.

      Without random mutation and variation within species, atheistic evolution falls apart.

      Wrong.

      The process of evolution works equally well under both deterministic and indeterministic systems.

      The word "random" is commonly used for anything that is which is outside the scope of discussion which is effectively arbitrary and could be substituted by almost any other similarly complex effectively unpredictable sequence. The toss of a die is commonly called random, despite the fact that that the outcome could be predicted from a suitably precise measurements of the toss speed and toss angle and the shape of the die and the rolling surface. The path of a beta radiation particle may be completely deterministic, but if is comes in from "outside our field of view" when looking/thinking about a single cell and it's DNA, we simply call it random, a convient way to reffer to any unknown and effectively arbitrary and effectively unpredictable aspect.

      The digits of Pi are completely deterministic, but for virtually any practical purpose they can be used and accepted as "random".

      The process of evolution works perfectly well if you use the digits of Pi to deterministically apply so-called "random" mutations.

      Given virtually any system cycling through replication with variation and selection, evolution works. It does not and cannot explain anything outside that system. It can neither proves nor disproove anything outside that system. It cannot say anything about the origin of that system, nor whether that system was "created" or it "always existed", or anything else.

      Are you going to attack solar nuclear fusion for using the word "random"? In the hot core of the sun random nuclei collide from random angles and at random speeds and sometimes fuse emitting particles or radiation in random directions. Whether those nuclei are following deterministic newtonian paths or not is irrelevant.

      Only the second [theistic ID] is compatible with all religions

      Not only is it incompatible with Atheism, it is apparently incompatible with the religion of virtually everyone in the current organized "ID movement", as virtually all of THEM are trying to push literal Biblical Cretionism and that all species (or at least all "kinds" of species") were independantly created fully formed.

      the first [basic theory of evolution] denies that religion exists.

      False. That's like saying the theory of nuclear fusion and theory of chemistry etcetera deny religion. They say nothing about an existance or nonexistance of anything outside of their respective physical fields.

      -

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    200. Re:Hmm... by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      I don't know what a "McScientist": is, but there is no conflict between science and logic. Science is the best-known application of logic.

      Although, you may be right when it comes to science teachers, at least in grade school. Many of them wouldn't be able to distinguish logic from illogic, even in simple cases.

    201. Re:Hmm... by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      ID is trying to fill the gaps left by generations of 'scientific' willful ignorance.

      Yes: "filling in the gaps" with superstition. No thanks.

    202. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      PreScript:
      The reason I just replied to multiple of your posts is because I went through your other posts on this subject seeking to understand what the heck you were trying to say when you replied to me elsewhere. My reaction was "Huh? Maybe it will make sense in context by reading his other posts.".

      random input DOES create random output

      Random input can, with arbitrarily high probability, produce consistant and non-random outputs.

      If you randomly (for any reasonable definition of random) place hydrogen atoms in a bounded region of otherwise empty space... a number of hydrogen atoms equal in mass to the sun... at most a fixed percentage of that mass could be expelled in various directions with the rest eventually spontaneously organizing into a star (or perhaps a binary star pair). Of course the fine grained location of every particle of the output is as random as the input, but the gross structure of the output is powerfully non-random to arbitrarily high certainty.

      whether you believe freedom of includes freedom from

      "Freedom of" does mean "freedom from", within a more narrow context. It means freedom from the force of government being used to establish favor of promotion or suppression of any religion over any other.

      For example you could certainly have a government run "comparative religion" class. In principal you could even have a highschool English teacher use some version of the Christian Bible as pure literature. However any highschool English teacher who would select the Bible is almost by definition the very teacher that most needs to be forbidden to do so. A teacher that would select the Bible is most certainly a Teacher who desires to do so for religious purposes, and that teacher must be forbidden to abuse their governmental powers for that purpose.

      Any teacher capable of using the Bible in an English class without violating the Separation of Church and State is also perfectly aware of the issues and difficulties in doing so, and would most certainly select an alternative equally usefull and less problematical peice of literature.

      You either need a deterministic universe continuing to create changes- in which case God is implied, because otherwise you wouldn't have a deterministic universe

      I fail to see how a deterministic universe implies God. I also fail to see how a nondeterministic implies anything for or against God.

      Who set up the "rules" for a deterministic or nondeterministic universe?
      Well who set up the rules for God?

      Who created/initiated a deterministic or nondeterministic universe?
      Well who created/initiated God?

      I see nothing any better or worse in accepting "God" as eternal and self-defining than in accepting "the Universe" and its "rules" as eternal and self-defining.

      Science does not say God initiated the universe, nor does science say God did NOT initiate the universe. Science does not address God, and anyone who thinks not mentioning God equals atheism is... to put it politely... wrong.

      Science is agnostic. The government is required to be agnostic and neutral. The constituion guarantees religious freedom for We The People, a right explicitly against the government. The government has no religious freedom.

      Some people yell and scream that silence by the government on the subject of God somehow equals atheism, and that is absolute Bull. And those are the exact same idiots who would yell and scream the loudest if their local highschool were to give a comparative religion class that treated their Holy Scripure Word Of God Truth as equal to the "lies" and "mythology" of Islam or Native American beliefs. They would scream to high hell that the government was forcefeeding their children that their religion was nothing but stupid mythology. That the government was equating the story of the Ressurection of Christ to the story of the sun being Apollo's flaming charriot flying across the sky.

      you're left w

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      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    203. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Your "think for yourself, little grasshopper" style fails not to amuse me.

      It's only that way that I can get people to think- far to many accept the dogma of "authorities", religious and secular, and think they're not just doing what every fundamentalist has done since the begining of time.

      For another look at this- and to get this discussion out of this arena and towards something far more profitable, see my latest journal entry on the subject.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    204. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      We really should move this to My journal where you'll get a better feel for where I'm coming from on this whole issue. It comes down to certainty and facts for me. Neither of which human beings are capable of, as much as we pretend to be.

      Fair enough. It is a difficult balance. Yet I believe the correct balance point is much further into the neutral territory than you seem to.

      In fact, my very first response is to refer you to my journal- there is no neutral territory between religions, the closest you can get is teaching tolerance of all religions and a lack of exclusion. The link above is to my journal, where I also link to a speech by one of America's favorite anti-science fiction writers on the subject.

      All religions? Really? Including Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Taoism, Zoroastrianism, Wicca, and Druidism? How about Satanism? And Scientology? And, for that matter, plain old atheism? And how about the dozens or hundreds of variants within each of those blanket labels, like Catholics, Mormons, and Unificationists?

      I have no problem with it- in fact, it would assure at least 3 parties a week in grade school, since the absolute best way to teach young children about various traditions is through parties based on those traditions.

      Should all of these religions be taught as Truth? It'll take a very long time to get through the science curriculum that way.

      Oh too bad- we actually need to expect the schools to TEACH something.

      Or shall we filter them all down the their common demoninator, and teach that? If we do, then we are teaching just the science itself.

      True enough- and that's the real role of the scientific method.

      Again, there are more than just these three religions, and not all of them teach the same moral codes. It is the state's job to teach the morality codified within its own laws, but no more than that; the rest is up to the individual.

      Oh, that's been real useful. Right now in America, we're failing to teach either- just look at our corporate world, where the phrase "It's just business" is used to excuse the worst personal ethical violations.

      I wouldn't say that it's half the subject. We haven't even established that the theology of the ancient mathematicians is even relevant to the study of mathematics.

      It's relevant because it's the WHY behind the assumptions and axioms that lie underneath all of mathematics- the foundation of the model. Without that framework, there is no why, there is just "because I said so".

      But in any case, yes--it's not the job of the public schools to put knowledge in a theological context. It can't be, because there is no context that would satisfy all religions, so it has to be up to the individual.

      Incorrect- there is a context- and that context is the human being. Religion is a part of being human that cannot and should not be expunged- do so and you run the risk of creating a new religion when it comes out somewhere else.

      OK, haven't we been through this already? It feels like this is where I came in. The word "random" does not imply "godless".

      With a God, the universe is deterministic- it was created for a purpose, and everything in it conforms to that purpose according to the scientific laws we are now discovering. Every particle in the universe is a part of that purpose. The only way you can have random is to have an indeterministic universe- one where particles follow random laws that are not discoverable at all. Random laws would be the ultimate proof against a God- it would leave us with only two conclusions, that either the mind of God is so formless and stupid that there are no laws, no purpose, or there is no God.

      You have yet to address either of these two problems with the idea of random mutation and variation WITHIN species.

      Asserting that there is

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    205. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      The word "random" is commonly used for anything that is which is outside the scope of discussion which is effectively arbitrary and could be substituted by almost any other similarly complex effectively unpredictable sequence.

      Like GOD? This sentence alone is proof that you've just replaced one undefinable and unpredictable dogma with another, and based the theory on it. Might as well just admit to the proof and say "God done it" instead of "random"- at least more kids would know what you're talking about. But no, you've got to HIDE the truth behind a concept.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    206. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      If you randomly (for any reasonable definition of random) place hydrogen atoms in a bounded region of otherwise empty space... a number of hydrogen atoms equal in mass to the sun... at most a fixed percentage of that mass could be expelled in various directions with the rest eventually spontaneously organizing into a star (or perhaps a binary star pair). Of course the fine grained location of every particle of the output is as random as the input, but the gross structure of the output is powerfully non-random to arbitrarily high certainty.

      What a very contradictory statement. Something is either random, or it is merely pretending to be random because we don't have all the input neccessary to understand the output. There's nothing supernatural going on here- each and every one of those particles is moving according to fixed phsical laws- and you CAN trace an individual particle through all the stages from input to output. That's only pseudo-random, not truly random.

      If you want to turn to religion for those other questions and to have faith in your religion, fine. But our constitution forbids anyone to seize the force of government to take sides and push one religion over another. Resolve religious questions outside of government-run highschools.

      The point is- science is incomplete enough to require faith to believe it's claims. Because it requires faith- then by the same rule in the constitution you believe in and I completely disagree with, you need to banish science as well. Mathematics too. In fact, the only things I can think you *might* be able to teach is law and the Constitution itself- ooops, no, that mentions God.

      All of human knowledge ultimately rests on faith and belief- pretending that it is otherwise is a lie.

      Most people, and in particular our court system, roughly agree on a rather different and more fuctional line between religion and other-than-religion than you appear to want to use. Heh :)

      Most people are liars in this respect, and are attempting to hide the truth from children.

      If you want to say there are philsophical issues behind "I saw Bob pull out a gun and shoot Bill", well ok... there are philosophical issues. However if you're Bob, the court is still going to send you to prison where you can mull over the philosphical issue of whether the bars you think you see on your cell are real. :)

      Yes, and that's a significant error on the part of the court- and we should say so.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    207. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Wrong. If I flip 10 coins (random mutation) and discard the ones that come up tails (selection), then I have a set of coins that all show heads. The input was random, the outcome was not.

      Flipping 10 coins is NOT random- it's pseudorandom.

      Then I hate to tell you this, but many things in the universe are indeterministic.

      No, they are not. They only appear to be so due to your limited point of view.

      Incorrect. Speciation has been observed.

      And thus environmental changes alone are an insufficient explaination without the addition of variation within species. How stupid can you get not to follow that?

      Repeating something doesn't make it true. Sorry.

      Then why do you keep repeating the idea that randomization exists, when it obviously doesn't?

      Who designed the designer?

      The designer of the designer of course. No uncaused causes.

      It's not frozen.

      If it wasn't frozen, you'd accept the proof that ID is science.

      The problem, which you keep denying in the face of all argument, is that ID is not science because it ignores tghe basic principles of science.

      Which is a problem with the basic principles of science, not with ID.

      Ergo, it should not be taught in a science class.

      Then neither should your "basic principles of science" which are equally based upon faith. NO double standards allowed, no faith-based crap about how one set of basic principles is "better" than another one. Either accept both as equal, or reject both as lies.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    208. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Hoo boy. I can see where you're going. So let me guess, your acccessing none-human experience to give us the inside scoop on whether the universe is deterministic or not.

      Nope, it's not that easy. Where I'm going is that humans are incapable of discovering fact- and the whole idea of objective fact existing for human beings is a dogmatic myth at best, at worst a rotten lie used to brainwash kids. See my journal for more information.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    209. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      No, it's a true hardware RNG, I would presume it uses radioactivity. (If it's not, I can quite easily construct an instrument that will do this).

      Radioactivity is not random. Radioactivity is merely the decay of unstable elements into stable ones by positrons and neutrons escaping from their weak force bonds. It might not be entirely understood by human beings yet- but it is a pseudorandom process, not a random one.

      Which is entirely indistinguishable from randomness - which is all we require of your God.

      Sorry, randomness may be indistinguishable from God to us- but that is merely because science in it's headstrong attempt to separate itself from theology merely renamed God "randomness".

      Heck, your God could just be a PRNG - by definition pseudo-random numbers look like random numbers, would we notice if the universe's random events were being generated by such a thing?

      There are no random events in the universe. If there were, science itself would be useless, because by definition there would be no physical laws at all to discover. Anything could be nullified by a "random event".

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    210. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Sorry, randomness may be indistinguishable from God to us- but that is merely because science in it's headstrong attempt to separate itself from theology merely renamed God "randomness".

      If you want to call randomness God then go ahead, but tell me why it must be intelligent.

      There are no random events in the universe. If there were, science itself would be useless, because by definition there would be no physical laws at all to discover. Anything could be nullified by a "random event".

      Not at all. Knowing that event A happens 50% of the time and event B the other 50% and event C doesn't happen at all is still useful information. We don't know whether lightning strikes are random, you no doubt claim they're not, but knowing that a copper rod can conduct it safely to ground is still useful, and doesn't require us to know whether the strikes are random or not. The science of lightning conductors is valid whether or not lightning strikes occur at random.

      --
      I am trolling
    211. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      If you want to call randomness God then go ahead, but tell me why it must be intelligent.

      Because of the existance of the physical laws that determine what appears to us to be random. Without those physical laws, with an unintelligent God, we're left with a truly random universe- supernatural events happening entirely at random with no purpose or pattern. At which point it becomes utterly useless to do any science at all- any laws we think we discover would actually be just local manifestations of order in what is by and large a random universe- and they wouldn't neccessarily hold true a minute from now, let alone be testible.

      Not at all. Knowing that event A happens 50% of the time and event B the other 50% and event C doesn't happen at all is still useful information.

      But it doesn't tell you that event C won't happen a minute from now, or that events D-Z won't happen further down the line. It's FAKE information, appearing to be useful when it really tells you exactly nothing.

      We don't know whether lightning strikes are random,

      And in fact, we have at least 3 possible answers that tell us that they're NOT random- and in fact predictable given the correct sensors.

      you no doubt claim they're not,

      They're obviously not, they're a buildup of static electricity in the ground and a lower electrical potential in the clouds. By measuring the static potential of the ground, they are predictable microseconds ahead of time.

      but knowing that a copper rod can conduct it safely to ground is still useful

      Yes but not random at all- and in fact is the reverse- the copper rod provides a short circuit that conducts it safely to the clouds.

      and doesn't require us to know whether the strikes are random or not.

      Yes, but for that matter so does a metal hammer planted in the ground as in the Norwegian temples to Thor. Randomness explains NOTHING- it's just a theological concept.

      The science of lightning conductors is valid whether or not lightning strikes occur at random.

      Actually, the science requires lightning strikes to be non-random to work- but all you've actually proved is that people can use science as a replacement for religion, which is my original point. If that's what you're going to teach as science, you might as well be teaching ID- it's EXACTLY THE SAME THEORY AS EVOLUTION if that's what passes for YOUR science.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    212. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      But some of those random outputs confer beneficial characteristics.

      So what? What does that say about either?

      Most don't, but some do.

      Doesn't matter- without determinism, you will never be able to predict what the mutation will be in a single individual. And unless you predict the mutations of every single individual, you will not be able to predict which one will be the solution that is most beneficial.

      No determinism required.

      And without the determinism- no prediction is possible.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    213. Re:Hmm... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      >The word "random" is commonly used for anything that is which is outside the scope of discussion which is effectively arbitrary and could be substituted by almost any other similarly complex effectively unpredictable sequence.

      Like GOD?


      Sure, there is absolutely nothing in science that says there is or isn't "GOD" somewhere offstage of the system/scope-of-discussion being explained.

      Maybe there's a God, maybe there isn't.

      Might as well just admit to the proof and say "God done it"

      Admit to WHAT "proof" of what?

      -

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    214. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Because of the existance of the physical laws that determine what appears to us to be random. Without those physical laws, with an unintelligent God, we're left with a truly random universe- supernatural events happening entirely at random with no purpose or pattern. At which point it becomes utterly useless to do any science at all- any laws we think we discover would actually be just local manifestations of order in what is by and large a random universe- and they wouldn't neccessarily hold true a minute from now, let alone be testible.

      That's just not true. Aspects of the universe being random do not mean the whole universe is random. We can discover laws in a universe which has randomness. Besides, invoking an intelligent God has no effect on your argument. It becomes utterly useless to do any science at all- any laws we think we discover would actually be just local manifestations of God's will in what is by and large an arbitrary universe- and they wouldn't neccessarily hold true a minute from now, let alone be testible.

      But it doesn't tell you that event C won't happen a minute from now, or that events D-Z won't happen further down the line. It's FAKE information, appearing to be useful when it really tells you exactly nothing.

      No, if you know C never happens then that is something useful. You seem unable to comprehend that the universe can have random aspects without making it impossible to predict anything. The whole field of statistics is about making predictions about random processes. I can't predict what the roulette wheel will come up with next time - as far as I'm concerned, it's completely random. But it's still useful to know that it will land on any given number 1/37 of the time.

      Yes but not random at all- and in fact is the reverse- the copper rod provides a short circuit that conducts it safely to the clouds.

      Indeed. But *this would still be true if lightning strikes were truly random*.

      Yes, but for that matter so does a metal hammer planted in the ground as in the Norwegian temples to Thor.

      True. So religion can work in the presence of randomness too.

      Randomness explains NOTHING- it's just a theological concept.

      Randomness explains events occurring at what looks to be random, and more simply than any alternative.

      Actually, the science requires lightning strikes to be non-random to work-

      The conductor and the science behind it works whether or not the strikes are random.

      but all you've actually proved is that people can use science as a replacement for religion, which is my original point.

      All you're showing is that science doesn't completely explain everything. You've got a god of the gaps thing going - science doesn't know what causes this yet so it must be god.

      If that's what you're going to teach as science, you might as well be teaching ID- it's EXACTLY THE SAME THEORY AS EVOLUTION if that's what passes for YOUR science.

      Claiming intelligence for randomness makes no difference to everything you've said. If our science is valid for what looks to every statistical test invented like random input, then it's also valid for truly random input. Whether your god is intelligent or not changes nothing at all. It's just an unnecessary additional assumption, so as scientists we don't make it.

      --
      I am trolling
    215. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Sure, there is absolutely nothing in science that says there is or isn't "GOD" somewhere offstage of the system/scope-of-discussion being explained.

      Except you just interjected one into the system/scope-of-discussion being explained. Interesting that you gave it the same name as Arthur Dent's daughter... :-)

      Maybe there's a God, maybe there isn't.

      So if there isn't, you're still going to teach kids to worship an indeterministic universe?

      Admit to WHAT "proof" of what?

      Two things: That science doesn't know everything, and that scientists are just as superstitious as anybody else who believes in things that are "outside of the scope of the discussion being explained". In other words- science is just another religion, another set of beliefs and models about what is true, albeit a particularily successfull one, still only one among many. Human beings can NEVER know the fullness of truth- and shouldn't claim to. The real problem isn't what the cirriculum in science class includes or doesn't include- the real problem is that science has become nothing more than just another authoritative cult for far too many people.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    216. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      That's just not true. Aspects of the universe being random do not mean the whole universe is random. We can discover laws in a universe which has randomness. Besides, invoking an intelligent God has no effect on your argument. It becomes utterly useless to do any science at all- any laws we think we discover would actually be just local manifestations of God's will in what is by and large an arbitrary universe- and they wouldn't neccessarily hold true a minute from now, let alone be testible.

      Why would God be as arbitrary as a human being? Just because we're arbitrary and biased doesn't mean God is; in fact it's likely that's a big difference between man and God. Seems to me Confucious said something about that...as did Isaiah, Ubantu, Koresh, and Mohammed. Science is the search for the mind of God, for the UNIVERSAL manifestation of God's will. Or at least, it used to be.

      No, if you know C never happens then that is something useful. You seem unable to comprehend that the universe can have random aspects without making it impossible to predict anything. The whole field of statistics is about making predictions about random processes. I can't predict what the roulette wheel will come up with next time - as far as I'm concerned, it's completely random. But it's still useful to know that it will land on any given number 1/37 of the time.

      But you don't know that C will never happen just because of statistics; all you know is that C has not happened *so far*. Statistics can tell us that the roulette wheel will reward the person betting on red or black 49% of the time; but it can't predict the earthquake that turns the table over and sends the ball rolling across the floor. Essentially useless- and rather stupid to depend on unless you've got *all* the information taken into account.

      Indeed. But *this would still be true if lightning strikes were truly random*.

      No, actually, it wouldn't. If lightning strikes were TRULY random, that is disconnected from the physical laws of the universe, then the copper rod would be no better of a disipator of the energy as the tree right next to it, or the blade of grass an inch away. RANDOM is random- totally devoid of physical law.

      True. So religion can work in the presence of randomness too.

      Religion and randomness are one and the same- the word Random is just a cop-out that says you don't want to investigate beyond a certain point, that you're willing to take this part on faith.

      Randomness explains events occurring at what looks to be random, and more simply than any alternative.

      Circular logic explains absolutely nothing other than the person refering to it is a coward who refuses to dig further. Simplicity is not valid when you're just inventing circular logic to pretend to explain something.

      The conductor and the science behind it works whether or not the strikes are random.

      If the strikes were truly random, that is, divorced from the basic laws of electricity, then copper would be no better of a conductor than stone, wood, or glass. Either things follow physical, natural laws, or you're just appealing to a religious authority.

      All you're showing is that science doesn't completely explain everything.

      Exactly- so we should stop teaching kids that it does, and stop censorship of alternative explainations.

      You've got a god of the gaps thing going - science doesn't know what causes this yet so it must be god.

      It's worse than that. If it was JUST that, I'd personally have no problem (some others might, but I'm more tolerant of other religions than that). No- science teachers have to claim that they can explain everything, but since they're so AFRAID of the concept of a God, and so afraid of being WRONG; they invent one called "random", so that they can continue to claim to be infallible before their students, inventing a new religion and not seeing the damage that causes. They tell us the p

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    217. Re:Hmm... by Asakusa · · Score: 1

      Thank you and that was the insight I was looking for.

      --
      The prisoner of hope is sustained and encouraged by his hope, even as he is confined by it.
    218. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Why would God be as arbitrary as a human being? Just because we're arbitrary and biased doesn't mean God is; in fact it's likely that's a big difference between man and God.

      As far as we can tell the decisions are completely random. There's no rhyme or reason that we can make out. Of course that could mean we're simply unable to comprehend it, but it would have to be a very complex pattern, and there doesn't seem to be any reason for a very complex pattern to exist. Anyway, the numbers look random to us - so how would it ruin our theories if they truly were random?

      But you don't know that C will never happen just because of statistics; all you know is that C has not happened *so far*. Statistics can tell us that the roulette wheel will reward the person betting on red or black 49% of the time; but it can't predict the earthquake that turns the table over and sends the ball rolling across the floor. Essentially useless- and rather stupid to depend on unless you've got *all* the information taken into account.

      Any scientific conclusion is only our current working model of the universe. You could have done thousands of careful experiments about how forces and acceleration work and then try and apply them to a speeding electron and get an answer that's entirely off-base. Science cannot and doesn't try to predict things with 100% accuracy. However, I don't think you can deny that scientific predictions have been and are useful.

      No, actually, it wouldn't. If lightning strikes were TRULY random, that is disconnected from the physical laws of the universe,

      You appear to be using a different definition of "random" to everyone else.

      Religion and randomness are one and the same- the word Random is just a cop-out that says you don't want to investigate beyond a certain point, that you're willing to take this part on faith.

      Not religion as it's conventionally defined. You can class me as believing in some mysterious generator that spits out numbers if you like, but that's in the same field as believing in some mysterious force that attracts massive objects towards each other.

      It's worse than that. If it was JUST that, I'd personally have no problem (some others might, but I'm more tolerant of other religions than that). No- science teachers have to claim that they can explain everything, but since they're so AFRAID of the concept of a God, and so afraid of being WRONG; they invent one called "random", so that they can continue to claim to be infallible before their students, inventing a new religion and not seeing the damage that causes.

      Belief in randomness isn't religion. It doesn't require anything approaching a god. I could write a mathematical function in a few lines that would give you something very like what we are seeing.

      They tell us the peer review system is so infallible that it cannot be questioned. That their method is infallible. Claiming so is what started this whole fight between arrogant human beings who think that they can be right and infallible.

      Infallibility is never claimed. Questions to the system are welcome. However, the peer review system is the best we have, and the accuracy of science is superior to virtually anything else.

      What I'm saying is that the statistical tests are invalid in and of themselves, and are thus no test for validity.

      Our theories work for random numbers. All that is required, fundamentally, is a string of 50% 1s and 50% 0s with no obvious pattern. The idea that such a phenomenon exists is just obviously simpler than the idea of an intelligent being choosing which numbers are 1s and which are 0s.

      Ah, but it's not unnecessary, as I've shown. You think you're avoiding religion by not making that assumption- but in reality you're just creating a new religion.

      It's not religion. There is no god, just a phenomenon that we don't know a source for and assume for the moment that there is no source for. It's no more religion than a belief in, say, the existence of quarks.

      Occam was a very smart philosopher- but any philosophy invented by man cannot be taken as infallible.

      Not infallible, no, but look at the results. Any razorless approach I've seen leads to nonsense.

      --
      I am trolling
    219. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      As far as we can tell the decisions are completely random.

      Yes, so? All that means is that the human race is a bunch of idiots. We already knew that. "As far as we can tell" just means that from our perspective the decisions appear to be random. That doesn't mean that from ALL perspecitves the decisions are random.

      There's no rhyme or reason that we can make out.

      Once again, so what? This just proves that human beings are incapable of reasoning on the level of an omniscient being, or even on the level of a being more scient than we are. Also something we already knew- no need to make up some idea of "randomness" to explain it, just admit that we're not the final product of the evolution of either our science, our culture, or our species.

      Of course that could mean we're simply unable to comprehend it, but it would have to be a very complex pattern, and there doesn't seem to be any reason for a very complex pattern to exist.

      Once again, that's only from our point of view, which is rather finite and limited.

      Anyway, the numbers look random to us - so how would it ruin our theories if they truly were random?

      True randomness would mean it's entirely outside of natural phenomena; beyond the ken of even an omniscient being. At which point, no possible laws could be discovered. No probability estimates would hold. Nothing could be predicted at all. Truly random means no rules.

      Any scientific conclusion is only our current working model of the universe. You could have done thousands of careful experiments about how forces and acceleration work and then try and apply them to a speeding electron and get an answer that's entirely off-base. Science cannot and doesn't try to predict things with 100% accuracy.

      And yet above, you arrogantly insist that randomness exists- not seeing the potential error in that.

      However, I don't think you can deny that scientific predictions have been and are useful.

      I agree they've been useful- but useful and accurate are two different things, as are fact and theory. No model actually approaches fact, so why claim to be teaching fact?

      You appear to be using a different definition of "random" to everyone else.

      Nope, same one. A random event is unpredictable in all frames of reference. That means that laws of physics do not hold for random events.

      Not religion as it's conventionally defined.

      I'm not, and have never been, conventional. A religion is just a system of belief, a model to explain the universe.

      You can class me as believing in some mysterious generator that spits out numbers if you like, but that's in the same field as believing in some mysterious force that attracts massive objects towards each other.

      Yep, exactly right. And Newton defined that as a part of the Mind of God- one of the rules God used to create the universe as it is.

      Belief in randomness isn't religion. It doesn't require anything approaching a god. I could write a mathematical function in a few lines that would give you something very like what we are seeing.

      Which just proves that there's an intelligent mind behind it. Both concepts require *belief* and *faith*. You can no more prove that there is a pattern underneath the randomness than you can prove there is no God. The concepts are equal and based in faith and belief, not in reality.

      Infallibility is never claimed.

      You've claimed infalibility for science and Occam's razor several times in this discussion already.

      Questions to the system are welcome.

      Then why are you responding as if they're not? Why do you ban questions that can falsify the system from the classroom?

      However, the peer review system is the best we have, and the accuracy of science is superior to virtually anything else.

      And yet, the peer review system is all about censorship- it's

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    220. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that you are trying to insert philosophy and metaphysics into science.

      Science is not separate from philosophy, it's a form of philosophy.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    221. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      And so, out of your own mouth, you believe that all science is a waste of time, doomed to fail.

      No- just the current incarnation of science is doomed to failure. The previous incarnation, the search for the mind of God, has made great progress. All the way to a theoretical limit beyond which we currently have no way to gain more information.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    222. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      The "who set up the universal constants" is a question which is completely irrelevant to science. It belongs to metaphysics, religion or---this is the candidate I'd favor---is essentially nonsensical.

      And thus, science has a basic philosophical error in it- one which makes science into more faith than fact.

      (Most of the proofs of existence of God and/or other similar stuff are based on arguments of infinite regression, like the one you are hinting at. I have failed, since I became aware of those arguments, that they prove not much more than the lack of imagination of the one using them. For example, in your case: why can it not be that universal constants are like they are just because they are? Or maybe because they cannot be otherwise?)

      That too requires faith. You can't get away from it- science is a religion.

      Science is merely interested in the fact that universal constants are as they are.

      Yep, and as such, it will always remain based on belief and tautologies.

      Introducing an agent assumed to have set the constants at the values they have, introduces in a big melodramatic move more problems than what it solves (it solves exactly zero problems...)

      Actually, it solves quite a few problems- the problem of randomness for instance, as well as the problem of entropy.

      I have no idea where you see this requirement come from.

      Randomness requires a belief I do not share- the belief that there is no underlying structure to the universe.

      The fact that something is complex by no means whatsoever requires that something else exist which can keep track of its complexity and/or control it.

      And yet, we know of no other complexity, no other set of rules, that was not set up by an intelligent mind.

      Well, there is no need in arguing that: that is essentially contained in the definitions of the words you are using. No one, absolutely no one, seriously pretends that humans are infinite, or that they can "get" anything 100% correctly, or anything remotely vaguely similar to that.

      Actually, anybody who believes in scientific "fact" separate from God is seriously pretending that to a very large degree.

      Indeed, it is not difficult to construe the scientific endeavor as precisely an attempt to do as much as is possible in the face of our finiteness.

      Then we need to teach THAT- not facts written in stone that anybody who is brave enough to disagree with gets thrown out of the classroom for.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    223. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      You're seem to believe that the concept of randomness is anti-theistic, in which case your disagreement is with much, much, more than evolution. You couldn't possibly "lose" this argument, because you've already decided that observable evidence means nothing. In short, you're not talking about science.

      Actually that's partially right. Actually, randomness is theistic- it presupposes an unintelligent god that we cannot predict. And the problem is far worse than "observable evidence means nothing" it's "the observer brings his bias to the observed".

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    224. Re:Hmm... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      The "who set up the universal constants" is a question which is completely irrelevant to science. It belongs to metaphysics, religion or---this is the candidate I'd favor---is essentially nonsensical.

      And thus, science has a basic philosophical error in it- one which makes science into more faith than fact.

      Dude: you want to find basic philosophical errors so badly it is somewhat funny.

      I have no idea from where you conclude that there is an error: certainly nothing I said in that paragraph affords that conclusion.

      I have no idea how you get from "science does not care who set up the constants" (because that is not its subject matter, but the subject matter of metaphisics or whatever) to "it is based on faith". Absolutely no idea.

      (Most of the proofs of existence of God and/or other similar stuff are based on arguments of infinite regression, like the one you are hinting at. I have failed, since I became aware of those arguments, that they prove not much more than the lack of imagination of the one using them. For example, in your case: why can it not be that universal constants are like they are just because they are? Or maybe because they cannot be otherwise?)

      That too requires faith. You can't get away from it- science is a religion.

      You missed the point completely.

      I am just saying that onthological arguments based on regression are very deeply broken because they are never accompanied by an explanation of why infinite regression is not a possibility. It requires absolutely no faith on no one's to realize that this is something that needs justifying.

      I am not saying that the hypothesis of infinite regression is valid, true or anything like that: only that it needs being taken care of.

      Science is merely interested in the fact that universal constants are as they are.

      Yep, and as such, it will always remain based on belief and tautologies.

      You keep saying that, but it is 100% counterfactual.

      Science has most certainly and verifiably produced more that belief and tautologies. Look around you: the monitor, the plastic out of which your keyboard is made, the vaccines you've had as a child, the TV waves going through you, the fabric from which your cloths are made, your deodorant, the artifical flavour of the last piece of gum you had.

      I'd expect anyone who says that science is based on belief to jump out of my window, as a concrete proof that they live by that idea. Otherwise, I cannot but conclude what the person in question really believes is that "science is based on belief except when it talks about gravity".

      Randomness requires a belief I do not share- the belief that there is no underlying structure to the universe.

      Note that you are defining "structure" so as to exclude randomness... Of course you can do that, but then your statement becomes void.

      I can only suggest that you study probability theory a bit: you'll immediately notice that randomness is in no way incompatible with the existence of "structure".

      Moreover, in most cases, randomness is just a convenient model devised to deal with "hidden variables", "macro-scale observations" &c. (There are interpretations of quantum mechanics in which randomness is a taken as intrinsic, but this is rather controversial) As such, its role is precisely to incorporate in our reasoning some kinds of lack of information.

      The fact that something is complex by no means whatsoever requires that something else exist which can keep track of its complexity and/or control it.

      And yet, we know of no other complexity, no other set of rules, that was not set up by an intelligent mind.

      We know of no intelligent mind w

    225. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      True randomness would mean it's entirely outside of natural phenomena; beyond the ken of even an omniscient being. At which point, no possible laws could be discovered. No probability estimates would hold. Nothing could be predicted at all. Truly random means no rules.

      Say I have a black box with a screen on it. Every second it displays either a 1 or a 0. There is no way to ever predict which of a 1 or 0 it will be ahead of time, but it is 1 50% of the time and 0 50% of the time (in the same way a dice is 1 1/6th of the time). But there is no possibility of the box exploding, or anything other than a 1 or 0 appearing. Such a thing is random by any definition I've seen, but does not make physics stop working, and that's the level of randomness we need. Science doesn't rely on the existence of random in the way you're defining it.

      And yet above, you arrogantly insist that randomness exists- not seeing the potential error in that.

      I insist that it exists in the same way I'd insist gravity exists. No, we don't know it's there for certain, but the evidence is overwhelming.

      I agree they've been useful- but useful and accurate are two different things, as are fact and theory. No model actually approaches fact, so why claim to be teaching fact?

      Our scientific model of the universe appears to approach the fact. We don't know this for certain, but with enough confidence to base decisions on what to teach on it.

      Nope, same one. A random event is unpredictable in all frames of reference. That means that laws of physics do not hold for random events.

      Laws of physics can still hold, provided they cannot precisely predict the outcome.

      I'm not, and have never been, conventional. A religion is just a system of belief, a model to explain the universe.

      If you're not going to accept the conventional meanings of the words in the English language, it's going to make it very hard to have a discussion.

      Yep, exactly right. And Newton defined that as a part of the Mind of God- one of the rules God used to create the universe as it is.

      You can call it that if you will, but why must such a God be intelligent?

      Which just proves that there's an intelligent mind behind it.

      Are you seriously claiming the function I just wrote down has an intelligent mind?

      Both concepts require *belief* and *faith*. You can no more prove that there is a pattern underneath the randomness than you can prove there is no God. The concepts are equal and based in faith and belief, not in reality.

      A belief in the simplest explanation for an observed phenomenon is in a different category from a belief based solely on the teachings of authority.

      You've claimed infalibility for science and Occam's razor several times in this discussion already.

      Perhaps so, in which case my apologies. They're not infallible, merely vastly superior to any alternative.

      Then why are you responding as if they're not? Why do you ban questions that can falsify the system from the classroom?

      Because I'm getting irritated. You seem to be wilfully misunderstanding the concept of randomness.

      And yet, the peer review system is all about censorship- it's based on censorship.

      If you consider a science journal insisting on only publishing science censorship, then yes. So?

      Or at least so you claim, not understanding that random numbers don't exist.

      On what basis do you claim they don't exist?

      And since that doesn't actually exist in nature- there's always a pattern even if you can't see it- you've really only got pseudorandom strings to deal with.

      But such strings would suffice to explain our observations of the universe, and are a far simpler idea than an intelligent god.

      It's exactly the same level of simplicity- completely based on faith and a misunderstanding of the word random.

      I can write the code for a psuedorandom number gene

      --
      I am trolling
    226. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Dude: you want to find basic philosophical errors so badly it is somewhat funny.

      Actually quite the reverse- I want people to tell the truth. If they KNOW something, I want that knowledge to be unchangeable, and if they're just telling me an opinion, I don't want them to use the word "KNOW".

      I have no idea from where you conclude that there is an error: certainly nothing I said in that paragraph affords that conclusion.

      The concept that something is irrelevant means that you are making a conscious decision to ignore evidence. Since you are not infalible and omniscient, you simply aren't qualified to make that decision, nobody is. Thus science is doomed to being forever wrong and incomplete.

      I have no idea how you get from "science does not care who set up the constants" (because that is not its subject matter, but the subject matter of metaphisics or whatever) to "it is based on faith". Absolutely no idea.

      If you don't care about a given set of data, you are taking it on faith that given set of data is truly irrelevant. How hard is this to understand?

      You keep saying that, but it is 100% counterfactual.

      If it was counterfactual, then there would be NOTHING, could be NOTHING irrelevant to science. All information, all evidence, true, false or otherwise, would need to be taken into account.

      Science has most certainly and verifiably produced more that belief and tautologies. Look around you: the monitor, the plastic out of which your keyboard is made, the vaccines you've had as a child, the TV waves going through you, the fabric from which your cloths are made, your deodorant, the artifical flavour of the last piece of gum you had.

      None of these are real outside of our belief that they are real. All you have stated here is that Science is the Religion that asserts that Reality is Real- which is a belief and a tautology. Just because something is based on faith does not automatically make it incorrect- but nor does it automatically make it correct, it's just another model of reality to consider.

      Note that you are defining "structure" so as to exclude randomness... Of course you can do that, but then your statement becomes void.

      Nice to know that you consider true statements to be void when they are inconvient to your beliefs- no different than any other fundamentalist.

      I can only suggest that you study probability theory a bit: you'll immediately notice that randomness is in no way incompatible with the existence of "structure".

      Only because probability theory is designed to say so. Proving a tautology with another tautology is not very useful.

      Moreover, in most cases, randomness is just a convenient model devised to deal with "hidden variables", "macro-scale observations" &c. (There are interpretations of quantum mechanics in which randomness is a taken as intrinsic, but this is rather controversial) As such, its role is precisely to incorporate in our reasoning some kinds of lack of information.

      And when you incoporate some kinds of lack of information into reasoning, that's called FAITH- that's exactly what faith is.

      The precise meaning of "scientific fact" very crucially includes the fact that humans are finite. It is built in in the requirements of falsability, of reproducibility, and what not.

      All of which, if you truly were including human finiteness into the equation, would merely be arbitrary rules for belief- dogma.

      Of course! Anyone pretending that science is anything other that that is a liar.

      And yet, we just had a judge claiming EXACTLY that- that disagreement with evolution is not allowed in classrooms in PA. The whole idea of allowing ID in the classroom is allowing disagreement.

      Now, to be honest: I tend to be slightly demanding on the kind of disagreement I will pay attention to. In my experience, most disagreement arises from ignorance.

      Even the ignorant may possess some data that the informed have overlooked- it's not safe to deny disagreement based only on ignorance.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    227. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Say I have a black box with a screen on it. Every second it displays either a 1 or a 0. There is no way to ever predict which of a 1 or 0 it will be ahead of time, but it is 1 50% of the time and 0 50% of the time (in the same way a dice is 1 1/6th of the time). But there is no possibility of the box exploding, or anything other than a 1 or 0 appearing. Such a thing is random by any definition I've seen, but does not make physics stop working, and that's the level of randomness we need. Science doesn't rely on the existence of random in the way you're defining it.

      Sorry- in my line of work that's considered pseudorandom. At best, it can only create a 1 or a 0 in accordance with the way the black box was designed; the very fact that it cannot explode or do anything unexpected makes it non-random. Did I mention I'm a software engineer by trade- working entirely in software, the realm of thought?

      I insist that it exists in the same way I'd insist gravity exists. No, we don't know it's there for certain, but the evidence is overwhelming.

      And yet gravity is entirely indescernable from a perpetually expanding universe.

      Our scientific model of the universe appears to approach the fact. We don't know this for certain, but with enough confidence to base decisions on what to teach on it.

      And that's the very arrogance that leads you into the semantic mistake of claiming infalibility- of pretending to be certain when you are NOT.

      Laws of physics can still hold, provided they cannot precisely predict the outcome.

      The whole idea of a LAW of physics instead of a THEORY is that it DOES precisely predict the outcome, in every case.

      If you're not going to accept the conventional meanings of the words in the English language, it's going to make it very hard to have a discussion.

      English is a highly imprecise language- and conventional meanings of words bring with them the bias of the speaker. Philosophicaly a religion has been any given system of belief for a very long time- it's the only definition that actually covers ALL religions as opposed to only organized monothesitic and polytheistic religions, which are subsets of the whole.

      You can call it that if you will, but why must such a God be intelligent?

      Because, as I have shown above, and you agreed to above, an unintelligent God yeilds Laws that aren't Laws and facts that aren't fact- an unpredictable, supernatural universe.

      Are you seriously claiming the function I just wrote down has an intelligent mind?

      No, I'm seriously claiming that for finite meanings of the word intelligent, YOU have an intelligent mind- and thus the pseudorandom function you just wrote down has an intelligent mind *behind* it. This is true for every pseudorandom software function or set of hardware we can think of- something has to limit the randomness for it to be pseudorandom.

      A belief in the simplest explanation for an observed phenomenon is in a different category from a belief based solely on the teachings of authority.

      The problem there is the observation itself is only as accurate as the instruments observing it; and just as finite, local, and non-universal as the teachings of an authority. In fact, most teachings of authorities of any type are based on observation; which is what makes them inaccurate and inadequate to begin with.

      Perhaps so, in which case my apologies. They're not infallible, merely vastly superior to any alternative.

      No, in fact, they are exactly the same as all of the alternatives- mere opinion that is sometimes true and sometimes false. Arrogance will get you nowhere with me.

      Because I'm getting irritated. You seem to be wilfully misunderstanding the concept of randomness.

      The reason you're getting irritated is because you don't actually understand the concept of randomness- only pseudorandomness.

      If you consider a science journa

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    228. Re:Hmm... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Dude: you want to find basic philosophical errors so badly it is somewhat funny.

      Actually quite the reverse- I want people to tell the truth. If they KNOW something, I want that knowledge to be unchangeable, and if they're just telling me an opinion, I don't want them to use the word "KNOW".

      Unchangable, definite knowldege is only possible for non-finite beings: being finite, we cannot in any way state anything definite because our experience is finite, and, likely, insufficient on any matter. So, basically, you want to reserve the word "know" for beings other than humans. You are free to do that.

      I am becoming repetitive, but here we go again: the fact that you use that definition of "knowing" (which is not at all the "common sense" definition, not the one used by science) makes your statement about the impossibility of knowing true. But it is a rather uninteresting truth, as it the impossibility of that kind of knowledge is contained in its very definition.

      I have no idea from where you conclude that there is an error: certainly nothing I said in that paragraph affords that conclusion.

      The concept that something is irrelevant means that you are making a conscious decision to ignore evidence. Since you are not infalible and omniscient, you simply aren't qualified to make that decision, nobody is.

      Dude: the fact that we are even able to ignore irrelevant evidence, in matters like "who set up the constants" as much as in more prosaic things like ambient noise, are what allows us to form concepts, ideas, reason, develop a consciousness, and not go crazy in the first 15 minutes of our existance.

      Science incorporates in its very essence the fact that we are neither fallible nor omniscient. What do you want humanity to do: develop a procedure for infallible and omniscient beings to acquire knowledge? What would that do for anyone? We have developed ways to deal with our own limitations. Yet you find those ways to be at fault for the very fact that we are limited.

      Thus science is doomed to being forever wrong and incomplete.

      Yes!

      You seem to find this is a bad thing. I do not.

      The difference comes from your demanding that the search for knowledge on the part of humans attain perfect, inmutable, complete knowledge, and my acknowledging that that is an unmeetable demand.

      I, as a principle, do not find a problem when I and others are not able to meet demands that are by their very essence unreachable.

      I have no idea how you get from "science does not care who set up the constants" (because that is not its subject matter, but the subject matter of metaphisics or whatever) to "it is based on faith". Absolutely no idea.

      If you don't care about a given set of data, you are taking it on faith that given set of data is truly irrelevant. How hard is this to understand?

      When what you want is to be able to predict where Mars will be tomorrow night at midnight, you do not care who set up the universal gravity constant at the value it has now. It is a completely irrelevant piece of data.

      Now, that irrelevance has been stablished by experience, and of course, as anything else which has been stablished by experience, is subject to being rejected did new information come which requires it. But the position of Mars has been quite precisely been predicted since at least the Sumerians, and yet no one has ever used in doing that determination any information even remotely related to "who set up the constants".

      Even if you acknowledge that "someone" set it the constant at its value and that that "someone" could very well change the value before tommorrow midnight and make your calculations wrong, that is completely irrelevant, because the calculations you make are your best guess given the informatio

    229. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Unchangable, definite knowldege is only possible for non-finite beings: being finite, we cannot in any way state anything definite because our experience is finite, and, likely, insufficient on any matter. So, basically, you want to reserve the word "know" for beings other than humans. You are free to do that.

      Actually, I'm not. The whole argument between ID and Evolution means that what is science- what is acceptable knowledge- is now being set in law. Thanks to two sets of bigots who don't want to admit that they are wrong, a student asking the question in science class will likely receive a bad grade just for being curious- or worse, will get removed from the classroom for violating the law. The obvious way out is to admit that science is just another religion, and treat all religions equally; but that won't happen because a judge in PA has decided to treat science as being above the constitution- and bad science at that.

      I am becoming repetitive, but here we go again: the fact that you use that definition of "knowing" (which is not at all the "common sense" definition, not the one used by science) makes your statement about the impossibility of knowing true. But it is a rather uninteresting truth, as it the impossibility of that kind of knowledge is contained in its very definition.

      It may be uninteresting to you- but that's exactly why you're missing the point of the debate, and the damage it does to people outside of the debate.

      Dude: the fact that we are even able to ignore irrelevant evidence, in matters like "who set up the constants" as much as in more prosaic things like ambient noise, are what allows us to form concepts, ideas, reason, develop a consciousness, and not go crazy in the first 15 minutes of our existance.

      Yes, but the flip side of that is that there is forbidden knowledge- and that is a bad thing.

      Science incorporates in its very essence the fact that we are neither fallible nor omniscient. What do you want humanity to do: develop a procedure for infallible and omniscient beings to acquire knowledge? What would that do for anyone? We have developed ways to deal with our own limitations. Yet you find those ways to be at fault for the very fact that we are limited.

      Incorrect. What I find at fault is the insistance that other rejected theories do not exist- without mentioning either the rejected theory or why it was rejected. Now we're haveing law set the definition of what is science. Where will it end? Do scientists really have to start with their own version of the witch hunts of the 1600s for you to see that censorship is a bad thing?

      The difference comes from your demanding that the search for knowledge on the part of humans attain perfect, inmutable, complete knowledge, and my acknowledging that that is an unmeetable demand.

      Actually, this is the first time you've admitted that it is an unmeetable demand. So far, you've put far more emphasis on the claim that ID is not science, instead of admiting that ID is as much science as Evolution is, because perfect, inmutable, complete knowledge is an unmeetable demand.

      I, as a principle, do not find a problem when I and others are not able to meet demands that are by their very essence unreachable.

      Then maybe you shouldn't censor others for it.

      When what you want is to be able to predict where Mars will be tomorrow night at midnight, you do not care who set up the universal gravity constant at the value it has now. It is a completely irrelevant piece of data.

      Unless of course, randomization comes along and changes that constant- in which case it becomes a highly relevant piece of data.

      Now, that irrelevance has been stablished by experience, and of course, as anything else which has been stablished by experience, is subject to being rejected did new information come which requires it. But the position of Mars has been quite precisely been predicted since at least the S

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    230. Re:Hmm... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      I am sorry: I cannot argue with you anymore. Honestly, I have grown bored of your arguments: I can take so much of semantic confusions.

      Do read up, though, some on quantum theory: it is quite deterministic...

    231. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      And you really should read up on the history of both science and cults- there is much that is comparable between the two at this point in time.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    232. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "There are prominent examples of *non-theists* who are proponents of ID (like Michael Behe"

      He's an outspoken christian, dumbass.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Behe

      And regarding Crick-

      'In a 1987 case before the Supreme Court, Crick joined a group of other Nobel laureates who advised that, "'Creation-science' simply has no place in the public-school science classroom."[27] Crick was also an advocate for the establishment of Darwin Day as a British national holiday[28].'

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Crick

      You Creationists are absolutely delusional.

    233. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Sorry- in my line of work that's considered pseudorandom. At best, it can only create a 1 or a 0 in accordance with the way the black box was designed;

      But there's no way to predict which will come out. I'd say that I could make such a box using radioctivity, but that doesn't matter - just suppose such a box existed. Would you deny that such a box is random?

      the very fact that it cannot explode or do anything unexpected makes it non-random.

      If you call such a thing random, then there is none of your kind of randomness in the universe. However, there is randomness of my black box kind, and that's sufficient to explain everything we've observed.

      Did I mention I'm a software engineer by trade- working entirely in software, the realm of thought?

      Maybe that's why you're looking at this wrong. In pure software there is no randomness - but that's not true in the universe.

      And yet gravity is entirely indescernable from a perpetually expanding universe.

      It's very easily distinguishable - stand on an iron asteroid and a watery comet of the same size, you'll notice you feel heavier on the former.

      The whole idea of a LAW of physics instead of a THEORY is that it DOES precisely predict the outcome, in every case.

      A law just tells us the effects of certain causes. The outcome can be unpredictable if, for example, it is impossible to precisely measure the inputs.

      English is a highly imprecise language- and conventional meanings of words bring with them the bias of the speaker. Philosophicaly a religion has been any given system of belief for a very long time- it's the only definition that actually covers ALL religions as opposed to only organized monothesitic and polytheistic religions, which are subsets of the whole.

      That definition covers every religion by covering practically any thought. You can't seriously be claiming that all beliefs are religious beliefs.

      Because, as I have shown above, and you agreed to above, an unintelligent God yeilds Laws that aren't Laws and facts that aren't fact- an unpredictable, supernatural universe.

      Even if you were right, and I certainly don't agree with you on that, how does an intelligent God make the universe any less supernatural? Saying "x happens because God wants it to" is no more of an explanation, and has no more predictive power, than "x happens".

      No, I'm seriously claiming that for finite meanings of the word intelligent, YOU have an intelligent mind- and thus the pseudorandom function you just wrote down has an intelligent mind *behind* it. This is true for every pseudorandom software function or set of hardware we can think of- something has to limit the randomness for it to be pseudorandom.

      In this case, yes, the function was written by someone intelligent, but that doesn't mean it always has to be. We have equations and functions arising all over the universe with no intelligent input - something like GmM/r^2 is just there, without needing a mind behind it. Why couldn't a pseudorandom function be the same?

      The problem there is the observation itself is only as accurate as the instruments observing it; and just as finite, local, and non-universal as the teachings of an authority. In fact, most teachings of authorities of any type are based on observation; which is what makes them inaccurate and inadequate to begin with.

      No. It may start at exactly the same level of accuracy, but it is improved upon, tested repeatedly. We're never 100% certain of something we've learnt from observation, but we can get arbitrarily close.

      No, in fact, they are exactly the same as all of the alternatives- mere opinion that is sometimes true and sometimes false. Arrogance will get you nowhere with me.

      Try comparing the accuracy of scientific predictions with that of those made by any of the alternatives.

      The reason you're getting irritated is because you don't actually understand the concept of randomn

      --
      I am trolling
    234. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      But there's no way to predict which will come out. I'd say that I could make such a box using radioctivity, but that doesn't matter - just suppose such a box existed. Would you deny that such a box is random?

      I think I just realized why quantum mechanics doesn't work in the macro world. The randomness only exists in the micro world, because it's not really randomness. Radioactivity is not random- you could theoretically track the positrons and know exactly which atom would decay next, then track it's positrons and know what would decay after that. The ones who say it's just a discontinuity between the micro and macro realms are right; it's a problem with the scope of the observer, not any real randomness.

      If you call such a thing random, then there is none of your kind of randomness in the universe. However, there is randomness of my black box kind, and that's sufficient to explain everything we've observed.

      Ok- I'll agree PSEUDORANDOMNESS DUE TO THE LAZINESS OF THE OBSERVER does exist.

      Maybe that's why you're looking at this wrong. In pure software there is no randomness - but that's not true in the universe.

      Actually, it is true in the universe as well- the problem is in us, the observers of the universe, not in the universe itself. The universe itself stays deterministic- we're just not looking at it with the correct resolution. It's kind of like google earth- look at an area where there is a lot of human habitation, where the sattelites have been very interested in what's going on, and you get sharp, clear pictures. Rural areas, not so much; you get pictures so blurry that they only make sense from 10 miles above ground level. Heisenberg, being just as anthromorphic as any other theologian, claims that the information he can't see didn't exist- and because you believe that, you fail to look.

      It's very easily distinguishable - stand on an iron asteroid and a watery comet of the same size, you'll notice you feel heavier on the former.

      More atoms expanding quicker would explain that just as well.

      A law just tells us the effects of certain causes. The outcome can be unpredictable if, for example, it is impossible to precisely measure the inputs.

      It's never impossible to precisely measure the inputs- it's only highly improbable that we as human beings will measure the inputs correctly.

      That definition covers every religion by covering practically any thought. You can't seriously be claiming that all beliefs are religious beliefs.

      No, just all humanoid beliefs- I don't know enough to claim so for other species groups. It's possible though. But yes- Philosophy and religion are how we have modeled the world since the begining of our species, and science is no exception to that rule. Now had I said ORGANIZED religion, you'd be more correct at least (though the argument can definately be made that science is organized) but mere religion doesn't even need two people. In fact, it's more likely that we have 7 billion religions on this planet right now; one for every individual that only tangentially intersect.

      Even if you were right, and I certainly don't agree with you on that, how does an intelligent God make the universe any less supernatural? Saying "x happens because God wants it to" is no more of an explanation, and has no more predictive power, than "x happens".

      It turns the universe into an experiment of the natural- God defines the natural to see what will happen when the constants and laws are as they are. Note that such a god is omniscient and not omniscient at the same time- just like us and randomness on a quantum level, it depends on the resolution you're looking at the universe through.

      In this case, yes, the function was written by someone intelligent, but that doesn't mean it always has to be. We have equations and functions arising all over the universe with no intelligent input - something like GmM/r^2 is just there, without

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    235. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      I think I just realized why quantum mechanics doesn't work in the macro world. The randomness only exists in the micro world, because it's not really randomness.

      Weather appears random but climate clearly isn't. Any gambler can tell you that even though the individual games behave as if they were random, the macroscopic effect is entirely predictable.

      Radioactivity is not random- you could theoretically track the positrons and know exactly which atom would decay next, then track it's positrons and know what would decay after that.

      Positrons aren't involved AFAIK. Anyway, if you want a definite example, measuring the spin of a spin-half particle. It has to be random, because it's possible to arrange 33 axes such that there is no consistent arrangement of spins at all of them. (We measure 3 in orthogonal directions and we always get two 0s and a 1. Always. When we make the measurement we affect the spin of the particle and it won't be the same the next time we measure in the same 3 directions, the arrangement of the 0s and 1 may be different but there will always be 2 0s and 1 1. But there is no way to assign spin along these 33 axes so that there's always 2 0s and a 1 in any 3 perpendicular directions. So unless you believe the experimenter's choice of axes to measure was determined, the spins that we will measure are fundamentally impossible to predict.

      The ones who say it's just a discontinuity between the micro and macro realms are right; it's a problem with the scope of the observer, not any real randomness.

      Quantum mechanics wasn't invented to have a cool theory. It was invented because it was necessary. The randomness is there, it is real, the evidence is as strong as any truth you care to name.

      Anyway, you didn't answer my question.

      Ok- I'll agree PSEUDORANDOMNESS DUE TO THE LAZINESS OF THE OBSERVER does exist.

      It's not a question of laziness. There are measurements which are impossible to make.

      Actually, it is true in the universe as well- the problem is in us, the observers of the universe, not in the universe itself. The universe itself stays deterministic- we're just not looking at it with the correct resolution. It's kind of like google earth- look at an area where there is a lot of human habitation, where the sattelites have been very interested in what's going on, and you get sharp, clear pictures. Rural areas, not so much; you get pictures so blurry that they only make sense from 10 miles above ground level.

      You're just asserting this. What grounds do you have for believing the universe must behave like software?

      Heisenberg, being just as anthromorphic as any other theologian, claims that the information he can't see didn't exist- and because you believe that, you fail to look.

      It's not about whether he could see it, the point is he proved that it's impossible to see it. And further experiments like the one I described above show it's not actually there.

      More atoms expanding quicker would explain that just as well.

      So atoms expand faster when they're clumped together? You're already getting more complicated than standard gravity. And compare a comet of normal with a comet of heavy water-ice.

      It's never impossible to precisely measure the inputs- it's only highly improbable that we as human beings will measure the inputs correctly.

      The whole point of QM is that it is actually impossible to measure some things.

      No, just all humanoid beliefs- I don't know enough to claim so for other species groups. It's possible though. But yes- Philosophy and religion are how we have modeled the world since the begining of our species, and science is no exception to that rule. Now had I said ORGANIZED religion, you'd be more correct at least (though the argument can definately be made that science is organized) but mere religion doesn't even need two people. In fact, it's more likely that we have 7 billion religions on this planet right now; one for every

      --
      I am trolling
    236. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Snipping down, this is getting too long.

      So unless you believe the experimenter's choice of axes to measure was determined, the spins that we will measure are fundamentally impossible to predict.

      Of course the experimenter's choice of axes to measure was determined- by the experimenter. This isn't random either- it's a conceious choice by a mind to reduce the resolution of the experiment.

      Quantum mechanics wasn't invented to have a cool theory. It was invented because it was necessary. The randomness is there, it is real, the evidence is as strong as any truth you care to name.

      Which isn't very strong, since all evidence is subjective- we choose to limit the input.

      It's consistent, sensible, and makes useful predictions. Not something any other religion I know of does.

      Every religion that survives more than 70 years or so does this. You must not know very much of religion. But even your science is not consistent, for instance:

      Absolute accuracy is impossible. Accuracy is made better by publishing results as soon as they are available so that others can collaborate. If we approached things your way we'd still be sitting there discussing whether large objects fall at the same rate as small objects, and unwilling to make predictions about anything.

      Wheras science has accurate predictive ability.

      Both of these quotes came from the discussion of science as religion- and they are NOT consistent with one another. That isn't to say that partial accuracy isn't useful- it is- but the very intertia you decry elsewhere in the discussion on peer review journals comes from not seeing the inconsistency.

      Arbitrary. It all comes down to believing the statements of one authority over another - not something consistent.

      That's true of any belief system- even science. It all comes down to which authorities you accept and which you deny. For instance:

      Most major religions have kept their basic assumptions the same. Christians still believe that God is a trinity, Jesus is the son of God, the Bible is the inspired word of God, etc.

      Actually, not all Christians believe all of those. One sect believes in trinities, another does not. Some say that Jesus was just a prophet. The Bible as the inspired word of God is accepted- but means very little for some meanings of the word "inspired". In fact, I can't think of a basic assumption that is accepted by all Christians.

      Religion still requires a lack of questioning of the most basic assumption - the existence of god.

      Nope- not all religions have a God. Zen Buddhists have only the universe. Catholicism considers God to be such a nebulous concept that "everything and nothing" fits. The religion of objectivism is a relatively recent set of beliefs that would deny the existance of everything outside of self- and has a morality based on that. Religion is far larger than you can possibly imagine- because all a religion is is a set of beliefs. You attempt to reduce religion down to the ones you are personally opposed to- and put science on a pedestal upon which it does not belong. Accuracy is not possible for human beings- but that doesn't mean that accuracy is impossible. And that statement is directly in conflict with the idea that science builds accurate models.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    237. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Of course the experimenter's choice of axes to measure was determined- by the experimenter. This isn't random either- it's a conceious choice by a mind to reduce the resolution of the experiment.

      The point is that if the experimenter had a choice of axes, then there is no way the result for each axis could be determined ahead of time.

      Both of these quotes came from the discussion of science as religion- and they are NOT consistent with one another.

      They're consistent. When I say "accurate" I don't mean absolutely accurate, just pretty/very accurate. Like when I say "good" I don't mean perfect.

      Actually, not all Christians believe all of those. One sect believes in trinities, another does not. Some say that Jesus was just a prophet. The Bible as the inspired word of God is accepted- but means very little for some meanings of the word "inspired". In fact, I can't think of a basic assumption that is accepted by all Christians.

      Fair enough, but within the sects most of the assumptions have remained the same for a long time - the schisms happened, but then the divided parts kept doing the same things until another crisis emerged. New ones are emerging, and some change does occur - several churches seem to be gradually accepting homosexuality, for example - but mostly the core beliefs that define a religion remain the same.

      Nope- not all religions have a God. Zen Buddhists have only the universe.

      Ok, fair enough, but I'm sure there's a similar unquestionable core belief.

      Catholicism considers God to be such a nebulous concept that "everything and nothing" fits.

      Not my experience of it.

      The religion of objectivism is a relatively recent set of beliefs that would deny the existance of everything outside of self- and has a morality based on that.

      If you're insinuating that to believe in science requires one to be fundamentally immoral, you're gravely mistaken.

      Religion is far larger than you can possibly imagine- because all a religion is is a set of beliefs. You attempt to reduce religion down to the ones you are personally opposed to-

      I think of religions in terms of the ones I'm personally familiar with. If I don't take a certain religion into account it's not because I can't criticise it as easily, just that I don't know about it.

      and put science on a pedestal upon which it does not belong.

      Science is different from religion, and superior in terms of results if nothing else.

      Accuracy is not possible for human beings- but that doesn't mean that accuracy is impossible.

      Absolute accuracy is impossible, and to the best of our knowledge not just for us but for anything. Accuracy is still possible and best achieved through science.

      --
      I am trolling
    238. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      They're consistent. When I say "accurate" I don't mean absolutely accurate, just pretty/very accurate. Like when I say "good" I don't mean perfect.

      In other words, you admit that science is full of error- you just would rather lie than admit that in science class.

      Fair enough, but within the sects most of the assumptions have remained the same for a long time

      So have the basic assumptions in science- the scientific method is a theology. Objective evidence is a theology. The existance of these go unquestioned for huge amounts of time.

      Ok, fair enough, but I'm sure there's a similar unquestionable core belief.

      Not for all of religion. Religions are merely systems of beliefs- there is no *single* core belief for all religions. Individual religious sects have core beliefs, yes, but no one core belief covers every religion mankind has ever believed in. That's why I call science a religion- it has core beliefs, and those core beliefs are markedly different enough to create sects and meta-sects.

      Not my experience of it.

      Roman Catholicism is one of those meta-sects; katholicos in Greek means universal. There is more to Roman Catholicism than any one person could ever experience personally; in theological terms the Catechism of the Catholic Church calls it a meta-culture, under which several local cultures with varying belief systems survive and thrive. A good example is the official church position taken on the ID debate- you have Jesuits claiming theistic evolution where God is but a witness to random indeterministic nature; to Dominicans claiming that Genesis is true, but just an allegory and the six days took "mille mille eons", to traditionalists in the United States who are splitting off over Young Earth Creationism.

      If you're insinuating that to believe in science requires one to be fundamentally immoral, you're gravely mistaken.

      No, I'm not- which is why I said the belief of objectivism rather than science. Objectivism can be philosophically derived from the scientific method; but doing so starts one down the slipery slope to solipsism and nilhism, systems under which morality has no meaning whatsoever (and neither does anything else because it's ALL false).

      I think of religions in terms of the ones I'm personally familiar with. If I don't take a certain religion into account it's not because I can't criticise it as easily, just that I don't know about it.

      Which is your same problem with philosophy- you discount it because you just don't know about it.

      Science is different from religion, and superior in terms of results if nothing else.

      Above you admited that those results are not absolutely accurate ever- I think the only reason you think it's supperior to other philosophies is because you are unfamiliar with other philosophies. Here's a hint- the test of time affects ALL philosophy equally. If there's anything objective in philosophy it's this- philosophies that do not produce accurate results die. Ones that do produce accurate results survive. It's evolution applied to human societies and ideas; survival of the fittest.

      From that point of view, science is simply too new to have it's results compared to religion as a whole; it's likely more accurate than very young sects (like say the Jevhovah's Witnesses, the Young Earth Creationists, or the Dispensationalists), but it's likely less accurate than say, Hinduism. Regardless of the technological marvels, what really counts in human truth is the applicability to human life, and the creation of happiness in that life. Science's most obvious advance towards that is materialism- and materialism is too young to have proof of increasing human happiness, it has yet to withstand the test of time.

      Absolute accuracy is impossible, and to the best of our knowledge not just for us but for anything.

      But it's incredibly arrogant to assume that the best of OUR knowledge is eq

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    239. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      In other words, you admit that science is full of error- you just would rather lie than admit that in science class.

      No. Science has a small amount of error. Less than, say, the reasonable doubt that would save a murder suspect from conviction.

      So have the basic assumptions in science- the scientific method is a theology. Objective evidence is a theology. The existance of these go unquestioned for huge amounts of time.

      They're not something that can be objectively shown, but they're worth believing as working assumptions based on the success we can have by believing in them.

      Not for all of religion. Religions are merely systems of beliefs- there is no *single* core belief for all religions. Individual religious sects have core beliefs, yes, but no one core belief covers every religion mankind has ever believed in. That's why I call science a religion- it has core beliefs, and those core beliefs are markedly different enough to create sects and meta-sects.

      The point is that a religion is different because it has an unquestionable core belief.

      Roman Catholicism is one of those meta-sects; katholicos in Greek means universal. There is more to Roman Catholicism than any one person could ever experience personally; in theological terms the Catechism of the Catholic Church calls it a meta-culture, under which several local cultures with varying belief systems survive and thrive. A good example is the official church position taken on the ID debate- you have Jesuits claiming theistic evolution where God is but a witness to random indeterministic nature; to Dominicans claiming that Genesis is true, but just an allegory and the six days took "mille mille eons", to traditionalists in the United States who are splitting off over Young Earth Creationism.

      The fact that they're having to split off shows that there is a cohesiveness to catholicism, one does have to agree on a substantial amount.

      No, I'm not- which is why I said the belief of objectivism rather than science. Objectivism can be philosophically derived from the scientific method; but doing so starts one down the slipery slope to solipsism and nilhism, systems under which morality has no meaning whatsoever (and neither does anything else because it's ALL false).

      So you're saying the scientific method implies morality is meaningless?

      Which is your same problem with philosophy- you discount it because you just don't know about it.

      I learn as much as I can. I have yet to see anything else as good as science in terms of making useful predictions about the world.

      Above you admited that those results are not absolutely accurate ever- I think the only reason you think it's supperior to other philosophies is because you are unfamiliar with other philosophies. Here's a hint- the test of time affects ALL philosophy equally. If there's anything objective in philosophy it's this- philosophies that do not produce accurate results die. Ones that do produce accurate results survive. It's evolution applied to human societies and ideas; survival of the fittest.

      Religions could have just as well achieved success through conquest, promises of afterlife, and tradition as through accurate results. And I have yet to see a religion produce an accurate prediction without using science "behind the scenes".

      From that point of view, science is simply too new to have it's results compared to religion as a whole; it's likely more accurate than very young sects (like say the Jevhovah's Witnesses, the Young Earth Creationists, or the Dispensationalists), but it's likely less accurate than say, Hinduism. Regardless of the technological marvels, what really counts in human truth is the applicability to human life, and the creation of happiness in that life.

      You define truth as that which makes people happy? That's just patently false. The technological marvels you dismiss are a demonstration of understanding and using that for control - because we kno

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      I am trolling
    240. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      No. Science has a small amount of error. Less than, say, the reasonable doubt that would save a murder suspect from conviction.

      Well, that's not a very good indicator- considering that the law is just a contrived method to separate the classes and kill off the worst of the unwanted. But the point is- most scientists overstate their case, insisting on an accuracy that is both impossible and does not exist.

      They're not something that can be objectively shown

      And things that can't be objectively shown are subjective beliefs. Not that there's anything wrong with that- but to ascribe a value that doesn't exist is at best an untruth.

      but they're worth believing as working assumptions based on the success we can have by believing in them.

      Just like any other religious belief. Religious beliefs that don't bring some measure of success eventually do fall. It can take centuries though, to tell the difference- sometimes millenia.

      The point is that a religion is different because it has an unquestionable core belief.

      Kind of like the two above? Actually, all religious beliefs can be questioned- but it takes time to find the answers. Often centuries or millenia. To insist that something is accurate or factual before the religion has been through that trial, is premature and rather impatient.

      The fact that they're having to split off shows that there is a cohesiveness to catholicism, one does have to agree on a substantial amount.

      It's more that they've got this idea that the Masons and scientists and Protestants have taken over- they reject the last 4 Popes on that score- but yes. The one substantial core belief for Catholicism is the Councilar Process- the idea that the magisterium develops doctrine adequately. It's very much like the peer review system- and has just about as much foundation behind it, as a belief in a working assumption that has worked for just about 1950 years, give or take a few decades. Like most fundamentalists, the traditionalists are failing to trust that process of change; they are wedding themselves to disproven theories.

      So you're saying the scientific method implies morality is meaningless?

      No, I'm saying that one interpretation of the scientific method implies that morality is meaningless. All religions, all belief systems, start spawning heresies and competing sects after the first hundred years or so; objectivism is just one of the more recent ones science has spawned. It's pretty easy to see how believers in objectiveism get there- the highest being in their universe is self, and what they don't experience directly they can't believe in. A universal morality requires belief- objectivists deny faith by their belief that nothing they haven't experienced directly exists.

      I learn as much as I can. I have yet to see anything else as good as science in terms of making useful predictions about the world.

      Depends on what you mean by the world; your world maybe but that isn't the only world that exists. You can't actually extrapolate your experiences to others except by belief.

      Religions could have just as well achieved success through conquest, promises of afterlife, and tradition as through accurate results.

      All that only goes so far; it's good for controling the individual life or the mob at the moment. But if the traditions become nonsensical the people will no longer teach them to their children, promises of the afterlife only are useful while people are afraid of death and thus can backfire, and conquest ends quickly because those who live by the sword also die by it. Eventually a religion must change, must grow up, must mature; otherwise it dies.

      And I have yet to see a religion produce an accurate prediction without using science "behind the scenes".

      Science was invented by religion to begin with, so why not? However, it is quickly appearing that science is failing in it's

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    241. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Just like any other religious belief. Religious beliefs that don't bring some measure of success eventually do fall. It can take centuries though, to tell the difference- sometimes millenia.

      OK, but that isn't necessarily success in understanding the world. Believing in the truth of the results of the scientific method is the best in that respect.

      Kind of like the two above?

      They can be questioned - if another method lead to more accurate predictions, science would adopt it.

      Actually, all religious beliefs can be questioned- but it takes time to find the answers. Often centuries or millenia. To insist that something is accurate or factual before the religion has been through that trial, is premature and rather impatient.

      Religions insist that core beliefs are true and must not be questioned. As an example, catholics are forbidden to associate with those who believe God and Satan have equal power.

      The one substantial core belief for Catholicism is the Councilar Process- the idea that the magisterium develops doctrine adequately. It's very much like the peer review system- and has just about as much foundation behind it, as a belief in a working assumption that has worked for just about 1950 years, give or take a few decades.

      Then why the doctrine of infallibility? And there is a lot more that is held as core beliefs - everything in the Nicene Creed, for example, is a statement of belief that one must agree with to be catholic.

      Depends on what you mean by the world; your world maybe but that isn't the only world that exists. You can't actually extrapolate your experiences to others except by belief.

      I can't be certain, but there's enough evidence - I see the same things as people I talk to about what we're seeing, hear the same noises, and so on.

      However, it is quickly appearing that science is failing in it's ability to explain what's happening "behind the scenes" as you put it.

      How so?

      No, I define USEFUL ACCURACY as that which makes people happy- a philosophy that is not useful does not make people happy, and will be discarded in the long run regardless of how accurate or inaccurate it is.

      I think science will survive because people need to know the truth or something close to it to base their lives on, even if they don't believe it. Ultimately science will be more useful than the alternatives not because it makes people happy but because it allows people to survive.

      Which may, or may not be, one of it's failings in the long term. What good is having technology if it only makes you miserable? Look at the Amish- completely satisfied with their little utopias, stuck as you would put it in 1600. Are you more satisfied with your technology than they are?

      I'm not sure if I'm more satisfied as I am now, but I certainly wouldn't be satisfied standing still", which keeping to such a lifestyle would require people to do.

      What does it matter to a man how the world was created if he cannot achieve happiness in this life?

      Because it's better to know.

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      I am trolling
    242. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      OK, but that isn't necessarily success in understanding the world.

      Correct- but unless understanding the world *also* brings happiness, it's destined to fall into the dustbin with other outmoded concepts, like canabalism.

      Believing in the truth of the results of the scientific method is the best in that respect.

      Yes, but you've yet to prove that success in understanding the world is actually best, or for that matter even useful. I'll grant that modern science has made great strides- but it's still relatively young, and it's caused a good deal of damage as well.

      They can be questioned - if another method lead to more accurate predictions, science would adopt it.

      Actually, no science would not- and that's the very problem. People who question the existance of objective evidence or the scientific method are considered heretics and not allowed to publish their thoughts in the peer reviewed journals, so there's no way for science to adopt a new idea in that arena.

      Religions insist that core beliefs are true and must not be questioned.

      So does science- just try getting a theory that doesn't match the orthodoxy into a scientific journal.

      As an example, catholics are forbidden to associate with those who believe God and Satan have equal power.

      Bad example- Zen Augustines are an approved Roman Catholic Order, and have been for 120 years now; and the balance between Good and Evil, the idea that God and Satan are equally matched, goes back at least to the 1300s and was the central theme in Dante's La Divinia Comedia. Certain American Catholic sects and orders do not agree with that concept, but by no means is it a churchwide ban.

      Then why the doctrine of infallibility?

      If you had actually read more than the title, you'd know that's exactly what I'm talking about when I refer to the Counciliar Method. The doctrine of infalibility does NOT say that everything the Pope says goes, rather it says that the Pope is fallible except in cases of faith and morals where his teaching is in keeping with Holy Tradition and the Councils and he is exercising the power of the Seat of Peter, which has traditionally been the office of "First among Equals", kind of like the chief editor of a peer reviewed journal, he gets the final say- for his time in office. I personally think they named it wrong...it has caused much confusion.

      And there is a lot more that is held as core beliefs - everything in the Nicene Creed, for example, is a statement of belief that one must agree with to be catholic.

      Also no- for we have the Eastern Rites under the Roman Pope as well, who do not use the Nicene Creed. You'd be correct for Latin Rite Roman Catholics- but that's just one culture among many.

      I can't be certain, but there's enough evidence - I see the same things as people I talk to about what we're seeing, hear the same noises, and so on.

      Actually, you only think you do- so far we haven't found two human brains that process input the exact same way. That's the reason we don't have brain interfaced computers yet.

      How so?

      Science fails in it's explainations when it refers to theological concepts and tries to call them facts- tries to assume absolute accuracy where there is none possible. This whole discussion started with just such a premature assumption of fact- in the theory of evolution- when the quantum mechanics simply wasn't there to call it an absolute fact.

      I think science will survive because people need to know the truth or something close to it to base their lives on, even if they don't believe it.

      But as you've shown before- science fails to give us absolute truth or anything close to it.

      Ultimately science will be more useful than the alternatives not because it makes people happy but because it allows people to survive.

      We're actually better suited to survive as a species without sci

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    243. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Correct- but unless understanding the world *also* brings happiness, it's destined to fall into the dustbin with other outmoded concepts, like canabalism.

      It will succeed because, in the long term, we can't survive without it.

      Actually, no science would not- and that's the very problem. People who question the existance of objective evidence or the scientific method are considered heretics and not allowed to publish their thoughts in the peer reviewed journals, so there's no way for science to adopt a new idea in that arena.

      The peer review process depends entirely on the existence of objective evidence so it would be nonsensical to publish results challenging it in a peer-reviewed journal. If an alternative method was successful the journals would adopt it - reluctantly perhaps, with a lot of inertia, but they would adopt it.

      So does science- just try getting a theory that doesn't match the orthodoxy into a scientific journal.

      There are hundreds of examples of new theories overturning the orthodoxy - plate tectonics is the obvious one. They might meet resistance and have a harder time getting published than theories that fit in, but ultimately there's no arguing with results - if the theory is right, experimental evidence will force its acceptance.

      Bad example- Zen Augustines are an approved Roman Catholic Order, and have been for 120 years now; and the balance between Good and Evil, the idea that God and Satan are equally matched, goes back at least to the 1300s and was the central theme in Dante's La Divinia Comedia. Certain American Catholic sects and orders do not agree with that concept, but by no means is it a churchwide ban.

      The belief was declared anathema hundreds of years ago and this has never been rescinded. The ban might not be enforced - to try and do so would probably weaken the church too much - but it's there.

      If you had actually read more than the title, you'd know that's exactly what I'm talking about when I refer to the Counciliar Method. The doctrine of infalibility does NOT say that everything the Pope says goes, rather it says that the Pope is fallible except in cases of faith and morals where his teaching is in keeping with Holy Tradition and the Councils and he is exercising the power of the Seat of Peter, which has traditionally been the office of "First among Equals", kind of like the chief editor of a peer reviewed journal, he gets the final say- for his time in office. I personally think they named it wrong...it has caused much confusion.

      You can say all you want but ultimately the teaching is that certain pronouncements are infallible - absolutely correct.

      Also no- for we have the Eastern Rites under the Roman Pope as well, who do not use the Nicene Creed. You'd be correct for Latin Rite Roman Catholics- but that's just one culture among many.

      They're not generally considered part of the Roman Catholic church. Of course there are many varieties of Christians, but there is a belief that defines them as Christians - that Jesus was divine - which must not be questioned, and each variety usually puts its own particular beliefs beyond question.

      Actually, you only think you do- so far we haven't found two human brains that process input the exact same way. That's the reason we don't have brain interfaced computers yet.

      It doesn't matter how we process it, just that we achieve the same result.

      Science fails in it's explainations when it refers to theological concepts and tries to call them facts- tries to assume absolute accuracy where there is none possible. This whole discussion started with just such a premature assumption of fact- in the theory of evolution- when the quantum mechanics simply wasn't there to call it an absolute fact.

      The evidence for both evolution and quantum mechanics is solid. No, neither is absolutely certain, but they're more than certain enough to teach to students, more than most other "facts" they will be taught, an

      --
      I am trolling
    244. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      It will succeed because, in the long term, we can't survive without it.

      We survived somewhere between 5800 years and 1.8 million years without modern science. It's stupid to say that we can't survive without modern science, when modern science is less than 200 years old. Individual human beings may not survive- but that's natural selection for you.

      The peer review process depends entirely on the existence of objective evidence so it would be nonsensical to publish results challenging it in a peer-reviewed journal.

      Exactly my point. You claim the system allows for questioning of basic assumptions, and then say it's nonsensical to question basic assumptions.

      If an alternative method was successful the journals would adopt it - reluctantly perhaps, with a lot of inertia, but they would adopt it.

      No, in fact, they wouldn't. They make money off of censorship; they're not going to abandon that money just because an alternative method is more successful.

      There are hundreds of examples of new theories overturning the orthodoxy - plate tectonics is the obvious one.

      And that took what, a century? Tell me, was it right for the peer reviewed journals to reject papers on plate tectonics?

      They might meet resistance and have a harder time getting published than theories that fit in, but ultimately there's no arguing with results - if the theory is right, experimental evidence will force its acceptance.

      But only if that experimental evidence is objective.

      The belief was declared anathema hundreds of years ago and this has never been rescinded.

      Uh, no, it wasn't. It was rescinded by the Council of Trent.

      The ban might not be enforced - to try and do so would probably weaken the church too much - but it's there.

      It was there at the council of Nicea- and is no longer there due to doctrinal development by the Councilar Method. You sure have a twisted view of Church History, but that's not surprising given your othodoxy against religion.

      It doesn't matter how we process it, just that we achieve the same result.

      But we don't achieve the same result- if we did there would be no such thing as subjective evidence. Everybody sees the world slightly differently, and NO one view is absolutely correct. There is no single reality to discover; we all live in different realities.

      The evidence for both evolution and quantum mechanics is solid.

      No it isn't- it referes to randomness and probability estimates, neither one of which are solid.

      No, neither is absolutely certain, but they're more than certain enough to teach to students

      If you're going to teach anything at all to students, you'd better be absolutely certain, OR you'd better label your theories as only possibly correct. To call that which is NOT absolutely certain fact is a lie- and from what you're telling me, it's a malicious one.

      more than most other "facts" they will be taught

      Well, that's a problem also then, if 2+2=4 is not a fact either (it isn't, but we'll get back to that). I simply disagree with lying in the classroom no matter what your justification.

      and not teaching them would leave students at an unreasonable disadvantage.

      Actually- learning the difference between truth and lies would be an incredible advantage in this world. We need more of that.

      Science gives us a very accurate approximation to the truth.

      But only an approximation- not real truth, and thus, not absolute accuracy.

      It predicts things very accurately.

      But not absolutely accurately- and thus not truth and should not be taught as such.

      Regardless of whether it's true in some mystical sense, it is enormously useful to base one's life on.

      Depends on your definition of useful- to me the jury's still out on that.

      How so? There's a correla

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    245. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      We survived somewhere between 5800 years and 1.8 million years without modern science. It's stupid to say that we can't survive without modern science, when modern science is less than 200 years old. Individual human beings may not survive- but that's natural selection for you.

      As I said, if nothing else, when the sun dies we'll need it.

      Exactly my point. You claim the system allows for questioning of basic assumptions, and then say it's nonsensical to question basic assumptions.

      You're trying to question them at the wrong level. Questioning the existence of objective evidence in a peer-reviewed journal would be like questioning the existence of gravity when discussing characteristics of extra-solar planets we've found.

      No, in fact, they wouldn't. They make money off of censorship; they're not going to abandon that money just because an alternative method is more successful.

      Few journals are corporate money-making entities.

      And that took what, a century? Tell me, was it right for the peer reviewed journals to reject papers on plate tectonics?

      Since the theory was first seriously proposed, maybe fifty years, but as soon as evidence (from magnetometry) was found, it was less than a decade before it became the orthodoxy. When there was no evidence, yes, it was right for the journals to reject papers - anyone can come up with a nonsensical-sounding theory that explains a few particular observations better than the prevailing model, and until we started doing the magnetic measurements that was all plate tectonics was. I'm sure there were rejections that shouldn't have happened, but once the evidence was there, there was no difficulty in getting a paper published.

      But only if that experimental evidence is objective.

      Yes, of course. But so far all experimental evidence seems to be.

      It was there at the council of Nicea- and is no longer there due to doctrinal development by the Councilar Method. You sure have a twisted view of Church History, but that's not surprising given your othodoxy against religion.

      There's no orthodoxy here. My stance on religion is based solely on my personal experiences of it.

      But we don't achieve the same result- if we did there would be no such thing as subjective evidence. Everybody sees the world slightly differently, and NO one view is absolutely correct. There is no single reality to discover; we all live in different realities.

      I don't believe there is such a thing as subjective evidence. On what grounds do you claim our realities are different?

      No it isn't- it referes to randomness and probability estimates, neither one of which are solid.

      Yes they are. There is overwhelming evidence for them.

      If you're going to teach anything at all to students, you'd better be absolutely certain, OR you'd better label your theories as only possibly correct. To call that which is NOT absolutely certain fact is a lie- and from what you're telling me, it's a malicious one.

      It's not a lie, it's the normal meaning of the word. Students will see it used that way every day - I can't help thinking of the "Dettol protects: fact" adverts.

      Well, that's a problem also then, if 2+2=4 is not a fact either (it isn't, but we'll get back to that). I simply disagree with lying in the classroom no matter what your justification.

      I said almost - of what I was taught, maths is the sole exception to this. If we only taught what we were absolutely certain of, we would have virtually nothing to teach. Any student who is able to understand the concept will know almost nothing is absolutely certain.

      Actually- learning the difference between truth and lies would be an incredible advantage in this world. We need more of that.

      Agreed. But students also need to know about the world. Anything we're as confident of as we are of the sciences in question is something students should know.

      But not absolutely accurately

      --
      I am trolling
    246. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      As I said, if nothing else, when the sun dies we'll need it.

      Considering that no species so far has survived the 100 million years that will take, I think that we can safely dispense with that as an option for now.

      You're trying to question them at the wrong level. Questioning the existence of objective evidence in a peer-reviewed journal would be like questioning the existence of gravity when discussing characteristics of extra-solar planets we've found.

      And yet, could be necessary for theories based on experiential instead of experimental evidence. A closed system does not allow out-of-system suggestions- which is a problem with ANY closed system. That's why Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI both spoke against fundamentalism.

      Few journals are corporate money-making entities.

      No, they're corporate grant-gathering entities.

      Since the theory was first seriously proposed, maybe fifty years, but as soon as evidence (from magnetometry) was found, it was less than a decade before it became the orthodoxy. When there was no evidence, yes, it was right for the journals to reject papers - anyone can come up with a nonsensical-sounding theory that explains a few particular observations better than the prevailing model, and until we started doing the magnetic measurements that was all plate tectonics was. I'm sure there were rejections that shouldn't have happened, but once the evidence was there, there was no difficulty in getting a paper published.

      The point is, by rejecting the particular observations, they missed a major theory. That's what you get when you limit evidence to only the experimental and not the experiential.

      Worse yet, there are several examples of science conflicting with subjective observation. That's where evolution falls down for many people, for instance.

      Yes, of course. But so far all experimental evidence seems to be.

      Why? What makes it more objective than experiential evidence? Might experimental evidence only APPEAR to be objective- because we've limited the people accepted to judge it to only those brainwashed into certain degrees?

      It's not a lie, it's the normal meaning of the word. Students will see it used that way every day - I can't help thinking of the "Dettol protects: fact" adverts.

      Also likely a lie- the use of the word fact is far too loose in normal meaning. Only the humble can learn new things- it would help if science was more humble. Likewise, I like the idea of the destruction of the advertising industry that would bring- they're a parasite on the system.

      I said almost - of what I was taught, maths is the sole exception to this. If we only taught what we were absolutely certain of, we would have virtually nothing to teach. Any student who is able to understand the concept will know almost nothing is absolutely certain.

      I'm not saying don't teach it. I'm saying don't teach it as absolute fact. There's a difference. It's the difference between being open to questioning basic assumptions and being closed to such questioning. It's the difference between censorship and free speech. If you are absolutely certain that evolution is and always will be the only fact of how we got here, then by all means teach it as you would math. But if not- then allow other people to come up with other competing ideas.

      Agreed. But students also need to know about the world. Anything we're as confident of as we are of the sciences in question is something students should know.

      Some are equally confident in ID. Why should we put your confidence above their confidence?

      But wealth and science aren't intrinsically linked.

      But they are philosophically linked (as are some forms of religion and poverty, actually). Wealth is linked to materialism, and materialism is linked to objectivism, which is linked to science.

      I am confident I have a better existence now than I wo

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    247. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Considering that no species so far has survived the 100 million years that will take, I think that we can safely dispense with that as an option for now.

      Trilobites made it through 300 million.

      And yet, could be necessary for theories based on experiential instead of experimental evidence. A closed system does not allow out-of-system suggestions- which is a problem with ANY closed system. That's why Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI both spoke against fundamentalism.

      How could you have peer-review of such a theory? It wouldn't make sense. It's not that you can't publish such things, just that you're looking in the wrong place to do so.

      No, they're corporate grant-gathering entities.

      They're rarely corporate at all. And surely at least in the present US climate they could gain more money by taking your approach.

      The point is, by rejecting the particular observations, they missed a major theory. That's what you get when you limit evidence to only the experimental and not the experiential.

      Observations weren't rejected, or certainly would never have been if the system were functioning as it is meant to (and by and large does). A theory was rejected while there was no evidence to support it, which is the sensible approach.

      Worse yet, there are several examples of science conflicting with subjective observation. That's where evolution falls down for many people, for instance.

      But there has never been successful prediction of the world based on subjective observation.

      Why? What makes it more objective than experiential evidence?

      The fact that it's the same for different observers - the very definition of objective.

      Might experimental evidence only APPEAR to be objective- because we've limited the people accepted to judge it to only those brainwashed into certain degrees?

      If there were brainwashing that effective, it would be used a whole lot more. Anyone can look at the experiment and usually you can reproduce it if you're willing to put the time and effort in. Sometimes these days something will require very expensive equipment, but there will be at least one independent team verifying the results.

      Also likely a lie- the use of the word fact is far too loose in normal meaning.

      It's normal meaning is the meaning of the word. If you're allowed to define words how you like, anything you say is true - and meaningless to anyone else.

      Only the humble can learn new things- it would help if science was more humble.

      Science is constantly learning new things.

      I'm not saying don't teach it. I'm saying don't teach it as absolute fact. There's a difference. It's the difference between being open to questioning basic assumptions and being closed to such questioning. It's the difference between censorship and free speech.

      It's not taught as absolute fact. Children are taught about the mistakes of science, the explanations that made sense and were useful for prediction but were eventually discarded and the experimental reasons why, like the luminous aether.

      If you are absolutely certain that evolution is and always will be the only fact of how we got here, then by all means teach it as you would math.

      Like Newtonian gravity, it may not always be the best explanation we have, but it will always be useful to make predictions and base their lives on. And we can't teach them anything better.

      But if not- then allow other people to come up with other competing ideas.

      Of course other people can. And if any of them had anything like the experimental support, explicative powers and predictive ability evolution has, I'd be the first to advocate their teaching to students. But they don't.

      Some are equally confident in ID. Why should we put your confidence above their confidence?

      Because my confidence is based on experiments you can reproduce for yourself and a method that has shown itself

      --
      I am trolling
    248. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      How could you have peer-review of such a theory?

      By being humble and not insisting that a lack of evidence to you is equivalent to a lack of evidence to everybody.

      It wouldn't make sense. It's not that you can't publish such things, just that you're looking in the wrong place to do so.

      Not if the editors and the reviewers start from the idea that *all* evidence is useful, not just reproducible evidence.

      Observations weren't rejected, or certainly would never have been if the system were functioning as it is meant to (and by and large does).

      Actually, many other observations *were* rejected prior to the evidence that was accepted. Evolutionary evidence, such as similar species separated by an ocean, the puzzle piece continental drift theory, mythical evidence such as Homer's Whirlpool, were all observations that were rejected by *modern* science that could have led to plate tectonics much earlier than it was accepted. Some continents are currently drifting as fast as a few feet a year (Africa comes to mind)- that brings climate change.

      But there has never been successful prediction of the world based on subjective observation.

      Not at all true- rice production in Bali is an example of subjective, religious observation producing a more accurate successful prediction than objective observation, which when applied produced a famine. T'Chinook canoes are another example of successful subjective observation. In fact, subjective observation worked for a huge amount of time in human history to do practical engineering.

      The fact that it's the same for different observers - the very definition of objective.

      I'm no longer sure that is ever true. But just to say for a second that it is- what does that matter? Why is experimental evidence *assumed* to be objective, when experiential evidence is not? In fact, shouldn't it be the other way around, since the controled experiment is set up to manage it's environment, where the observation by experience is not?

      If there were brainwashing that effective, it would be used a whole lot more.

      It is, it's called education.

      Anyone can look at the experiment and usually you can reproduce it if you're willing to put the time and effort in. Sometimes these days something will require very expensive equipment, but there will be at least one independent team verifying the results.

      But can a team really be said to be independent if the subjective degrees are the same?

      It's normal meaning is the meaning of the word. If you're allowed to define words how you like, anything you say is true - and meaningless to anyone else.

      Now you're getting the idea of why science is meaningless to some people.

      Science is constantly learning new things.

      And yet, sometimes a new thing comes along and instead of actually even looking at it, it's rejected out of hand.

      It's not taught as absolute fact.

      If science were not being taught as absolute fact, then alternate theories would be welcome in the classroom- even incorrect ones- for the discussion they bring in.

      Children are taught about the mistakes of science, the explanations that made sense and were useful for prediction but were eventually discarded and the experimental reasons why, like the luminous aether.

      Interesting example- because I brought up the luminous aether and subaether theories back in high school- and was sent to the principal's office for disrupting the classroom. I've experienced the censorship of suggesting that science can make a mistake- it's probably the only reason I'm sympathetic when the courts step in to censor what can be said in a science classroom. Be that as it may- there is great value in letting children come up with whatever theories they can find and test those theories themselves. There's also a good deal of value in teaching that science isn't always correct- and

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    249. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Aw heck, missed a /.

      How could you have peer-review of such a theory?

      By being humble and not insisting that a lack of evidence to you is equivalent to a lack of evidence to everybody.

      It wouldn't make sense. It's not that you can't publish such things, just that you're looking in the wrong place to do so.

      Not if the editors and the reviewers start from the idea that *all* evidence is useful, not just reproducible evidence.

      Observations weren't rejected, or certainly would never have been if the system were functioning as it is meant to (and by and large does).

      Actually, many other observations *were* rejected prior to the evidence that was accepted. Evolutionary evidence, such as similar species separated by an ocean, the puzzle piece continental drift theory, mythical evidence such as Homer's Whirlpool, were all observations that were rejected by *modern* science that could have led to plate tectonics much earlier than it was accepted. Some continents are currently drifting as fast as a few feet a year (Africa comes to mind)- that brings climate change.

      But there has never been successful prediction of the world based on subjective observation.

      Not at all true- rice production in Bali is an example of subjective, religious observation producing a more accurate successful prediction than objective observation, which when applied produced a famine. T'Chinook canoes are another example of successful subjective observation. In fact, subjective observation worked for a huge amount of time in human history to do practical engineering.

      The fact that it's the same for different observers - the very definition of objective.

      I'm no longer sure that is ever true. But just to say for a second that it is- what does that matter? Why is experimental evidence *assumed* to be objective, when experiential evidence is not? In fact, shouldn't it be the other way around, since the controled experiment is set up to manage it's environment, where the observation by experience is not?

      If there were brainwashing that effective, it would be used a whole lot more.

      It is, it's called education.

      Anyone can look at the experiment and usually you can reproduce it if you're willing to put the time and effort in. Sometimes these days something will require very expensive equipment, but there will be at least one independent team verifying the results.

      But can a team really be said to be independent if the subjective degrees are the same?

      It's normal meaning is the meaning of the word. If you're allowed to define words how you like, anything you say is true - and meaningless to anyone else.

      Now you're getting the idea of why science is meaningless to some people.

      Science is constantly learning new things.

      And yet, sometimes a new thing comes along and instead of actually even looking at it, it's rejected out of hand.

      It's not taught as absolute fact.

      If science were not being taught as absolute fact, then alternate theories would be welcome in the classroom- even incorrect ones- for the discussion they bring in.

      Children are taught about the mistakes of science, the explanations that made sense and were useful for prediction but were eventually discarded and the experimental reasons why, like the luminous aether.

      Interesting example- because I brought up the luminous aether and subaether theories back in high school- and was sent to the principal's office for disrupting the classroom. I've experienced the censorship of suggesting that science can make a mistake- it's probably the only reason I'm sympathetic when the courts step in to censor what can be said in a science classroom. Be that as it may- there is great value in letting children come up with whatever theories they can find and test those theories themselves. There's also a good deal of value

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    250. Re:Hmm... by m50d · · Score: 1
      By being humble and not insisting that a lack of evidence to you is equivalent to a lack of evidence to everybody.

      How can one do a peer review without trying to reproduce the results?

      Not if the editors and the reviewers start from the idea that *all* evidence is useful, not just reproducible evidence.

      But that's not what those journals were made for, and, judging by the number of successful journals that take that approach, doesn't seem to be a very successful one.

      Actually, many other observations *were* rejected prior to the evidence that was accepted. Evolutionary evidence, such as similar species separated by an ocean, the puzzle piece continental drift theory, mythical evidence such as Homer's Whirlpool, were all observations that were rejected by *modern* science that could have led to plate tectonics much earlier than it was accepted.

      The observations were accepted, published, puzzled over. The species were puzzling, certainly, but there were other theorised mechanisms, the puzzle piece isn't actually that good a fit, myths don't always relate to the facts, overall there wasn't enough reason to believe that the continents just moved. Once the plates were discovered it all made sense of course - the plates are created and destroyed at the edges - but that idea didn't make sense until we knew about the mid-atlantic ridge and understood that the seafloor was spreading at the sides of it.

      Not at all true- rice production in Bali is an example of subjective, religious observation producing a more accurate successful prediction than objective observation, which when applied produced a famine.

      Religious how?

      T'Chinook canoes are another example of successful subjective observation.

      Anyone can observe whether a canoe works or not.

      In fact, subjective observation worked for a huge amount of time in human history to do practical engineering.

      Engineering is all based on observations that are entirely reproducible. Of course they often weren't, but they could have been.

      I'm no longer sure that is ever true. But just to say for a second that it is- what does that matter? Why is experimental evidence *assumed* to be objective, when experiential evidence is not? In fact, shouldn't it be the other way around, since the controled experiment is set up to manage it's environment, where the observation by experience is not?

      Reproducibility is key. If you have a reproducible experience, I'm sure that would be publishable. A controlled experiment is assumed to be reproducible because so far they always have been - which is why the controlled environment is specified so precisely.

      It is, it's called education.

      Education doesn't appear to mean people don't have religious beliefs.

      But can a team really be said to be independent if the subjective degrees are the same?

      It depends, but in this case, yes. Scientists get unexpected results all the time, so what their degree taught them doesn't really affect what they expect from a "serious" experiment - one where the result is essentially unknown, even though the theory may well have predictions. Of course scientists aren't perfectly objective - they're only human - but they will try. On the whole, they seem to succeed - we see more than enough contradictory results published.

      Now you're getting the idea of why science is meaningless to some people.

      Scientific language is usually very precisely defined, and used to mean what it means. Any unusual definition will be explained.

      And yet, sometimes a new thing comes along and instead of actually even looking at it, it's rejected out of hand.

      Sometimes, yes. And that's a bad thing, but an understandable one given the limited manpower and resources of most scientific institutions. If there is evidence for something, it will get attention - not perhaps as quickly as it should, but it will get it.

      If science were not being

      --
      I am trolling
    251. Re:Hmm... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      How can one do a peer review without trying to reproduce the results?

      Confirm-only. You wouldn't be able to say something is false, only confirm that something is true.

      But that's not what those journals were made for, and, judging by the number of successful journals that take that approach, doesn't seem to be a very successful one.

      The point isn't success or lack of success- the point is that this is a logical hole in human belief systems, science included. One that for some strange reason, you refuse to acknowledge.

      The observations were accepted, published, puzzled over. The species were puzzling, certainly, but there were other theorised mechanisms, the puzzle piece isn't actually that good a fit, myths don't always relate to the facts, overall there wasn't enough reason to believe that the continents just moved.

      It's that third one I have a problem with. In my experience, myths *always* have a core of fact behind them, that's why they make good enough stories to become myths. That makes your conclusion that there wasn't enough reason to believe the continents were in fact moving belief based.

      Once the plates were discovered it all made sense of course - the plates are created and destroyed at the edges - but that idea didn't make sense until we knew about the mid-atlantic ridge and understood that the seafloor was spreading at the sides of it.

      Perhaps that's another key here- things don't have to make sense to be true, in fact, human reason is sufficiently imperfect for a lot of true things not to make sense.

      Religious how?

      The temple priests determined the calendar for the year, which determined the plantings, waterings, weedings, and harvest. This continued until the mid 1970s, when an anti-religious group of international aid workers said "this is mythical bunk and we know how to grow rice better". Within three years they had upset the predator/prey relationships on the island so bad that they caused a famine- at which point the farmers went back to the priests, and everything worked again just the same as ever.

      Anyone can observe whether a canoe works or not.

      But that's not how the T'Chinook got their design- it came from their religion about swimmers (Salmon) and whales and the Cedar Man.

      Engineering is all based on observations that are entirely reproducible. Of course they often weren't, but they could have been.

      The fact that they often weren't- means that they DON'T HAVE TO BE.

      Reproducibility is key. If you have a reproducible experience, I'm sure that would be publishable. A controlled experiment is assumed to be reproducible because so far they always have been - which is why the controlled environment is specified so precisely.

      Prayer is highly reproduceable- but I've only seen one published study on it. Tai Chi is reproduceable and has been done for centuries- but chiropracters are still not considered "real doctors" by insurance companies. There's a world of reproducibility in religion- all of which is considered to be subjective by science.

      Education doesn't appear to mean people don't have religious beliefs.

      But it does mean that they put asside the beliefs of their ancestors for a different set of religious beliefs, the beliefs of their degree. Which is all that is neccessary.

      It depends, but in this case, yes. Scientists get unexpected results all the time, so what their degree taught them doesn't really affect what they expect from a "serious" experiment - one where the result is essentially unknown, even though the theory may well have predictions. Of course scientists aren't perfectly objective - they're only human - but they will try. On the whole, they seem to succeed - we see more than enough contradictory results published.

      That's a surprise to me- but possibly because such contradictions rarely have fundamentalists on either side behind them t

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  6. Scooped again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Witchvox had this story early this morning.

  7. Doh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But everyone knows evolution was invented by Satan himself!

  8. Why isn't... by Dante+Shamest · · Score: 1
    ..cloning in the list!? =(

    ...if you don't get it, read this.

    1. Re:Why isn't... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      I almost made fun of you for cloning his post before I "got it"...

  9. LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL no it's not an intelligent design.

  10. For a horrified, thankfully brief, moment... by Homology · · Score: 4, Funny

    I thought the mail client Evolution was named "Scientific Achievement", until I got past the headline...

    1. Re:For a horrified, thankfully brief, moment... by stavromueller · · Score: 0

      So did I.

      --
      I kill harmless processes for sport
    2. Re:For a horrified, thankfully brief, moment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got by the headline? How un-slashdot of you. You must be new to these parts.

  11. How long... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before religious wackos organize a boycott against Science Magazine (assuming they haven't already)?

  12. In a stunning announcement by mhollis · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The State of Kansas, acting under orders of its school board, has now banned the journal "Science," stating that it does not fit the definition that will be used from now on in Kansas education of its title.

    Educators are ordered to immediately remove the journal from all libraries, collections and classrooms.

    --
    Gods don't kill people, people with gods kill people.
    1. Re:In a stunning announcement by ndansmith · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Which is a shame, because Science has been running so many high-quality articles lately.

    2. Re:In a stunning announcement by slashname3 · · Score: 0, Troll

      New flash! State of Kansas has banned the use of the term Science from all schools and teachers with degrees are being fired. "They just don't seem to want to teach the true faith. So they have to go."

      In a possibly related story people from Kansas are so dumb they are unable to figure out how to turn the lights on in their own homes.

    3. Re:In a stunning announcement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more likely they are waiting for the intelligent designer to turn them on for them

    4. Re:In a stunning announcement by quokkapox · · Score: 1

      Don't knock Kansas. The education authorities there have done us a great service. We now know which state to look at first when we need people who can flip burgers without asking questions.

      --
      it's a blue bright blue Saturday hey hey
  13. Yup by everphilski · · Score: 1

    I would be inclined to agree with you. Science (the magazine) is making its stance known in the whole debacle (in case anyone didn't know already). To me the science article here wasn't that convincing. Most of it was genetics anyways - one could argue genetics was the big breakthrough. (personally I'm a fan of runner up #2...)

    -everphilski-

  14. The Kansas Case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SOT, but before this discussion gets any hotter, note that what the Board of Ed was requiring was that teachers would be forced to read a prepared statement about intelligent design. That's entirely different from following a cirriculum and choosing whether or not to read verbatim from a textbook.

    I basically think that a lot of those claims for "separation of church and state" are not only outside the scope of what the US Constitution specifies, but on this one, I think the judge did the right thing - if for the wrong reasons. However, the discussion belongs in a theology or philosophy course, not a biology course.

    1. Re:The Kansas Case by relentless1914 · · Score: 1

      Well the constitution of the United States does not mention "Seperation of Church and State"....

      There is the establishment clause that says that the government cannot endorse an official State religion, but the Church/State argument is not based on the constitution. Up until the Secular Humanist revelution, (the Enlightenment), the most used text book in the schools across the country was the Bible.

    2. Re:The Kansas Case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      from this page: http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~brians/hum_303/enlightenm ent.html

      The Enlightenment

                Although the intellectual movement called "The Enlightenment" is usually associated with the 18th century, its roots in fact go back much further. But before we explore those roots, we need to define the term. This is one of those rare historical movements which in fact named itself. Certain thinkers and writers, primarily in London and Paris, believed that they were more enlightened than their compatriots and set out to enlighten them.

    3. Re:The Kansas Case by Bassman59 · · Score: 1
      Well the constitution of the United States does not mention "Seperation (SIC!!!!) of Church and State"....

      There is the establishment clause that says that the government cannot endorse an official State religion, but the Church/State argument is not based on the constitution.

      You are so wrong. Read the First Amendment to the Constitution. The Establishment Clause says, and I quote, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

      In other words, the "Church/State argument" is COMPLETELY based on the Constitution.

      Where'd you go to school? Kansas? Up until the Secular Humanist revelution, (the Enlightenment), the most used text book in the schools across the country was the Bible.

    4. Re:The Kansas Case by relentless1914 · · Score: 1

      "Seperation of Church and State" is very different from "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Saying that no one can mention religion in public schools, or forcing people to exclude Jesus, Mohammed or any other religious figure from schools is WAY outside of the original intent of the First Amendment. You know it, and so do I.

      I'm surprised at how selective peoples understanding of this is. The First Ammendment was meant to stop the creation of an "Official National Religion" or "Official State Religion". The language while archaic by today's standards isn't really all that hard to understand.

      Technically this prohibition was meant for congress, and was specifically to prevent the creation of laws that favor one religion or another. Since I don't know of any laws that state that a Baptist preacher must give a prayer before city council meetings, or anything like that, such action, as long as it was not legislated by law would NOT violate the establishment clause.

      Actually I went to school in NY.

      Merry Christmas

    5. Re:The Kansas Case by Bassman59 · · Score: 1
      "Seperation (SIC!!!!) of Church and State" is very different from "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

      Ummm, not it's not, and decades of jurisprudence say so.

      Saying that no one can mention religion in public schools, or forcing people to exclude Jesus, Mohammed or any other religious figure from schools is WAY outside of the original intent of the First Amendment. You know it, and so do I.

      And that's not what's happening, although you'd believe otherwise if your only source of information is blowhards like Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh.

      What the courts have consistently decided is that you cannot TEACH one religion's tenets and precepts in a public school. Public schools are government entities, and as such showing a preference for one religion over others is a small step on that slippery slope towards the establishment of a state religion. Nobody is saying that you cannot teach Catholicism in a private Catholic school. Nor is anyone saying that you cannot have a social studies/humanties class in comparative religion.

      Christmas pageants and the like are usually allowed because to the "defenders of Christmas'" eternal chagrin, these events are essentially secular in nature.

    6. Re:The Kansas Case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (OP here again)

      I think what the atheists are afraid of is the slippery slope. "OK, we allow the Ten Commandments in first. Now let's try for Biblical creationism." ...and so forth. It could be done as piecework. Yeah, I can understand that viewpoint.

      But banning religious messages or anything with a hint - or public prayer - is taking it too far. Banning any theological discussion is in effect establishing Atheism as the only state-sanctioned religious belief. It is clearly against "free exercise" as well.

      I've yet to come across a story where the state came down hard on any theological discussion that involved a religion other than Christianity. Maybe I'm reading the wrong rags? Also: ID seems is a theme that runs through all the major religions, not just Christianity, and I take note of the loaded buzz-phrase "comparative religion".

    7. Re:The Kansas Case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the classical greek creation mythos is much closer to modern science than the christian creation mythos is.

      Hesiod, in his Theogony, says that Chaos existed in the beginning, and then gave birth to Gaia (the Earth), Tartarus (the Underworld), Eros (desire), Nyx (the darkness of the night) and Erebus (the darkness of the Underworld). Gaia brought forth Ouranos, the starry sky, her equal, to cover her, the hills, and the fruitless deep of the Sea, Pontus, "without sweet union of love," out of her own self. But afterwards, Hesiod tells, she lay with Heaven and bore the World-Ocean Oceanus, Coeus and Crius and the Titans Hyperion and Iapetus, Theia and Rhea, Themis and Mnemosyne and Phoebe of the golden crown and lovely Tethys. "After them was born Cronos the wily, youngest and most terrible of her children, and he hated his lusty sire." Cronos, at Gaia's urging, castrates Ouranos. He marries Rhea who bears him Hestia, Demeter, Hera, Hades, Poseidon, and Zeus. Zeus and his brothers overthrow Cronos and the other Titans, then draw lots to determine what each of them will rule. Zeus draws heaven, Poseidon draws sea, and Hades draws earth.

      This is interesting, because in the greek mythos there was chaos at the begining, ummm, like there was a huge explosion? a big bang perhaps?

      Then the universe created the gods and the gods created man. But the greeks had many gods, or spirits and they tended to say that the wind blew because a spirit was making that wind blow. So the gods to the greeks where just forces of nature.

      So the universe created everything and the forces of nature came into play and built up and created more complex forces and from that was created simplier forms and then more complex forms and finally man. Sure seems almost identical to current scientific thought on the matter and I don't see any supernatural creation god in this mythos.

      Buddist say that you are here now, and can only perceive what you can perceive so thinking about what happened before your own perceptions or before the accounts of anyone elses perceptions on a matter is futile and useless.

      I love the Egyption creation mythos, there is a creator in that one, but he created the universe by jacking off to relieve loneliness... pretty funny stuff, I can just imagine some uptight christian teacher trying to explain that mythos to a class full of giggling beavis and buttheads.

      In Hinduism, nature and all of God's creations are manifestations of Him. He is within and without his creations, pervading the entire universe and also observing it externally. Hence all animals and humans have a divine element in them that is covered by the ignorance and illusions of material or profane existence.

      --

      I stopped going to church when I was 5 years old, the christan bible is so full of bs, it's obvious fantasy. I figured that out at about the same time I figured out there was no santa clause and no tooth fairy. My favorite verse of the old testament is that were it says that if you beat your servant as long as they live for 1 full day before they die, it wasn't your beating that killed them. Nice. That is how I live _my_ life. NOT. I married a Muslim woman and she died from cancer and my "devoutly" Christian mother tells me that my dead wife is burning in hell because she died a Muslim. Wow. With a mother like that, who needs fundamentalist Muslim Jihads for an enemy. I just walked away, my plan is to never speak another word to that woman my entire life.

      I have often suddenly been made aware of myself sitting at a certain place in the universe, driving in my car, or sitting at home, or walking down the street, with the thought, "Why this, why do I exist, why does the universe exist the way it does, why am I as I am in the situation that I am in right now." It is a very bizzare feeling. I think that everything exists all at the same time in an infinite maze of creations, all of which are infinitely complexe and that this immense complexity is God, the universe, and everythin

    8. Re:The Kansas Case by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      The language is neither archaic, nor hard to understand. It is actually relatively recently that historical revisionists with a religious agenda have gone back and muddied the meaning by combining establishment meaning "established church" and establishment meaning "public or private institution." And then carrying that so far as to imply that it is okay to give a nod to one religion as long as there are many denominations of it.

      Reading other works by the framers of the constitution and the bill of rights makes it abundantly clear that the intention was separation of church and state. But more importantly it should be obvious to any clear headed individual that when you mix church and state the results have been disasterous EVERY TIME.

      One might also note that the biggest pundit of "the constitution only says we can't create a STATE religion" is Pat Robertson. This is the guy who publicly advocates assassination of foreign leaders and publicly implies that God's wrath should befall cities who remove school board officials which support his idealogy.

      The results have been disasterous EVERY TIME.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    9. Re:The Kansas Case by archaiclinuxuser · · Score: 1

      According to http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/hum_303/enlightenment.h tml, the Enlightment occured before the founding of the country. Considering the U.S. forefathers were heavily influenced by the Enlightenment, I suspect they probably meant a separation of separation of church and state. You might want to see James Madison's view, http://www.jmu.edu/madison/center/main_pages/madis on_archives/constit_confed/rights/epilogue/epilogu e.htm, or, perhaps, the view of Thomas Jefforson on Church and State, http://www.unf.edu/~dschwam/danbury.htm.

  15. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by 110010001000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How about you guys just keep to your beliefs and stop trying to change ours? We don't need or want your "message" - so keep it to yourself like most other religions do. If we are interested in Christianity we will ask you about it.

  16. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by bchapp · · Score: 1

    I am not trolling, but I really couldn't tell if you are being serious or sarcastic, especially about renaming the planets...

  17. Tacky, tacky by Otter · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Shoehorning a bunch of legitimately interesting work into "Evolution!" is just heavy-handed politicking, that cheapens both science and Science. What they don't seem to get is that the ID people have no long-term investment in science and don't care if they bring the whole thing down; scientists need to be careful about drawing the line between research and politics.

    And, hello -- how about the HapMap?

    1. Re:Tacky, tacky by DogDude · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I couldn't agree more. To even mention "Intelligent Design" or other such nonsense in a scientific discussion gives it credence that it doesn't deserve. "Intelligent Design" should be given the same amount of attention as the theory that the guy standing on the corner of my street has about aliens, slippers, and papayas: none.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    2. Re:Tacky, tacky by phritz · · Score: 2, Informative

      Did you even read the articles? I highly recommend them - very accessible and good reads. And, BTW, a third of the main 'evolution in action' article is dedicated to HapMap. They make an excellent case for how evolutionary science has had some really big discoveries this year. ID only gets mentioned once, in the weekly editorial. But with things like the comparison between the chimp and human genome and observations of speciation without geographical barriers, it's clear that this wasn't simply a political decision (although it might certainly of played a role). Check it out - it's all accessible without a subscription.

    3. Re:Tacky, tacky by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Intelligent Design people should be laughed at, and then called names, such as "idiot" and "moron". I don't believe in ignoring them. They should wear little bell-boy outfits and dance around to organ grinder music. I could watch that all day.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    4. Re:Tacky, tacky by fermion · · Score: 1
      One mistake that most non-scientists make, especially those non-scientists that like to the cafeteria style philosophy and religion, is that science is an attempt to bring the natural world under a consitant and rigorous framework. At the heart of science, there is no strict seperations of fields, no rules that say these tools can only be used in these cases, or results in one field cannot be at least tennetively applied to anohter. The only rules have to do with how we might make a valid claim. For instance, have empirical evidence indicated that it is valid, a framework can be built describing why it is valid, a model that can be used to other claim that can then be tested for validity, and a description of who the new claims fits in the current cannon.

      What this means is the following. The same theory of radiocative decay that is used to date Noah's Ark, and Jesus shroud, and the temples in Israel and Palestine, are also valid to date date the artifacts found in archaelogical digs, and the same assumptions, that animals tend to die around thier stuff and radioactive decay is constant over a long period, are used. The same theory that are used to gentically match relatives, can also be used to catalog other remains. The same theory that is used to adapt medical treatment to resistant viruses, is also used to map changes in the genome over time. The same anthropology that is used to study how consumers respond to products, is also used to study how civilizations evolve.

      The fundemental fallacy of these opportunistic people who wish to violate the will of God by the application of technology to medicine and better lifestyle, but cry foul when we make mention of the logical consequences, is that one cannot arbitrarilily limit the domain of a theory, any more than one can arbitrarily limit the domain of god, despite the fact that so many religous people wish to do both by cliaming to not only know the domain of the science, buy also by getting on the TV and claiming to know the mind of god. Both will take us to a better place, if we are open minding enough to allow the truth to set us free.

      And don't be fooled. It would be easier if we could just wave a magic wand and limit the domain of a theory. I am sure many current headache would be healed if we could limit quantum mechanics to the subatomic and atomic world, classical mechanics to the conventional world, and General Reletivitiy to the macro world. And on a practical level we do so, just like when we assume the world is flat for calculating distances. However, if we had made such sortcuts reality, I would not be typing on this computer, and we would not have the cool LED christmas lights.

      And if one believes that politics can be seperated from reality, that is another myth that needs to be destroyed. Making decision for purely political reason, with no regard to the negative consequences, is surely bad. However, focusing attention on information that might be useful to expand and more engage the public is a wider conversation is surely good. For instance, Melvin Laird has a article in the current issue of Foreign Affairs in which he discusses the US withdrawl from Vietnam, and the lessons we might apply to the current situation in Iraq. I do not see this as purely political. I see this a man with something to say, and believing now is the right time to say it.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    5. Re:Tacky, tacky by commodoresloat · · Score: 1
      the theory that the guy standing on the corner of my street has about aliens, slippers, and papayas

      I am intrigued by these theories and I would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

  18. Runner Up Scientific Achievement of 2005 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Studies indicating possibility of a heliocentric solar system.

  19. Song and dance by Valacosa · · Score: 1
    "The number one spot was awarded jointly to several studies that illuminated the intricate workings of evolution. The announcement comes in the same week that a US court banned the teaching of intelligent design in classrooms.'"

    [To music]: Weeee're gonna make it after aaaalllllll!!!
    --
    "Live as if you'll die tomorrow." Ridiculous. You could die later today.
  20. Scientific Achievement? by AxemRed · · Score: 1

    More like the most politically-involved scientific achievement of the year. Maybe that's what the were aiming for, but it seems like they're trying to pass it off as if we just figured it out this year.

  21. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by mrak+and+swepe · · Score: 5, Funny

    For example,"I think the planets should be renamed because they're named after fake gods."

    Given that you Christians believe in one God (or is it three?), won't it get rather confusing if you name all the planets after him?

    You won't be able to tell Uranus from Urelbow.

  22. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your handle says it all.

  23. usual Slashdot accuracy by snarkh · · Score: 2, Informative

    The announcement comes in the same week that a US court banned the teaching of intelligent design in classrooms.


    The court did not ban the teaching of the ID, it ruled that the teachers
    cannot be forced to do that.

    1. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by Transcendent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Insightful? More ironic

      "Our conclusion today is that it is unconstitutional to teach intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in a public school classroom"

      I'd link to other news sites, but you can google it yourself.

    2. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by snarkh · · Score: 2, Informative
      Ironic? More moronic.
      Why don't you read the judgement:


      1. A declaratory judgment is hereby issued in favor of Plaintiffs pursuant
      to 28 U.S.C. 2201, 2202, and 42 U.S.C. 1983 such that
      Defendants' ID Policy violates the Establishment Clause of the First
      Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and Art. I, 3 of
      the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
      2. Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65, Defendants are permanently enjoined
      from maintaining the ID Policy in any school within the Dover Area
      School District.

    3. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by Transcendent · · Score: 1

      The quote presented in my previous post was from the ruling of the judge.

      The actual order by itself leaves the "Policy" term up for debate, which requires the reading of the plantiff's complaint along with the defendents answer, and so on. I would assume that the "policy" they speak of is the one outlined by the plantiffs, which is in the official complaint. Within it, it states the changed cirriculum: "Students will be made aware of gaps/problems in Darwin's Theory and other theories of evoution including, but not limited to Indelligent Design." That, along with the much longer statement listed in the complaint which was quoted from the original press release of the Dover school district, implies that the school will present ID as an alternative. Hence, banning their "policy" would ban the teaching of ID in public schools for that district (which is implied by the Judge's statement). You could even say that it bans the teaching of any alternative to the theory of evolution, but going from the actual memorandum, that is not the intent.

      Again, there is much interpretation of the judgement when only reading the official ruling, but when put in the context of the Judge's statement, it becomes clear that he banned the teaching of ID. But, one would have to read the 139 page memorandum.

    4. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by snarkh · · Score: 1
      I don't think your implication is correct. The fact that the _policy_ of teaching ID is unconstitutional
      does not imply that teaching it as an alternative to evolution by an individual teacher is unconstitutional.


      But even if you take that very broad interpretation the ruling says nothing about teaching it as long as it is not presented as a scientific alternative to evolution.


      Therefore the claim that the ruling bans teaching of ID is erroneous even under the broadest interpretation.

    5. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

      Please mod this down. As other commenters have proven with complete quotes from the ruling, this comment is not informative - it is wrong. Teaching intelligent design as well as the policy of teaching intelligent design were ruled unconstitutional.

    6. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by snarkh · · Score: 1


      Perhaps you should read the judgement and the ruling. What was ruled inconstitutional
      was the policy of teaching ID as a scientific alternative to evolution. Even under the most broad interpretation imaginable it is not the same as banning teaching ID.

    7. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

      I did read the judgment and ruling. I'm also familiar with court precedent of the Establishment Clause. It follows from the ruling that teaching ID in any classroom, not just that of science and biology, would be teaching religion as theory rather than philosophy, and therefore banned.

    8. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by snarkh · · Score: 1


      Care to substantiate your claim with specific quotations?

    9. Re:usual Slashdot accuracy by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The fact that the _policy_ of teaching ID is unconstitutional does not imply that teaching it as an alternative to evolution by an individual teacher is unconstitutional.

      I don't see how you can conclude that. In both cases it is an offical of the government using their government powers to do the same thing. I don't think changing the scale of government action from a state to a school district or to an individual school or to an individual classroom or tutored to a single student changes the act itself, or the unconstitutionality of the act. Use of government power to aid and promote religion.

      teaching it as long as it is not presented as a scientific alternative to evolution

      I haven't read the (139 page) ruling, but yeah, I'd certainly agree with the direction you're going. You could certainly mention it in relation to current events in a social studies class, and in fact I think it would be a great to explain what it is and cover why it is not science and why the court ruled it constitutional. That's very different than pushing ID itself. An excellent case study in understanding our constitution and what it means and how it operates.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  24. Why isn't... by Viper+Daimao · · Score: 1

    ..cloning on the list!? =(

    ...if you don't get it, read this.

    --
    "In the game of life, someone always has to lose. To me, if life were fair, that someone would always be Oklahoma." -DKR
  25. Evolution within Intelligently Designed systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately, recent U.S. court decisions have barred public schools from exploring evolution within such Intelligently Designed organisms as Dolly the sheep.

    Still, it would be interesting to study differences in evolution.

  26. I know this is 146 years late, Mr. Darwin by digitaldc · · Score: 1

    FYI Charles Darwing wrote On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection in 1859.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Darwin

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  27. Evolution is predictable? by COMON$ · · Score: 0, Redundant
    Wow, I want to read the paper that proves that. Not that I support the ID movement, but predicting the outcome of chance is quite a stretch.

    I was taight evolution was science because it was testable. Theism is not science because it is untestable.

    ID could be science if we could show that some existing race put us here for their own purposes, but that would involve finding them.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    1. Re:Evolution is predictable? by gorzek · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm afraid I can't point you directly to any research, but the general idea is that we can predict with some accuracy how a species will adapt to a chance in its environment. It is also something we have witnessed on a limited scale in real-time. One example is moth coloration in response to air pollution. We have actually witnessed and documented phenomena such as this, which demonstrate evolution via natural selection happens on a pretty regular basis, even now. Here is a (very brief) link, with discussion of the moth phenomenon: http://anthro.palomar.edu/evolve/evolve_2.htm

    2. Re:Evolution is predictable? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > ID could be science if we could show that some existing race put us here for their own purposes

      Wouldn't it then simply be a "fact?"

    3. Re:Evolution is predictable? by 1ucius · · Score: 1

      Good point (I'd mod it up), but there is still no way to determine whether that change occured due to a random event or whether some ID decided to help the bugs survive in their new environment. Come up with an experiment to choose between those two hypothesis and you'll win multiple Nobel Prizes.

      Conversely, even if ID advocates could find some structure that required a 1 in 10^9999999999999999999999999999 event to occur, the existance of that structure would still not prove there is an ID. Evolutionists could still argue that if that event hadn't occured, we wouldn't be here pondering it's unlikelyness.

      In the end, there are limits of what "Science" can do and what it can't.

    4. Re:Evolution is predictable? by gorzek · · Score: 1

      Isn't that why we have religion and philosophy, then? To explain what science can't? If so, why do some insist on using religion to re-explain what science already has?

    5. Re:Evolution is predictable? by mugnyte · · Score: 1

      Evolution is only partly built from chance. Chance is the expansion of "attempts at a generation" which hit the wall. The predictive portion is the filtering by which only some of those chances live on the form a viable mutation. We predict what might live by studying the filters each generation hit.

      Predictively, the common cold is a mutation on several strains of virus. They are shuffled, broken and pieced together a myriad of ways in each host. However, there is a limit to which mutations are viable because (for example) only a few of the exposed protein signatures can become infectious to that host type.

      Also, quite a few other mutations form a non-working virus (replication, delivery mechanisms, etc are flawed).

      By changing the filter to (say) kills all viruses of a certain DNA sequence (or, more aptly, protein signature), we allow only those which *do not match* to pass through. This is in addition to other filters already in place (replication, infection, etc).

      If you take this to a grand scale, mutations in infectious viruses, filtered against all drugs, makes for a new strain, which is no longer affected by the drugs. Guess what's been predicted for a long time, and verified over and over? That the common cold you catch is a strain you've not built antibodies for yet, so it passes all your filters and sticks. Evolution in action, all year long and within every person alive. It's been studied, replicated, predicted and verified. Same for antibacterial concepts, animal food chains, traffic patterns, information represenation, and to some part, human behavior.

      If you want to add ID somewhere in there, be my guest, but it's not necessary. There's nothing magic about it. In fact, the entire process is used every day in evolutionary programming models - nothing in the results is "so complex" as to think each evolutionary model is actually a little "god" intelligently shuffling things around. It's a system of replication, mutation and filtration.

      The fact that this simple concept, which is used in so many places in science, is attacked for it's link to human development is a little sad. Understand first that the propaganda of religious fundmentalism seeks to cloud the issue. Evolution pertaining to human development is sacred to them. But to the rest of the world, it's evolution is just a tool of science, to explain (as in test/predict/replicate). This tool helped build the compression routines for phone lines, the highway/traffic layouts for your town, and many things inside the IT world (voice-recognition, spam filtering, etc). Claiming it's invalid is a bit ironic - it's proven results are unavoidable in the man-made or natural world.

      To those that have any inclination to see ID kept around: Please remember that evolution is alive in well in many parts of the scientific world, and is used to make viable, existing products. Animal development through evolution may be complex in it's DNA content and effects, but the process is working elsewhere, so there's no reason to doubt it.

    6. Re:Evolution is predictable? by 1ucius · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Science has its balliwack, religion and philosophy have theirs. Both sides have a tendency to overstep their bounds in this subject area.

    7. Re:Evolution is predictable? by grub · · Score: 1


      If so, why do some insist on using religion to re-explain what science already has?

      Because science is slowly chipping away at their mythologies. They can't stop it so they've decided to insert their crap into science as a trojan horse so their fables seem to hold true. This document entitled The Wedge at Work isn't short but it's an excellent read.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    8. Re:Evolution is predictable? by mildgift · · Score: 1

      It's religious chauvanism. If religion has helped someone, say, in finding meaning for their life, for getting through difficult times, or something else significant, then people feel compelled to defend everything that the religion pushes.

      It's like this: say you love your parents, but, they sometimes do jerky things. You're still going to defend them, even when they're jerks. Eventually, you *may* grow out of it, and be an independent person, but, most people tend to stick up for their parents' imperfections.

      I think religious people are doing the same thing: defending their authority figure from (what they see as) criticism.

  28. Evolution? Scientific Achievement of 2005? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who are they kidding anyway? Evolution hasn't been scientifically proven. How can it be named a scientific achievement?

  29. Scott Adams is a genius by Valacosa · · Score: 1

    "At some point in time an intelligent being had to be involved."
    Seriously, when I read that, I honestly saw "At some point in time an intelligent being had to be evolved." Funny blunder on my part.

    Anyway, I gave someone mod points earlier today for posting this short essay by Scott Adams. I recommend you read it.

    --
    "Live as if you'll die tomorrow." Ridiculous. You could die later today.
  30. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by emjaycue · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Right now, people should be doing plain ol evengalicizing like Jesus taught
    Indeed. To bad so little of the evangalizing that goes on is done the way Jesus taught. But, then again, caring for the sick and poor without expecting anything in return and telling the wealthy and privileged to go jump through a needle is so blase. It's so much easier to go after the schoolteachers and complain about the use of the phrase "Happy Holidays" at the local Walmart.
  31. Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ....but creationists? For some reason each and every single time a story about evolution, intelligent design or even the origins of life appears, it amasses enourmous amounts of comments in a short period of time. I predict the same for this story, with regret.

    I'm wondering what the hell is going on? Is it just a political hot potato and ./'ers are simply venting here? This might be, but I've seen a lot of comments from Slashdoters in support for ID one way or the other. It's scary because the Slashdot readership to me is apparently amoung the most educated on the net. We are mostly geeks after all.

    It would be scary to think that all the geeks around me actually believe in religion. When I was younger I just assummed that most people were completely secular like me, and didn't believe in religion at all; delegating it to the status of fictional works like comic books etc. It came as something of a shock to my world view that most people are not in fact secular but do hold religious beliefs. I haven't quite recovered from it.

    Or maybe it's just trolling by the GNAA et al, with Slashdotters flaming back. I'd like to believe this.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
    1. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It would be scary to think that all the geeks around me actually believe in religion.

            I have noticed that, among software engineers, the percentage of individuals who hold extravagant beliefs (UFOs, intelligent design, ghosts, psychic powers) seems to be alarmingly high. I still that fellow, who would introduce himself as a computer scientist, who claimed that "The Blair Witch" movie depicted events as they actually happened....

    2. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by 110010001000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most celebrated scientists and great thinkers (Einstein, DiVinci, Archimedes, etc) believed in God. In Einstein's case, his parent were non-religious - yet he was very religious himself. There is no corollation between intelligence and religous belief.

    3. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Like with most things, some slashdotters like me are being *extra* nerdy and insisting that mere theological theories don't get touted as fact. Evolution, having replaced "God did it" with "Random Chance did it" is particularily bad at this; as is the claim that ID is not science because of some incredibly arbitrary and subjective rules about who is a scientist and what a science is. Thus the argument every time it shows up.

      BTW, it has nothing at all to do with creationism- the type of ID we're talking about takes a given the scientific age of the earth at about 4 billion years and the latest age of the universe at 19.3 billion years. Creationists peg the entire shebang at much less than that- around 6000 years or so. What the argument is really about to me is arrogance, certainty, and the nature of the word "fact".

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    4. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you deliberately feeding the fire, or are you genuinely that close-minded?

      Why is it scary to you that so many geeks might actually believe religion? An awful lot of brilliant math and science has been performed by people who firmly believed religion...does that terrify you, too?

      Or do you just assume that, if someone believes in religion, they're supporters of ID and incapable of rational thought?

      I don't understand the anti-religous crusade so many people seem to take on as their own little holy war. Why the hell can't you leave me alone? You believe what you want, and I'll believe what I want. I won't teach your kids to believe what I do, and you can just stay away from mine.

      If you want to talk about testable hypotheses, we can do that. You produce evidence contrary to my understanding of the universe, and I'll change my understanding. I'd hope you could do the same thing.

      But if you want to get into a contest of faiths, don't even bother. And don't think that atheism isn't a faith: absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. You can prove to me that we as a species evolved, ultimately, from a tiny pile of organic slime clinging to a rock in some antediluvian sea. Check. You can't prove to me that no god exists, any more than I can prove to you one does.

      Your railing against religion (and everyone else's) as a whole (as opposed to railing against statements made based on religion that are demonstrably false, which is, of course, appropriate) is no better than any other zealot demanding that his religion is right and everyone else's is wrong.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    5. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      Arbitrary and subjective rules... like math?

      You are correct that the definition of "science" that requires such attributes as predictive, logical, testable, falsifable and provable is both "Arbitrary and subjective". The problem is that multiple definitions of the word "science" are being used. When proponents of ID use the word "science", they are referring to a different process than the one described by the previous attributes.

      The purpose of language is dilluted when multiple concepets are described by the same word because of the danger of confusing the two concepts.

      Personally, I don't care what definition you use for the word "science", just don't try to tell me that the concept your definition of the word "science" describes is the same concept that I am talking about when I talk about a process definied by the five aforementioned attributes.

    6. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      as is the claim that ID is not science because of some incredibly arbitrary and subjective rules about who is a scientist and what a science is.

      Science is the experiment. Observation, Hypothesis, Experiment, Result, Conclusion. ID omits entirely Experiment and result, thus is NOT science. ID doesn't even admit the possibility of experiment. Not science.

      What the argument is really about to me is arrogance, certainty, and the nature of the word "fact".

      The argument to me is about turning the clock back 300 years, and placing society back under the boot of the first and second estates, or their nearest cultural equivilants.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    7. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by the_rev_matt · · Score: 1

      You'd be surprised at the number of computer geeks who are completely unable to deal rationally or logically with anything outside of computers. I think a part of it stems from "Oh, I'm technically minded so I understand this easily". Skill in one field does not translate automagically to skill in another. I know people who are brilliant at math and physics but believe whole heartedly in astrology or tarot or homeopathic healing.

      Never underestimate the extent of human stupidity.

      Note that I don't think I'm any smarter than people who believe silly things, just that I'm more 'reality based'.

      --
      this is getting old and so are you

      blog

    8. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Dadoo · · Score: 1

      I'm wondering what the hell is going on? Is it just a political hot potato and ./'ers are simply venting here?

      The bible-thumbers are feeling persecuted, again. (Amazing that a WASP could feel persecuted, isn't it?) It happens every so often. I don't know if you're old enough to remember Reagan's presidency, but then, it was abortion and porn. Now, it's evolution and the "War on Christmas". I imagine, in the 2020-2030 time frame, it'll be something else.

      I'd like to say "just ignore them", but they can really make some progress, if allowed to work unchecked.

      It would be scary to think that all the geeks around me actually believe in religion.

      It's not just any religion that's a problem. Nearly all the people I work with are religious (including me) and I don't have a problem with that. It's the evangelical, creationist types, who believe everyone must be converted, that really scare me. We have a few of those here, too.

      --
      Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
    9. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by jimktrains · · Score: 1

      I think that those who support ID here either support a theory of evolution where there exists a God who wanted it to happen that way and/or know that ID is NOT science and is SEPERATE from science. Or at least I will be as saddened as parent if not....

      --
      "You will do foolish things, but do them with enthusiasm." - S. G. Colette
    10. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Roy-Svork · · Score: 1

      Look I'm sorry all this talk of people who support ID being stupid and the like has got me all flamed up. ID isn't about creationism, and has no religious motivations whatsoever. All it says is that we shouldn't dismiss the intelligent design THEORY out of hand, it is important in humankinds search for the ultimate answer to life the universe and everything that we look at all tha available options to explain where life originally came from. There is a problem with evolution, in that darwinian THEORY cannot explain where life came from, only how it continued to change. There is no doubt that evolution is occurring as it's just plain obvious, but to me the issue of irreducable complexity rules out evolution or even biochemical predestination. I mean how could DNA or the process of cell division 'evolve' if evolution itself requires cells to divide and carry on it's genetic blueprint. ID is just the best thing for this we have at the moment, so someone come up with something better and I'd probably go with it...

    11. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I don't understand the anti-religous crusade so many people seem to take on as their own little holy war. Why the hell can't you leave me alone? You believe what you want, and I'll believe what I want. I won't teach your kids to believe what I do, and you can just stay away from mine.

      Ever hear of this guy. He was right. He almost got burned at the stake. There are thousands more like him, a lot of whom did get burned at the stake. For what? Being right.

      You think this won't happen again? Think that humanity has "grown up"? What happens when your kids and their irrational beliefs propagate and my kids get derided, supressed, or even killed for simply saying the truth.

      Billions have lived under the boot of religion. Billions are still living under it. You think that's right? I don't. I think that indoctrinating your children, or anyone elses, is morally wrong; and socially dangerous.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    12. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Dadoo · · Score: 1

      Why the hell can't you leave me alone?

      See, here's the problem: it's the religious nuts that won't leave the rest of us alone, not the other way around.

      All we want to do is teach science in science class and teach religion in church - where they both belong. But is that good enough for you? Of course not. You need to make up some bogus theory to get religion in my science class in a ridiculous attempt to blur the line between science and faith.

      --
      Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
    13. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Arbitrary and subjective rules... like math?

      Yes, that's one example. 1+1=2 because we say it does and because it works for our model; other models may differ.

      You are correct that the definition of "science" that requires such attributes as predictive, logical, testable, falsifable and provable is both "Arbitrary and subjective". The problem is that multiple definitions of the word "science" are being used. When proponents of ID use the word "science", they are referring to a different process than the one described by the previous attributes.

      To some extent yes- but then again, so do proponents of evolution as far as I can tell. The premise that random mutation happens is neither testable or falsifiable, and it's completely counter to human logic, for instance.

      The purpose of language is dilluted when multiple concepets are described by the same word because of the danger of confusing the two concepts.

      Maybe your purpose of language is- mine isn't.

      Personally, I don't care what definition you use for the word "science", just don't try to tell me that the concept your definition of the word "science" describes is the same concept that I am talking about when I talk about a process definied by the five aforementioned attributes.

      Well, evolution doesn't fit those five aforementioned attributes either- so I guess you'll just have to bow out of the conversation entirely.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    14. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by mce · · Score: 5, Informative
      There is no corollation between intelligence and religous belief.

      Yes there is. The more intellegent people are, the less likely they are to be religious. Pointers to plenty of studies that show this can be found here. The fact that there are indeed famous intelligent and religious people is not a proof of the contrary (as any intelligent person will know :-).

      Besides, when refering to people like Da Vinci, one has to take into account the society that they lived in and the corresponding education that they recieved.

    15. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Science is the experiment. Observation, Hypothesis, Experiment, Result, Conclusion. ID omits entirely Experiment and result, thus is NOT science. ID doesn't even admit the possibility of experiment. Not science.

      Well, for that matter, so does Evolution, which is based entirely on observations, hypothesis and conclusions. So by this set of completely arbitrary and capricious rules, which are DIFFERENT from the 5 given for the previous poster, Evolution is not science and should not be taught as science, and neither should biology, quantum mechanics, economics, psychiatry....you get the picture.

      The argument to me is about turning the clock back 300 years, and placing society back under the boot of the first and second estates, or their nearest cultural equivilants.

      You mean kind of like you do when you allow sciences such as biology to be taught as fact? All you've done is replace the church council with peer-reviewed journals.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    16. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 3, Informative
      ID isn't about creationism, and has no religious motivations whatsoever.

      Judge John Jones disagres. A direct quote from his 139 page ruling:

      "It is ironic that several of these individuals, who so staunchly and proudly touted their religious convictions in public, would time and again lie to cover their tracks and disguise the real purpose behind the ID Policy."


      ID is all about religion. It was made by the religious, for the religious and to be religious. Any debate about ID is a debate about religion. This fact is unescapable.

      There is a problem with evolution, in that darwinian THEORY cannot explain where life came from, only how it continued to change.... I mean how could DNA or the process of cell division 'evolve' if evolution itself requires cells to divide and carry on it's genetic blueprint.

      Evolution, when combined with other disiplines, can explain every facet of evolution. It's all in the numbers. the sheer amount of oppertunies for mutation, combined with natural selection, ensure that processes are constantly being refined and streamlined for their enviornment.

      And yes this process is completely random. That is in fact its primary strength. Through random mutations, organisims have a higher chance of adapting to any changes in their ecosystem, no matter how it changes.
      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    17. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      The premise that random mutation happens is neither testable or falsifiable

      Are you trying to say that inheritable random mutations of DNA do not occur? I would beg to differ with that statement.

    18. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think he is in any way against religion itself with the point he is making. I've had somewhat similar experiences lately, when I have found out about some people having these kinds of beliefs. You could probably get the exact same feeling if someone told you that they believe that a tooth fairy exists.

      The feeling is not aggressive, but rather confusing. You just lose of the common strains of thought you thought you had with that person, since they can't possibly be the same due to the different world views. And that is what makes it so frightening.

    19. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Such bullshit.

      They were, unfortunately, products of their time. If you look at belief in a supernatural deity and educational achievement, they are inversely correlated. Intelligence and religious belief are likewise inversely correlated. Education in science (of all types) and religious belief are inversely correlated.

      Your statement is a lie - just google and you will find ample evidence of study after study showing that the better educated a person is (or the more intelligent they are) the less likely they are to believe in a God figure.
      (Here's the first link I could find from a 10 second Google search:http://www.harrisinteractive.com/harris_pol l/index.asp?PID=359)

      (Another interesting fact is that when men and women of equal status are compared, men are less likely to believe than women. This may have something to do with natural gender propensities to emotion vs. logic, but it's unclear).

    20. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      The premise that random mutation happens is neither testable or falsifiable, and it's completely counter to human logic, for instance.

      What? Not only is random mutation testable and potentially falsifiable, it has in fact been tested and proved to be the case, time and time and time again. That's why flu shots must be reissued every flu season. That's why virii become immune to vaccination. That's why birds beaks change shape.

      As for it being contrary to human logic; I'm sure it would be to someone who belived in magical divine incarnations of new evolved life. Or that women are unclean during menstruation. The rest of us will be over here in the Enlightenment if you'd care to join us.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    21. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with that is, a theory is defined as "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."

      ID is not a theory. It is an explaination, with no testable underpinnings. It explains without offering proof, and cannot be used to generate predictions that are any better than random guesses.

      Combine this with these two of your statements.
      1. "There is no doubt that evolution is occurring as it's just plain obvious, but to me the issue of irreducable complexity rules out evolution or even biochemical predestination."
      2. "ID is just the best thing for this we have at the moment, so someone come up with something better and I'd probably go with it..."

      For 1, you dismiss out of hand testable processes that attempt to explain this very thing, and ultimately I fear that this is a case of "I don't understand it so it must not be right." If that is the case, it is a lack of education on your part.

      For 2, no one will ever be able to show you something better. As I have already pointed out, ID has no testable theory behind it; ID is an explaination without proof. You will be responsible for changing your own mind, because the mindset that has you locked out of science will only make anyone trying to educate you an enemy. You will have to become your own enemy and grow beyond yourself, if you want to find something better.

      If there is a God, I hope God is a tricky sort. I want this all to be a big puzzle that I have been set to decipher, through science, reasoned observation, and the incredible brain I was given. I should be challanged to explain, not to accept blindly and never question.

    22. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You've got to be kidding.

      Because some people have been murdered in the name of religion, religion should be abolished? Does that mean because some people have been murdered in the name of freedom, freedom should be abolished? Slaves were kept in the name of cotton, so cotton should be eliminated? Maybe we should talk about eugenics, which was accepted science at the beginning of the 20th century.

      Your claim that indoctrinating children is always wrong is even more ludicrous. What do you think I'll be doing when I teach my children that stealing is wrong, or that driving on the right side of the road is right, or that all men are created equal? That's flat out indoctrination. Of course, so would be teaching them that stealing is right, or that driving on the right side of the road is wrong, or that some men are worth less because they've got more melanin.

      What do you think you're doing to your kids when you teach them to stamp out religion everywhere they find it? What's up next, you're going to start burning bibles?

      More importantly, you haven't addressed the central point: atheism is a belief system, just like theism is. You can't prove there is no god. So all you're trying to do is make sure everyone agrees with your belief system. Explain to me again how this is better than some theist trying to make sure you agree with his?

      And don't give me the "because I'm right and he's wrong" argument until you can prove that there is no god.

      This is why much of the world these days either enjoys or is moving towards religious tolerance. Which means I can be Catholic, and you can be atheist, and we no one has to get nailed to anything.

      Then religion doesn't need to muddy the waters around unrelated issues. We can discuss, say, heliocentrism without me dismissing you because you're atheist or you dismissing me because I'm not. You, on the other hand, are going to press on with religious intolerance. The only reason people like you aren't just as damaging now as the Roman Catholic Church was centuries ago is because there aren't enough of you in charge.

      And thank God for that.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    23. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      Virtually EVERY major scientist, past or present, and intellectual claims to be religious to some degree. Carl Sagan is an aberration. Suprising, but true. 88% of the world population belongs to some religion. Now you can claim that the remaining 12% has a higher concentration of intelligent people, but that is extremely doubtful.

      BTW, a few dubious studies of handfuls of American (500 people!) as test subjects does not prove any corellation. Any intelligent person knows that.

      I am an athiest myself, but I am not an elitest.

    24. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      Um, why are you talking about education? I never mentioned education, only intelligence. There aren't any studies that correlate intelligence with religious belief.

    25. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      Well, for that matter, so does Evolution, which is based entirely on observations, hypothesis and conclusions.

      That's flagrantly untrue.

      I, personally, did experiments in college that yielded data relevant to evolution. While my personal observations only lent support to one portion of evolution (natural selection), that's still testing portions of the theory.

      Moreover, I am aware of experimental research that has yielded results supporting speciation, another portion of evolution theory.

      Don't confuse a lack of direct observation with a lack of science. Indirect observation and logical extrapolation, combined with measuring those extrapolations against observed data, is science as well, and it's there that ID falls down.

      ID does not explain observed data as well as evolution (or, when someone twiddles it until it does, its conclusions become indistinguishable from evolution), and, therefore, even were it science, it would be bad science. The best theory is always the one that comes closes to exactly predicting empirical results.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    26. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      So by this set of completely arbitrary and capricious rules, which are DIFFERENT from the 5 given for the previous poster, Evolution is not science and should not be taught as science, and neither should biology, quantum mechanics, economics, psychiatry....you get the picture.

      No I don't. Are you seriously suggesting that biology and quantum mechanics are not subjected to scientific rigor? Have you never heard of medical trials? Medical experiments? Particle accellerators?

      Evolution is firmly backed by experiment. We've dug up dinosaur bones! That's an experiment. It gathers data that was not known beforehand. Evolution is proably one of the most tested theories on earth. Numerical models fit evolution. We can interpolate the evolution of species by using fossils as data points. It's a successful technique. Believing in thunder gods is not.

      All you've done is replace the church council with peer-reviewed journals.

      Yeah. It's called The Age of Reason? Some people like to call it a Free Society, where thought is not surpressed and we are free to laugh at ridiculous and irrational ideas like Intelligent Design and beliveing that masturbation is evil.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    27. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to say that inheritable random mutations of DNA do not occur? I would beg to differ with that statement.

      I'm trying to say that diseases, radiation, and any other influence of a mutation you can think of is NOT RANDOM- and shouldn't be taught as such. Randomness is just a theological concept for something we're too finite to understand. It doesn't exist as fact.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    28. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      You can have religious belief and still be intelligent; you can still even believe in evolution as I do (well intelligent is for others to judge). My religious beliefs are not Christian, they are hindu and effectively state that god kickstarted the universe at the big bang and it's been doing it's own thing ever since; I take religious stories as parables and metaphors to help me guide the way I live my life. I do not evangalise or force my beliefs on others. Is that so hard to accept?

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    29. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Not only is random mutation testable and potentially falsifiable

      Ok, falsify a random number for me. Or better yet, predict what it will be.

      it has in fact been tested and proved to be the case

      Appearances are not proof. Observations are not proof.

      time and time and time again. That's why flu shots must be reissued every flu season. That's why virii become immune to vaccination. That's why birds beaks change shape.

      If you believe so, sure. But that's all it is, a religious belief.

      As for it being contrary to human logic; I'm sure it would be to someone who belived in magical divine incarnations of new evolved life. Or that women are unclean during menstruation. The rest of us will be over here in the Enlightenment if you'd care to join us.

      Funny how the enlightenment failed to do anything but create another religion.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    30. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      Obligatory disclaimer: I believe that ID is both non-scientific, and almost certainly, also wrong (note that the two are not equivalent).

      I think the reason that this topic always brings out so many comments is that the US is currently in the middle of a culture war, started a few decades ago by the anti-religionists, and now in full force as the more radical religionists fight back.

      Hence it has become a "big-news" divisive issue. The fact that most of the MSM is anti-Christian (or at the least, very much anti-evangelical or fundamentalist Christian) contributes to the divide and to the constant attention to the issue.

      Kansas does something stupid with regard to ID, and it gets as many headlines as a major success (the elections) in Iraq. Somewhere a judge rules pro or con on a peri-religious display and again, big headlines.

      Also, there are many people who have a reflexive, almost juvenile "anti-parent" reaction to the appearance of religion. This increases the sensitivity - especially on a nerd blog.

      So to answer your question:

      Yes, it's a hot spot.

      Yes, it is even more so for many nerds/geeks. Y

      Yes, many geeks are religious - especially in the United States.

      As has been pointed out by another commenter, many people far more brilliant that perhaps anyone who posts here (famous scientists) were also deeply religious.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    31. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's impressive you confuse the difference between education and intelligence.

    32. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      What exactly is your definition of the word random?

    33. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      I, personally, did experiments in college that yielded data relevant to evolution. While my personal observations only lent support to one portion of evolution (natural selection), that's still testing portions of the theory.

      Ok, describe your experiment so that we may repeat it- and show how it proves that randomization exists, since that's the core data that fails to be testible.

      Moreover, I am aware of experimental research that has yielded results supporting speciation, another portion of evolution theory.

      Well, strictly speaking, while some ID proponents don't believe in speciation, I don't see it as a problem to the central premise of ID: that the world is not random.

      Don't confuse a lack of direct observation with a lack of science.

      Funny, that's one of the things everybody complains about with ID- that nobody has ever directly observed God.

      Indirect observation and logical extrapolation, combined with measuring those extrapolations against observed data, is science as well, and it's there that ID falls down.

      Why? Have you ever bothered to actually look at ID?

      ID does not explain observed data as well as evolution (or, when someone twiddles it until it does, its conclusions become indistinguishable from evolution),

      It's conclusions ARE indistinguishable from evolution, that's a given. But as to it not explaining observed data as well as evolution- I'm sorry, I fail to see how believing in an indeterministic universe is less complex than believing in God.

      therefore, even were it science, it would be bad science. The best theory is always the one that comes closes to exactly predicting empirical results.

      But evolution doesn't predict empirical results- because it starts from a random premise.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    34. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      Talk about splitting hairs...yes. Insofar as a certain neutron hitting a certain atom at a certain time can only cause a certain isotopic change, you're right, it's not random. It's pure cause and effect, and, in some sense could be predicted if one had enough information.

      (I could make a Heisenbergian argument that not only don't we have enough information, we can't have enough information, and, in fact, that information doesn't exist in the first place, but since you deny the very existence of randomness, I expect you deny Heisenberg's research, as well, so I won't bother)

      HOWEVER: from the point of view of evolution, these changes are random, insofar as they are completely independent of the process being studied. They are neither caused by nor affected by the results of that process.

      But if it will help, I'm willing to stipulate that "random mutations" can be referred to as "mutations with causes orthogonal to the process of evolution."

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    35. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2, Informative

      What exactly is your definition of the word random?

      An event that is too complex to be described as fact by finite human beings; that must be described in terms of probability because we don't want to or can't do the work neccessary to make it predictible. Thus, anything steming from a random event is by definition not predictable; thus evolution and ID are scientifically equivalent depending on the set of arbitrary rules you use to define science.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    36. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Your claim that indoctrinating children is always wrong is even more ludicrous. What do you think I'll be doing when I teach my children that stealing is wrong, or that driving on the right side of the road is right, or that all men are created equal?

      And what about when people teach their children that masturbation is wrong; that women are unclean during menstruation; that infidels should all be killed; that unelected leaders must be obeyed unconditionally; that young girls' must be castrated; that homosexuals are evil; that unbaptisted children go to hell; that people who commit suicide will go to hell. The list goes on and on and on.

      If I, a secular person, said any of these things to anyone, especially a child, I would be thrown in jail. There's is clearly a line somewhere that is being crossed daily, using religion as a legal and constitutional loophole.

      And don't give me the "because I'm right and he's wrong" argument until you can prove that there is no god.

      Prove something that is by definition unprovable? That's a derisible statement. It's even lower down on the scale than people who believe in UFO's, vampires and ghosts. At least they make attempts to subject their beliefs to science and experiment. I might not be right, but you're certainly standing on shaky ground.

      You, on the other hand, are going to press on with religious intolerance. The only reason people like you aren't just as damaging now as the Roman Catholic Church was centuries ago is because there aren't enough of you in charge.

      I am intolerant of injustice, and I see many people perpetuating injustice in the name of religion. I'm not going to start a crusade, but I will speak my mind. And the only reason "people like me" are not as damaging as religious leaders in the past is because democracy and the rule of law hold sway in our society. And these two things are coming under attack from the kind of people that promote ID.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    37. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by shma · · Score: 1



      Einstein, at least, was not particularly religious and certainly did not believe in the same God as any organized religion. From Wikipedia:

      "It was, of course, a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it."

      --
      I came here for a good argument
    38. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Talk about splitting hairs...yes. Insofar as a certain neutron hitting a certain atom at a certain time can only cause a certain isotopic change, you're right, it's not random. It's pure cause and effect, and, in some sense could be predicted if one had enough information.

      Good. That's completely right.

      (I could make a Heisenbergian argument that not only don't we have enough information, we can't have enough information, and, in fact, that information doesn't exist in the first place, but since you deny the very existence of randomness, I expect you deny Heisenberg's research, as well, so I won't bother)

      Actually, I accept Heisenberg's research, but limit it to affecting human beings. It's quite possible to know enough information- it's just not possible for US to do so.

      HOWEVER: from the point of view of evolution, these changes are random, insofar as they are completely independent of the process being studied. They are neither caused by nor affected by the results of that process.

      Also true enough- but you see, that raises the same problem of predictibility as ID raises. Since we don't actually know the mind of God without being God, we can't predict natural selection under ID with any accuracy. Likewise, since we don't know the random mutations ahead of time, we can't predict natural selection under evolution with any accuracy. Thus both fail equally on testibility and falsifiability- and if you're into demarcation of science as being separate from theology, that's a problem for you.

      But if it will help, I'm willing to stipulate that "random mutations" can be referred to as "mutations with causes orthogonal to the process of evolution."

      When your cause is orthogonal to the process, you've effectively destroyed your ability to be called a hard science under demarcation. But if you get rid of demarcation and it's arbitrary and subjective rules, ID and evolution become indistinguishable- thus the whole debate becomes useless because the conclusions to the research are exactly the same.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    39. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1


      Ok, falsify a random number for me. Or better yet, predict what it will be.... ....Appearances are not proof. Observations are not proof.... ....Funny how the enlightenment failed to do anything but create another religion....


      Your comments speak volumes. Do you seriously stand by these statements? Do you believe that these stand on par with the arguments of Intelligent Design?

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    40. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by sbsaylors · · Score: 1

      Without trying to pull a "my dad is bigger then your dad" sort of game here, I cant help but say what I've understood and read - that if intellect and wisdom is the attribute (D&D anyone!?) and having both high values - many of the most intelligent and wise folks we think about had lives less absolute then a yes / no on religion.

      From the history I read many debate it inside and outside themselves early their lives and then that last minute rally most humans have when they start to debate their own passing away.

      That being said - and risking the "biggen then" situation - Many were not religious, and I'd say the mention of Einstein is an excellent example. Sure he had many letters like his famous one about God to children, but I highly doubt he was "religious" in the classic christian sense. I'd say he had some very large doubts... Let along people like Jefferson, Franklin (excluding Paine ). Maybe better said is their is a huge seperation between those who believe in a set of papers and those who believe in "something".

      But the real debate should'nt be in WHO is religious or not religious as much as maybe - "how would they see the teaching of evolution and creationism" in school (or on /.)?

      THAT, I'm guessing, is what many of those - we all find celebrated as "intelligent" would be more in agreement with each other about.

    41. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      An event that is too complex to be described as fact by finite human beings; that must be described in terms of probability because we don't want to or can't do the work neccessary to make it predictible. Thus, anything steming from a random event is by definition not predictable; thus evolution and ID are scientifically equivalent depending on the set of arbitrary rules you use to define science.

      Educate yourself. If you're going to go around arguing that a random event is the result of divine intervention and that the results of any system based on random events cannot be scientifically explained, then you should just shut down your PC right now, and stop taking flu shots.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    42. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how believing in an indeterministic universe is less complex than believing in God

      Do you accept that there exist phenomena whose behavior could be explained by probability theory, such as radioactive decay?

      If not, then we have nothing further to discuss, since you're dismissing evidence.

      If you do, however, we're discussing fundamental properties of the universe, and that can be useful. If you wish to propose that events which appear random occur the way they do because God makes them, that's fine. This is similar to proposing that objects which have weight in a gravity well have it because God makes them. All that's happening is you're identifying inherent properties (probability, mass) as the hand of God.

      You won't get any argument from me, since your explanation of weight is indistinguishable from mine, that objects have mass.

      But really, this just amounts to Thomas Moore's (IIRC) first causes argument: go back to the first cause you can explain. Go one cause before that, and there you find God. God exists in the unkown, as has always been the case.

      Personally, I believe in a God whom we'll find not just in the unkown, but the unknowable: He created the universe for us to explore and study, so He created it susceptible to experimentation, and behaving according to rules that we can (someday) understand. After all, I can conceive of no greater being than one who can create a handful of fundamental particles and a short list of rules, knowing that just from these the entire universe would naturally follow. To me, that's like writing a hundred lines of code, knowing that if you just run it for long enough, it will accurately simulate all of human history.

      I don't believe in a capricious or interventionist God. In my mind, God's smart enough to create the rules such that he doesn't have to break them to have things happen the way he wants. I don't buy into a God capable of creating the universe, but who has to keep tinkering with it to keep it running.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    43. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 2, Informative

      Some questions for Intelligent Design:

      1. What is the scientific theory of intelligent design (ID)?

      2. What evidence supports ID and not a competing theory?

      3. What predictions does ID make?

      4. How might ID be falsified?

      The IDers have had since 1987 (when "intelligent design" was first used as a drop-in replacement for "creation science") to come up with answers for these questions and they've failed to not only make any headway, they've failed to even attempt to answer them. So you'll excuse me and fellow research scientists in biological fields for writing them off as a bunch of charlatans after waiting 18 years for them to get off their asses and actually do some research, or maybe, I dunno, formulate a scientific hypothesis in the first place? BTW, theory in science means more than halfassed guess, and putting the term in allcaps is an indication that you don't know this.

      But wait, I've got some more questions for you:

      5. Why does ID go directly to the courts and political process to try and get their idea accepted, instead of, doing some actual research?

      6. If ID is not an entirely religious objection to established science, then can you explain The Wedge Document?

      7. Explain why the Discovery Institute is funded largely by Howard Ahmanson, a person who also funds relgious extremists such as the Chalcedon Foundation, which has the express aim of turning the US into a theocracy?

      8. Why is it that prominent proponents of ID frequently speak in churches, just like proponents of creation science?

      9. Why was the Dover school board defended by the Thomas Moore Law Center, which is "...a not-for-profit public interest law firm dedicated to the defense and promotion of the religious freedom of Christians, time-honored family values, and the sanctity of human life. Our purpose is to be the sword and shield for people of faith, providing legal representation without charge to defend and protect Christians and their religious beliefs in the public square." (from their own website) if ID is not religious?

      10. Why was it that "Of Pandas and People," the ID textbook that was a major focus in Dover, written by creationists?

      11. Why would Bill Dembski say "Intelligent design is just the Logos theology of John's Gospel restated in the idiom of information theory," (quoted from wikipedia, refering to Touchstone Magazine. Volume 12, Issue4. July/August, 1999)?

      12. Why would Touchstone Magazine, a "Journal of Mere Christianity", devote an entire issue to supporting ID?

      Or maybe ID really is just a religiously-motivated argument from ignorance like all of us biological scientists think?

    44. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Your comments speak volumes. Do you seriously stand by these statements? Do you believe that these stand on par with the arguments of Intelligent Design?

      My argument is that humanity simply isn't advanced enough to know either way- so in a way, I'm not actually arguing EITHER side. I'm saying we're too stupid to decide.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    45. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by kcbrown · · Score: 1
      Why is it scary to you that so many geeks might actually believe religion? An awful lot of brilliant math and science has been performed by people who firmly believed religion...does that terrify you, too?

      I don't know that he's terrified so much as perplexed.

      And I think I understand why.

      To hold a religious belief requires that one have some sort of unchecked faith in something that cannot be observed or verified in any way.

      Science requires no such thing. At most, it requires the "belief" that observations of the world are generally valid, and that the universe is generally consistent in our own local region of space (for some branches of science, e.g. astronomy, the latter assumption is tentatively extended to cover the observable universe).

      Those assumptions are ones that pretty much everyone automatically makes every day, so the amount of "faith" they require is no greater than the amount of "faith" an ordinary person has when normally interacting with the world anyway.

      Or to put it another way, science is just the formalization of the way people deal with the world around them anyway (you know: examine the world, come up with an idea of how something works, do something to test it, adjust the idea based on the results, etc.).

      Back to the original question: the reason some of us might be perplexed about the fact that some geeks have religious beliefs is the fact that such a person has to intentionally not apply the scientific method to some of their own beliefs. It means that the person in question intentionally limits the scope of the methods he uses to evaluate ideas in order to preserve the ideas that he would probably otherwise discard for lack of evidence (since in science, one does not hold onto hypotheses which make no testable predictions and for which no observable evidence exists).

      And the reason that's perplexing is that geeks in general expect themselves, and others, to apply rules consistently and in an unbiased manner. As you can see from the above, holding religious beliefs and applying the methods of science at the same time requires the person in question to break that consistency, to bias the application of the rules of logic and science.

      Now, I personally don't have a problem with someone holding a religious belief, as long as they don't attempt to push that belief onto me. But I won't hesitate to point out that there's at least one area of their belief system to which they're not applying the tests they normally apply (and that they generally expect others to apply as well -- they're geeks, after all).

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    46. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Do you accept that there exist phenomena whose behavior could be explained by probability theory, such as radioactive decay?

      Actually, I claim that while probability theory is usefull for describing radioactive decay, probability theory can't actually EXPLAIN anything at all- not with any accruacy or certainty.

      I don't believe in a capricious or interventionist God. In my mind, God's smart enough to create the rules such that he doesn't have to break them to have things happen the way he wants. I don't buy into a God capable of creating the universe, but who has to keep tinkering with it to keep it running.

      But oddly enough we come out at the same place. Only an indeterministic universe is unstable enough for God to need to keep tinkering with it- a deterministic universe could be set up at the begining, and we're just not smart enough yet to see it.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    47. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Educate yourself. If you're going to go around arguing that a random event is the result of divine intervention and that the results of any system based on random events cannot be scientifically explained, then you should just shut down your PC right now, and stop taking flu shots.

      Why would I avoid the God-given gift of intellect, and the miracles that it creates? I'm not saying that these things cannot be scientifically explained- I'm saying that by the definitions of science given in this discussion so far, these things are not science.

      There's a difference- I'm not saying I disagree with random events, I'm saying there is a problem with our definition of what is science, at a very basic level.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    48. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And what about when people teach their children that masturbation is wrong; that women are unclean during menstruation; that infidels should all be killed; that unelected leaders must be obeyed unconditionally; that young girls' must be castrated; that homosexuals are evil; that unbaptisted children go to hell; that people who commit suicide will go to hell. The list goes on and on and on.

      And yet, I believe not one of those things, while simultaneously being Catholic. Meanwhile, I'm sure I can find plenty of non-religious totalitarian regimes that do believe some of them.

      If I, a secular person, said any of these things to anyone, especially a child, I would be thrown in jail. There's is clearly a line somewhere that is being crossed daily, using religion as a legal and constitutional loophole.

      No, you probably wouldn't, at least not in the U.S. (with the possible exception of your "infidels should all be killed" bit, which might qualify as actionable hate speech...whatever that means). If you went ahead and actually started castrating young girls, that would be a different issue entirely, of course.

      Prove something that is by definition unprovable? That's a derisible statement. It's even lower down on the scale than people who believe in UFO's, vampires and ghosts. At least they make attempts to subject their beliefs to science and experiment. I might not be right, but you're certainly standing on shaky ground.

      I have to admit, I don't know what "derisible" means, and I can't tease out of its context what you mean by it (and I don't get any hits on google define:), so I can't really rebut it.

      You do seem to take offense at being asked to do exactly what you're asking the religious to do, though. You deny the existence of God because I can't prove it...yet you ask me to accept the non-existence of God despite your inability to prove it. The fact that you can't prove it either way is exactly my point.

      You believe something you can't prove, that God doesn't exist. My point is that I do not understand how this is conceptually any different than anyone else believing something he can't prove. Why is your unprovable belief superior to mine?

      I am intolerant of injustice, and I see many people perpetuating injustice in the name of religion.

      Hey, fancy that, I'm also intolerant of injustice. You know, injustices like attacking people for their unprovable beliefs because they don't agree with your unprovable beliefs. Like dismissing the opinions, thoughts, intelligence, and very worth of people because they don't agree with your unprovable belief system.

      I'm not going to start a crusade, but I will speak my mind.

      Good for you. Keep speaking your mind. Right up until you start claiming I shouldn't be able to speak my mind (you know, like claiming that teaching my children is evil and immoral), I'm fine with that.

      And the only reason "people like me" are not as damaging as religious leaders in the past is because democracy and the rule of law hold sway in our society.

      Funny how you dismiss your atheistic religious intolerance as made benign by democracy and the rule of law, while simultaneously assuming that theistic religious intolerance can't be made benign the same way. Again, it intrigues me how much better your unprovable belief is than everyone else's unprovable beliefs.

      [Democracy and the rule of law] are coming under attack from the kind of people that promote ID.

      Ignoring the hint of melodrama, you're right, they are. Of course, you might want to consider that the set of all people who adhere to ID is not the same as the set of all people who aren't atheists before you resume your little tirade.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    49. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Most celebrated scientists and great thinkers (Einstein, DiVinci, Archimedes, etc) believed in God.

      DaVinci would have been tortured to death if he had dared hint that he didn't believe in the Church, wether or not he actually believed in a god is unkowable, because he was smart enough to fake it thouroughly, and motivated by a survival instinct to do so. However, he provided the basis of the scientific method, and logically proved that ghosts aren't a concern to anyone. I find it unlikely that he believed in invisible angels inseminating virgins in the night.

      And you think Archimedes believed in "God", singular? As in a monotheistic judeo-christian god? That's quite a feat for a pre-christian greek from a polytheistic society.

      --

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

    50. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Why would I avoid the God-given gift of intellect, and the miracles that it creates?

      I have been asking myself much the same question since the beginning of this thread.

      I'm saying there is a problem with our definition of what is science, at a very basic level.

      Our definition of science is fine. You're the one whose having problems.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    51. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Like with most things, some slashdotters like me are being *extra* nerdy and insisting that mere theological theories don't get touted as fact. Evolution, having replaced "God did it" with "Random Chance did it" is particularily bad at this; as is the claim that ID is not science because of some incredibly arbitrary and subjective rules about who is a scientist and what a science is. Thus the argument every time it shows up.

      BTW, it has nothing at all to do with creationism-


      Oh, you are so wrong it hurts.

      First of all, "design" and "create" are synonyms. It has everything to do with creationism, it's just cleverly worded to avoid any direct mention of the specific religion that it is meant to support, in order to attempt to sneak it into public schools despite a constitutional ban of such shenanigans. Hence the ruling to that effect.

      ID is not science by the very definition of science! "the state of knowing : knowledge as distinguished from ignorance or misunderstanding", ID is based on ignorance and misunderstanding, it's the entire basis of the argument: "There's bit we don't know or understand yet, so a magical, invisible hand did it!"

      Just because it's a lie supporting something you agree with doesn't make it true.

      --

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

    52. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by m50d · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Why is it scary to you that so many geeks might actually believe religion? An awful lot of brilliant math and science has been performed by people who firmly believed religion...does that terrify you, too?

      No, it just saddens me - I wonder how much better they could have done without it.

      Or do you just assume that, if someone believes in religion, they're supporters of ID and incapable of rational thought?

      Supporters of ID, no. As for rational thought, not incapable, but by definition they think irrationally more often than is good.

      I don't understand the anti-religous crusade so many people seem to take on as their own little holy war. Why the hell can't you leave me alone? You believe what you want, and I'll believe what I want. I won't teach your kids to believe what I do, and you can just stay away from mine.

      Because you're wasting your life, and you're not seeing the glory of the universe that's out there. And you're doing it for such a stupid reason. When you're walking down the street and see someone banging their head against a building, you want to stop them.

      If you want to talk about testable hypotheses, we can do that. You produce evidence contrary to my understanding of the universe, and I'll change my understanding. I'd hope you could do the same thing.

      Of course. And if you're doing that that's halfway there. But if you start believing random things without evidence, your worldview's not going to make a lot of sense.

      But if you want to get into a contest of faiths, don't even bother. And don't think that atheism isn't a faith: absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. You can prove to me that we as a species evolved, ultimately, from a tiny pile of organic slime clinging to a rock in some antediluvian sea. Check. You can't prove to me that no god exists, any more than I can prove to you one does.

      Just like the fairies at the bottom of my garden. I haven't seen them because they turn invisible whenever humans are looking at them, of course. Occam's razor and assuming the absence of anything that doesn't have a reason to exist is the only way to get a reasonable view of things.

      Your railing against religion (and everyone else's) as a whole (as opposed to railing against statements made based on religion that are demonstrably false, which is, of course, appropriate) is no better than any other zealot demanding that his religion is right and everyone else's is wrong.

      We at least have some grounds for this - "religion is dumb because this religious person said this dumb thing" is fallacious but better than "my religion is better than yours" with no reason at all.

      --
      I am trolling
    53. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by m50d · · Score: 1

      ID doesn't solve that issue at all - how did the designer arise?

      --
      I am trolling
    54. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      And yet, I believe not one of those things, while simultaneously being Catholic.

      Then by definition you are not a Catholic, and you are in fact a heretic. Sorry, but that's the way your religion works. And that's what your children may well end up being taught by zealots while your back is turned.

      No, you probably wouldn't, at least not in the U.S. (with the possible exception of your "infidels should all be killed" bit, which might qualify as actionable hate speech...whatever that means). If you went ahead and actually started castrating young girls, that would be a different issue entirely, of course.

      But what if in those same United States your religious beliefs dictated that your dying child could not recieve a life saving blood transplant? What then? Or perhaps a comatose loved one? Why should a doctor be stopped, or in any way impeded from saving someones life because of unaccountable and unscrutible religious beliefs?

      Of course, you might want to consider that the set of all people who adhere to ID is not the same as the set of all people who aren't atheists before you resume your little tirade.

      I know that. But I also know that a great many people who are religious are swayed by the arguments of ID and other fundamentalist dogma. Isn't homosexual marraige now illegal in eleven states? A perfect example of persecution by the religious. Something I'm not protected against, even though those same persectutors are protected against religious persecution, i.e. any attempt to hold their beliefs accountable.

      Most religious people might not be rabid fundamentalists, but in my expierience the majority are more intolerent and willing to persecute than the non-religious.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    55. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      If I, a secular person, said any of these things to anyone, especially a child, I would be thrown in jail. There's is clearly a line somewhere that is being crossed daily, using religion as a legal and constitutional loophole.

      You're clearly high on drugs if you think a parent would be thrown in jail for teaching their child "crazy" thing just because they don't have a religion "as a loophole." For better or for worse, you can teach your child practically any nonsense you feel like. There's no special super-duper "get out of jail" free card for doing it for religious purposes. Tell them the Earth is flat. Tell them Jews are behind all of the world's ills. Hell, you can even tell them that morality is a fictional construct that has no purpose but to chain the strong to the collective will of the weak. We don't really have any sort of standards (fortunately and unfortunately) about what sort of nonsense parents can teach their children, and I can't think of any non-totalitarian society that ever has.

      Prove something that is by definition unprovable? That's a derisible statement. It's even lower down on the scale than people who believe in UFO's, vampires and ghosts. At least they make attempts to subject their beliefs to science and experiment. I might not be right, but you're certainly standing on shaky ground.

      *fwissssssshhhBOOOOM!!*
      (That's the sound of the point breaking the sound barrier over your head.)

      He can't prove that God exists. You can't prove that no god exists. You're both on shaky ground, but at least he's a lot less insulting and arrogant about it.

      Atheism is a faith. It can't be proven. It can't be tested. It makes claims about man's place in the universe, about existence after death, and about whether there is an inherent morality to the universe. It is a minimalist religion with no formalized moral code.

      I am intolerant of injustice, and I see many people perpetuating injustice in the name of religion.

      And yet, you don't seem as bothered by people perpetuating injustice who aren't doing it in the name of religion. Do you focus soley on the negative and strike out at nationalism that breeds hate against other nations, at greedy men who hurt their customers by cutting corners, or at amoral researchers that develop biological weapons? Perhaps, instead you are tempered by seeing the volunteerism that patriotism breeds, the bounty that our dollars can buy thanks to industrious capitalists, and the life saving medicines. I don't know about you, but at least I don't tar all of patriotism, capitalism, and science by the actions of their bad actors.

      If you are not so strongly set against pride in one's country, entrepreneurship, and research, why must you only focus on the negatives of religion? Why do you not see the charity, the inherent motive to strive against injustice and poverty, and the drive for peace and harmony at the hearts of most religions? Why have you made up your mind that religions are evil without listening to what they have to say?

      To me, the essence of bigotry is to hate something so much that you build a two-dimensional characature of it built solely on negatives, and you blindly disregard the positives as irrelevant. It is the same whether it is racism, elitism, sexism, or religious intolerance.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    56. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by the-empty-string · · Score: 2, Informative
      Insightful as they may be, your observations are false. Unfortunately they are often-repeated myths.

      Einstein was not "very religious", he was agnostic. From Autobiographical Notes (bolding mine)*:

      Thus I came -- though the child of entirely irreligious (Jewish) parents -- to a deep religiousness, which, however, reached an abrupt end at the age of twelve. Through the reading of popular scientific books I soon reached the conviction that much in the stories of the Bible could not be true.
      You can find the above quote, along with many others pointing firmly in the same direction, at http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/quotes_einstei n.html.

      As for your assertion about the lack of correlation between intelligence and religion, most studies point to a negative correlation:

      All but four of the forty-three polls listed support the conclusion that native intelligence varies inversely with degree of religious faith; i.e., that, other factors being equal, the more intelligent a person is, the less religious he is.
    57. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1
      What exactly is your definition of the word random?
      An event that is too complex to be described as fact by finite human beings;

      God works in mysterious ways. He is inscrutable.

      Your definition of random seems to fit as a definition of god.
      --

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

    58. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by lagerbottom · · Score: 1

      I'll own some of that.

      I have railed against religion (though not here). And yes. It's because I am scared. I hear things like "ID" and Prayer In Schools, and "reversing Roe v Wade"...and well yeah. That scares the shit out of me. It's a threat to the things I hold dear. Science, Seperation of Church and State, and freedom from an invasion of privacy.

      So to say that I shouldn't be afraid of what one believes, is pretty naive.

      --
      "He was a wise man who invented beer." - Plato
    59. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Atheism is a faith. It can't be proven. It can't be tested. It makes claims about man's place in the universe, about existence after death, and about whether there is an inherent morality to the universe. It is a minimalist religion with no formalized moral code.

      If atheism is a faith then teetotalism is a drug addiction, pacifism is an act of aggression, and quite frankly up is down.

      I do not believe in divine beings or holy scriptures. That isn't a system of belief. It's just my opinion. It doesn't grant me any special privilages, unlike someone who actually does believe in something. In fact, but not believing in something, one could argue that I am some sort of second class citizen who must keep his mouth shut while people go around him believing in the most outlandish notions with no proof whatsoever. Then it gets a bit more serious when this religious class uses its additional rights and powers to attemtp to force its beliefs, illogical as they are, down my throat.

      To me, the essence of bigotry is to hate something so much that you build a two-dimensional characature of it built solely on negatives, and you blindly disregard the positives as irrelevant. It is the same whether it is racism, elitism, sexism, or religious intolerance.

      It's hard to see the positives when there are so, so many well documented negatives. I would argue that religion has been a force for evil more so than good in this world, and I could make a convincing argument for that.

      The trouble with religion is that you must accept the evils with the good. you must accept the commands from the clergy on high, else you are cast out. They use the kindness, love and eternal life as the bait, and before you know it you're paying tithes, snipping your childrens genitals, your wife can't sit next to you in church and you're voting the way the local padre tells you to. You don't even know you've been conned because you've been practically brainwashed by the expert prose and argument, and the worst part is someone who wants to help you out of the mess you're in can't do so because the whole thing is a constitutionally protected process. Google Scientology and try and explain to me what the fundamental difference between that and any other major religion actually is.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    60. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      My argument is that humanity simply isn't advanced enough to know either way- so in a way, I'm not actually arguing EITHER side. I'm saying we're too stupid to decide.

      Have the integrity to stand by your argument. You are arguing for Intelligent Design based on the premise that it is beyond our ability to explain evolution.

      This is false. It is not beyond our ability to explain evolution. In fact, we are able to exlain and account for the entire process remarkably well. Nor is it beyond our ability, or yours, to understand evolution.

      It may however be beyond the ability of some to simply accept this process that they can both understand and explain. If so, then that is a problem you are either going to have to come to terms with, or come up with a better explanation for.

      If ID is your better explanation, fine. Just don't beset some misfortunate children with such an odious belief system as that. Especially on taxpayers money.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    61. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ahodgson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why is it scary to you that so many geeks might actually believe religion? An awful lot of brilliant math and science has been performed by people who firmly believed religion...does that terrify you, too?

      I don't think we're scared so much as confused. Why would someone intelligent believe in an invisible and all-powerful being for whom no evidence exists, and whose existence is so incredibly unlikely? How could someone intelligent, who would would presumably be well-read and therefore be aware of the incredible range of (blatantly silly) things people have professed belief in throughout history, not simply place modern religion in the same category? How can intelligent people, who dismiss out of hand many other superstitions, believe in the most outlandish things? Is it really that hard to get past childhood indoctrination?

      Religion is so clearly a means for uneducated people to explain the world around them, as well as a way of wishing the world was not as it is (ie. denying mortality), that it is very hard to see how someone smart could fall for it.

      That's what confuses us.

    62. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you honestly mean to tell me that you aren't aware that educational achievement and intelligence as measured by IQ are directly correlated?

      Google for that as well - I think from memory one study, the average college-level grad is 15 points higher than the average for the population at large.

      Please, all I wanted was for you to find the studies before you proclaim the conclusion. Your statement was false, and you obviously have never even investigated your position by informing yourself of actual scientific data.

    63. Re: Slashdot Under Siege.... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > Evolution, having replaced "God did it" with "Random Chance did it" is particularily bad at this

      You just tole everyone you don't have the first clue about how evolution works.

      > as is the claim that ID is not science because of some incredibly arbitrary and subjective rules about who is a scientist and what a science is.

      Should we take Behe's suggestion and redefine science to include ID -- and astrology?

      > BTW, it has nothing at all to do with creationism

      Yeah, that's why the authors of Of Pandas and People used "designer" as a plug-in replacement for "creator".

      And it's also why the Dover defendents are now falling down and crying "religious persecution!"

      > the type of ID we're talking about takes a given the scientific age of the earth at about 4 billion years and the latest age of the universe at 19.3 billion years. Creationists peg the entire shebang at much less than that- around 6000 years or so.

      Actually, the leading proponents of ID are all over the map regarding the age of the earth and the universe. You should look up the transcripts of the recent Texas textbook hearings and see how the YECs among them squirmed and tried to avoid the question when asked how old they thought the earth is.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    64. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I'm with you on this one. I happen to believe that there is a higher power, God, whatever one chooses to call the deity. However, I don't feel the need to inject my religious faith into science, nor do I see that science is trespassing on my personal beliefs or attacking my faith.

      I think the Evolution/ID conflict is a false one, manufactured to dupe the less sophisticated among us and to gain and maintain political power, just as the "War on Christmas" is an obvious ploy to distract us from more serious issues.

      (Being a geek with religious beliefs, I sometimes entertain the idea that God is the Ultimate Hacker, and that all of creation flows from a single principle (or algorithm), as in "The Word". If this is the case, then the goal of science would seem to be to seek this single unifying principle as well as to describe its observable iterations. In any case, this idea is metaphysical, not scientific. It helps me unify my belief in God and my understanding of science, but it's not science in any sense of the word.)

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    65. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not highly religious, so butting in here doesn't leave me much to fall back on, but I can tell you're operating under a grave logical flaw. Religion is none of the things you are decrying. Ranting idiots and inscrutable rules are not religion. If you have a problem with assholes hijacking religious institutions for their own purposes, then that's what you should be opposing. Assholes. Not religion in general.

    66. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "Or do you just assume that, if someone believes in religion, they're supporters of ID and incapable of rational thought?"
      if you believe that a Being craeted the universe, then you de facto believe in ID. Many people who are relegious out of fear, but are educated, try to deny ID; However if you believe in a being woth a plan, doesn't that mean we were created by design?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    67. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Science has no business positing the existence or non-existence of a deity. The problem with ID is that it posits the existence of a deity as a scientific explanation for the observable natural word. Thus it is not science, should not be taught in the science classroom, and should be exposed as "fake science".

      I think you are thinking about a "philosophical" ID rather than a "scientific" theory of ID. (Finger quotes around scientific.)

      Outside the science classroom, in the realms of philosophy, metaphysics, spiritual and religious thought, ID can find a comfy home. I myself believe that there is some ultimate unifying algorithm or principle from which all of creation flows. Whether this principle is the deity, is an embodiment of the diety, or was created by the deity is a question I cannot answer (nor could I answer with science, since it beyond the abilities of science to answer; it's a theological question).

      If you actually examine ID as espoused by the ID movement, they posit that all animal species were created by a deity whole, with all of their main attributes intact, which is pretty much in contradiction with what we know about Evolution. ID is an apologetic for Christian Fundamentalism, which takes the extreme view that every single word in the Bible must be taken as literal truth.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    68. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      excpet evolution can be test, and you CAN make predictions with it.
      For the record, Evolution is not a theory, it's a fact. Evolution by Natural Selection is the theory.

      you can not use ID to make accurate predictions.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    69. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by bmgoau · · Score: 1

      Im agnostic, but i for one know that above all else

      Science is not incompatiable with spirituality.

      Sometimes science might interfear with conservative religious teachings, but when that happens its up to the individual to make up their own minds. Take in all the information they can and decide for themselves.

      I fear that sometimes, all this intelligent design fiasco is simply a minority of people who fear beyond all else that if they let go of their litteral interpretation of religious teachings that their lives will become divoid of a sense of wonder, or purpose.

      For some, i feel that science is a natural path of humanity, it is part of who we are, we are discoverers. For most, science helps us uncover more and more about the universe, from the very small, to the very large and even the scale of interactions between objects within it. Looking at the universe brings a sense of awe to every human being and whether they interpret this as part of gods power or simply mathamatical beauty is up to them.

      I ask, anyone to look at a picutre of the Hubble Deep Field photograph, and tell me that it doesnt give them a sense of awe. Then i will ask them what it means to them... some will say it shows the correlation of how truely important yet insignificant our actions and lives are, while some will say that it is a testament to their gods power. Either way, neither statement is removing the scientific accuracy of the image.

      Just like when church was scared when Galileo presented his heliocentric model of the universe, Intelligent design and creationalist believers are scared of losing the wonder and purpose in their worlds, because they have never known the scientific method, the unknown scares them. for them everything is made clear in a book, and to diviate would not only be sin, but would scare them at the deepest level. Its just upto us to convince them that the scientific method is not imcompatiable with spirituality, and that infact, discovering details about the world around us is not only enjoyable, and fullfilling, but can be seen in terms of gods power.

      The universe is a big place, and that makes god powerful for some, science just tried to understand it, and make it bigger, and for many more it makes their god even more powerful.

      Science and spirituality are not imcompatiable. Religious conservatives are just scared, for they are only human and are not familure with the beauty of the universe outside the pages of a book.

    70. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by marcosdumay · · Score: 1
      Well, I saw the first few entries on that link you give (I am too lazy to read them all). No one of them correlated inteligence and religious belifes.

      But it is very easy to me to belive that inteligency and conservadorism are correlated, as those studies show.

    71. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have come to treat belief in gods as a type of genetic disease. I've seen too many intelligent and rational people belive in God. I asked myself how could so many smart people believe in something so stupid? My theory is that religious belief evolved in humans. What evolutionary advantage this god belief provided I can only guess at. But I hope that in the future as our knowledge of genetics increases it will be possible to locate this "god gene" and remove it for good. In the future there may be a cure for the disease of religious belief.

    72. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      If atheism is a faith then teetotalism is a drug addiction, pacifism is an act of aggression, and quite frankly up is down.

      I think you're confusing atheism with agnosticism. There's a difference between an absence of belief and a belief in absence. For one thing, people with an absence of belief don't passionately defend it to the point of denigrating others. You only get passionate arguments about their superiority from believers. People don't get that defense / offensive on issues that they don't have a firm stake in.

      You're not expected to keep quiet about your beliefs, but in a civilized society, you're expected to treat people who believe differently from you in a civil fashion. Call it "tolerance" or "manners." There's a difference between respectful and disrespectful disagreement, and you put yourself firmly in the latter category by labeling all people who differ from you on this belief as evil. That's bigotry and elitism. Putting yourself (and people like you) above others is the root of all injustice.

      It's hard to see the positives when there are so, so many well documented negatives. I would argue that religion has been a force for evil more so than good in this world, and I could make a convincing argument for that.

      I'm sure you could -- mostly by focusing completely on the negatives and by ignoring all other contributing social factors to those negative events. The Crusades? Completely Catholicism's fault (ignoring that it was largely money hungry nobles that pushed it with the aid of their corrupt kinsmen in the church despite the fact that Jesus is very clear in his opposition to war and killing). Terrorism? Completely Islam's fault (ignoring that it is largely funded by discontent at the influx of foreign values and of foreign support for freedom-crushing, secularist dictators and that there are plenty of secular terrorist movements like the ETA and IRA). In the process, I'm sure you'd ignore the Red Cross and other charities that had religious origins, the fact that the people who built the welfare system in America ran on Christian moralist platforms against poverty, and the defining role of faith in the lives of Gandhi, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and a great many others who have made positive changes on the world because their faith demanded it of them.

      Religion gets scapegoated a lot because religion is historically the most common social glue for defining a community. I'd recommend you read "The Lucifer Principle." You might like it since it would trod a little less on your sensibilities than mine. It's an interesting book that takes a broad overview of evolutionary sociobiology to get at the roots of mankind's pack animal mentality and its effects on society. It may open your eyes to why religion is historically commonly found at the root of conflict and persecution, but why replacing religion with any other ideology won't really solve the problem. There have been plenty of atrocities committed in the name of secular ideologies (like Stalinism, Maoism, and Fascism) without religious justification for the same exact reasons that they are committed in the name of religion -- blind love of one's community, hunger for power and status, and hatred of outsiders as evil and inferior.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    73. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow talk about living proof that not believing in religion does not equal being smart.

      You really think you've figured it out and that my friend is always the start of stupidity (and you've gone far down that path already). You seem to think that you're completely rational or that you should be: you really need to escape the basement and simply LIVE!

      You can still be as atheist as you wish but oh boy you really need a dash of irrational hedonism!

      Sincerely
      Asymetrical Cow-warden

      AC is a fellow religious nerd who:
      - thinks certain scientific parts of ID might be onto something
      - enjoys both the sensory and conceptual beauty of the world
      - is too rational most of the time (which makes it feel a bit weird to tell you to escape the basement since I'm trapped in a tower (not an ivory one lol))
      - can't be bothered to log in to do what amounts to child-rearing (sorry but your enormous pride needs, no begs, to be hurt)

      p.s. embrace diversity (including thought) instead of fearing it (it won't make you fit in here at /. or anywhere else in the world but it will be more interesting)

    74. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by gillbates · · Score: 1

      Actually, I kind of regard the absence of religious belief as an indicator of lack of intelligence. The willingness to arbitrarily ignore 4,000 years of human experience suggests that they lack the intelligence necessary to cope with difficult and sometimes contradictory data. Most intelligence tests are necessarily limited to solving only a narrow range of problems; typically, these problems involve relationships which are discrete, linear, and seldom go beyond anything mathematical in nature. Asking someone to explain why one painting is better visually composed than another requires a large degree of intelligence, but unfortunately, such explanations cannot be objectively rated. Thus, a large part of what constitutes human intelligence - that is, perception and judgement, and even learning, are simply not tested.

      It's getting to the point where the whole science vs. religion debate is really for the infantile. Anyone with an open mind and a little dilligence can figure out the two are not opposed to each other. Rather, it is when supposedly educated people confuse a religious philosophy (naturalism) for science that things get heated. Trust me, no one in the Vatican is staying up late because someone is sequencing DNA in a lab somewhere. Rather, it is when naturalist dogma is spewed from scientists that people get all fired up:

      • Scientists don't like it because it isn't real science. Yes, many aspects of evolution have been shown to be true (like microevolution), but taken as a whole, evolution still does not explain the fundamental question of how we came to be. In fact, this question more properly belongs in the realm of philosophy, but small minded atheists insist on discussing it within the realm of science.
      • Religious nuts don't like it because they see science as a competitor for authority. It doesn't matter what science says, science is a problem because it represents an alternative authority. They don't seem to understand that the Bible writers were more concerned with the relationship between God and Man than the particulars of how we were created. It does not occur to them that the Bible can be an authority on matters religious, and science an authority on matters material.
      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    75. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by SamSim · · Score: 1

      I'm still waiting for the inevitable two-thousand-comment story entitled "Creationists Oppose Linux".

    76. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by moz25 · · Score: 1

      As Oscar Wilde put it (more or less): "If atheism is a religion, then not collecting stamps is a hobby". The only thing that binds atheists is that they do not subscribe to a theist-centric philosophy. That's like saying that everyone not from the US is from the same country.

      I find it as insulting that my personal philosophies and beliefs are dumped in the category "unbeliever" as you find it insulting that you are dumped in the "non-rational ID looney" camp.

      Also, following your argument, belief in Astrology would be equivalent to belief in e.g. the supernatural powers of Jesus. Can you prove Astrology to be false? Or the FSM?

      Just my thoughts on this matter...

    77. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      Then by definition you are not a Catholic, and you are in fact a heretic. Sorry, but that's the way your religion works. And that's what your children may well end up being taught by zealots while your back is turned.

      I'm on my way to a Christmas - whoops, sorry, HOLIDAY party, so I don't have time to respond to your whole post. However, you have a grand misconception of how Catholicism works. There is, within the faith, a process by which one can stay Catholic and not believe in/agree with almost anything the Catholic Church holds true. The only exceptions to this are the "core" beliefs that are held to define Catholicism (things like Jesus is the son of God and himself divine, the virgin birth, Mary's assumption, and the like). The evils of masturbation, for example, aren't among those core beliefs.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    78. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The grand parent poster said, and you quoted him on it:

      Prove something that is by definition unprovable? That's a derisible statement.

      By dirisble he clearly means worthy of derision. As in he laughs (unkindly) at the suggestion that the existence/non-existence of God is knowable. That's clearly the position of a Strong Agnostic. And yet you lambast him for being an atheist when it is clear he isn't. Why is it that the religiously indoctrinated have a knee-jerk reaction of claiming that any one who doesn't follow their faith must follow another faith, one which they judge to be inferior?

    79. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      Also, following your argument, belief in Astrology would be equivalent to belief in e.g. the supernatural powers of Jesus. Can you prove Astrology to be false? Or the FSM?

      Astrology, yes, since it purports to make predictions regarding events which can then be observed and compared to those predictions. The FSM, no, and if someone actually wants to believe they've been touched by his noodliness, more power to them. I, of course, think they're wrong, but you won't see me on street corners railing against belief in the FSM.

      Basically: as far as I'm concerned, you can believe anything you want, and unless I can prove (within the bounds of "proof" accepted by science) you're wrong about it, I'll leave you alone. I reserve the right, of course, to take issue with any actions you undertake that are harmful, but I won't criticize your beliefs.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    80. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by stevelinton · · Score: 1

      I mean how could DNA or the process of cell division 'evolve' if evolution itself requires cells to divide and carry on it's genetic blueprint.

      We don't know the details, since there are no records and we haven't had the time or space to run experiments on the necessary scale (a whole planet for 100 million years or more) and furthermore I am not a biologist, but, as I understand it, the process goes something like this:

      1. general chemical soup in the seas and atmosphere of primordial Earth -- water, ammonia, methane, CO2, etc.,
      2. energy input from the Sun, lightning, volcanoes and/or under-sea vents drives the formation of more complex chemicals (the beginnings of this process has been observed in the lab
      3. (and here we get speculative) more complex chemicals form, which catalyse further reactions in the chemical soup, causing it's bulk composition to start changing more quickly and less randomly
      4. eventually you get a molecule which can catalyse its own synthesis from the soup. Best guess is that this is something like RNA, but we don't know.
      5. now we have self-replicating systems, and, after a short time, competition for resources. Now natural selection plays a role
      6. gradually these molecules become more complex, and become teams of molecules, forming primitive virus-like or bacteria-like organisms.
      7. then comes the switch to DNA for long term genetic storage, offering less error and more flexibility, and the structured cell with a nucleus and mitochondria, offering more efficient and flexible operations.

      I am not aware of any instance of irreducible complexity which is not thoroughly debunked.

    81. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      Sorry for the double reply, but I forgot to add something.

      Atheism - that is, the firm belief that God does not exist, is a religion insofar as it holds to be absolute truth that which is, by definition, unprovable. This is as distinct from agnosticism, which is a simple lack of willingness to believe in anything that can't be proven.

      Agnosticism is a perfectly rational response to the proposal of the existance of something which is beyond proof. Atheism is a counter-belief system. It's one thing to say "I don't believe in God, because no one has demonstrated He exists." It's entirely another to say "I know God doesn't exist, because no one has demonstrated He exists."

      The latter is belief-based, the former is empirical.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    82. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anne+Honime · · Score: 1
      ID isn't about creationism, and has no religious motivations whatsoever.

      To the opposite, ID is all about religion and faith, since you have to believe it - there are no proofs, not even a single clue to back up that belief.

      All it says is that we shouldn't dismiss the intelligent design THEORY out of hand, it is important in humankinds search for the ultimate answer to life the universe and everything that we look at all tha available options to explain where life originally came from. There is a problem with evolution, in that darwinian THEORY cannot explain where life came from, only how it continued to change.

      The interesting part of this is : you're right, evolution as a real, scientific theory, can't be used for purposes outside its scope. Clearly, the question of the prima causa is in essence transcendantal, hence, unscientific, therefore ouside the scope of scientific theories, be it big bang, quantum mechanic or gravitation. And by this criterium, ID is clearly unscientific : by postulating the answer to the question of origins, it fails the scientific test. That doesn't prove ID is false, but it proves that ID shouldn't be taught outside sunday schools, which is the very root of the debate. Being unscientific, ID has no room in science lectures, period.

      I could very well postulate on my own that universe was created this morning, by an intelligent designer who somehow implanted memories in our brains ; or I could think that I'm alone and dreaming of humanity. Those postulates are no more backuped than ID - but I resist the temptation to submit them to be included in school curriculum. Even if I believed it, it would be meaningless because the world I would be hypotheticaly dreaming of would still be governed by scientific laws, therefore the answer to the theological question of origins would be pointless to live in that world.

    83. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Atheism - that is, the firm belief that God does not exist, is a religion insofar as it holds to be absolute truth that which is,

      What kind of idiot equates a firm belief with absolute truth? I suppose next you'll equate a firm beleif that the Tom Cruise is gay with absolute truth, and that those who profess such a beleif implicitly declaring their religiosity.

    84. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      There is, within the faith, a process by which one can stay Catholic and not believe in/agree with almost anything the Catholic Church holds true.

      Sorry, but that is NOT how Catholicism works. The Pope is your lord and master. his word is law, and his word is passed down through church law. You obey these teachings or you are in a state of sin. You may think otherwise, but if you want to call yourself a Catholic then you must accept the above mentioned dogmas of the church. Anything less is essentially Protestantism.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    85. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's true. Atheists are smarter, more ethical, and better looking than religious people, and I'm pretty sure they have bigger dicks.

      Oh, and ladies, we're more sensitive without being needy. Plus we'll respect you in the morning and make you breakfast. Truly, we're heterosexual gay people.

      In your FACE, American Taliban!

    86. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Ever hear of this guy. He was right. He almost got burned at the stake. There are thousands more like him, a lot of whom did get burned at the stake. For what? Being right.

      The persecution of Galileo was a tragedy, and not an isolated one - but the parent poster made it pretty clear he doesn't condone that. "If you want to talk about testable hypotheses, we can do that. You produce evidence contrary to my understanding of the universe, and I'll change my understanding. I'd hope you could do the same thing." Galileo suggested a testable hypothesis; the response was entirely inappropriate.

      You think this won't happen again? Think that humanity has "grown up"? What happens when your kids and their irrational beliefs propagate and my kids get derided, supressed, or even killed for simply saying the truth.

      You're mistakenly assuming that all religion is necessarily irrational; this is not the case at all. Secondly, you're assuming that your atheistic beliefs constitute "truth"; I must respectfully disagree. Finally, you're apparently assuming I'll raise my kids to encourage derision, suppression and murder; how dare you?

      Billions have lived under the boot of religion. Billions are still living under it. You think that's right? I don't. I think that indoctrinating your children, or anyone elses, is morally wrong; and socially dangerous.

      Living under the boot of religion? Yeah, that doesn't sound like it would be a good thing, but you don't sound like you have a particularly clear understand of what religion is, and I doubt you know much about mine. If you're interested in learning (which I have to say would genuinely surprise me), I can certainly try to explain it.

      By the way, are you suggestion I should teach children that what I believe to be false is actually true? You can't prove atheism to be correct, so why should I believe it? And if I don't believe it, why would I teach it to someone else? That sounds morally wrong and socially dangerous to me.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    87. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by cachorro · · Score: 1

      And yet who cannot but marvel at the subtle humor of a creator who has endowed humans with the faculty of belief while at the same time denying them any rationale for exercising said faculty.

      My own sense is that the intelligent believers have some understanding of the verse:

      "Far above that which they attribute to Him is He"

    88. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      It means that the person in question intentionally limits the scope of the methods he uses to evaluate ideas in order to preserve the ideas that he would probably otherwise discard for lack of evidence (since in science, one does not hold onto hypotheses which make no testable predictions and for which no observable evidence exists).

      The problem here is, many people seem to assume that the logical conclusion, in the absence of scientific evidence to the contrary, is that God does not exist. Because of this assumption, most atheists see themselves as having no religious belief, and therefore since anyone you disagree with on a matter of fact (not opinion) must be wrong (since if you were wrong you'd change your belief until you were right again), all religion is therefore wrong.

      That was confusingly worded, but I don't think I'm overstating.

      Anyway, the thing is, many of us disagree with your basic assumption. If you assume that, in the absence of scientific evidence to the contrary, that there is a God, then obviously anyone who believes otherwise - including atheists - is holding a religious belief, on faith, without proof. That's OK, but it means your unscientific religious belief that there is no God isn't any crazier than my unscientific religious belief that there is.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    89. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      ....but creationists? For some reason each and every single time a story about evolution, intelligent design or even the origins of life appears, it amasses enourmous amounts of comments in a short period of time. I predict the same for this story, with regret.I'm 50% with you, brother

      I'm wondering what the hell is going on? Is it just a political hot potato and ./'ers are simply venting here? This might be, but I've seen a lot of comments from Slashdoters in support for ID one way or the other. It's scary because the Slashdot readership to me is apparently amoung the most educated on the net. We are mostly geeks after all.

      Some points:
      1. Most Slashdotter's are American.
      2. Most American's are religious. http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0OBW/is _10_43/ai_113526975
      That's a fairly skeptical study. Virtually 80% of Americans believe in a deity.
      3. Therefore, barring specific evidence about geekiness and atheism, I'd say most Slasherdotters would be religious. Even if ONLY 40% of slashdotters are religious (versus 80% of americans), and even if only 25% of those believe in ID, that'd still be 10% of slashdot which believe in ID.

      That's enough to make these discussions total 1-sided flamefests, but big flamefests. Which they are.

      It would be scary to think that all the geeks around me actually believe in religion. When I was younger I just assummed that most people were completely secular like me, and didn't believe in religion at all; delegating it to the status of fictional works like comic books etc. It came as something of a shock to my world view that most people are not in fact secular but do hold religious beliefs. I haven't quite recovered from it.

      Perhaps that's how you were raised. That's how I was raised. Sometimes, however, you need to look into the looking glass, and realize that not everyone was raised that way. Many, many geeks I know were raised in VERY religious households. Most of these loose up quite a bit; there's something of 'slacking' in geek culture, and this includes slacking on things like church. However, there's a big difference between having your worldview weakened, and having you worldview flipped on its head.

      If you feel that you are a smart person, its easy to believe that all smart people would come to the same conclusions as you about life, the universe, and all 'that jazz'. However, this is not often the case; in nature versus nuture, I assure you that nuture does matter quite a bit.

      One day, man may create an enlightened civilization that does not require a universal father figure. We've had that before, in various cultures, and some atheists have that now. It's not eschewing spirtuality totally; Shintoists don't believe in an overarching deity, early Zoarstrians certainly didn't (and of course don't forget Nietzsche), and many polytheistic cultures didn't see their deities as father figures but rather as power players whom one might some day compete with. This goes for both the extremely sophsticated polytheistic cultures, like late Hinduism, or more succinict religions, such as aboriginal tribal beliefs; I find it quite endearing that aboriginal tribes talking about their uncle, God of the West, or a great-great-grandfather, a minor deity who was responsible for such and such. These living religions are _very_ interesting to me.

      For whatever reason, the judeo-christian-islamic tradition really likes God, the Universal Father, who Watches and Punishes us. *shrug*, To Each His Own.

      For me, it's easy to be spiritual without having a formalized religion (ah, I do like early shintoist thought). Having had haullicinations at one point in my life helps, but I feel that the entire nature of the universe, the idea that there is a layer of randomness that we find difficult to pierce without something approximating faith, (science calls it assumption->hypothesis test) combin

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    90. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by winwar · · Score: 1

      "Yes, many aspects of evolution have been shown to be true (like microevolution), but taken as a whole, evolution still does not explain the fundamental question of how we came to be. In fact, this question more properly belongs in the realm of philosophy, but small minded atheists insist on discussing it within the realm of science."

      Sorry, but evolution does explain how we came to be. Now if you mean how life started, well, then you would be correct about evolution. But researching how life began is certainly a valid scientific endeavor. Philosophy doesn't have much to add-it's much better for the "why are we here" and "what is our purpose".

      "Asking someone to explain why one painting is better visually composed than another requires a large degree of intelligence, but unfortunately, such explanations cannot be objectively rated."

      There is a large difference between difficult and impossible. I'm willing to bet this is done all the time in certain majors..... Or are you saying you couldn't objectively rate the explanations showing a badly painted stick figure is not as well composed as the Mona Lisa? One would suspect an intelligent person would realize this.

    91. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because you're wasting your life, and you're not seeing the glory of the universe that's out there. And you're doing it for such a stupid reason. When you're walking down the street and see someone banging their head against a building, you want to stop them.

      You completely misunderstand the connection between faith and science. Christian scientists often view science as a method of exploring God's creation to a greater degree. Science used in this way does not contradict faith, nor can it be compared to banging heads against a building. Science enhances the Christian appreciation and understanding of God. Astronauts, for example, have remarked about their adoration of God and understanding of their insignificance in comparison with the universe when viewing Earth from the moon. Robert Boyle was one of the most devout Christians of his time, and utilized science as a way to explore creation. Even the great Philippus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim spent his last days using alchemy as a ministry tool to heal the sick.

      You assume that faith is designed to undermine science, and that Christians view science as an attempt to undermine faith. This is not the case.

      Of course. And if you're doing that that's halfway there. But if you start believing random things without evidence, your worldview's not going to make a lot of sense.

      Irrelevant when arguing against a Christian. Hebrews 11:1 states, "Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." Christianity, it seems, was one step ahead of you over 1000 years before you were born. Christians believe a lot of things with evidence, and their worldview makes sense.

      Just like the fairies at the bottom of my garden. I haven't seen them because they turn invisible whenever humans are looking at them, of course. Occam's razor and assuming the absence of anything that doesn't have a reason to exist is the only way to get a reasonable view of things.

      Assuming that God exists, who said that he has to move within your human understanding of logic?

      We at least have some grounds for this - "religion is dumb because this religious person said this dumb thing" is fallacious but better than "my religion is better than yours" with no reason at all.

      Aren't you doing the same thing?

      I'm not necessarily criticizing your viewpoint, but to assume that Christianity, or religion in general, is some sort of intellect-retardant is either ignorant or hateful.

    92. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Phroggy · · Score: 1
      No, it just saddens me - I wonder how much better they could have done without it.

      Many scientific discoveries have been made in the search to understand more about God's creation; without the belief that God created a wonderful and interesting universe for us to explore, they might not have bothered.

      Supporters of ID, no. As for rational thought, not incapable, but by definition they think irrationally more often than is good.

      I disagree that holding a religious belief precludes rational thought. In the absence of scientific proof to the contrary, I don't see the belief that God exists (but currently chooses not to reveal Himself in a scientifically observable way) to be irrational at all - certainly no more irrational than the belief that, in the absence of scientific proof to the contrary, there is no God.

      Because you're wasting your life, and you're not seeing the glory of the universe that's out there. And you're doing it for such a stupid reason. When you're walking down the street and see someone banging their head against a building, you want to stop them.

      Interesting that you should use that word.
      "The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." - Psalm 19:1 (NIV)

      The universe reflects the glory of the Creator; I find it curious that you would expect religious people not to see it.

      "religion is dumb because this religious person said this dumb thing" is fallacious

      I'm glad you agree. Many people don't.

      but better than "my religion is better than yours" with no reason at all.

      How about, mine's better than yours because mine is based on the writings of dozens of people who communicated directly with God and wrote exactly what He wanted them to, thousands of years ago. What the Bible says about the sinful nature of mankind is consistent with observation; the Bible's guidelines for how to live your life promote good health and the improvement of society. Not to mention the promise of eternal life in the presence of the Creator, offered as a free gift. And getting direction from God when I'm not sure what to do is always helpful too, although I don't ask for it as often as I should and sometimes fail to pay attention when I'm given answers (hey, nobody's perfect).
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    93. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why the hell can't you leave me alone?

      Get your fucking god off my money then come back and talk shit.

    94. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      Also true enough- but you see, that raises the same problem of predictibility as ID raises. Since we don't actually know the mind of God without being God, we can't predict natural selection under ID with any accuracy. Likewise, since we don't know the random mutations ahead of time, we can't predict natural selection under evolution with any accuracy.

      That is total and complete BS. Scientists predict the results of natural selection all of the time. Have you never heard them say: "If we overuse antibiotics then we will evolve a pathogen that is resistent to antibiotics?" or "If you confine large animals to an island, then they will evolve to be smaller?" Each individual mutation is random, just as every lottery ticket purchase is random. That doesn't mean the overall result is random. The lottery always makes money, because the whole system is rigged, just as with natural selection. You could do natural selection experiments in your basement. I've heard that crickets selected for longevity can evolve into a variant that lives twice as long as normal crickets.

    95. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Is it really that hard to get past childhood indoctrination?

      Yes!

    96. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Crag · · Score: 1

      "for whom no evidence exists"

      What form would such evidence take? Repeatable phenomena with no generally accepted theory or explination? Science has made great strides, but for every mystery we unravel two more show themselves.

      I'm socially agnostic. Atheism would require that I choose a definition for the deity or dieties my atheism would be denying. Mundane philosophical logic dictates that it is impossible to prove OR disprove the existance of an all-powerful entity.

      My intuition tells me that Godel's incompleteness theorem can be applied to scientific knowledge to show that we will never have a complete model of the mechanics of the universe. Such a model would necessarily be incomplete or self-contradicting.

      We will always be making progress, asymptotically approaching a Perfect Model. Between our current Best Model and the Real World will be a gap of unexplainable or unpredictable behaviors. There will always be room for religion or supersition in those gaps, no matter how small they are. However, even if my intuition is wrong and we come up with a complete model of the universe, there's no way we can "know" that that universe and our measurements and modeling of it, were or were not constructed by a greater power of some sort.

      Whether you believe there is or isn't a higher power, the degree to which you hold that believe is the degree to which you claim to know something which is, by definition, unknowable. There is no logical difference between telling someone an untestable assertion is true and telling them it isn't.

      So let's ALL keep our beliefs to ourselves.

    97. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by kcbrown · · Score: 1
      The problem here is, many people seem to assume that the logical conclusion, in the absence of scientific evidence to the contrary, is that God does not exist.

      One must be careful to distinguish between belief in lack and lack of belief. Most atheists lack belief in a God. Some believe in lack thereof.

      Only when one must make a decision where one must assume either existence of God or nonexistence thereof will someone who lacks belief fall back to a default. Generally that default will be nonexistence, since it is what comes of the application of Occam's Razor.

      Anyway, the thing is, many of us disagree with your basic assumption. If you assume that, in the absence of scientific evidence to the contrary, that there is a God, then obviously anyone who believes otherwise - including atheists - is holding a religious belief, on faith, without proof. That's OK, but it means your unscientific religious belief that there is no God isn't any crazier than my unscientific religious belief that there is.

      I cannot agree. The reason I cannot agree is that someone who holds a positive belief in God despite lack of evidence of said God is someone who is failing to apply Occam's Razor to the question of God's existence, whereas they would not fail to apply the Razor to any other similar belief. On the other hand, someone who believes in the nonexistence of God due to lack of evidence is applying Occam's Razor. Admittedly, belief in the nonexistence of God has nothing supporting it other than Occam's Razor, but belief in the existence of God has nothing supporting it whatsoever. Therein lies the crucial difference.

      There is no difference at all between believing in the existence of God and believing that aliens routinely visit Earth and abduct people from time to time. Neither has any substantiating evidence worth anything. Yet those who have a scientific bent and who also simultaneously believe in God will scoff at those who believe that aliens are visiting us right now.

      If you wish us to believe that belief in the existence of God has the same standing as belief in the nonexistence of God, then you must concede that the belief in the existence of God has the same standing as the belief that aliens are visiting Earth and occasionally abducting people. Or any unfounded but unprovable belief, for that matter.

      No, sorry, but belief in the nonexistence of something based on lack of evidence is slightly more substantiated than belief in the existence of something despite lack of evidence. If you cannot see that, then why don't you believe that aliens are abducting people from under our noses?

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    98. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Crag · · Score: 1

      Also, by "socially agnostic" I mean that I keep my relationship with spirituality out of my relationships with most other people. My marriage to my wife was a commitment between the two of us which we made as a matter of choice. Our spiritual relationships with the universe are not part of our commitment to each other. There was no church involved, and we only involved the state because of certain hassles we would have run into otherwise.

    99. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1

      God you are dumb :)

    100. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by dannixon · · Score: 1

      And don't think that atheism isn't a faith

      Right, and not collecting stamps is a hobby. ;-)

    101. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      Why would someone intelligent believe in an invisible and all-powerful being for whom no evidence exists
      Oh? Sir Science by all means show me the scientific proof that God does not exist. As a biologist I would love to read it. As a Christian, I would love to read it. There is no evidence on how life originally formed, yet evolution is considered fact. 'Memory Mud' forming RNA is the best they can offer, yet, no one can dupe it in the lab. I am a biologist, I know that evolution is real, but you and yours *faith* in atheism is always confounding to me. To paraphrase you "Why would someone intelligent believe in a universe that sprang into existense for no reason at all ?"

      Seraphim

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    102. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by busmacedon · · Score: 1

      I say this as an atheist who is strongly against ID:

      I have a hypothesis as to why people who are very educated believe in religions. It has to do with comfort of the mind. There is some scientific evidence (I have not personally investigated it thoroughly so take this statement with a grain of salt) that the human mind is wired to believe.

      Furthermore, you have to consider that if people were raised in a religious envioronment, with all its social and psychological nuances and benefits (and downsides), this also contributes to their desire to believe.

      Why look down upon those who are more comfortable believing? I personally hold some (minor) delusions about how I look, for example, and they make it easier to make it through the day.

      Is the goal of personal beliefs necessarily to determine and follow the ontological truth as set down by Western philosophical tradition? Perhaps it is true that this approach gives certain advantages in personal decision making, but perhaps it does not in all situations. I don't know, so I see it as a personal decision to believe whatever someone wants, and do not view that choose to do so as inferior.

      Of course, this does not make it socially responsible to elevate beliefs to the status of science. Thankfully there is a well-developed system of peer review to filter out these biases as best we can.

      (It is a whole other topic about religious morality and law, so I will not go there for the sake of pertinance.)

    103. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you do not believe in Thor- yet many sincerely did- we have never PROVEN THor does not exist.

      Another sig here puts it best man. I'll paraphrase.

      There are millions of gods not to believe in. Atheists simply believe in one less.

      As an agnostic or atheist (the definition seems to wander around a bit) I do not believe that Gods do not exist. I do not believe that Gods do exist.

      I have not stopped beating my wife since last tuesday.

      Why would snowflake cause a huge pile of snow to kill thousands in a village below? Random crap happens all the time in the world.

      God pretty clearly hasn't intervened in evolution on earth in billions of years (not millions). If you prefer to believe that he caused those first primative animals before trilobytes (sp) to exist, more power to you man. Science is about what we can actually observe. It's a method- not a religion.

      For what it's worth, if god DID exist and was real- I'd think it's a pretty sick creature based on what's in the bible. It did some pretty morally heinous things if it was real.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    104. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      88% of the world population belongs to some religion

      Where did you pull this statistic out of?

      I have heard otherwise on relgion and percentages. This was from a professor of religious anthropology in college.

      The more industrialized the nation the less participation in religion. The most industrialized nation, I believe Denmark or Netherlands, had something like 10% church of the population attends church of some sort. America, the most religious of all industrialized nations, has only about 50% of people that attend church of some sort.

      It would appear the vast majority of your 88%, if that statistic is to be believed, is from the uneducated developing nations.

      I would also point to this site.

      http://www.religioustolerance.org/ev_publi.htm

      If you are going to trump someone with facts, at very least attempt to cite them.

    105. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Darby · · Score: 1

      Actually, I kind of regard the absence of religious belief as an indicator of lack of intelligence.

      Then you have put no real thought into the subject at all.

      The willingness to arbitrarily ignore 4,000 years of human experience suggests that they lack the intelligence necessary to cope with difficult and sometimes contradictory data.

      Which is proven by the fact that you attempt to relate lack of religious belief to *ignoring* humanities experience with religion rather than to paying attention to it.

      Truly your point is most made laughable by limiting it to 4000 years.
      What about all the years before that particular god was invented?!?

      What about the fact that religion of all stripes has almost always throughout history been used as a tool to fuck the many for the benefit of the few?

      Damn, dude.

      Ignoring the history of religion is how it perpetuates.
      Dealing with the reality of the history and the present of religion is the number one reason for anybody with a scrap of intelligence to reject it.

      Because, really, how much sense does it make for an all powerful perfect being to have as its sole purpose to hide *all* evidence of its existence and then torture everybody who doesn't believe in him in spite of every single relevant fact. Further torture those who happen to get some nonsense trivial details wrong.
      That isn't a deity, that's a petulant 5 year old who desperately needs a spanking.

      Change a few details for any non-Judeo-Christian-Muslim religion.

    106. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Darby · · Score: 1

      I don't understand the anti-religous crusade so many people seem to take on as their own little holy war.

      By "so many", I have to assume you mean "nobody"
      The OP wasn't crusading, he was expressing his feelings about the issue.
      Seriously, "crusade" is a heinous word fully equivalent in meaning to "holocaust".
      There is no difference in the intent, the malice, or the reality of those events.
      Well, except, of course, that the holocaust only lasted a few years, not hundreds.

      Why the hell can't you leave me alone?

      Neither the OP, nor (I'll bet) anybody else has done a god damned thing to you.

      You believe what you want, and I'll believe what I want. I won't teach your kids to believe what I do, and you can just stay away from mine.

      That's the entire point of the ID debate, but you have it entirely reversed.
      It's sick *religious* fuckholes trying to shove their idiotic nonsense down everybody'd throat at gunpoint that is the entire problem here.
      Now, keep in mind, by "idiotic nonsense" I'm referring to the fact that they are so desperate to try and shove *their* god into everyone's face that they have entirely reduced their god to being 100% indistinguishable from a flying mass of spaghetti and meatballs.
      It seems like you believe in god. Do you believe that your god is a flying pile of pasta?!?
      If not, then STFU.
      You are not persecuted, you are defending the people who are forcing your god into a fucking pasta maker.

      And don't think that atheism isn't a faith: absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

      If you can't even bother to figure out what you're talking about, then STFU.
      "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" has nothing to do with atheism.
      You're claiming that absense of evidence is all the reason you need to believe that whatever nonsense there is no evidence *for* should be believed.

      There is no evidence whatsoever for *any* of the thousands of gods that have been invented over the years. Hence no reason to believe in *any* of them.
      You're making the fundamental error in any attempt to argue for religion. You're assuming it's true to start out with.
      There is no point of even discussing evidence of absence without any evidence for it to start out with.
      Hence our noodly overlord.

    107. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Darby · · Score: 1

      And don't give me the "because I'm right and he's wrong" argument until you can prove that there is no god.

      Bullshit alert!!!!!!

      Until you can prove that there *is* a god, then there is no value in it whatsoever.
      Quit the circular reasoning. You are claiming that your god is the flying spaghetti monster. Until you quit assuming the only thing you're trying to demonstrate you will be unable to construct a coherent argument on the subject.

      Unless there were any rational reason at all to believe in your magical invisible friend (who ain't the same as the one other people who claim to share your religion have), opting not to doesn't create a new religion.

    108. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by moz25 · · Score: 1

      I agree with your first reply (regarding Astrology, etc) so I won't comment on that.

      As for atheism... you have to distinguish between "weak" and "strong" atheism. The first is closer to agnosticism and the second closer to what you might consider religion. I would consider that a lousy religion though as it gives you no afterlife, no central holy book, no rituals, no prayer and no church system. It misses all the traditional characteristics of religion, so it seems like more of a philosophical than a religious position.

      I myself don't tend to make claims about the non-existence of deities because it's logically impossible to prove a negative. Of course, one or more deities can exist, but does a specific religion make the right claims about them... I doubt it. Through a "reductio ad absurdum" we can see that when the existence of so many deities (we have 2500 of them) cannot be disproven, the most likely scenario becomes that none of them exist.

    109. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by pintomp3 · · Score: 1

      so you are substituting "holier than thou" with "smarter than thou"? a pushy atheist is no better than a bible-thumper. arrogance is rarely a sign of or a product of intelligence.

    110. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1
      1) BEST. TROLL. EVAR. (And here I am replying to it)

      2) Sorry, but that is NOT how Catholicism works.
      Something tells me that the Catholic may know a bit more about his faith than the Atheist. At the very least, he is (by default) more qualified to discuss it.

      Maybe it's just me.

    111. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm sure you'd ignore the Red Cross and other charities that had religious origins
      Perhaps you had better read up on the history of the Red Cross. The organization started out as the International Committee for the Relief of the Wounded. The Red Cross symbol was merely an inversion of the Swiss flag, chosen due to Swiss neutrality. The organization attempts to remain neutral on all accounts - including religion. Otherwise, they would have a hard time operating on fields of battle.

      Simply because the organization was founded by a christian, and uses a cross as its symbol, does not make it a christian organization. It espouses no christian dogma. Does not reference prayer/churches/gods. And actively disassociates itself from any appearances to the contrary.

      ICRC
      Red Cross
      Britannica Article


      rho
    112. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but the correct answer is "Mormon".

    113. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Roy-Svork · · Score: 1

      I agree that ID probably should not be taught in schools, and there is absolutely no proof other than the cell division process being very improbable, and following a set pattern, which are the two main requirements for us to recognise something as intelligent (eg easter island; we do not attribute the carvings to the random workings of wind and erosion due to these two factors). However, as natural selection stands, any change that doesn't benefit the animal directly will be lost quickly in successive generations. So if part of any of life's irriducably complex systems were to eveolve before any of the other parts of that system, then it would not get carried on as only the system as a whole benefits the organism. This way it would be extremely hard to explain the chance evolution of all these parts simultaneuosly, as evolution by it's nature works in small incremental steps that benefit the lifeform.

    114. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by lmlloyd · · Score: 1

      You do know that atheism is not actually a synonym for secular, don't you? There are plenty of people who believe that the matters of man are the matters of man, and the matters of religion are separate from that; yet still believe in some sort of spiritual existence, be it God, or Buda or whatever.

      I get so tired of people like you who see the word "secular" and automatically assume "look, godless heathens!"

      Also, the lack of a belief in god is not the same thing as a belief in the lack of a god. It is only myopic religious provincialism which boils things down to the childish level where you either believe in the One True God, or you are some kind of damned atheist! The fact of the matter is, even IF you honestly believe in some sort of supernatural being guiding all events in the world, there is still a big question as to WHICH of these gods you should believe in. Then there is the question of whether there is one, or a pantheon of them, who their chosen people are, was Jesus a profit, or a Buda, or the son of God, what foods you are and aren't allowed to eat on which days, who did and didn't get resurrected when... it goes on for quite a while. Only someone who was indoctrinated young, and never once even thought to question their belief could possibly think it was as simple as you either believe in god or you don't.

      If you want to know why you might get dismissed by that whopping 10% of the country who says they aren't religious, that last point might have more to do with it than you think. You see, those of us who weren't raised in a particular religious tradition, still have to wrestle with the same moral questions you religious people do, and most of us go out and try to find some answers. While you are flipping through your bible looking for what King James approved as the proper answers, we are finding out what the Greeks thought on the subject, what Hindis think about it, what the Shinto view is, what Druidic tradition says, and yes, even what they say in the Bible. While you are asking your priest the church thinks a particular passage means, we are researching the Thomas Gospel and the Rabbinical interpretations of the Torah.

      You see, you are absolutely right that no one should call your judgment into question simply because of your faith. However, calling someone's judgment into question because they are basing their every moral decision, and possibly even their eternal state of being, on a single book out of thousands of other books out there claiming to cover the exact same ground, IS a good reason to call their judgment into question! I mean, your belief says that roughly 67% of the people on Earth have it wrong, and are all doomed to an eternity of damnation. That is a pretty big claim, and when the reasoning behind that is "it says it right here in the book," there is a pretty strong justification for calling your judgment into question. I know you don't see it this way, but some of us have never once in our entire life settled for "God said so" as an answer to any question. So, there is an immediate suspicion of the critical thinking ability of those for whom that is all the answer they need.

    115. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1
      Finally, you're apparently assuming I'll raise my kids to encourage derision, suppression and murder; how dare you?

      It seems that he is daring with great gusto. Reminds me of a proverb: "A fox smells its own lair first".

      And from the GP:

      Ever hear of this guy. He was right. He almost got burned at the stake.

      In addition to what you said, it is important to realize 2 additional things about Galileo's persecution:
      1) The imprisonment of Galileo was politically motivated. It had very little to do with religion, or even catholicism as a whole.
      2) He was never at risk for being burned at the stake. This is just part of the "myth" which surrounds him.

      Full disclosure: I am agnostic.

    116. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1
      My God? I thought that everyone understood that we Americans worship the Almighty Dollar.

      Get it? "In the Almighty Dollar We Trust"? Dollar? Trust?

      Tough Crowd.

    117. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm wondering what the hell is going on? Is it just a political hot potato and ./'ers are simply venting here? This might be, but I've seen a lot of comments from Slashdoters in support for ID one way or the other. It's scary because the Slashdot readership to me is apparently amoung the most educated on the net. We are mostly geeks after all.

      Even among the world's educated, there seems to be a desire to believe in something bigger than one's self. Sometimes that leads to charity work, sometimes that leads to yoga, and sometimes that leads to religion. Could it be that "the desire" was installed by a Creator?

      While I wished that the article had triggered an academic debate, I'm not suprised at the arguing and flaming. I am suprised when someone on either side expresses shock that there would be others that could possibly hold the other position.

      For what it's worth, people should pick Evolution or Creation. The politically correct/middle ground "ID" or "Theistic Evolution" should be obvious bull to either side.

    118. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry guy but it takes a leap of faith to start believing in supernatural beings so I'm going to have to disagree with you that atheism is a faith.

      I'll give you this-

      People who have faith that there are no gods of any kind are being religious.

      But
      People who lack faith in any gods are not.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    119. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by hachete · · Score: 1

      I've been reading Marxist Hacker 42 grind down the arguments here with the monotony of a meat grinder, without providing any countervailing evidence. De nada. Zilch. Nothing. Oh, he's taken apart his opponents, re-purposed their arguments for his own. I'm sure there's a special name for this kind of rhetoric. Sadly, he has provided no actual data supporting his viewpoint. In fact, I've not seen any bold statement of MH42 furthering ID which can be taken apart by his opponents.

      The trial produced a wad of paper supporting evolution. Name me some studies which have been peer-reviewed in scientific journals which have supported ID *unequivocally*. Even Behe admitted that some of his supporting evidence could be viewed as supporting evolution.

      Neither have the ID crowd falsified Evolution; they just take the falsiable test of Evolution and turn into fact with no underlying evidence. In a strict falsiability test, it too would be peer-reviewed. It has been and has been found wanting. All that gives it life is the money provided by multi-millionaires.

      I think the ID crowd want it both ways: to be treated as "science" and, when push comes to shove, and their bluff is called, retreat behind faith, blocking discourse.

      On one thing Marxist Hacker 42 is right: we have replaced the theologists with the councils of science and damn right too. The scientists pursuit of objective knowledge has given us knowledge beyond our dreams. We are where we are because of science. If you wish to go down the route of theological dominance, then I believe you will go down the route of terror, murder torture. Believe this or be shot. Wipe out all the opponents, their writings, their race. Look what happened to the pagans in western europe. You want to live like the taleban, go ahead. You can count me out and actively against the religionists.

      Somebody said earlier that there is always a lot of noise regarding articles on evolution. I believe that there is a cultural war against science organised by the religionists. I think this noise is the evidence. Hacker Marxist 42 is part of that noise.

      h

      --
      Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
    120. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by gillbates · · Score: 1
      What about the fact that religion of all stripes has almost always throughout history been used as a tool to fuck the many for the benefit of the few?

      Actually, we call that politics. If you look at the difference between religious and atheist regimes, atheist regimes almost always commit atrocities on a scale far greater than religious ones. Consider the likes of Pol Pot, Hitler, Stalin, etc... Granted, they didn't sacrifice virgins to the gods (a practice which died out thousands of years ago), but they sacrificed millions of innocent lives for the "promise of a better tomorrow" Read up on communism sometime.

      And your comment about humanities was assinine. As was your insistence on comparing God to a petulant 5 year old. God doesn't hide his existence from mankind - if He did, why do so many people believe in him? Do you expect us to believe that the whole world - apart from a few atheists - is really just a bunch of morons who do whatever people tell them, and believe whatever their told? Anyone who has studied history and the multitude of political revolutions in Western culture alone would know better than to think that.

      Not that I think you're a bad person, but I keep hearing this same anti-religious mantra repeated over and over, without any proof. Usually, when proof is offered, it is limited to a very specific time and place, ignoring the rest of recorded history. I'm not so narrow minded, and I think the dogmatic insistence of an anti-religious sentiment only shows that someone is unwilling to learn.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    121. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by m50d · · Score: 1
      You really think you've figured it out and that my friend is always the start of stupidity (and you've gone far down that path already).

      I'm young, I'm entitled to a little arrogance.

      You seem to think that you're completely rational or that you should be: you really need to escape the basement and simply LIVE!

      Not all the time. But it seems the best way to approach serious matters. Last time I discussed the origin of life IRL I was off my head on absinthe, being very friendly to everyone. It doesn't seem a better approach. For one thing I can't remember what the hell I said.

      You can still be as atheist as you wish but oh boy you really need a dash of irrational hedonism!

      It's not like I don't enjoy whatever I can get in that line, but life has a serious side too, and I think these kinds of questions are part of it.

      --
      I am trolling
    122. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by m50d · · Score: 1
      You completely misunderstand the connection between faith and science. Christian scientists often view science as a method of exploring God's creation to a greater degree. Science used in this way does not contradict faith, nor can it be compared to banging heads against a building.

      That's far less frequent than either of us would like it to be. Sure, there are plenty of Christians, including the examples you list, who are scientific in their approach to the world and view it as revealing God. But there are an awful lot more who see the one as contradicting the other.

      Irrelevant when arguing against a Christian. Hebrews 11:1 states, "Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen."

      Faith is its own evidence? Cute, I suppose, but not sensible in any way.

      Christians believe a lot of things with evidence, and their worldview makes sense.

      I assume here you meant "without evidence". In which case true, but that's because rather than believing random things without evidence they believe a specific set of things without evidence - those an authority says they should. But the support of an authority is no real support for one reason or another. Christians are being irrational here, and applying their methods consistently would lead to a worldview that did not make sense.

      Assuming that God exists, who said that he has to move within your human understanding of logic?

      He doesn't. But you're suggesting giving up trying to understand the world. I prefer to assume the world does make sense, based on the results this approach has given so far.

      Aren't you doing the same thing?

      No. My religion, if you want to see it as such, is better than yours because it makes mostly accurate predictions which have helped people enormously, made lives far better. The abolition of slavery almost certainly couldn't happened without its efforts. What has any other religion done for anyone? Many good things have been done in the name of religion, but they're all the things any good person would have done - morality doesn't depend on religion. And much evil has been perpetrated under the banner of religion, although in the same way it's quite likely another excuse like nationalism would have been found if it hadn't been there.

      I'm not necessarily criticizing your viewpoint, but to assume that Christianity, or religion in general, is some sort of intellect-retardant is either ignorant or hateful.

      Hateful? I hate them, for my own reasons, and that may be clouding my judgement. But I can't see an intelligent approach leading to religion. It's comforting and I sometimes wish I had it, but it doesn't make sense.

      --
      I am trolling
    123. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by m50d · · Score: 1
      Many scientific discoveries have been made in the search to understand more about God's creation; without the belief that God created a wonderful and interesting universe for us to explore, they might not have bothered.

      I don't think so. Wherever we find humans we find evidence they were exploring, as much as they could. The universe is interesting no matter what you believe about where it came from. And it's obvious from just a few attempts at finding the cause for phenomena that the universe is largely understandable.

      I disagree that holding a religious belief precludes rational thought. In the absence of scientific proof to the contrary, I don't see the belief that God exists (but currently chooses not to reveal Himself in a scientifically observable way) to be irrational at all - certainly no more irrational than the belief that, in the absence of scientific proof to the contrary, there is no God.

      Do you believe in bigfoot, the loch ness monster, alien abductions, the fairies at the bottom of my garden? Believing in the existence of something in the absence of evidence one way or another is irrational, in the absence of evidence you have to assume the simplest explanation. Taking the other approach (of believing anything exists unless there is evidence against it) and applying it consistently leads to an insane worldview.

      The universe reflects the glory of the Creator; I find it curious that you would expect religious people not to see it.

      It's from experience. I don't know which way the Bible points on this (IME quotes can be found to support any viewpoint) but in practice it's rare.

      How about, mine's better than yours because

      Now we're talking. That's a better way to approach this. However, once you start giving reasons I can start shooting them down.

      mine is based on the writings of dozens of people who communicated directly with God and wrote exactly what He wanted them to, thousands of years ago.

      You're claiming your scriptures are the precise word of God? In that case, why do they contain so many contradictions? And in any case, is your claim any better substantiated than any other religion's?

      What the Bible says about the sinful nature of mankind is consistent with observation;

      I observe a society where IIRC 80% of the adult population admits they pay no attention to religious teachings functioning pretty well. I observe plenty of people who have never been "saved" through anything religious behaving as if they are fundamentally good. I certainly don't observe any difference in sinfulness between the religious and non-religious, which seems entirely contrary to those teachings.

      the Bible's guidelines for how to live your life promote good health and the improvement of society.

      Up to a point, but many of them are clearly outdated and even harmful to modern societies. The dietary restrictions are the most obvious example - once they prevented disease, but now they merely waste perfectly good food. But the same is true of the approaches to, say, women, homosexuality, war, and so on. You can find 20 better guides to living a healthy life that improves society in any bookshop.

      Not to mention the promise of eternal life in the presence of the Creator, offered as a free gift.

      Hey, I'll give you the promise of this big bridge in Manhattan. Free gift. And I'm pretty sure there are better promised eternal lives offered by other religions.

      And getting direction from God when I'm not sure what to do is always helpful too, although I don't ask for it as often as I should and sometimes fail to pay attention when I'm given answers (hey, nobody's perfect).

      OK, advice is always good, but pretty much any religion will offer you that.

      --
      I am trolling
    124. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Darby · · Score: 1

      If you look at the difference between religious and atheist regimes, atheist regimes almost always commit atrocities on a scale far greater than religious ones. Consider the likes of Pol Pot, Hitler, Stalin, etc...

      Well, 2 out of 3 anyhow. Hitler's regime was *extremist* Christian in every aspect.
      Look it up.
      Anyhow, a "state Religion" versus the State as the religion is merely semantics.

      As was your insistence on comparing God to a petulant 5 year old.
      It's not my insistence. There is no other reasonable conclusion that can possibly be drawn from Judeo Christian beliefs. Seriously, try to counter that and you will be instantly swallowed up in contradictions and apologetics.

      God doesn't hide his existence from mankind - if He did, why do so many people believe in him?

      They don't believe in "him", they believe in literally millions of different gods, many of whom demand that their followers murder the followers of the other ones.
      That's either an entirely incompetent diety, or a petulant child who enjoys *causing* all the suffering that has ever been caused in the name of religion because he was too fucking evil to speak plainly.
      Hell, he could turn the whole sky into a giant display and xspeak his message loud and clear, but he doesn't.

      Do you expect us to believe that the whole world - apart from a few atheists - is really just a bunch of morons who do whatever people tell them, and believe whatever their told?

      No, not everybody, but most people tend in that direction. It's made much easier to keep people ignorant sheep when they're brainwashed by their parents from birth to believe that some utter nonsense that doesn't stand up to a scrap of reason is absolute truth. The fact that they are brainwashed into blind ignorant acceptance by terroristic threats from birth has a major affect of their later abilities to think rationally on that subject.

      It is an absolute fact that religion's primary use throughout history has been to keep the masses stupid and compliant.

      Not that I think you're a bad person, but I keep hearing this same anti-religious mantra repeated over and over, without any proof.

      Point out one thing I've said that isn't 100% obviously true and absolutely proven and I will prove it to you absolutely.
      The laughable part of your point is that the sole basis and the only requirement for your entire religion is that you blindly and without possibility of proof believe that an all powerful deity considers the most important thing to be for people to ignore all reason and accept his existence without one single scrap of proof having been offered throughout the entire history of the world.

      Usually, when proof is offered, it is limited to a very specific time and place, ignoring the rest of recorded history.

      Again with this nonsense. The entire burden is on you. Unless you can prove your side, there is no reason for any sane person to even believe such a far out wacky idea is even remotely possible. The fact that evil oppressive theocracies ruled over our ancestors for thousands of years is the only reason so many people still buy into such nonsensical crap. The fact that parents force it down their children's throats is a truly evil act even by the stated Christian beliefs. That utterly destroys free will.
      If you really believed your religion, and really believed free will, then nobody would tell their kids crap about it until they were old enough to understand it.
      They would then explain all the various religions and the histories thereof and the fact that they *believe* in their particular version even though there is nothing at all to distinguish it as being better than any others (including flying spaghetti monsterism) and then they would let their kids make up their own minds.

      Nobody does that though. Their religion would be dead. Unless they brainwash their children into *blindly* accepting it, then practically nobody would buy into it once they'd reached ma

    125. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      It's true. Atheists are smarter, more ethical, and better looking than religious people, and I'm pretty sure they have bigger dicks.

      Well, if you approximate "more ethical" as meaning crime rate, then yes. Studies HAVE shown that atheists are substantially under represented in prison populations. So either they do commit less crime than the general population, or they are so much more intelligent that they don't get caught.

      As for your suggested "dick size" study, it could seriously skew the "average dick size" results if there is any difference in atheism rates between men and women.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    126. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I see others have addressed the well established fact of the purely religious motivatation of these ID activists, so I'll skip that.

      There is a problem with evolution, in that darwinian THEORY cannot explain where life came from

      There is a problem with chemistry, in that chemistry THEORY cannot explain where elements came from.

      Oh wait, the origion of elements is entirely outside the field of chemistry. The THEORY of chemistry does not claim to, and does not attempt to, explain the origin of elements.

      But heay, lets not let a little detail like that stop anti-chemisty activists from trying to attack and discredit chemistry on that basis.

      The theory explaining the origin of elements is called nuclear fusion. There was a long period of time where the theory of chemistry was well established and conclusively supported when they had little or no understanding or evidence of the theory of nuclear fusion.

      The theory of the origin of life is called abiogenesis. Evolution is currently thoroughly understood and thoroughly developed and thoroughly tested and thoroughly supported and thoroughtly accepted science. Abiogeneis is currently a weakly developed and weakly supported theory, and as such it has little or no place on a highschool science curriculem, and as such NO ONE is fighting over any issue of the "origin of life" in highschool classrooms. Abiogenesis attempts to address a singular microscopic event shrouded behind billions of years, and which has left no direct trace. It is hardly supprizing that abiogenesis is a poorly developed and poorly supported field. However that fact is in no way a valid criticism of evolution.

      it is important in humankinds search for the ultimate answer to life the universe and everything

      Science only explains the whats and the hows of the physical universe. If you want some sort of metaphysical answer of why, you have to look for it somewhere outside of a science class.

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    127. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      However, as natural selection stands, any change that doesn't benefit the animal directly will be lost quickly in successive generations.

      No, actually neutral and even mildly negative mutations tend to hang around. In fact neutral and even mildly negative mutations are valuable for sheer difference value. Predators and parasites and viruses and infections all evolve to best target the "normal" and "ideal" genetic makeup of the target species. Just being different means that you may be more resistant to infection or attack, even if it is a mildly negative difference. So variation has a postive selection pressure just for the sake of variation.

      A population builds up a library of nonfatal mutations. A library of countless neutral or mildly harmful mutations. The various mutations even get measured for their cost/benefit values, with them appearing as different percentages of the population according to that cost/benefit value. The most costly motations being the rarest, and the most beneficial being themost commen.

      The mixing and recombination with each generation actually preforms an astonomically powerful search for valuable combinations of mutations. In fact you still get virtually the full power of evolution even if every individual mutation is nutral or harmful. You can combine a negative mutation producing a mild toxin with a negative mutaion producing defective skin sweat glands that leaks protines from the blood out onto the skin, and you can wind up with a primative poison frog with a primative defense against predators. You can then combine that with another negative mutation for "defective" kidneys incapable of filtering out certain toxins from the blood... a mutation that would normally cause toxins to build up in the blood to fatal levels... but combined with the leakey sweat glands causes all of the toxins to come out and build up onto the skin for a truely toxic from. Combine that with a negative mutation for bright red skin... a mutation that would normally ruin a frog's camoflauge and get it eaten by predators... and you get a bright red poison frog that predators know not to attack even attempt to eat.

      And another very signifigant aspect is that you don't want to have just some of these bad mutations... it could be fatal to be bright red without poison (get eaten fast), or fatal to have defective kindeys unable to eliminate the toxins without having the defective skin sweat glands to otherwise excrete the toxins. What this means is that you don't want to interbreed with average frogs that have normal genes for camoflauge and normal kidneys and normal skin and no toxin. You either want to be a purebreed with none of these "defects" or you want to be a purebreed with all of them. You don't want to interbreed and mix genes. You want to be two separeate species.

      So we introduce another bad mutation. A mutation for a late breeding season. Normally trying to breed off-season makes it hard to find mates, and in particular breeding late means that the eggs will hatch late and that the tadpoles will be yonger and smaller than the normal frog's tadpoles. The smaller yonger tadpoles will have a bitch of a time trying to compete for food against the bigger normal tadpoles....

      But this is a USEFUL mutation because it is exactly the right sort of mutation to prevent interbreeding and to drive a speciesation event. Our new poison frogs are better off accepting the "bad" off-season breeding time for the advantage of not accidentally breeding with normal frogs and mixing genes and having lots of their offspring drop dead or get eaten.

      Five bad mutations. Extra toxins in the blood, defective skin poors, defective kindeys, ruined camoflageg, and bad breeding season. These five bad mutations come together perfectly to create a new species. And it would all be even easier had I based it on neutral mutations. I restricted it to 'bad' mutations as proof of concept.

      Populations build up huge libraries of neutral mutations, and even

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    128. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      On one thing Marxist Hacker 42 is right: we have replaced the theologists with the councils of science and damn right too. The scientists pursuit of objective knowledge has given us knowledge beyond our dreams. We are where we are because of science. If you wish to go down the route of theological dominance, then I believe you will go down the route of terror, murder torture. Believe this or be shot. Wipe out all the opponents, their writings, their race. Look what happened to the pagans in western europe. You want to live like the taleban, go ahead. You can count me out and actively against the religionists.
      Look what you are doing right now to the religionists- it's no different from anybody else espousing a dogma at the sacrifice of truth. But if you or anyone else thinks that "facts" and "evidence" exists- I suggest they read this Journal Entry on Facts and Evidence on the Internet.

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    129. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Lady+Jazzica · · Score: 1

      "Ever hear of this guy. He was right. He almost got burned at the stake. There are thousands more like him, a lot of whom did get burned at the stake. For what? Being right."

      Actually, no. He was told he could teach heliocentricism as an unproven theory, which was the case back then. He agreed, but then he broke his word, so his legal problems were actually more along the lines of breaking a contract or something like that.

      He didn't get into trouble for being right; his model of the solar system (perfectly circular orbits) was actually worse than the geocentric models used at the time when it came to predicting the movement of the planets in the sky. So, based on what was observable scientifically at the time, Galileo was wrong.

    130. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Lady+Jazzica · · Score: 1
      And yet, I believe not one of those things, while simultaneously being Catholic.

      Actually, to be a good Catholic, you'd have to believe some of those things (and rightly so). Specifically, you have to believe that masturbation is wrong:

      Catechism of the Catholic Church - The sixth commandment
      2352 By masturbation is to be understood the deliberate stimulation of the genital organs in order to derive sexual pleasure. "Both the Magisterium of the Church, in the course of a constant tradition, and the moral sense of the faithful have been in no doubt and have firmly maintained that masturbation is an intrinsically and gravely disordered action." "The deliberate use of the sexual faculty, for whatever reason, outside of marriage is essentially contrary to its purpose." For here sexual pleasure is sought outside of "the sexual relationship which is demanded by the moral order and in which the total meaning of mutual self-giving and human procreation in the context of true love is achieved."
      None of the other things have to be believed. But just in case someone's interested, I'll discuss some of the other points.

      While it is not automatic that "people who commit suicide will go to hell", one does have to believe that suicide is a mortal sin, since one is committing murder. Of course, mental illness or something like that could reduce or eliminate one's culpability. And as the Catechism says, we are allowed can hope that suicides repent of their sin before it's too late:

      Catechism of the Catholic Church - The fifth commandment
      2280 Everyone is responsible for his life before God who has given it to him. It is God who remains the sovereign Master of life. We are obliged to accept life gratefully and preserve it for his honor and the salvation of our souls. We are stewards, not owners, of the life God has entrusted to us. It is not ours to dispose of.

      2281 Suicide contradicts the natural inclination of the human being to preserve and perpetuate his life. It is gravely contrary to the just love of self. It likewise offends love of neighbor because it unjustly breaks the ties of solidarity with family, nation, and other human societies to which we continue to have obligations. Suicide is contrary to love for the living God.

      2282 If suicide is committed with the intention of setting an example, especially to the young, it also takes on the gravity of scandal. Voluntary co-operation in suicide is contrary to the moral law.

      Grave psychological disturbances, anguish, or grave fear of hardship, suffering, or torture can diminish the responsibility of the one committing suicide.

      2283 We should not despair of the eternal salvation of persons who have taken their own lives. By ways known to him alone, God can provide the opportunity for salutary repentance. The Church prays for persons who have taken their own lives.
      Homosexuals are not evil as such, but their sins are; just as someone tempted to kill isn't evil for being tempted, but he would be evil if he were to kill.

      That unbaptisted children go to hell is a possibility, since they haven't received the grace of justification through baptism; but on the other hand, the Catechism says that we can hope that God will save them despite that:

      Catechism of the Catholic Church - The sacrament of Baptism
      1261 As regards children who have died without Baptism, the Church can only entrust them to the mercy of God, as she does in her funeral rites for them. Indeed, the great mercy of God who desires that all men should be saved, and Jesus' tenderness toward children which caused him to say: "Let the children come to me, do not hinder them," allow us to hope that there is a way of salvation for children who have died without Baptism. All the more urgent is the Church's call not to prevent little children coming to Christ through the gift of holy Baptism.

    131. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Lady+Jazzica · · Score: 1

      The Pope isn't the lord and master of other Catholics, he's their servant: the servant of the servants of God ("Servus Servorum Dei"). He certainly works more for me than the other way around...

      As far as his teaching goes, when the Pope speaks infallibly, he is doing nothing but teaching the truth. Catholics don't believe such teachings due to being forced to do so; rather, Catholics freely believe what the Church teaches because they love the truth.

    132. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by hachete · · Score: 1

      Ah-ah, the post-modernist troll. Go away, shoe.

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    133. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      >Observation, Hypothesis, Experiment, Result, Conclusion.

      Well, for that matter, so does Evolution, which is based entirely on observations, hypothesis and conclusions.... Evolution is not science and should not be taught as science


      Wrong.

      Evolution makes many predictions, and countless experiments have been run to test those predictions. The fact that you are ignorant of those experiments does not mean you can use your ignorance to claim evolution is not scientific.

      For just one example, evolution includes the element of common decent with variation. It predicts that genetic analysis of life on earth will fall into an extremely strict tree pattern. Thousands if not millions of such genetic analysis experiments have been run in the past several years and they have conclusively confirmed that extremely strict tree pattern.

      Observation, Hypothesis, Experiment, Result... with that result being fed back in as a new observation. An ongoing loop of refinement and increasing accuracy and increasing understanding.

      allow sciences such as biology to be taught as fact?

      Science should be taught in the same manner as physics and chemistry and other fields of science.

      Evolution should not be singled out for attack by the same sort of people who attacked Galileo's sun-centered solar system because their "Literal Word Of God Scripture" said the earth did not move and that it was the center of the universe.

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    134. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      >(I could make a Heisenbergian argument that not only don't we have enough information, we can't have enough information, and, in fact, that information doesn't exist in the first place...

      Actually, I accept Heisenberg's research, but limit it to affecting human beings. It's quite possible to know enough information- it's just not possible for US to do so.


      You are missunderstanding Quantum Mechanics. As the prior posts already wrote, Heisenberg uncertainty is NOT(!!!) merely a physical limitation on our ability to measure something. QM says that the information physically does not exist in the first place, not until it is measured.

      What you are trying to suggest is a "hidden value" model, one where there is a real value already there that we simply cannot see and are unable to measure. There have been experiments done showing all "hidden value" models incorrect and impossible, showing that that the desired information is not and cannot already be there, not in any normal meaning of the words.

      Note that while this descibes an inderterministic observable universe, it can in fact be laid on top of a purely deterministic system. For exaple there is the "multiverse model" that basically says that every outcome that can happen does happen. Complete determinism. However we would only observe a single viewpoint, we would only observe one half of any particular branching point. The branch itself is deterministic, and there will be an exact copy of us observing each outcome on each branch, but which side of the branch any particular instance of us would subjectively observe is indeterminate.

      But that is merely one of many possible explanations, and is beyond what QM does or can say at the moment. In any case, it still says nothing either way about God.

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    135. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Evolution makes many predictions

      How do you predict a random start point? When you can predict a random start point, you can claim Evolution makes predictions- until then, the very word "random" in the start point makes evolution unpredictable.

      The fact that you are ignorant of those experiments does not mean you can use your ignorance to claim evolution is not scientific.

      Experiments that start with random events and prove only preconcieved notions are called observations, not experiments.

      For just one example, evolution includes the element of common decent with variation. It predicts that genetic analysis of life on earth will fall into an extremely strict tree pattern. Thousands if not millions of such genetic analysis experiments have been run in the past several years and they have conclusively confirmed that extremely strict tree pattern.

      That's not prediction, that's observation. Anybody looking at their own family tree can see that so-called "prediction".

      Observation, Hypothesis, Experiment, Result... with that result being fed back in as a new observation. An ongoing loop of refinement and increasing accuracy and increasing understanding.

      What increasing accuracy? How can you have increasing accuracy when you start with randomization as an assumption?

      Science should be taught in the same manner as physics and chemistry and other fields of science.

      Only AFTER it becomes hard science- becomes predictable, with NO random elements.

      Evolution should not be singled out for attack by the same sort of people who attacked Galileo's sun-centered solar system because their "Literal Word Of God Scripture" said the earth did not move and that it was the center of the universe.

      I don't- my latest journal entry attacks environmentalism on exactly the same premise- that hard science is indeed very hard to achieve, and it's nearly impossible to separate it from religion.

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    136. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      You are missunderstanding Quantum Mechanics. As the prior posts already wrote, Heisenberg uncertainty is NOT(!!!) merely a physical limitation on our ability to measure something. QM says that the information physically does not exist in the first place, not until it is measured.

      And I'm saying Heisenberg is making the same mistake of any other Dogmatic preacher- mistaking his own point of view, or humanity's point of view, for a universal point of view.

      What you are trying to suggest is a "hidden value" model, one where there is a real value already there that we simply cannot see and are unable to measure. There have been experiments done showing all "hidden value" models incorrect and impossible, showing that that the desired information is not and cannot already be there, not in any normal meaning of the words.

      And exactly how do you prove that negative? The interferance of the human observer creates the problem of the hidden value model to begin with- you'd have to remove the human brain from the observation COMPLETELY- including observing the results of the experiment. Include the human brain, you introduce bias. There is no way around that.

      Note that while this descibes an inderterministic observable universe, it can in fact be laid on top of a purely deterministic system. For exaple there is the "multiverse model" that basically says that every outcome that can happen does happen. Complete determinism. However we would only observe a single viewpoint, we would only observe one half of any particular branching point. The branch itself is deterministic, and there will be an exact copy of us observing each outcome on each branch, but which side of the branch any particular instance of us would subjectively observe is indeterminate.

      I'm familiar with that potential explaination- heck, it solves a lot of my personal history, like why I remember nuclear weapons being used on Tripoli, Libya in the 1980s when nobody else does. However, it's a religious explaination ultimately- it requires faith to believe.

      But that is merely one of many possible explanations, and is beyond what QM does or can say at the moment. In any case, it still says nothing either way about God.

      And thus is a primarily *religious* interpretation of the results.

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    137. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Overall result means nothing unless you can predict the individual genetic line. GIGO.

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    138. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Have the integrity to stand by your argument. You are arguing for Intelligent Design based on the premise that it is beyond our ability to explain evolution.

      No, actually, that's not my argument. My argument is that human beings are too stupid to actually discover truth, so we make up myths like Evolution and Intelligent Design to explain the unexplainable. Thus the whole argument between the two is idiotic at best- and brainwashing at worst.

      This is false. It is not beyond our ability to explain evolution. In fact, we are able to exlain and account for the entire process remarkably well. Nor is it beyond our ability, or yours, to understand evolution.

      Fine, if you claim that- explain the WHOLE process, from the first hydrocarbon molecule to DNA to the eventual evolution of human beings and a prediction of where the evolution of our species (which obviously isn't done yet) is heading. And don't fall back on the myth of randomization to do it. Until you can do that, this claim that we are able to explain and account for every piece of the process is false.

      It may however be beyond the ability of some to simply accept this process that they can both understand and explain. If so, then that is a problem you are either going to have to come to terms with, or come up with a better explanation for.

      I deny that you've even understood or explained the process- and have to fall back on "random" for some portions of it.

      If ID is your better explanation, fine. Just don't beset some misfortunate children with such an odious belief system as that. Especially on taxpayers money.

      To me, both belief systems are equally "odious". What we should be teaching kids is that human beings are inadequate to come up with anything better than inadequate models to explain a universe far more complex than our own brains- which are pretty darn complex to begin with.

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    139. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Our definition of science is fine.

      If that's true, why do you have to fall back on theological ideas like a random, indeterministic universe?

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    140. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Your definition of random seems to fit as a definition of god.

      That's because the entire idea of a "random" event was designed specifically to replace an "Act" of God. The definition fits because it was designed to fit, and vice versa. Complete circular logic, and never questioned by the very people who claim that there is no God because "random" mutations explain everything.

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    141. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      excpet evolution can be test, and you CAN make predictions with it.

      Some parts of evolution can. Not all, unfortuneately- when you rely on random events, or pseudorandom events, or Acts of God for your input, you haven't really explained anything at all.

      For the record, Evolution is not a theory, it's a fact.

      Fine, then prove that randomness exists. REALLY exists, not pseudorandom events like quantum mechanics describes, not raditation breaking down, but real supernatural random events. That's what is required for Evolution to become a "Fact" with a capital F.

      Evolution by Natural Selection is the theory.

      Natural Selection is only HALF of the theory. It's the catalyst by which Acts of God, Pseudorandom numbers, or random events become orderly and non-random. Without the other half- pick one of the three, they're all equally good- the most evolution can predict is when a species will become extinct.

      you can not use ID to make accurate predictions.

      Yes you can, because ID is exactly the same as evolution in the process, in the catalyst of natural selection. The only difference is the input- and Natural Selection is so good at the output that it may not matter what the input is at all.

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    142. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      You'd be better off actually thinking about the points I raise- and becoming a bit more skeptical about your science than just accepting any Richard Dawkins that comes along, to dazzle you with philosophy disguised as science.

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    143. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Are you seriously suggesting that biology and quantum mechanics are not subjected to scientific rigor?

      Yes I am- in fact I'm suggesting that these are actually closer to religions than to the sort of 100% always true never changing scientific fact that say, Newton's laws in Earth's gravitational field have become.

      Have you never heard of medical trials?

      I have- they never do quite approach 100% certainty, do thay? Which would be a requirement of your rules.

      Medical experiments?

      Same problem- experiments in the guise of observations.

      Particle accellerators?

      Rather hard it's been for them to come up with the same result twice, let alone rise to the level of your definition of true science.

      Evolution is firmly backed by experiment.

      Only for a very different version of the word experiment than is given.

      We've dug up dinosaur bones! That's an experiment.

      No, it isn't- that's mere observation. Designing a DNA strand, watching it evolve, carefully controling it's environment to create a dinosaur after billions of years- that's an EXPERIMENT.

      It gathers data that was not known beforehand.

      Since when? Dinosaurs existed sometime in the past- or if the FSM style religionists are right, were created as bone sometime in the more recent past. Both explainations are logically valid- and merely digging up the bone does NOT lend evidence to either conclusion. Carbon dating would, but it becomes unreliable after 8000 years or so. Geological dating helps, but when you talk to evolutionists and geologists separately, you quickly realize that is a circular definition- the layers are defined by the fossils found in them, and the fossils are dated by the layer they were found in.

      Evolution is proably one of the most tested theories on earth.

      Until you actually examine it, anyway.

      Numerical models fit evolution.

      Numbers are an abstract concept, numerical models can be created to prove anything. This is no proof at all.

      We can interpolate the evolution of species by using fossils as data points.

      Or at least we assume we can- since nobody's invented a time machine yet to check the interpolation, this is as often wrong as it is right, and no better at all than mere religion.

      It's a successful technique.

      It's a successfull technique because it's never been tested in any way that could actually prove it wrong.

      Believing in thunder gods is not.

      It's no different than believing in thunder gods- none of this proves that evolution is anything more than just another myth. That's not to say it isn't right- there's a core of truth in every myth- it's just to say it's not finished, and probably won't be anytime soon. And in fact, because it's based on random mutation that can't be predicted, it's actually no more predictable than ID, which is EXACTLY THE SAME THEORY replacing randomness with acts of God.

      Yeah. It's called The Age of Reason? Some people like to call it a Free Society, where thought is not surpressed and we are free to laugh at ridiculous and irrational ideas like Intelligent Design and beliveing that masturbation is evil.

      Isn't it odd then, that you claim that "thought is not supressed" but the very next phrase is based on supression of thought?

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    144. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      Oh? Sir Science by all means show me the scientific proof that God does not exist

      Huh? Since when can you prove a negative? Prove the Flying Spaghetti Monster doesn't exist. Prove that UFO's don't exist. Prove that Tom Cruise's aliens don't exist.

      "Why would someone intelligent believe in a universe that sprang into existense for no reason at all ?"

      But that argument is obviously recursive. If the Universe requires God to create it, then who or what created God? Adding God doesn't answer anything.

    145. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by hachete · · Score: 1

      that's "sceptical" troll. you'd be better off expending more energy in something like macrame. now shoe.

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    146. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      If the Universe requires God to create it, then who or what created God? Adding God doesn't answer anything.
      Certainly it does, you just don't like the conclusion. The "then who or what created God?" thing is usually called the 'Putting God in a Box' arguement. I believe that we can both say that time/space began at the moment of the Big Bang right? And I think that we can say that every major religeon, and most of the minors as well have their $diety creating the universe. So is it argueable that $diety lives outside the normal time/space stream. Recursion, ok, lets use that, God created God, why not? Or, perhaps, just perhaps, we have no clue what it is really like outside of time/space and our reference to it. Lets face it, *something* started the universe. No one really knows who or what or how. But I always find it disappointing that as a athiest you can have faith, yes faith, in a physical explaination of how the universe came into being without any real proof at all, and yet when someone expresses thier faith on how it all began, well...they are wrong. Sounds like a version of Catholics vs Lutherans to me. Science as a whole gets to wave its collective hands every so often and say "Well, we just dont know". Yet at the same time to do that as a thiestic person gets you the loony award in the modern day. Given time science will explain many many things. But here is something - I will bet you that how the Big Bang started will not be explained in your lifetime. Here is the other part though. I bet 2 seconds after the end of your lifetime, that you will have the answer.

      And certainly you can prove a negative:

      • The romans didn't use Craftsman tools
      • pi doesn't equal 3.14...
      • The tsunami last year didn't kill people
      • The jewish Holocaust never happened

      Seraphim

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    147. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      It's more fun macrameing your brain....after all, you don't know that what you've been told is real, is real. You just have faith that what you've been told is real, is real. Nice religion you've built up.

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    148. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by hachete · · Score: 1

      No no no, I congratulate *you*, noodly flipness, on the niche that you're building up, particularly in trying to get the last word in. *Your* post-modern religion is more than I can bear. Your dogma is a dogma all of it's speicial ownness. It seems to answer all the questions, except the one, where can I get funding or a decent paying job. I do believe there's a position for teaching philosophy 101 to grandmothers on the other side of Saturn, where the notions of reality, of time and being, of being and nothingness are discussed ad nauseaum.

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    149. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      No no no, I congratulate *you*, noodly flipness, on the niche that you're building up, particularly in trying to get the last word in. *Your* post-modern religion is more than I can bear. Your dogma is a dogma all of it's speicial ownness. It seems to answer all the questions, except the one, where can I get funding or a decent paying job. I do believe there's a position for teaching philosophy 101 to grandmothers on the other side of Saturn, where the notions of reality, of time and being, of being and nothingness are discussed ad nauseaum.

      Courts of law, user interface design, software engineering, art- there are plenty of places philosophy is useful. The scientific method itself was designed by philosophers. The idea that philosophy automatically leads to the poorhouse is based on an incomplete understanding of what philosophy is.

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    150. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by hachete · · Score: 1

      True, true. It's a shame that your dogma isn't as useful, and you have to go around ambulance-chasing geeks.

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    151. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      The best bet is not to reject philosophy out of hand as not being useful. All philosophies are at least partially useful, otherwise they would not have survived to present day. The test of time is the *original* scientific method, and it still holds true, even if it takes centuries to work.

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    152. Re:Slashdot Under Siege.... by hachete · · Score: 1

      "passion to breed a form in shimmer of rain-blur"

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      Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
  32. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by grub · · Score: 1


    I agree Creation is debatable, but Intelligent Design seems to be logical to me.

    The two are the same and have an untennable position. Without a shred of proof going for ID nee Creationism there's nothing to debate.

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    Trolling is a art,
  33. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by PoitNarf · · Score: 1

    ...but nobody has explained to me where the big bang gases came from that created the universe.

    Why does everything need to have a beginning and an end? Why can't this matter or energy have always existed and always will exist? I don't find that so hard to swallow.

    --

    "0101100101? It's just jibberish. *looks in mirror, gasps* 1010011010@!? AHHHHHH!!"
  34. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Homology · · Score: 1
    I am not trolling, but I really couldn't tell if you are being serious or sarcastic, especially about renaming the planets...

    Don't you know that the school board of Kansas has decided that this will be done next year?

  35. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what are you on crack? "like most other religions do" The Muslims are blowing themselves and children up over it. Jihad anyone? Take a look at the definition. Hindu's go around all the time telling people about what they believe. In fact very few religions don't do that. You must not have heard of Tom Cruise or Scientology.

    The subtext of virtually all religions on the planet is recruitment. Don't let your bigotry turn you into an idiot.

  36. More to the article than just evolution. by olddotter · · Score: 1
    Some interesting ideas made the list:
    • Winner: Evolution in action.
    • Runner up: Planetary blitz.
    • In bloom.
    • Neutron stars.
    • Miswiring the brain.
    • Complicated Earth.
    • Protein portrait.
    • Change of climate.
    • Systems biology.
    • Bienvenue Iter.

    I personally would have put the Climate change data higher on the list. But some good biology/medical work was recognized as well.

    1. Re:More to the article than just evolution. by digitaldc · · Score: 1

      In bloom.

      You mean Nirvana made the list? I always said they were way ahead of their time.

      --
      He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  37. How long till Christmas is banned? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Congratulations! you are now no longer allowed to celebrate Christmas. Merry Evolution! You are not loved and have no purpose.

    1. Re:How long till Christmas is banned? by DaveCar · · Score: 1

      No, we are not loved (by a deity) and our life has no intrinsic purpose. C'est la vie.

      So what say we imbue our lives _with_ a purpose by loving each other and trying to make life better for one another.

      Seeing as we'll save all that time we used to spend arguing about who's god was bigger and killing each other in holy wars we'll need to keep ourselves occupied with something.

      Merry Enlightenedmass!

    2. Re:How long till Christmas is banned? by cozzano · · Score: 0

      I was wondering about this. How many people are actually going to have a 'true' Christmas? How many buy presents and so on to celebrate the birth of Christ? Not many I'll bet - I don't and I can't think of any people I know well who will (which obviously isn't representative...).

      I hear-by coin the phrase Commermas - as this is what Christmas has become. A lot of people buying a lot of presents for others in winter because its expected of them.

    3. Re:How long till Christmas is banned? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Personally I hope we keep it.

      I like christmas with all of it's drinking, partying and debauchery.

      But then again, that's what MERRY is all about- being drunk.

      That's why christmas WAS banned by puritans and why in the 1800's they said HAPPY christmas, not MERRY christmas.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  38. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

    'Bring as many to people to faith...' Hmm... this seems to imply that those who have faiths that are different than your own have no faith. It makes the fatal assumption that all other religions are somehow invalid or untrue. The thing is that of all the world's religions, only Christianity and Islam share the fundamental belief that 'for my faith to be right, everyone else's has to be wrong.' This is just plain wrong thinking and is not even close to what the actual teachings of Jesus were. (And before you dispute that, think about what it actually says in your Bible, as opposed to what your religious fanatic clergy have told you.) But what do I know about Chrisianity? I'm not even Christian, so you may as well ignore me.

  39. Poor fundies! by cffrost · · Score: 0, Troll


    They're having a rough week. Now would be a hilarious time to try to force science into the churchroom. Any fundies up for some preachings from "Darwin's Gospel"?

    Kick 'em while they're down, I say. Can I get an "Amen!"

    --
    Thank you, Edward Snowden.

    "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
    1. Re:Poor fundies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen brother!

  40. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by LurkerXXX · · Score: 5, Insightful
    At some point in time an intelligent being had to be involved.
    The elements that created everything had to come from somewhere.

    Where did the Intelligent being come from? The elements that comprise the being had to come from somewhere.

    Whatever you reply to this "he always existed" or whatever, is the same reply I'll give you to you about where the elements came from. It's just as logical as yours.

  41. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by CDPatten · · Score: 1

    actually they aren't. One said we were created in 6 days by the Christian god. The other says that at some point in the time line an intelligent being had to be involved. Whether it was during a six day period or simply craeteing the gasses that started it all.

    Why don't you do a little research before touting your FUD.

  42. It's Almost Funny by The+Lost+Supertone · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why is it academics and scientists so often decide that they are simply better than everyone else? Simply because by their own standards they achieve better than others? How would they feel if groups of people who say excelled at spiritual aspects of life, which apparently are beyond the reach of so many of these people, and simply stated that the realization of intelligent design was the top epiphany of 2005? It'd be laughed as a self promoting statement. Of course though I imagine they'd be quite offended if we pointed out this was the same thing. Humans are arrogant.

    1. Re:It's Almost Funny by NewbieProgrammerMan · · Score: 1
      How would they feel if groups of people who say excelled at spiritual aspects of life, which apparently are beyond the reach of so many of these people, and simply stated that the realization of intelligent design was the top epiphany of 2005?

      What does "excelled at spiritual aspects of life" actually mean? This is a serious question - I really do want to know what you mean by this. Also, are you implying that these "scientists and academics" are all somehow morally or spiritually crippled?

      (FWIW, I apologize in advance for asking a serious question on /.)

      --
      [b.belong('us') for b in bases if b.owner() == 'you']
    2. Re:It's Almost Funny by C10H14N2 · · Score: 1

      You make the absurd assumption that "academics and scientists" are necessarily non-religious. You are deeply wrong. What is incredibly arrogant is that people who self-identify as non-scientist/non-academic are insisting that they know what is and should be considered scientific and/or academic, shoving it down their throats even though there is not a reciprocal attack happening from the scientific/academic corner trying to define what is and is not religious. It is simply insecurity on the part of those attacking science and academia that the results of those imply the absurdity of their closely-held faith-based beliefs.

      In short, you're flailing at windmills.

      My CAPTCHA for this post was "stoning." Maybe there is a god after all. At least he has a sense of humor.

    3. Re:It's Almost Funny by taskforce · · Score: 1

      Actually, I have met many religious people who do tend to rub it in my face that I'm going to hell. One claimed that after "Eschaton" Christians would be "kings and bishops over men." I can only provide anecdotal evidence, but then your assertion is also based on the anecdotal evidence of this story.

      --
      My 3D Texturing Skinning work (under construction)
    4. Re:It's Almost Funny by Bassman59 · · Score: 1
      "Why is it academics and scientists so often decide that they are simply better than everyone else? "

      And religious nutjobs like Pat Robertson and James Dobson don't think they're better than everyone else? Puh-leeze.

    5. Re:It's Almost Funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My captcha is "unguided". Whoa.

    6. Re:It's Almost Funny by Darius+Jedburgh · · Score: 1
      Simply because by their own standards they achieve better than others?
      You answer your own question.
      How would they feel if groups of people who say excelled at spiritual aspects of life, which apparently are beyond the reach of so many of these people, and simply stated that the realization of intelligent design was the top epiphany of 2005?
      I'd ask "why are these people, who excel at the spiritual aspects of life, getting so involved in biology?"
      Humans are arrogant.
      Compared to what?
  43. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know many of you don't see this as a liberal vs conservative thing, but I truly believe it is.

    Dumbass... the federal court decision was made by a Republican Judge.

    I agree Creation is debatable, but Intelligent Design seems to be logical to me.

    It's the same thing.

    Seriously, how can you deny that some intelligent being had a hand in the creation of the universe at some point in time?

    Who made the intelligent being? And if no one made him/her/it which is much more complicated than the universe, then why did someone have to make the universe?

    You have no logic.

  44. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "I think the planets should be renamed because they're named after fake gods."

    You are free to call the planets whatever you wish.
    But clearly what you really want is the power (through government dictate) to force others to use names that are approved by your particular religion.

    I hear a lot of Christians complain about how oppressed they are.
    In the end the complaints turn out to be about wanting the power to control others.

  45. to paraphrase ignignot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I hope they can see this 'cause I'm doing it as hard as I can."

  46. Whew... and I thought that faith blinded people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, CrazyJim1, you're right. All you Christians have to do to defeat these darn scientists is to strategize. We wouldn't want things like "scientific process", "hypothesize, test, prove" and "repeatable experimentation" to thwart your movement. All you need is faith!!!

    In fact I have total faith that God created the Internet just so you and your cult can use it to evangelize to us heathens! If only we would take God into our hearts, all the world's problems would be solved! Beginning with those no-good school districts who want our children to learn things like lightning and thunder are naturally created phenomenon and not God showing his displeasure at the world's corruption!

  47. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

    They do? I have never had a Hindu or Muslim or Jew attempt to convert me. Neither has anyone else. Hindu's in particular believe that you are born Hindu. You cannot "become" Hindu. It is Christians which are converting Hindu's - not the other way around. Sorry.

  48. New Planet Names by John+Muir · · Score: 1

    God
    God the Father
    God the Son
    The Holy Spirit

    and um...

    Steve?

  49. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is quite a philosophical argument, but absurd none the less. Everything in this universe has a beginning and end. That certainly is not debating in the science community with any more then the existence of santa clause (yes st. nic did have a beginning and end).

    So that perspective really should stay on the scifi channel where it belongs.

  50. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Admiral+Frosty · · Score: 1

    There are more things in heaven and earth,
    Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.

  51. rtop? by npodges · · Score: 1

    i wonder what came in rsecond and rthird.

    1. Re:rtop? by DeathFromSomewhere · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should read the Rticle. :P

      --
      -1 overrated isn't the same thing as "I disagree".
  52. Politics and academia by Douglas+Simmons · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This is an instance of a decision being made over something that has nothing to do with politics intrinsicly based on politics. The same kind of thing happened in 1973 when homosexuality was removed from the American Psychological Association's big book of diseases. This decision wasn't made because the members of the APA decided homosexuality suddenly did not meet the definition of diseases (which it did, as it is still in the book thinly-veiled under the name Gender Identity Disorder), rather the APA buckled under tremendous political pressure from an aggressive homosexual movement.

    Maybe that was a Good Thing, but should decisions like identifying the Best Scientific Achievement of a year and medical decisions of vast importance be something we leave open to the whims of politics? I realize that in this case there was no "buckling" from pressure but it apparently was intended to reflect political shifts of our time. Whatever the case, it just doesn't sit well with me.

    1. Re:Politics and academia by NewbieProgrammerMan · · Score: 1
      This is an instance of a decision being made over something that has nothing to do with politics intrinsicly based on politics.

      The ./ summary/headline is misleading - please note the first paragraph of TFA starts with: "Research into how evolution works has been named top science achievement of 2005..." (emphasis mine)

      IMHO there's enough legitimate and useful research mentioned in the article to actually warrant making note of it in a "list of major endeavours."

      --
      [b.belong('us') for b in bases if b.owner() == 'you']
    2. Re:Politics and academia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically, "Gender Identity Disorder" applies to transexuals, people who believe themselves to be physically the wrong gender, not to homosexuals who do no believe themselves to be the wrong gender.

    3. Re:Politics and academia by Trogre · · Score: 1

      Don't worry. In an attempt to completely turn the tables, people are now pushing for forms of 'hatred' such as 'homophobia' to be classed as a mental illness and put into that little book.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    4. Re:Politics and academia by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is an instance of a decision being made over something that has nothing to do with politics intrinsicly based on politics.

      Nonsense. They are simply recognizing the huge amount of recent work that has immensly increased our understanding of evolution and its mechanisms. You'd be right if they were mearly recognizing the staggering quantity of raw evidence in support of evolution that has accumulated recently, as the quantity was already overwhelming, and is about as signifigant as more evidence in support of gravity. If there were recent comparable increases in the understanding of gravity and it's mechanisms, that would would be worthy of equal note.

      1973 when homosexuality was removed from the American Psychological Association's big book of diseases. This decision wasn't made because the members of the APA decided homosexuality suddenly did not meet the definition of diseases

      Homosexuality falls under "diseases" exactly as left-handedness falls under "diseases".

      it [homosexuality] is still in the book thinly-veiled under the name Gender Identity Disorder)

      Bullshit. Homosexuality does NOT fall under Gender Identity Disorder at all. Gender Identity Disorder is an intense and exaggerated desire/belief to *be* the opposite gender, for example a hyperfeminine boy fixated on a desire to get pregnate and have a baby. "Hyperfeminimity" and "hypermasculinity" is maladpative and harmful exaggerated affectation of gender, such as a girl expressing hypermasculine model of aggression and violence, or a boy expressing a hyperfeminine model of passivity.

      Your personal distaste for homosexuality notwithstanding, homosexuals express no intellectual infirmity and they are just as capable of productive, sucessfull, fullfilling lives as anyone else (including raising children), and they they cause no more social of physical harm to anyone than anyone else.

      If you find sex with men revolting, FINE, don't fuck men. If you find sex with blacks (or asians or whatever) revolting, FINE, don't fuck blacks (or asians or whatever). However that gives you no right to call interracial marriage a "mental illness", and it gives you no right to deny interracial couples the right to marry.

      God damnint! These aren't the middle ages anymore. It's un-fucking-believeable that in this day and age we can still have 40% of the population of Ala-fucking-bama vote against interracial marriage, and more than 50% of the population of several states voting to deny marriage rights based on gender. Race, gender, religion, the 14th ammendment of the United States Constitution guarantees equal treatement and nondiscrimination by the government and in the laws. You can no more write a valid law to discriminate on the basis of the gender of marriage applicants than you can write a valid law to discriminate on the basis of the gender or religion of marriage applicants. Yeah, lets ban marriages between Christians and Muslims while we're at it... and ban marriages between Jews and Atheists too.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  53. randomness vs predictability by snarkh · · Score: 1

    Just because something is random, does not mean it is unpredictable. Suppose I toss a coin 10^6 times.
    Then I can pretty confidently say that the fraction of heads is going to be between 49.9% and 50.1%.
    Each toss is random but the result is reasonably predictable.

    1. Re:randomness vs predictability by gorzek · · Score: 1

      I think the real lesson of evolution is that you can have random input (mutation) that produces orderly output (selection.) But many people seem to have trouble separating the two.

  54. Not banned. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    this sensationalist headline needs to die. intelligent design was not banned by the ruling, the previous board's policy of mandating its teaching (along with the wider scope of their attempt to actually remove science from the curriculum and replace it with religious studies) was found unconstitutional. teachers are still free to discuss it with their class if they wish under this ruling, though i'm sure they recognise that it could lead to action against themselves.

    1. Re:Not banned. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Having spent half a day reading all 139 pages of the ruling I feel the need to clarify. The judge's ruling is quite clear, ID is inherently religious, and inherently unscientific, and so should have no place in science classes or be in any way presented as an equal or acceptable alternative to Darwinian theories in the name of science to impressionable young minds.

  55. Thank-you by John+Guilt · · Score: 1, Funny

    Similarly, the Bible has not been banned from classrooms, but can't be used as an authoritative history text...nor "The Three Little Pigs" used in animal husbandry courses, especially if you catch them at it.

    1. Re:Thank-you by snarkh · · Score: 1


      The ruling was a little more narrow, concerning a specific ID policy of the board.
      Taken broadly, perhaps it may be interpreted that ID should not be presented as a scientific
      alternative evolution as you suggest. However teachers are certainly still allowed to discuss it in class.

  56. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Retort from an atheist "I'd rather have a bunch of fake gods to choose from instead of one nameless fake god..." It's simple to dismiss something blindly.

    Planets are named the way they are because of who discovered them. I wouldn't expect anyone to change the names of established things based on something that is wholey unrelated to their names. For example, I'm not about to rename the Star of Bethlehem flower to something else because I don't agree with the religion. That's just as assanine. And before you assume I'm irreligious, I'm a christian attending seminary college, so stop being so self-important with your religion, you're making it look bad.

  57. Finally recognition! by somejeff · · Score: 1

    "It took me 14 billion years and 3 x 10-30M g/cm3 of playdoh. And I got was this lousy achievement award!" - Mr. Universe

    1. Re:Finally recognition! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "Stop complaining! Now get off the couch and take the grabage out." - Mrs. Universe

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Finally recognition! by pintomp3 · · Score: 1

      our creator is a bodybuilder? damn, there's a pun in there too!

  58. I was just reading this creationist article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    As a liberal Christian, I have a certain passionate hatred for creationism. I despise creationism because it makes Christians look like a bunch of narrow-minded idiots. For example, I was reading in a Christian newspaper an article about the ICR, which stated the earth was young, and cited four reasons for this. All four reasons [1] have been long-since refuted over at Talkorigins.org or the Evolution Wiki. I was able to refute three of the four points off of the top of my head.

    I have seen creationist after creationist come to this Creation-Evolution debate board I lurk on, tell us the Earth must be young because of XXX and that we are all wrong. Once we present to them some scientific evidence that the Earth is old, they get real quiet real fast.

    Basically, believing in an old Earth is only possible when a creationist is in a serious state of denial. Case in point: The only people who believe in a young Earth have a religious reason for doing so. Many Christians believe in an old Earth; not one atheist believes in a young Earth.

    [1] The original offending article can be seen here. The refutations can be found here (just because you can come up with one case where we got different dates doesn't mean the 99+% of cases where we get the same age via different techniques is invalid) here, here, and here (the refutation is for creationist claims for c14 levels in coals, but the process in question can make diamonds have c14 atoms also).

    1. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      At the risk of violating /. best practices as defined in the FAQ:

      Me, too.

      Creationists and other bible-thumping fundamentalist types frustrate and anger me more than just about any other group I can think of. I'm a life long Catholic, and the bitter crusade being carried out by some people against all religion is beyond offensive to me...and it's primarily caused by those groups of people.

      GRR. ARGH.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    2. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Dadoo · · Score: 1

      Thanks for this. I wish I had mod points. It really irks me when creationists insist you must be an atheist, if you believe in evolution.

      --
      Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
    3. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 1

      heading OT but I thought I'd add this: I consider Catholicism to be "fundamentalist" too, since it requires, among othher things, that you believe in

      1. trinity: 1==3
      2. transubstantiation: eat/drink the ACTUAL flesh and blood of Jesus

      neither of these make sense on any level (not even to religious scholars) and can only be accepted by the same type of thought that also leads to creationism.

    4. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am sorry I have to laugh. Are you actually suggesting that as a christian you can believe in evolution? So what exactly makes you a christian then?

    5. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      ??

      Expecting God to follow the rules of identity that obtain in his creation isn't necessarily wrong, but it isn't necessarily right, either. If one is going to believe in something that's fundamentally outside the realm of provability (and, hence, outside all the rules of the universe), I don't see any logical difference between believing that 1 == 1 outside the universe and believing that 1 == 3 outside the universe. Of course, I also believed my Algebraic Structures of the Number Systems professor when she told us that unique prime factorizations are simply a feature of our common-use number system, and didn't necessarily pertain to other ones...

      Yes, transubstantiation is a hitch. Moreover, it's pretty obviously an artifact from the RCC's desire to emphasize its importance. It's one of the things that contributes to my being something of a fallen Catholic. But it's not a belief that, as far as I can tell, does any harm, so I don't feel compelled to really worry about it that much.

      Now, the RCC's policy on contraception is another matter entirely, insofar as I find it irresponsible at best, reprehensible at worst. The people who are most likely to buy into everything the Church says without questioning it are the same people who can least afford to practice Church doctrine in this regard. But that's a different topic entirely.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    6. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by truckaxle · · Score: 1
      The best arguement against a young earth is not decay rates or deposition rates, or salinity rates but things you can walk up and see. The best arguement I have come up with is the geological angular unconformity with takes several unavoidable long time period sequential steps such as

      • Deposition
      • Lithofication
      • Uplift
      • Erosion
      • Deposition (again)
      • Lithofication (again)
      • Uplift (again)
      • Etc.

      Great examples abound and there is even one at the bottom of the grand canyon. Some fine examples 1, 2, 3 and 4
    7. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an atheist. Yet, as a conspiracy theorist, I have reasons to consider a young earth. More specifically, I see patterns that fit some of the scenarios offered by a young earth. For example there are over 500 flood related myths and 80 or 90 of those have solid similarities. Therefore I have to look for evidence that some of the data supporting an old earth may be flawed. For example, I've seen evidence on Google Earth for an expanding earth. In one case quite violently expanded, not by a planet killing asteroid, but one that just made a flesh wound and went on to become our moon, sinking Atlantis, ending the last ice-age, and causing a pole shift. This all happened, quite quickly, when India was split from Antarctica, at the entry wound, sinking Lemuria, and sending the other two crashing into Asia and South America. The moon would have easily popped out of the Kermadec trench, adding 30% to the size of the Pacific, in the process. I then went looking for Guarani myths and found Abaangui, their god of the moon, who fits the Expanded Earth theory. I've also got good reason to doubt some of Shell Oil's ocean floor records on the subject. This process of discovery started after I was introduced to descendants of shipwrecked survivors from Atlantis, who in turn spawned the Illuminati to hide their re population strategies. There is good solid empirical data to be gleaned by examining ancient and not so ancient sex laws.

    8. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by oneiron · · Score: 1

      These ideas can easily be reconciled as ritual metaphors by catholics of even modest intelligence. I'm not even a christian, per se, and I can buy into these two ideas with enough self-honesty to meet the catholic criteria.

    9. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Dadoo · · Score: 1

      Are you actually suggesting that as a christian you can believe in evolution?

      I suppose that depends on your definition of "Christian". Catholics accept evolution and they call themselves Christian. Now, I suppose you could assert that, in fact, Catholics are not Christian, but that would basically be like saying the Earth is flat: I could try to argue with you, but it would be a waste of my time.

      --
      Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
    10. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, it does imply some confusion. After all, how do you select your particular subset of fairy tales to believe in? Do you roll dice? Or just wait for science to advance enough to definitively rule out particular portions of the Bible? Do you have a particular stopping point where you will hold on to your beliefs despite scientific proof that they're bogus? At least the fundies have some claim to consistency; everything in Bible == true.

    11. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 1

      the whole point of being a Catholic is that you believe they are NOT metaphors - if you want to believe they are metaphors you're welcome to be a Protestant but won't get much support from Catholics.

    12. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by oneiron · · Score: 1

      You realize there are different types of metaphors, right? It's a representation...it can be interpreted as a allusion to a greater reality that you and I aren't consciously aware of...of other 'dimensions' if you want to get Quantum about it... Use your imagination. Bottom line... It's about faith...faith that there's something greater than what we can touch/smell/see/hear/taste. Just like any other Christian denomination...

      I'm very close friends with a devout Italian-American catholic who grew up in Long Island... You know...the kind that worships the pope? I know how she feels about these things, and she knows how the pope feels about them.

      You're peddling anti-christian propaganda, plain and simple. Look at your name for christ's sake. Like I said, I'm not even a Christian and I can smell your schtick all the way over here in Texas.

    13. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 1

      I am not anti-Christian, I very much like some Christian values. I am an atheist and I am anti-fundamentalist. it pisses me off when people feel so strongly about the trivial things like the number of days it took for the Earth to form or the morality of masturbation that they completely ignore the big rules like love thy neighbour.

      you want to talk BS about different levels of reality that's fine but go ask a creationist to agree it's all just a metaphor in some higher platonic dimension and they'll tell you to fuck off. similarly Catholic beliefs require you to believe you are actually eating Jesus's flesh. you can try wording it as fancy as you want, as religious scholars have tried without success, but at the end of the day you still come down to a choice of whether the Earth is a few thousand years old or not, and whether the bread is now actually Jesus's flesh or not, and you can't be a good creationist/Catholic if your answer is "well, not really, but..."

    14. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by oneiron · · Score: 1

      you can't be a good creationist/Catholic if your answer is "well, not really, but..." The RCC is a big and slow-moving beast, but it does change with the times. All it takes to be a 'good Catholic' is to be firm, reasonable, and level-headed in your beliefs...and be able to articulate them persuasively without self-doubt. The more 'good Catholics' that are out there with progressive beliefs, the quicker the RCC will respond. It seems like you're goal is to "save" the poor Catholics from a "fundamentalist" dogma you don't like... Whether you've made that your 'mission' in life or not, your comments paint a pretty clear picture of where you're head is at.

      Really, if you want things to get better, we need to try and meet these guys somewhere in the middle. Helping them to reform their beliefs to be more in line with reality is the best thing we can do to meet that end.

    15. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Are you serious?

      People are christians because they believe in CHRIST.

      Not because they believe god created the universe.

      Believe in christ and that he died so your sins* would be forgiven and you would get to go to heaven.

      *Including rape, torture, murder- just about anything as long as you sincerely converted and repented and acted appropriately within a few seconds before you died.

      ---

      I don't believe but I hang out with some sincere believers.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    16. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      neither of these make sense on any level (not even to religious scholars) and can only be accepted by the same type of thought that also leads to creationism.

      Or for that matter to quantum mechanics. Every system of belief has it's assumptions. Even atheism.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    17. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by dbucowboy · · Score: 1

      As a Christian, I completely agree with you.

      --
      This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
    18. Re:I was just reading this creationist article by Schickie · · Score: 1
      Nice pics. The same or similar stuff can be seen almost anywhere short of a swamp, if less pretty and less obvious. How do you know volcanic activity didn't do it in under a day? Alternatively, prove that the ID Dude (better use a cap there just in case) didn't just stick it there that way. Maybe She just likes things at angles?

      After 900 posts (rough estimate) of "lefties" arguing with religious fundamentalists I'm still undecided whether this is an example of:

      A) Foolish wishful thinking, as repeatedly proven historically (think Socialism), or

      B) A pointless love of argument as an end in itself (just to hear yourself talk).

      (( On the off chance you might ask, I'm "B" ))

      You cannot prove that a single word in the Bible, the Koran, the Talmud, etc (or Grimm's 3rd Fairy Tale from the top) is *not* the word of any given god or Gollum or Superwoman or The Raellians or, for that matter, a previous incarnation of me. You can't even prove that Tarot cards don't work.

      The inability to prove a negative, especially a cleverly chosen vague and ephemeral one, is the last, and best, refuge of superstition(s) that survive. Otherwise they go the way of Black Cats and Broken Mirrors and Scientific Marxism.

      You can only hope that the next generation grows up with a lower percentage of mysticism seekers, though the US seems to be going the wrong direction. (Somebody tell me why?).

      Twenty years ago I thought that New Ageism was a bigger threat to Civilization than Superpower Nukes, Ebola and The Big Asteroid combined. How foolish.

      Think I'll go play chess with my dog while waiting for the next UFO visit.

  59. At last some recognition, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And people same there's no Outlook replacement for Linux!

    Bah!

  60. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

    actually they aren't. One said we were created in 6 days by the Christian god. The other says that at some point in the time line an intelligent being had to be involved. Whether it was during a six day period or simply craeteing the gasses that started it all.

    Why is the number of days a relevant distinction? Both theories say that "God did it" with no supporting evidence.

  61. Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 2, Informative

    The problem is really that most people don't really understand what ID is. When it comes to the issue of the origin of life, it is very difficult for people to remove their emotions from their rational process. Those that don't believe in God will look at intellegent design as something that they already know to be false and those that DO believe in God will look at Neo-Darwinism as something THEY know to be false. Thus it happens that neither can understand the other side's argument.

    It is important to understand that ID and the theory of Evolution do not disagree per se. It is ID and Neo-Darwinism that disagree. There are two important issues to be looked at when attempting to discover the origin of life:

    (1) the specifics of how life evolved from a scientific point of view, ie natural selection etc.
    (2) The "big picture" of how the planet is full of human beings now where it was once only a molten planet.

    When it comes to the first issue, ID does not disagree with Neo-Darwinism. Natural selection is not disputed. The fact that there are mutations that often result in new speicies is not disputed. These are the scientific phenomena that were the steps taken to get us to where we are now.

    It is the second point where Neo-Dawinists and Intellegent Design proponents disagree. Neo-Darwinists think that the mainspring of evolution is natural selection acting on random genetic variation. In otherwords, it was an unplanned, unguided and random process.

    Intellegent design simply states that the state of life on Earth is far to complex to be attributed to a random process. The fact that life has evolved to its current state and is flourishing is a statistical anomoly. Intellegent design states that the complexity of existence cannot be explained by simple chance, and that there must be a "prime mover" that is guiding the processes of evolution and natural selection.

    The fact is, the second issue (which is the most commonly debated it seems here on slashdot) is more philisophical than scientific. For those that really want to understand the other side (I know that many cannot, for their bigotry overwhelms their intellectual hunger) I would suggest that you read this article. It is a treatise written by a prominent Christian thinker about the origin of life.

    Many of you may have guessed by this point that I agree with ID. However, please do not mistake my intent. I am not trying to CONVINCE anyone of anything. I merely want people to be CLEAR on what ID really is. It is important when discussing such a charged topic as the origin of life for there to be clarity as to what each side REALLY believes.

    1. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Bassman59 · · Score: 1
      "Intellegent design states that the complexity of existence cannot be explained by simple chance, and that there must be a `prime mover' that is guiding the processes of evolution and natural selection."

      So, who created the Creator? Did It just spring up out of the aether?

      -a

    2. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1
      So, who created the Creator? Did It just spring up out of the aether?
      ID does not address that question. Any answer to that question is as good as any other as far as ID is concerned. ID only talks about a "designer", however he came about.
    3. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Shihar · · Score: 1

      No one cares if you believe in ID or not. Creationism and scientific explanations have lived side by side for as long as the two have existed. The point of conflict is when creationism (be it ID or something else) tries to intrude upon science.

      ID is not science. You cannot make a prediction with ID and test that prediction. ID has absolutely no predictive powers. Further ID relies on the words 'too complex'. The argument boils down to that from what we know right now, we can't fully explain certain things. This argument could have been used against lightening 500 years ago. We could have argued that from what we know of lightening, it couldn't exist without and intelligent creator. Clearly, that is not the case. No one argues any more that each time a bolt of lightening is cast it is the will of the creator.

      The conflict over ID is that ID folks are trying to shove a piece of non-science into publicly funded science class rooms in schools in a nations where there is supposed to be a separation between government and religion. As long as ID folks insist upon using public funds to push their religious minded philosophy (it isn't even a theory) in public schools, you better believe people are going react with indignation every time they hear the words "intelligent design".

      Take this philosophy and shove it into a church or Sunday school where it belongs. As long as the ID folks keep trying to push this nonsense upon everyone else using the power of the state, you can be damn sure every even vaguely scientifically minded person out there is going to be pissed off every time the words intelligent design is mentioned.

      Imagine if one day the government mandated that all churches must teach Flying Spaghetti Monsterism (FSM) in Sunday school. Imagine the kind of response you would get from Christians each time FSM was mentioned. I bet you it wouldn't be one of tolerant understanding for another religion. It would be pissed off indignation at a group is trying to impose its religious values using the force of the government.

      No one gives a damn if ID is taught in a church. People DO give a damn if this religious philosophy is being taught in a science class room as science.

    4. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      I merely want people to be CLEAR on what ID really is.

      We are clear. We already know that it's just creationism in disguise. We also know that it is making a luaghing stock of the whole scientific community. Most of us also know that it is flat out wrong.

      Don't patronise Slashdotters pal. A lot of us RTFA.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    5. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Thorsten+Timberlake · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Neo-darwinism?

      Why the -ism suffix?

      Where are the Newtonists? Galileoists? Einsteinists?
      And what exactly is new about it?

      It is not an ideology, as some would have you believe. It is well founded science.

    6. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Stan+Vassilev · · Score: 1

      I think God or whatever intelligent creature that supposedly designed us would really be dissapointed by Christians and ID supporters as a whole. I mean, science advances, and religion folks are forced to look for holes in the modern theories and when something can't be yet explained, they shove God in there "see, you don't know why THIS happened, cuz this is GOD".

      Trouble is, the places to "shove God" become smaller and smaller as time passes. This increases the tension between scientific research and religion institutions and results in sillyness as we saw this year.

      "Intellegent design simply states that the state of life on Earth is far to complex to be attributed to a random process."

      You know one definition of random could be a set of specific events and facts based on known nature laws, that put together create a result far too complex to analyse.

      So we just call it random. From that point of view tha fact that life is far too complex and that's based on random events kind of fits together nicely.

      Also, many ID supporters like to give other examples where what might be attributed to evolution is in fact intelligent design - like the development of computer technology over the past years. It might look like "evolution of computers" to some alien form excavating remains of PC-s hundreds of years from now, but we know we actually intelligently designed all those machines.

      Where it breaks the analogy, is I suppose the part where we're supposed to erase all evidence of our existence here, abandon Earth, and then watch and punish any computer who tries to disagree with our existence. What a great way for intelligent beings to spend some quality time, eh.

    7. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1
      Neo-darwinism?
      Why the -ism suffix?
      Where are the Newtonists? Galileoists? Einsteinists?
      And what exactly is new about it?
      Here.
      It is not an ideology, as some would have you believe. It is well founded science.
      In my original post (did you actually read it?), I mentioned two aspects of the theory of evolution that you are talking about. The first is the exact method by which it occured. This IS science, you are correct. ID does not disagree with this aspect. The second issue, however, is metaphysical. It is important to not confuse the two seperate aspects of the explanation of the origin of life.
    8. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1
      We are clear. We already know that it's just creationism in disguise. We also know that it is making a luaghing stock of the whole scientific community. Most of us also know that it is flat out wrong.
      Do you know that because you RTFA'ed? The article told you so? Who is "we", the slashdot collective mind?
      To say that ID is creationism in disguise tells me that you discredited my post from the onset. There is a very clear distinction between creationism and ID. ID is much closer to modern evolution theory than it is to creationism. You are as biggoted as the fanatical Christians who believe only in creationism and don't want to hear anything about other schools of thought.
    9. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Thorsten+Timberlake · · Score: 1

      Read it? I'm trying to stay ahead here, by reading neither articles NOR comments!

    10. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by ttfkam · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Could you please provide us with a single previous example of metaphysics accepted as science that still stands today? Let me run it down for you.

      metaphysics = not observable
      metaphysics = not testable
      metaphysics = not falsifiable
      metaphysics = not science

      Once again...

      metaphysics = not science

      Say it again...

      metaphysics = not science

      No one has said that you cannot discuss ID in a comparative religion or philosophy class. These are the classes for metaphysical discussions, not the biology classes.

      One more time...

      metaphysics = not science

      Got it yet?

      metaphysics = not science

      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    11. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by kraada · · Score: 3, Insightful

      it was an unplanned, unguided and random process.

      I think this statement with regards to evolution is not correct. True it is unplanned and random, but the process, as a process is not unguided. Each creature evolves with its evironment as a guide.

      Imagine some organism in a world full of oxygen and very little carbon dioxide. Let's say this organism has three offspring (A), (B) and (C). (A) is just like the original organism. (B) uses more carbon dioxide. (C) uses more oxygen and less carbon dioxide. (A) will continue just as the original organism did, (B) will be worse off, and (C) will be better off. Thus (C) and its offspring will be better suited to live in the environment.

      The guide is the world the organisms live in. That world may have been created randomly. Each particular mutation may arise randomly. But the process of evolution for each species is guided by the environment of that species.

      You also say that life is a statistical anomoly. This seems nontrivially related to the inverse gambler's fallacy. Further, there are hundreds of billions of solar systems. Many of them probably have planets (we have already found some, I suspect we will find that solar systems are more and more likely as we gain the ability to see such things). If the odds of life forming on its own is, let's say, 100,000,000,000 to 1 against (which seems very generous to the people who think life is unlikely, given experiments with the common elements which form the building blocks of life and lightning), and there are 100,000,000,000 planets. On average, there will be life somewhere. Further, the only people that will notice will be from that planet (because there won't be life anywhere else!). They may think themselves extremely special and favored by the universe. They would be wrong.

      If you're going to claim that basic life (single celled organisms, let's say) may occur reasonably often but in order to evolve there needs to be guidance in the mutation process, I'm just going to claim that the right environment needs to be in place to encourage mutations with the appropriate features. And given the mutations I can speculate with some accuracy (or at least, historically we have been able to) about the conditions at the time which made such mutations useful. This makes my theory bear extra fruit while you simply put some being in and say "it did it", and that tells us nothing extra. So even if the theories were otherwise equivalent in terms of their predictive power, I can predict things about the environment after the fact, and you cannot. This seems to be an extra point in favor of my theory all other things being equal, which, obviously I don't think they are.

    12. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1
      The thing about Intellegent Design is that it isn't really just finding an unknown and saying "hey, we don't know the answer to this, so the answer must be God!" I would agree with you that this happens often, but not in this case.

      Basically what ID says is that the fact existence is possible, that life could flourish, that we aren't gobbled up by the sun or a black hole, etc. is so astronomically unlikely, that the easiest explanation is that there is SOMETHING (it doesn't have to be God, btw) that drives this.

      In fact I don't think that we are disagreeing completely. You said:
      You know one definition of random could be a set of specific events and facts based on known nature laws, that put together create a result far too complex to analyse.
      So we just call it random.
      This is pretty much what I am trying to argue. That "random" is not what guides evolution of species but rather that there is some inherit design that is too complex for us to figure out as of yet, and that is what is guiding the process. Again, this does not have to be God, like most people think.
    13. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 2, Insightful

      dan_sdot wrote:

      In otherwords, it was an unplanned, unguided and random process.

      The real problem--primitive superstitious beliefs aside--is that people think that ``order'' can never come from ``randomness.'' Which, of course, is pure bullshit.

      Take a heaping handful of marbles and toss them purely randomly into a shoebox. Hey-presto! Order from chaos!

      Or, if you like, drop enough bowling balls onto a beach, close enough to each other, that they start to pile upon each other. Once again, order spontaneously arises from chaos--no matter how randomly you add the balls to the pile.

      It's the exact same reason why crystals are so pretty, why large astronomical bodies are (essentially) spherical...and why life exists. In one word, ``entropy.''

      If a state with higher entropy--and, therefore, one that's more stable--is more ordered than an alternative state with lower entropy, over time, the more ordered state will predominate. And, of course, local conditions will play a huge role in what's more stable. Those marbles in the box will take one configuration if the box has right angles to the edges, and another if the edges are round....

      Really and truly, that old chestnut about the puddle being fascinated that it exactly fits the shape of the footprint is spot-on.

      Cheers,

      b&

      Of course, the other big problems are that people have no fucking clue just how long a billion years is, or how large and diverse the Earth is. Start with any ludicrously improbable number you want to put on abiogenesis, and multiply that by a billion years and a third of a billion square miles of surface and a third of a billion cubic miles of ocean...and by the billions of solar systems in the galaxy and the billions of galaxies in the universe...and I guarantee you, your answer is greater than 1. b&

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    14. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The second step that people often take when it comes to the random evolution school of thought is not science, but metaphysical.
      Oh, and also I see that you think that I am saying that ID should be considered a science. I'm sorry if I wansn't clear, I don't think that it is a science (its not). It is a metaphysical school of thought, just as the corresponding "step 2" of random evolution theory is.

    15. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1
      No one cares if you believe in ID or not. Creationism and scientific explanations have lived side by side for as long as the two have existed. The point of conflict is when creationism (be it ID or something else) tries to intrude upon science.

      ID is not a form of creationism. Not even close. Really, it is important to be intellectually honest about these things. Creationism is not a very respected theory, intellectually speaking.
      Also, I didn't imply that ID is science. It is not. ID deals with the 2nd step that I spoke of in my top level comment, which is a metaphysical question.
      As far as schools teaching it, that is another question that I did not even come close to addressing.
    16. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Bassman59 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Me: "So, who created the Creator? Did It just spring up out of the aether?"

      dan_sdot: "ID does not address that question. Any answer to that question is as good as any other as far as ID is concerned. ID only talks about a `designer', however he came about."

      ID doesn't address many questions ... it just gives up when the questions get difficult. "Beyond human comprehension," or some such cop-out.

    17. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1

      This is a very good point you make. The problem is that you can keep going up the ladder. An organisms development is guided by its ecosystem. What is the ecosystem's development guided by? The planet's perhaps. The planets is guided by the galaxy's system. One can keep looking up for where the guidance came from, that is true. But when you get to the top the conclusion must be drawn that there is one universal design inherit that propogates to all other design.
      By the way, this does not need to be "God". That is simply the typical way of speaking of this design. Either way, there is some intellegence inherit in the universe that guides everything.
      I think it is important to emphasize that point. ID does not assert some "being" that created things (although some claim that it does, mostly through misunderstanding I think). It merely says that there is intellegence in the universal design. Sort of like a piece of software can have intellegence built into it to do one task or the other.

    18. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1
      Take a heaping handful of marbles and toss them purely randomly into a shoebox. Hey-presto! Order from chaos!
      There is nothing chaotic about that drop. The human mind cannot calculate the physics immediately to understand why they fell to the locations that they fell to, but it was not chaos that placed them there. It was physics.
    19. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1

      Different theories are come up with to explain different things. The theory of gravity is not meant to understand or explain why bullfrogs don't sleep, for example. ID is not meant to explain how God exists. ID is not even meant to prove that God exists, contrary to what most people think. ID does not mention God, it simply says that there is intellegence inherit in the mechanic of the universe that guides the development of existence.

    20. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Do you know that because you RTFA'ed? The article told you so? Who is "we", the slashdot collective mind?

      I know that because I have been educated, unlike the misfortunate children being subjected to this ID fallacy. Most slashdotters you will find are rational types and so will be able too see through your argument and read between the lines.

      To say that ID is creationism in disguise tells me that you discredited my post from the onset. There is a very clear distinction between creationism and ID.

      I do not have to discredit your post. You can do that all on your own. You have discredited yourself! You have stood up and lied through your teeth. You have misled, misinformed, twisted logic, contorted argument. you do not even have the integrity to admit that this Intelligent Design nonsense is simply your newest method of forcing creationism down the throats of those with more integrity than you.

      Even now you persist in your outright falsehood. Have you at last come to the point where no shred of self respect is left? Tell us your true opinion. Do not skulk behind false argument any longer. Stand for once in open daylight and tell us what you truely believe. If you cannot do that, then I know not how you can ever look whatever god you believe in in the face.

      You know that Intelligent Design is creationism. You've known it all along! Now say it! Or begone sir!

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    21. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Weirsbaski · · Score: 1

      Those that don't believe in God will look at intellegent design as something that they already know to be false and those that DO believe in God will look at Neo-Darwinism as something THEY know to be false. Thus it happens that neither can understand the other side's argument.

      And this is the crux of the problem. Teach evolution but not ID in school? Then you must be teaching that God doesn't exist.

      I merely want people to be CLEAR on what ID really is. It is important when discussing such a charged topic as the origin of life for there to be clarity as to what each side REALLY believes.

      Yes. Based on the first quote, if you believe in God then you know evolution to be false. Therefore only anti-God people can believe in evolution.

      Not wanting ID taught in science class isn't the kneejerk belief that God doesn't exist, it's the belief that until ID becomes a valid scientific theory (based on measurable evidence, and able to be proven false), it doesn't belong in science class.

      --

      I am not a sig.
    22. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1

      Are you serious? I honestly don't know.
      Assuming you are, the only thing I can say is that I am not "lying" about anything. Just look at the merits of my argument. I'm not trying to fool anyone.

    23. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 1

      My point exactly. It's the laws of nature that demand that marbles in a shoebox line up in nice, neat, orderly rows even if it was a random process that landed them in the box in the first place.

      And it's quite similar laws of nature that demand that life, and ever-more evolved life, arises from the whatever-it-was we came from.

      Cheers,

      b&

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    24. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1
      Not wanting ID taught in science class isn't the kneejerk belief that God doesn't exist, it's the belief that until ID becomes a valid scientific theory (based on measurable evidence, and able to be proven false), it doesn't belong in science class.
      Fair enough. I never said that it should be. I am not even remotely close to talking about politics.
    25. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by dan_sdot · · Score: 1

      Precisely. In otherwords there is an inherit intellegence that guides things, not randomeness. I will say it again: inherit intellegence != God. Think of how people somehow say "my software has enough intellegence in it to detect ______ and avoid it." There is an intellegence build into the system that controls how it functions.

    26. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 1

      Erm...that's not ``intelligence'' by any definition I've ever seen. You might as well subscribe to that whole intelligent falling schtick and be done with it.

      The laws of physics are no more intelligent than the laws of nature. Unless you'd like to suggest that it's some sort of cosmic intelligence that makes 2 + 2 = 4?

      Cheers,

      b&

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    27. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Shihar · · Score: 1

      ID is not a form of creationism. Not even close. Really, it is important to be intellectually honest about these things. Creationism is not a very respected theory, intellectually speaking.

      ID isn't a respectable theory either. It isn't even a theory, much less a theory with a scrap of peer reviewed work done it. Research on UFOs and little green men has more scientific credibility and a much larger body of peer reviewed papers then ID does.

      Further, ID absolutely is being used as a foot in the door for creationism. It isn't a magical coincidence that the ID advocates just all happen to be Christians. Creationism was utterly destroyed by science and is utterly unacceptable to teach in a school science class. Now ID tries to carry on where creationism was stopped cold. It desperately seeks a way to imply the G word in public schools. True, it isn't creationism in the traditional sense, but it was spawned from the same place.

      Also, I didn't imply that ID is science. It is not.

      That brings you a lot closer to reality the nut jobs trying to bring this crap into a science class room. Good for you. Too bad the other advocates of ID trying to bring this crap into a science class room seem to disagree with you. They seem deeply intent upon calling it science and shoving it down the throats of the masses using the force of government.

      As far as schools teaching it, that is another question that I did not even come close to addressing.

      There is a fundamental issue here. You think people are pissed off at ID because it is big misunderstanding about what ID is. The truth is that people are pissed off because a handful of religious zealots are trying to teach it as science. People start getting pissed off whenever ID is mentioned because no other philosophy has advocates trying to mandate its teaching in a science class room by law.

      Doesn't it seem a little fishy to you that no other philosophy has entire organizations built around trying to use law to enforce the teaching of their philosophy in publicly funded schools? ID is a wedge being used to try and spew the G word all over the inside of science class rooms and nothing else. Want to prove me wrong? Stop trying to use the force of law to teach this crap.

      I suggest writing an e-mail to your favorite ID advocacy group explaining to THEM how they misunderstand ID. Anyone who understands ID as you present it wouldn't consider trying to shove this crap into science class room. As you have already stated, this crap isn't science, so why are the advocates of ID so keen on using the force of government to put it in a science class room?

    28. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ID does not address that question. Any answer to that question is as good as any other as far as ID is concerned. ID only talks about a "designer", however he came about.

      ID MUST address that question. In fact, I'd say it's the very foundation of the issue. If the designer came into being "naturally", then it could also have happened with life on earth, so you might as well get rid of the middle man. If the designer itself required a designer, then you have three possibilities:

      1. One of the designers appeared spontaneously, so the argument reduces to the above.
      2. You have an infinite regression of designers. This is OK in itself, but from cosmology it looks like the universe has only existed for a finite length of time
      3. The ultimate designer is a god, in which case you've left the bounds of science behind.

      Any way you take it, it's a useless theory.
    29. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by kraada · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I was not explicit enough. There is no higher directed cause needed for the ecosystem to be the way it is. There is no "ladder" to go up. The environment changes based on physics. You want to know where the laws of physics comes from? That's the universe we have. I don't think just because there exist laws of physics there must have been an intelligent being creating those laws. I don't buy the telological argument at any level, and that's really all that's going on here at base. I do not think the universe is too complicated to have arisen randomly. Then once it's here, that's what we have.

      But this should not be some sort of new revelation. For any human being alive, a split second change could easily have made us not exist. How is that you ask? Have your parents in a slightly different position the time they had sex and you were conceived. Then it's easy to imagine that your particular sperm cell wasn't the one to make it to the egg (if any made it to the egg at all). Then you wouldn't have existed. To deduce from this that clearly there is some invisible hand inside your mother pushing the "right" sperm into the egg seems ludicrous to me. All the sperm tried, it just so happened that your sperm got there. And now here you are. Could a very small change have eradicated your existence? Sure. The same might well be true for all life on Earth if you go back far enough. It sure doesn't entail that someone had to pick the right outcome.

    30. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      ID is not meant to explain how God exists. ID is not even meant to prove that God exists, contrary to what most people think. ID does not mention God, it simply says that there is intellegence inherit in the mechanic of the universe that guides the development of existence.

      The problem is that ID relies upon a logical fallacy (appeal to ignorance) to "necessitate" a designer, which itself suddenly becomes exempt from the same logic (or lack thereof) that was used to wish it into place at the start.

    31. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Precisely. In otherwords there is an inherit intellegence that guides things

      Non-sequitur. From where did you derive this "inherent intelligence"?

    32. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by winwar · · Score: 1

      "ID is not meant to explain how God exists. ID is not even meant to prove that God exists, contrary to what most people think. ID does not mention God, it simply says that there is intellegence inherit in the mechanic of the universe that guides the development of existence."

      Of course it is not meant to prove that God exists. That is its premise. It doesn't mention God because otherwise everyone would call it creationism. Hard to get that into a science class.... Hell, it isn't even a theory (as in wild assed guess) much less a scientific one. It's a belief. Heck, it's not even supported by most religions. In other words, it's pretty useless.

    33. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by n54 · · Score: 1

      Please read all of this post before considering blowing up :)

      Hmm I think very few seem to realize just how deep the rabbit hole goes. Yes I.D. can be said to not be science and many parts (not all) of I.D. definetly isn't science imo but if one says that (and I do and so does a lot of other people at Slashdot (be it in more absolute terms) although I don't think they know of the consequences of saying so) then one has to be intellectually honest enough to admit that a lot (not all) of the theory of evolution isn't science either.

      *imagines hordes of Slashdotters going "BOOM" at this point* j/k ;)

      If it is any consolation many I.D.'ers will probably go "BOOM" too... because, yes, as the parent alluded to many I.D. "groupies" don't get the subject at hand either - just like "Evolution" groupies.

      Those who are interested in looking into this rabbit hole (taking the red pill) instead of just continuing the debate without understanding how someone (like me) can actually make such a claim should read the link provided in this Marxist Hacker 42 journal entry: http://slashdot.org/~Marxist%20Hacker%2042/journal /124769

      The link in the journal entry goes to an I.D. article which is fairly well written (there are some mistakes but no "show-stoppers") and which tries to argue why I.D. is science or at least should be considered equal to the theories of evolution/descent.

      I recommend reading it to anyone who knows or can be bothered to learn (wikipedia will do - it's pretty good on PoS) at least rudimentary Philosophy of Science. Yes it is long, no it is not bullshit (if it seems like bullshit readers should take that as a cue to brush up on their PoS vocabulary/knowledge (yes I know PoS isn't the best of acronyms lol)).

      Now contrary to the aim of the article in my opinion it actually shows why neither should be seen as pure science but that's simply my opinon (based on my conviction that one actually can demarcate science from non-science -- not that PoS is "finished" with that yet; if it was this very debate would be non-existent).

      Imo people are pissed off (on both sides) because they're more interested in Being Right TM by following whatever their previous opinions would determine/demand than actual discussion. It is enticingly easy to get pissed off that way and has nothing to do with rational thought or science... frustration abounds and everybody find themselves in the trenches.

      I have to agree with dan_sdot: most people do not have a clue as to what I.D. actually is or that they're actually portraying themselves as Darwinists or Neo-Darwinists in their supposed rebuttals of I.D.. They usually don't know that I.D. doesn't discard evolution in its entirety and as such isn't anti-evolution (but it is anti-Darwinism). They obviously are unaware that many (if not most) scientists (non-I.D.'ers) are very sceptical towards Darwinism, Neo-Darwinism and other forms of "extended" evolutionary views as well as I.D. for pretty much the same reasons: those have slim (some would say non-existent) scientific credentials as a whole (though individual parts of the aforementioned "ideologies" are accepted and do have their scientific credence).

      In the end I guess one can only laugh; the whole topic seems to have degenerated into a debacle of two vocal but ignorant groups hitting each other over the head with the same kind of faulty arguments while the rest of the world goes on with its business.

      --
      this comment is provided "as is" and without any express or implied legibility or congruity [...]
    34. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Shihar · · Score: 1

      I can cut my response down to a very concisely. ID is by definition NOT science. ID does not offer any predictive capacity. A theory MUST offer some predictive capacity or else it is not a theory.

      If you want to argue that ID has some sort of scientific merit, get that shit published in just ONE journal. So far ID hasn't even managed that feat. That puts ID below UFOs in terms of credibility. Get yourself published in a journal worth its pulp and maybe we could even talk about teaching it in schools. Until that time, this is just a bull shit method of religious nuts trying to shove religion into the public sector

      Honestly, I don't care what you believe. I don't care if you preach what you believe. Take that religious non-sense into a class room though, and people will be rightfully pissed off. Achieve the level of 'science', and then we can talk again. Until then, go back to church.

    35. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't speak for Slashdot submitters, in some cases you're no doubt correct, however in the scientific community bigotry has nothing to do with it. If you must talk of being blinded by belief, can you not see that the concept 'guided natural selection' is logically inconsistent? ("Intellegent design states that the complexity of existence cannot be explained by simple chance, and that there must be a "prime mover" that is guiding the processes of evolution and natural selection.") Or do you say the Designer generates the variations and then wholesale kills off those less successful instead of letting nature cull them? If nature culls them, the selsection again becomes natural, leaving the Designer's role as generator of variations. Occam has something to say though about omnipotent, effectively omnescient beings interjected where random variation suits as well.

    36. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by Copid · · Score: 1
      ID does not mention God, it simply says that there is intellegence inherit in the mechanic of the universe that guides the development of existence.
      That's sort of the crux of the matter. ID is a conclusion (or a philosophical position). Nothing interesting springs from it aside from the satisfaction it gives certain religious groups. That's why it gets smacked down whenever it tries to present itself as some sort of scientific model. To paraphrase a great post I saw elsewhere, "ID is not a scientific alternative to evolution. It's a philosophical alternative to science."
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    37. Re:Most people don't know what ID is by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 1
      The fact that life has evolved to its current state and is flourishing is a statistical anomoly.

      You DO realize that you have a sample size of ONE, right? There is only one earth to look at. Where, oh where did you think using the world 'statistical anomoly' would help your cause. Do you even know what the study of statistics is? Or were you simply being an echo chamber for what everyone else has told you to be true?

      THIS is why I deplore religion, and religious 'thinking'. There is no such thing as the boogy monster. And dont go telling me to leave your beliefs out of it if I dont agree with you. The fact of the matter is that I, along with everyone else, will have to deal with the people who believe this line of 'reasoning'. And most of those people will look right over the facts of a situation and go with the 'moral' thing to do. Which in most cases will end up causing injury or death from not seeing the realities of a given situation.

  62. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "he always existed" You are arguing about Creation not ID. Get your argument straight. ID doesn't disagree with your point, it just says that an intelligent being was involved in the creation of THIS universe. Doesn't say where, when, or in what way.

    I would agree the being came from somewhere, and a more philosophical answer would be a 4 dimension. Kind of like we draw on a piece of paper (2d) to make stick characters. They came from us (in the 3d world). Hey but what do I know, i'm not some as the parent says, liberal.

  63. the Eye of the needle is not for sewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So many people missunderstand the eye of the needle. Jesus said it is easier for a rich man to pass through the eye of a needle then to enter into heaven (not exact phrasing)but what this means is once the city gates were closed for the night there was a small back door that a man could just barely fit through. this door was called the eye of the needle. but for a man to pass through he had to "let go of his possesions" then go through and then someone else would pass them through then they would follow. It is refering to the rich man that cannot letgo of his earthly possesions, as if that is all there is. but then if you don't beleive in god then earth is all you have.

  64. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The noble prizes have started to loose the prestige they once held

    L-O-S-E. Lose. LOSE. LOSE! God damn it!

  65. Why not predict chance? by shrtcircuit · · Score: 1

    What you say is chance (i.e. evolution) I think may actually be a comletely predictable series of events, which is just subject to such a complex order of variables and conditions that we can't wrap our minds around it.

    Why do tree branches grow the way they do? Because God pointed his finger and made it so? I doubt it. Whether God exists remains to be seen, but I think the constant environmental conditioning (air movement, sunlight, water, pollutants, whether an ant crapped in that spot - quite literally everything that could happen in the growth of a tree) in addition to the genetic predisposition of the tree itself caused that branch to grow where it did. The same goes for anything else which is a living, dynamically adapting and growing organism. We call it chance because there is simply no way for us to understand the complete nature of why it happens the way it does -- but just because we can't understand it, does not make it random. A million things can affect where *one* branch grows, now extend that to all branches, of all trees, and you begin to understand the sheer scope of the problem; and we're just talking about trees, which stay in one place.

    Two trees of the same seed, grown next to each other in an isolated tank, will still grow differently. Molecular differences in their environment will ensure that, no matter how carefully the enclosure is built. (Plus, my guess is there is a small genetic difference even between trees of the same type.) If we could control 100% of energy and matter down to the atom in this environment I surmise we'd be able to control "chance" reasonably well, but that isn't going to happen, so seemingly random changes will happen that we'll never be able to quantify or predict.

    Humans have this quirky way of thinking that just because something isn't immediately obvious, or because the concept is just too massive to wrap their minds around, that it is controlled by random chance, or a mysterious supreme power. I won't debate the existence of God, but despite our advances in history our understanding of science and the whole of everything around us is neophytic at best. To even begin to think we have a grasp on the concept-at-large is hilarious.

  66. Re:Evolution? Scientific Achievement of 2005? by arevos · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Who are they kidding anyway? Evolution hasn't been scientifically proven. How can it be named a scientific achievement?

    "Scientifically proven" is an oxymoron. No scientific theory has ever been proved. Ever.

  67. Re:I'd go even farther by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    Um, you are aware, I trust, that aspects of contagious diseases are in fact explained very well by evolution. One can predict, for instance, a rough probability of the likelihood of an animal-based influenza virus getting a mutation that can allow it to spread to animals. Without evolutionary theory, how could we explain all manner of biological events? It is no exagerration to say that evolution is the grand unifying theory of biology.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  68. Evolution is false, and one day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    you'll find this out the hard way!!

  69. GOD! by lostngone · · Score: 0

    God isn't going to be happy when he hears about this!

  70. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Wikipedia · · Score: 1, Insightful

    faith is defined in the bible as the assured expectation of things hoped for. Hebrews 11:1. So no one can prove it to you, only you can.

    --
    P2P Anonymous Distributed Web Search: http://www.yacy.net/
  71. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by tpjunkie · · Score: 1

    From your comment it seems like you dont have an understanding of the Big Bang theory; specifically where you say "...the big bang gases[sic] came from that created the universe" But since no one has explained it to you, here goes: First of all, the "Big Bang" refers to the creation of the universe as we know it, this is currently only described as a massive release of energy that resulted in the creation of a rapidly expanding universe with an incredibly large amount of energy. As it continued to expand, the fundamental forces of physics began to seperate out and exert their individual effects on the universe, which at this point had expanded enough that the temperature of the whole mess was low enough that matter in the form of protons, neutrons, and electrons began to form. Finally, after more expansion and cooling, this matter was of sufficiently low energy to be able to coalesce into atoms, mostly Hydrogen. As for what "gave" the gasses the properties they have, I would argue that nothing "gave" anything, their properties are a direct result of their makeup, which determines their characteristics, from electronegativity to boiling point to optical properties (or color for the lay man) That is a scientifc explanation for the creation of the universe, and guess what? There is room for god in there! Our understanding of physics breaks down at the moment of the big bang. No one knows or can say how this process happened or what caused it. If you like, you can say "this is the work of god." However, saying that god must have been responsible for something just because you personally don't understand something is entirely different from allowing the possibility that our current science cannot address because the laws of physics no longer apply.

  72. Incorrect summary by ShadowsHawk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "The announcement comes in the same week that a US court banned the teaching of intelligent design in classrooms.'" http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/2 0/1656228&tid=99&tid=14 The actual ruling was that it could not be taught in a science class. It said nothing about theology or sociology. I find the anti religion sentiment that's been becoming more pervasive more than a little disturbing.

    1. Re:Incorrect summary by anonymo · · Score: 1

      "The actual ruling was that it could not be taught in a science class. It said nothing about theology or sociology."
      Exactly.
      "I find the anti religion sentiment that's been becoming more pervasive more than a little disturbing."
      I think it just the usual flamewaring attitude to blow thing out of proportion. It was for provocating more comments only just like in any tabloid newspaper.

      Banning religion in the USA??? Where no one dares to state he/she is an atheist face to face being afraid of retailation.
      Indeed, I'm from Europe, and I visited the USA several times before and talked to some immigrated Europeans. They warned me never ever tell I'm an atheist - better to be a jew or muslim whatever but you MUST believe in something. I doubted and tested it - and indeed, the next question was are you a commie, aren't you? And treated like a smelly alcoholist.

  73. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by TIMxPx · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure to which teachings of Jesus you are referring, but you have to remember that Jesus's earthly ministry, by his own admission, was to the Jews. As a Christian, I think that there are elements of truth in all other religions, but that Christianity is the only one that offers salvation by faith according to God's grace. Other religions have different teachings, some true and some false, but we Christians believe that we are saved through faith in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. If another religion doesn't adhere to the basic tenets of the Christian faith, I am comfortable calling it invalid, and I would invite its followers to talk to Christians about the differences between faiths. I have the kind of peace and contentment through my faith that people don't tend to get anywhere else, because the work of Christianity is already done, and all we have to do is believe. It's like accepting a gift. You don't have to accept it, but if you want it, it's there for you to have for free. Christianity is fundmentally different from other religions, which require works or ceremonies to be performed, or which rely on human abilities or ideas above God's strength.

    --
    There are 10 kinds of people in the world: That averages about 660,000,000 of each kind.
  74. Dont like evolution, deny germ theory too by shwc · · Score: 0, Redundant

    What has become clear to me is that: 1) Most people do not understand evolution in general, if polls are any indication. Even fewer people understand molecular evolution which is what many of the findings being recognized are. A failing of our education system to stand up to the political pressure of the Fundies?. Perhaps. 2) The basic religious objection to evolution is that the religious folk do not wish to be related to apes because man is divine (made in gods image). Being related to every other organism in the natural world would somehow sully the notion of Man's divinity. 3) Religion = belief based on faith 4) Science = testable hypothesis Religion = belief & faith I believe the car is red. (Or if you prefer "I believe that man and apes did share a common ancestor )." You will still believe the car is red even if science proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the car is white and that the owner only drives it during brilliant red sunsets. It is a matter of faith, the car is red. Objective & verifiable observation-based reality has little bearing on the matter. Science = testable hypothesis I postulate that the car is red. In order test this red color hypothesis I will scrape off some of the paint and test the the paints light absorption and reflective properties. Further, I will dissolve the paint and subject it to a mass-spectrophotometer in oder to determine the chemical make up of the paint. I will compare the properties of the experimental sample to the properties of known paints and pigments. As my knowledge increases about cars, paint pigments, and light over time, I will revisit my old results too see if they agree with my new results. And if not, why. As for evolution, thousands of scientists world wide test, expand, and retest evolutionary theory everyday. Evolution has yet to prove false. Humans and the chimpanzee are evolutionary cousins, a blink of an eye away on the evolutionary tree. If you doubt it, go to http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/. Look up the scientific papers reporting the chimp and human genomes in pubmed. Do a little bit of background reading on homology searches. Prove to yourself the relationships between organisms by doing a your own homology searches using blast & clustal. Build a evolutionary tree. You do not have to be a scientist to do this, although you will have to do more background reading than a scientist would. The tools and information are all there in the public data bases. The power of comparative genomics is awesome.

    1. Re:Dont like evolution, deny germ theory too by Bassman59 · · Score: 1
      "The basic religious objection to evolution is that the religious folk do not wish to be related to apes because man is divine (made in gods image)."

      As Frank Zappa points out, "if we are made in G-d's image, then G-d must be dumb all over, and a little ugly on the side, as well."

      -a

    2. Re:Dont like evolution, deny germ theory too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If science likes to prove everything, would it be fair to call scientific heresy to boldly claim that God does not exist? If "athies" ("fundies" eh) are so sure of their claims, then they must provide proof. If no proof exist to either confirm or deny something, then no one has a right to make an assertion. When atheists conclusively proves existing gaping holes in their understanding of creation (what was before universe, what is after? oh ya, it was big bang and the big crunch thats easy), then perhaps they can without air of hypocrasy attempt to minimize faith held by billions of people for millenia.

    3. Re:Dont like evolution, deny germ theory too by mailtomomo · · Score: 0

      what was before universe, what is after?
      uh, you know but time is created by matter, so "before" the universe there was no matter and as such no time.
      so "what was before ?" isn't a valid question.
      And science doesn't prove anything : a scientific method is to observe something, deduce a theory from your observations then you try to disprove it by testing the consequences of that theory.

    4. Re:Dont like evolution, deny germ theory too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you wrap your head around the very question which puzzled and continues to puzzle some of the brightest minds of all time, feel free to dismiss it as a non-question.

      Secondly, scientific method by definition is the mechanism used to either conclusively prove or disprove an observation.

      Lastly, scientific theory is by and large a belief which has not been disproven. Therefore, until something is conclusively proven, it cannot be stated, in the name of science as fact.

  75. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Frostalicious · · Score: 1

    The density of stupidity in this post is truly impressive. Surely the dumbness power of this post could nullify any possible reply.

  76. careful i have a patent on intelligent falling... by abandonment · · Score: 3, Funny

    This comment has been sent a 'cease and desist' order. Please refrain from discussions regarding 'Intelligent Falling' as it is covered by our recently granted patent.

  77. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > Everything in this universe has a beginning and end

    Everything I have ever seen has been the colors red or blue, therefore there is no such thing as green.
    Just because you've never encountered anything infinite, it does not mean that nothing infinite exists at all. Really, you'd have to have left the planet (not to mention, galaxy) to even begin rationally thinking something like that.

  78. Of Course It's Political by Bullfish · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If you go back and look at my previous posts on this subject, you'll no I'm no fan of ID. Teach it to kids in Sunday school, but not in biology class. Now granted evolution and a lot of the bio-sciences have been on the run in the US over the past while, the only reason this award was granted was to bolster the bio-science community by the other scientists saying "Good on You!".

    There is nothing wrong with that, in fact if you have a weak team in a sports league, the other teams in terms of PR will say good things about that team and try to get the fans out. ID got a boot from the courts this week, but I don't think anyone thinks that will kill the issue. The sides are still on the field and the thinking people have to say "go team!".

    1. Re:Of Course It's Political by quokkapox · · Score: 0, Troll
      Teach it to kids in Sunday school,

      No!! Don't teach it to kids, at all. If there were a religion that sponsored Thursday School where they taught kids that whites were morally superior to blacks, or that Asian kids were smarter than Caucasians, or that the Sun goes around the Earth, or that electricity is a magical force that comes from God and makes the lights turn on at night, or that you can have whatever you wish for if you just pray hard enough to Shai'Hulud, would that be okay with everyone? No! I'm gonna get burned at the stake someday, or at least modded down for this, but it has to be said. Let's stop teaching our children things that aren't true.

      --
      it's a blue bright blue Saturday hey hey
    2. Re:Of Course It's Political by Bullfish · · Score: 1

      Either you have a free country or you don't. I don't want a tyranny of the intelligentsia anymore than I want a tyranny of the fundamentalists. I may not agree with them on many subjects, but the religious have a right to practice their religion or the entire raison d'etre of Canada and the United States (and many other countries) is a sham. The cynical may believe it is a sham anyway, but I refuse to join them.

    3. Re:Of Course It's Political by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      Hey, I'm not even free to pay a doctor to take care of me when I'm sick. Canada is in no way a free country.

    4. Re:Of Course It's Political by Bullfish · · Score: 1

      That's a load of BS perpetuated by right wing interests. You can pay if you want for faster treatment. I live in Manitoba so I know you can. Doctors get paid privately all the time, there are private clinics in Canada and private doctors. If you don't like that, you can even leave the country and get cheap plastic in India, expensive treatments of all kinds in the US or join Don Ho in Thailand for stem cell treatments. What a doctor can't do is bill a patient directly for services that are covered under medicare. Those bills the doctor has to charge to medicare according to their fee schedules. The prime minister even attends to a private clinic.

      As for wait times in the public system, try to comparing them to the wait times the uninsured have in free community hospitals in the US as opposed to the best private hospitals. Canadian wait times are not bad, and if you have an emergency need, you get seen right away.

    5. Re:Of Course It's Political by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      Canadian wait times are not bad

      Define "not bad"?

      "In Ontario in 2003-04, there were 10,757 total hip replacements done and the average waiting time, according to the health ministry, was 190 days." http://www.canorth.org/en/patientsupport/latestnew s2.asp

      This seems to be a standard example; over 6 months waiting for an operation to relieve a very painful, disabling condition (albeit not life threatening).

      The prime minister even attends to a private clinic.

      Of course he does. Politicians and senior bureaucrats routinely put themselves above the law. Everyone is equal, but some are more equal than others. Etc.

    6. Re:Of Course It's Political by Bullfish · · Score: 1

      Yes, you will wait up to 190 days for a hip replacement, popping T3's all the way. But you will get it done, and it won't cost you $20,000. Most people who need hip replacements tend to be old, and less able to afford it. In places without universal health care, many of these people go without. Which is better? Having these people not get the surgery certainly will help wait times. It is inherent in any system that allows anyone to walk into a hospital anytime they are sick will have trouble meeting surges. The greying population is causing a run on hip replacements so that has been in the news. A real concern to be sure, and we can make things better.

      190 days is bad.

      Really bad. I wonder how long it takes to get the same free treatment in the US if you can't afford it? Or, if you do have insurance, how long does it take to wrestle with the HMO and get the requisite approvals? Unless you can afford Cadillac insurance, my understanding is that you don't pick your doctor, you HMO gives you a like it or lump it list.

      I any event, I do agree though that we do need to do more to improve our system.

      Unfortunately, I agree with your note about politicians, and there presence makes any solution harder.

  79. Creationism isn't a required belief for Catholics by tlynch001 · · Score: 0
    The Catholic church doesn't teach that the genesis version of creation is fact. As Pope John Paul II said:

    "Humani Generis, considered the doctrine of evolutionism as a serious hypothesis, worthy of a more deeply studied investigation and reflection on a par with the opposite hypothesis. ...Today , more than a half century after this encyclical, new knowledge leads us to recognize in the theory of evolution more than a hypothesis. ...The convergence, neither sought nor induced, of results of work done independently one from the other, constitutes in itself a significant argument in favor of this theory."

    So in the future, just poke your fun at the other denominations.

  80. Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by kodaz · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I am not surprised that this journal would make this postulation. Its not science, its politics.

    The hypocrasy is astounding and goes to prove the reason and need for the debate and teaching of the creationism origins scientific view.

    Although I guess an evolutionary view of origins naturally leads to a disrespect and hatred for others of opposing views, calling them idiots and retards because they believe that science proves that evolution DID NOT happen and even can't happen because it is in itself anti-scientific is hypcritical in the highest.

    The scientist that have studied long and hard and thought through the physics, biology, mathematics, geology etc. have very powerful reasons to doubt the evolution and naturalistic theories of origins as they are non-scientific in many cases.

    Some of the biggest reasons are:
    1) life never comes from non-life although there were earlier scientists who believed that maggots appeared from nowhere on rotting meat. This theory is based on non-science err nonsense either works.

    2) explosions don't bring order...although one naturalistic-scientist boldly stated, " as a matter of fact, given enough time, a tornado passing through a junkyard could assemble a working Beoing 747"

    3) Mutations occur but almost always bring harm and NEVER add new information to a genetic chain. New information is required for one species to change or evolve into another and this does not occur in observable nature anywhere. Infact, DNA which was discovered after the evolution theory is a huge slap in the face to evolution and a dramatic proof of intelligent design.

    4) Science itself was vastly vived by a creationist perspective. The creation around us suggests a Creator that is why it is called creation. And the God of Creation created us in His image to create, explore, examine, study, analyze, record, name, etc. which is why us humans are having this whole debate on this thing we created called the world-wide-web in the first place.

    These are just a few of the reasons why creationism is a more excellent science than the blind faith of an evoltuionary naturalist viewpoint. Evolutionists can't take the heat which is why they get so angry at opposing views. Step back folks and think for yourselves, study both sides and you will begin to change your mind, its inevitable because reason will hold out where it is free to exist.!!

    PS Merry Christmas :)

    1. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Kobun · · Score: 1
      One thing sticks out to me, and I thought I would share.
      3) Mutations occur but almost always bring harm and NEVER add new information to a genetic chain. New information is required for one species to change or evolve into another and this does not occur in observable nature anywhere. Infact, DNA which was discovered after the evolution theory is a huge slap in the face to evolution and a dramatic proof of intelligent design.
      I said it before, "Correlation is not causation." Of course, I was being cynical at the time ... Probably am being cynial now, too. Ah what the heck, let's toss in a fun one. Mutations always causing harm? What about the X-Men?

      Merry Christmas, cheers!
    2. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by kodaz · · Score: 1

      Dang!! hadn't thought about them....oh snap You're right!

    3. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Sand_Man · · Score: 1

      I can never tell if these types of posts are serious or just a good troll.

    4. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by SMS_Design · · Score: 1

      You are an astoundingly misinformed jackass.

      1) life never comes from non-life

      Just because we have not observed this event does not mean it has never happened. Pick out the very simplest of monocellular organisms. Now allow the UNIVERSE infinite time. Eventually, something will happen to bring things into proper order.

      2) explosions don't bring order

      Um. Okay. Thanks for that, but please note that you're comparing a mass of some form of matter that is expanding quickly due to a simple chemical reaction to THE FUCKING BIG BANG.

      3) Mutations occur but almost always bring harm and NEVER add new information to a genetic chain.

      Oh boy, thats hard science. They almost always bring harm. And isn't a mutation new information.. kinda by default? There's a difference between a genetic shift and your methhead cousin whose baby was born with two noses.

      4) Science itself was vastly vived by a creationist perspective.

      Yeah. Scientists.

    5. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you realize what the infinite complexity of a single cell is? Even the simplest of monocellular organisms breaks down further into ordered complexity. So no, I don't believe that could ever just "come about" even with infinite time. To believe that takes more faith than creationism does.

    6. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just because we have not observed this event does not mean it has never happened. Pick out the very simplest of monocellular organisms. Now allow the UNIVERSE infinite time. Eventually, something will happen to bring things into proper order.
      OK, fine, but understand what you are saying here is that there is no scientific evidence to support such a theory.
      Um. Okay. Thanks for that, but please note that you're comparing a mass of some form of matter that is expanding quickly due to a simple chemical reaction to THE FUCKING BIG BANG.
      hmm.. don't really understand what you are trying to get at. The big bang was EXACTLY a mass of matter that expanded really quickly after some sort of reaction.
      Oh boy, thats hard science. They almost always bring harm. And isn't a mutation new information.. kinda by default? There's a difference between a genetic shift and your methhead cousin whose baby was born with two noses.
      LOL. Your first sentence "thats hard science" juxtaposed with the ad hominem at the end of your comment is hilarious.
      Yeah. Scientists.
      I honestly don't even understand what you are saying here...
    7. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by arevos · · Score: 2, Interesting
      life never comes from non-life

      So if something has not been observed, it cannot happen? Interesting philosophy. Stupid; but interesting nevertheless.

      explosions don't bring order

      What have explosions got to do with anything?

      Mutations occur but almost always bring harm and NEVER add new information to a genetic chain.

      Technically speaking, a defined sequence is information, even if it is random.

      These are just a few of the reasons why creationism is a more excellent science

      Except creationism doesn't match the criteria of a scientific theory, so it rather fails at the first hurdle, doesn't it?

    8. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      explosions don't bring order

      Another slashdot liberal. Guess you would want Saddam to be in power. Our troops are risking their lives out there. You liberals drop to new lows every day.

      Hopefully santa brings you some common sense and patriotism. Oh guess not since you liberals don't believe in Christmas.

    9. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically speaking, a defined sequence is information, even if it is random.

      Claude Shannon and Information Thoery would tend to disagree.

    10. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by kodaz · · Score: 0

      Is your cheek soar?

      Your tongue was pressing into it so powerfully there. :)

    11. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by CharlesEGrant · · Score: 1
      3) Mutations occur but almost always bring harm and NEVER add new information to a genetic chain. New information is required for one species to change or evolve into another and this does not occur in observable nature anywhere. Infact, DNA which was discovered after the evolution theory is a huge slap in the face to evolution and a dramatic proof of intelligent design.

      I hardly know where to begin.

      First, there is rather a lot of evidence that most point mutations are neutral. This is because a the genetic code is redundant. For example both CCC and CCA code for the amino acid proline. Markedly beneficial mutations are rare but not so rare that they are not produced in the laboratory every day. How about a mutation that extends the life of mice? Second, speciation has frequently been observed in the wild. In fact one of the papers cited in the parent article in Science was on the speciation process in European blackcaps. Are you actually familiar with information theory? A lot of ID proponents seem to toss it around without actually understanding it. Let me offer you this quote from The Mathematical Theory of Communication by Claude E. Shannon and Warren Weaver (Illini Books edition, 1963 pg 8)
      The word information, in this theory, is used in a special sense that must not be confused with its ordinary usage. In particular information must not be confused with meaning.
      In fact, two messages, one of which is heavily loaded with meaning and the other of which is pure nonsense, can be exactly equivalent, from the present viewpoint, as regards information.


      What you are calling "new information" is from the point of view of communication theory a loss of information because it represents the failure of DNA replication to produce a perfect copy of the original message. Information theory offers no opinion whether this loss of information will bring good or ill to the organism.

      Most of the important algorithms in bioinformatics and computational biology are implicitly based on evolutionary ideas. Some in fact use explicit models of DNA evolution. These are algorithms are being used with considerable success to find genes and regulatory elements in our genome. Why don't the ID advocates come up with their own algorithms and gene finding software. We'll pit them head to head and see who's better at finding genes.
    12. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      ) life never comes from non-life

      Error number 1. Life clearly had to come from non-life at some point, otherwise we wouldn't be here. Even if God Did It (tm), life still came from non-life.

      2) explosions don't bring order

      Error number 2. Nothing to do with evolution at all.

      3) Mutations occur but almost always bring harm and NEVER add new information to a genetic chain. New information is required for one species to change or evolve into another and this does not occur in observable nature anywhere.

      Errors 3 and 4. Mutations can and do add new information, but even if it didn't, that's OK because new information is not required for speciation. Also, speciation has been observed.

      4) Science itself was vastly vived by a creationist perspective. The creation around us suggests a Creator that is why it is called creation.

      Error 5. Meaningless statement.

      Evolutionists can't take the heat which is why they get so angry at opposing views.

      No, they get mad when people attempt to trumpet their religious beliefs as a valid scientific theory. Well, they're not.

      Step back folks and think for yourselves, study both sides

      Scientifically speaking, there is only one side.

    13. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Do you realize what the infinite complexity of a single cell is?

      Do you realize the infinite complexity of a single ice crystal? I guess it never snows in your world, unless God makes each snowflake personally.

    14. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by arevos · · Score: 1
      Claude Shannon and Information Thoery would tend to disagree.

      Not at all; note my use of the term 'a defined sequence'. Random noise is not defined when an analogue signal is processed, otherwise it would merely be a case of subtracting what you know to be the noise from the transmitted signal in order for you to perfectly retrieve the original message. Shannon talks of randomness as an undefined function that cannot be predicted, a barrier to the communications signal you wish to transmit.

      On the other hand, DNA is a predefined sequence, and one cannot distinguish between noise and signal; genes that don't do anything one generation, may turn out to be beneficial several thousand generations down the line. So, if anything, the randomness in DNA adds to the information content. It's been a while since I've covered Information Theory, but couldn't one make the argument that the randomness that exists in DNA actually reduces the entropy? A perfectly random sequence of numbers cannot be compressed, by definition, so the greater the element of randomness in DNA, the less it can be compressed and thus the lower its overall entropy.

    15. Re:Evolution = the new evolved bigotry by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The scientist that have studied long and hard and thought through the physics, biology, mathematics, geology etc. have very powerful reasons to doubt the evolution

      That would be simliar to the number of scientists who reject the sun being powered by nuclear fusion, and who instead support the "Electric Universe" crap that oddly keeps appearing on Slashdot.

      In otherwords the number is essentially zero.

      Roughtly 99.9% of professional biologists accept evolution. There is no genuine scientific controversy over evolution. A negligable number of crackpots making arguments and claims that have been reviewed and invalidated by all the the rest of the experts in the field does not make a genuine scientific controversy

      Go ahead, check out what fraction of professional biologists reject evolution.

      1) life never comes from non-life

      I thought we were talking about evolution?

      That's like attacking the theory of chemistry because it doesn't explain the origin of elements. The theory of chemistry is perfectly valid science even if we DON'T yet have a strong well supported theory of nuclear fusion to explain the origin of elements.

      Evolution explains the behaviour of life once it exists, just as chemistry explains the behaviour of elements once they exist.

      The theory of "the origin of life from nonlife" is abiogenesis. Considering that it attempts to address a singular microscoping evend shrouded behind the mists of several billion years, and that it has left no direct trace, it is hardly supprising that it is a poorly developed and poorly supported area of science. And no one is disputing it is poorly developed and poorly supported. However it is a lot better developed and better supported that you realize. However I'm not going to even try to get into it with you. Lets simply agree that poorly developed and poorly supported science has little or no place on a highschool science curriculum. There IS NO FIGHT over the origins of life in or highschools. The all of the fighting is over evolution.

      2) explosions don't bring order

      ARG! that argument is a pet peeve of mine, and I really hate seeing it (and explaining it) over and over and over and over.

      Basically the argument is that the second law of thermodynamics prooves evolution impossible. That is the statistical law that says entropy (disorder) increases. That law only says the average disorder must increase, and it does not apply at all when there is a system with energy flowing through it.

      It is quite normal and common for structure and order and complexity and information to spontateously arise out of nature when you have a system with energy flowing through it. In particular the sun is pumping energy into and througha variety of systems on the earth. For example the sun evaporates disordered water molecules into even more disordered and chaotic water vapor, which can then cool and condense as highly ordered complex snowflakes.

      Order and structure and complexity out of chaos. The sun metling ice and evaporating water *is* your metaphrical explosion blasting apart the water molecules into random bits of water vapor, and the final outcome of that explosion is an increase in complexity in the final snowflake.

      3a) Mutations occur but almost always bring harm

      Most mutations are neutral. A population builds up an increasing library of mutations, beneficial ones and neutral ones, and even mildly harmful ones. And in fact evolution would proceed with no trouble even if we assume there were NO beneficial mutations. Each generation mixes and suffles that library of neutral and mildly negative mutations looking for combinations that are valuable. A mutant gene producing a mild toxin on the blood is a negative mutation, and a mutation where the sweat glands leak blood protines onto the skin is negative, leaking out valuable blood protines. However if you combine those two negative mutations you wind up with a frog leaking and building u

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  81. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by VJ42 · · Score: 1

    I, myself am hindu (and born as such) and what you've said isn't entirely true. *Some* Hindus believe you can't become a hindu, but the majority I know do not. Afterall what would the Hare Karishnas[1] do if people couldn't become hindu, on a more day to day level there are people who come to my local temple who definately wern't born hindu and seem to have converted, as they are members of the white indiginious population here in the UK.

    [1]The Hare Krishnas are the only evangelical group of Hindus I know of. Most that I know (who actually take time to study the religion) respect and believe all faiths (including athesim & agnostisism) to be of equal value and as such believe evangelisism (is that even a word?) to be pointless.

    --
    If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
  82. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by dan_sdot · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Dumbass... the federal court decision was made by a Republican Judge.
    Dumbass... he did not say republican/democrat. And he wasn't talking about that recent court decision.
    It's the same thing.
    Dumbass... its a completely different theory. Mimicing the intellectuals who actually really argue the case for random evolution does not make you smart. You can't even distinguish the different schools of thought.
    Who made the intelligent being? And if no one made him/her/it which is much more complicated than the universe, then why did someone have to make the universe?
    Good question. But that can really be answered by science, can it?
  83. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by dbucowboy · · Score: 1

    True, but then in the same since your theory of gasses just appearing is just as illogical as the theory of God always existing. Where is end of the universe? Is there a wall and a sign that say's the end somewhere deep into space? No and I don't think anyone believes that. So it is not any more irrational to believe in a God with no beginning and no end than it is for you to believe in an infinite universe that just happened.

    I am actually reading a very well written book called God doesn't believe in atheists by Ray Comfort... I highly recommend it. Ray Comfort has been a platform speaker at the National convention of American Atheists. I venture to say that as an atheist it would be near impossible to read this book and not have your "faith" shaken considerably. If you doubt my claim, I encourage you to grab a copy and read it.

    http://product.half.ebay.com/God-Doesnt-Believe-in -Atheists_W0QQtgZinfoQQprZ2743256/

    --
    This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
  84. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by mugnyte · · Score: 1

    ...in the bible...

    Perhaps you should step away from the assumption of the bible as a source of truth. Your appeal to that book as an authority doesn't work in my library.

  85. Isnt that funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its funny how ID is being so shot down... i mean its so far reached that 1 miracle brought about everything rather than 1 trillion miracles by chance.

    How long does it take for a species to evolve?
    The woodpecker for instance.. would starve to death in what, 2 weeks?
    that means he grew that special back claw that helps him leverage himself on the tree REALLY fast right?
    oh but wait... his beak, first time he tried to nail a tree with it, that would be jabbed into his brain,
    but in a couple of days he got the "shock absorber" like beak he has now... right?
    oh damn.. how does he get the little critters out from under the bark? oh yea, he grew that REALLY long tounge in a couple of days too out of need... right?

    ok.. how many more species do I need to point out to you that could NOT have survived if their
    "evolution" tooks even hundreds of years let alone thousands or millions?

    1. Re:Isnt that funny by kodaz · · Score: 1

      CAREFUL!! Your starting to think logically...this has no place in our evolved evolutionary society. Everything must be viewed through the glasses of evolution and long naturalistic timeframes its the way we do things here. Now be quiet and go away!

    2. Re:Isnt that funny by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Its funny how ID is being so shot down... i mean its so far reached that 1 miracle brought about everything rather than 1 trillion miracles by chance.

      There's nothing miraculous about random mutation and natural selection. Do the math. It's not improbable that life evolved. It's practically inevitable. Your example was also a logical fallacy.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
  86. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by grub · · Score: 1


    "Intelligent Design" still maintains a god or gods made it all. If you ask the people pushing the silly idea you'll find that they aren't referring to Odin or Zeus as the creators, they're talking about their christian god.
    They changed a few words in "Pandas and People" to drop the term Creationism and come up with Intelligent Design. They lied and laundered money to push their myth on unsuspecting children. Scum, the whole lot of 'em.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  87. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually they don't. One says the Christian god found in the bible, and the other said that some intelligent being. There is a VERY BIG distinction in that. If you aren't smart enough to see that distinction then he really shouldn't reply to your post.

  88. Don't confuse evolution with creation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolution explains how things progress; it does not explain how the progression started. Those of you who dismiss intelligent design in the context of creation as well as evolution must remember one thing: Believing that an intelligence got the ball rolling requires divine faith; and believing that chance got the ball rolling -- that it happened because it happened, requires secular faith (whether you like it or not).

    In any event, nobody with a video camera was there when life came to be on earth, so don't look for answers to age old questions in this forum. Nothing to see here. Please move along.

  89. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by ShadowsHawk · · Score: 1

    You accuse Christians of trying to change you and you're obviously very upset by that. By the same arguement, you would be attempting to change them by saying that evolution is more valid than ID. In my opinion, this falls under the same social graces of the giving/receiving of 'holiday' greetings. Accept the fact that other people can differ from you with grace and the world is a better place.

  90. People don't take meat seriously enough by Jeremi · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I don't wholly subscribe to the idea that I'm just meat


    I think the dismissive phrase "just meat" implies that there isn't much to it. In fact you can implement some incredibly cool things using "just meat". Intelligent life, for example.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    1. Re:People don't take meat seriously enough by wildsurf · · Score: 1

      I don't wholly subscribe to the idea that I'm just meat

      You might enjoy this short story. The word "meat" connotes a level of homogeneity and simplicity that is completely unwarranted; meat is actually ridiculously complicated. That's why there's no meat on Mars, for instance.

      --
      Weeks of coding saves hours of planning.
    2. Re:People don't take meat seriously enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact you can implement some incredibly cool things using "just meat". Intelligent life, for example.

      Or even better, a steak.

    3. Re:People don't take meat seriously enough by univgeek · · Score: 1

      And don't forget tasty food...

      After all, if God didn't want us to eat animals, he wouldn't have made them out of meat...

      --
      All bow to his Noodliness!! His Noodle Appendage has touched me!
    4. Re:People don't take meat seriously enough by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      After all, if God didn't want us to eat animals, he wouldn't have made them out of meat...


      By that logic, God also approves of cannibalism...

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    5. Re:People don't take meat seriously enough by owlstead · · Score: 1

      POLICE: Sir, are you classified as human?
      DALLAS: Uh... negative. I am a meat popsicle.

    6. Re:People don't take meat seriously enough by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Actually, according to the Bible humans were forbidden to eat meat until after the Flood. It was a concession to our moral depravity. Adonai, apparently, is a militant vegetarian.

  91. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ditto

  92. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by zymurgy_cat · · Score: 1

    Not to start this debate again, but nobody has explained to me where the big bang gases came from that created the universe.

    I'll make a deal with you. When you can explain to me where the creator/intelligent designer came from, I'll explain to you why your use of "gases" is incorrect.

    --
    -- Fugacity: Confusing chemists since 1908
  93. Just under 4 billion years too late by whitehatlurker · · Score: 4, Funny

    I wonder how "Evolution" feels about the award - 4 billion years of hard work, and now it gets recognition.

    --
    .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
  94. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

    Krishnas are a cult and therefore can be discounted from any discussion. I don't know of any real Hindu that believes that you can convert to Hinduism or seek to convert others.

  95. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Hatta · · Score: 2, Informative

    Seriously, how can you deny that some intelligent being had a hand in the creation of the universe at some point in time? The elements that created everything had to come from somewhere.

    The intelligent being had to come from somewhere too, until you explain that, you've explained nothing. ID is a fundamentally question begging answer.

    If intelligence can "just exist" then why can't we "just exist" without a creator?

    If an intelligence needs a creator, where did the first creator come from, or is it just turtles all the way down?

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  96. What's "fake" about Jupiter? by mangu · · Score: 1
    "I think the planets should be renamed because they're named after fake gods."


    Since you put that in quotes, and from the general tone of your post, one cannot tell if you are serious, joking, or sarcastic. However, let's consider that one sentence. What's "fake" about the gods who are eponymous to the planets? They are the same gods who gave their names to the weekdays in several languages, including English, Spanish, Swedish, and others. Those gods are absolutely as true as Jehovah, or Jesus, or Allah, or Quetzalcoatl, or Ra, or any other god.


    Until the day when one or more true gods come forward and claim their true existence, any and all gods on whom any person has faith, is absolutely as true as all the others. That's why religion should be separated from both politics and science, and why there must exist freedom to believe or not in any religion. There's no uncontrovertible evidence for the existence of any god at all.

    1. Re:What's "fake" about Jupiter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Måndag, Moon day.
      Tisday, day of Tir (Tyr).
      Onsdag, day of Oden.
      Torsdag, day of Tor.
      Fredag, day of Frej.
      Lördag, lögardagen, day of bath.
      Söndag, day of Sol.

  97. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by spurtle15 · · Score: 1

    Given that you Christians believe in one God (or is it three?), won't it get rather confusing if you name all the planets after him?

    Why? You've got the Father, The Son, The Holy Spirit, Rex, Mittens, Nibbles, etc...

    The Divine Mystery, One God, different persons. E Plurbis Unum, one big happy family, or something.

  98. I Beg to Differ on the Prediction Prediction by truckaxle · · Score: 2, Informative
    You claim that ID is not predictible- but since it predicts the exact same outcomes that evolution does, that would mean that evolution wasn't predictable either

    I don't think this is true or I did not understand your meaning. For example:

    • There are two kinds of whales: those with teeth, and those that strain microscopic food out of seawater with baleen. Some scientist using the theory of evolution predicted that a transitional whale must have once existed, which had both teeth and baleen. Such a fossil has since been found.

    • Evolution predicts that we will find fossil series, ID make no such predictions. Fossil series in especially easily preserved anamals such as shells (bivalves,etc) are well represented and recognized.

    • Evolution would predict that animals on distant islands will appear closely related to animals on nearby islands and the closest mainland, and that the more distant the islands, the more distant the relationship. This is what is found in numerous examples in smaller scales, ie Gallapogos Islands and in larger scales such as Marsupials in Austrailia.

    • Evolution would predict parasites such as the guinea worm ID would not.

    • Darwin himself predicted that precursors to the trilobite would be found in pre-Silurian rocks. He was correct: they were subsequently found.


    I would appreciate you expanding your thought here how ID would make the exact same predictions as evolution.
    1. Re:I Beg to Differ on the Prediction Prediction by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      "God put those trilobite fossils in the old rocks to test us."

      "God made the guinea worm to test us."

      The problem with invoking God is that nothing is out of bounds. Therefore *any* result is compatible with ID.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  99. You are only harming science by 4Dmonkey · · Score: 1

    I dont know what these americans are up to, but they are watering down science by announcing such things. Overreactions such as these are giving much more importance to ID and such beliefs, than they actually deserve.
    You are blowing into the fire of religion and ignorance rather than letting it burn out and die slowly.

    --
    God created man in his own image, but somehow he evolved into a hairless monkey.
    1. Re:You are only harming science by Whiteox · · Score: 1

      I agree but come to a different conclusion.
      I am a trained historian with a science background. If I can yell from rofftops what I'm about to say then this whole debate will take an a different meaning:

      The problem about damning ID is that ALL comments and arguments that I've read so far totally miss the point:

      1. We are experiencing a paradigm change. In other words, Evolutionists are trying to explain how single celled organisms have attributes that DO NOT fit evolutionary theory; and instead of acceptance of that, they discount it! This is a crime.

      2. In the historical past , as far as the history and philosophy of science states, that the evidence that doesn't support the accepted theory will, in fact either modify the accepted theory or lead to the creation of a new theory that accepts new evidence.

      And that is not what is happening here.

      ID has a value in that it challenges the Theory of Evolution. Note that it is not a Law, but a theory.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
    2. Re:You are only harming science by 4Dmonkey · · Score: 1

      Since you are a historian, I'm sure you must have seen that old ideas die only when old people holding on to them die.

      Theory of biological evolution is no different from any other scientific theory. It has inaccuracies and weaknesses, or we may discover such in future. New theories or varients will be proposed and slowly something more accurate will replace it. But thats not going to happen in a few months or even in few years. It takes time, may be a generation for example. For that duration scientists are going to dearly hold on to their beliefs, especially the old guys. Its nothing unusual and nothing special about biological evolution in particular.

      While this is going on, we expect that the scientific community carries on with their business as usual and we also expect the cults or 'closed belief' systems to keep opposing them (as they have always done with any ideas, scientific or not, that conflict with their beliefs or even those that try to state the same belief in different terms). But its irresponsible for the ones proposing changes in old theory to hurry things up (for who knows what purpose) and even provide a chance to cults/religious abusers etc to take advantage of it (which you see has resulted in one idea being forced on another, a trademark of religion). They should have stated their ideas and should have waited for things to become better for them, as they have always done and succeeded.

      And for those holding on to the inaccuracies to ensure their theory lives, should remain busy with their work and hope for the best instead of performing an even more irresponsible act of diluting the theory by bringing it on the same level of a religious idea, by defending its 'truthfulness' using law-system or this childish announcement of it being a winner of the year.

      I personally feel that, ID, even if very much inaccurate an unscientific, holds a status of a simple theory in general, and should not be opposed consciously. Rather it should be left to die a natural death just like all other weak theories. But what we see here is a drama created by abusers of public innocence(=supidity), for their own lowly purposes, and real science guys as well as real believers of a faith standing by and watching helplessly.

      --
      God created man in his own image, but somehow he evolved into a hairless monkey.
  100. Re:Creationism isn't a required belief for Catholi by Dadoo · · Score: 2, Informative

    That's great, and all, and I agree with you. The problem is that the people pushing ID and creationism don't accept what the pope has to say. Most of them don't even believe Catholics are Christian.

    --
    Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
  101. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I'm an agnostic, not an atheist. And basic fabric of the univers/a-multiverse/something-wilder may just exist, and always have existed. In 'empty' space bits of matter and anti-matter may spontaneously pop up. It's thought that that happens and explains some of the radiation comeing from black holes. Our universe might just be some bubble that popped into existance like those particles do. Time may only exist in this universe, so there is no worry about thinking about a 'before'. I don't know. And neither do the 'believers' or 'non-believers'. We have absolutely no way of knowing since those things are entirely out of our scope of our physics/existance. Perhaps some day we will have the tools to probe more deeply into it, but we simply aren't equipped for it today. However, that said, the springing forth into existance of an all-knowing all-powereful sentient existance would seem much more unlikely than the springing forth of simple matter, the with complexity slowly added/evolving into the system.

  102. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Wikipedia · · Score: 0

    You are so convincingly correct.

    --
    P2P Anonymous Distributed Web Search: http://www.yacy.net/
  103. dont like evolution, deny germ theory too by shwc · · Score: 0
    Scientifically speaking evolution is a theory, but only because there are no absolute facts in science ... just testable theories that have yet to prove false.

    Let us examine some other biological scientific theories ...

    • 1) Germ theory. This is the theory that micro-organisms can cause disease.
    • 2) Cancer theory. (e.g. the theory that cancer occurs when cells escape normal cellular regulation).
    • 3) Antibiotic theory (e.g. the theory that penicillin or other similar molecules will kill bacteria).
    • 4) The theory that neurons transmit electrical impulses.

    How about some non-biological scientific theories...

    • 1) Atoms are made up of electrons, protons and neutrons (which themselves are made up of smaller particles).
    • 2) Electricity is due to the movement (conductance) of electrons.

    The list is nearly endless. All of these are, scientifically speaking, theories but are espoused as fact in common usage because experimentally they have stood the test of time. The case for evolution is as strong, if not stronger, than germ theory. The exact biological details of how a specific germ infects a cell, causes the disease symptoms, or is purged by our immune system might be hotly debated, but germ theory as a whole is not.

    Similarly, scientists debate about the mode and tempo of evolution, about the exact mechanism(s) of speciation for a given speciation event, and about the exact contributions of different mutational forces & mechanisms, fitness levels required for survivability, and the underlying biochemical processes. The existence of evolution is not under debate because in experiment after experiment ... scientific observation after scientific observation ... time and time again, for the two centuries that scientists investigating this concept, evolution has held true, testable, and verifiable. Many of the experiments reach back in time, even to the prokaryotic/eukaryotic split.

    If you are worried about the scientific debate part, I should inform you that there is a also debate about the exact nature of protons, electrons, and neutrons (e.g. string theory) or what gravity is (gravitons?, how does gravity exert force). That electrons or the force of gravity exists is not really in contention. Neither is the existence of evolution.

    Evolution provides a framework for all of biology. It is sort of the "unified field" theory of biology. The theory is that good. Evolutionary theory has greatly increased our understanding of biology and medicine and continues to have tremendous predictive capacity.

    Here is an evolution based prediction that is in the news lately. Bird flu. The H5N1 strain of bird flu, by random mutation and repeated exposure to humans acquired (evolved) the ability to infect humans. Scientists are now worried that the H5N1 strain might evolve the ability to spread from human to human. "Beneficial" for the survival of that viral strain, "bad" for humans individually. I can not say what H5N1 transmissibility means for the long term fitness of the human species.

  104. Scientific Achievement of 2006..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot readers prove/disprove the theory of evolution!!!

  105. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by norite · · Score: 1

    Right on!
    Mod this Up!

    --
    -- Fuck Beta
  106. One day, they will scap this theory too by Indu · · Score: 1

    Another award was this: Complicated Earth. Comparisons of rocks from Earth and outer space forced scientists to scrap long-held views of how our planet formed. So we will not be surprised if some day, we will see the scientists "scrapping" long-held views on Evolution?

    1. Re:One day, they will scap this theory too by cqnn · · Score: 1

      No, not really.

        The scientists who had to scrap the Complicated Earth theory did so because the
      evidence showed they could not use that theory as a tool to predict the formation
      of extrasolar planets; thus it was not useful in further research.

        Scientists today use evolutionary principles to predict the behavior of viruses,
      plants, and other small organisms. Thus it remains a useful tool for further
      scientific study.

    2. Re:One day, they will scap this theory too by bigtrike · · Score: 1

      So we will not be surprised if some day, we will see the scientists "scrapping" long-held views on Evolution?

      It's always a possibility. If another theory should emerge which fits the observed data better, it will become the new accepted theory. This would also hold true for Intelligent Design if it was considered a scientific theory.

      Like all scientific theories, the people supporting "intelligent design" would have to be willing to abandon the idea should evidence come along which better supported an entirely different theory.

    3. Re:One day, they will scap this theory too by Indu · · Score: 1

      It may remain useful at present. But that doesn't mean that it is "true" or that it won't be scrapped at some point in the future. My point is that what scientists call "knowledge" is not knowledge at all. It is just a convenient framework for so-called "advancement". But advancement towards what? Is the world a better place for it? Do people not suffer any more? Do living beings not die any more?

    4. Re:One day, they will scap this theory too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, It's just all too hard isn't it diddums. Let's all just throw in the towel and go clutch our rosary beads because that will supposedly make us happy where as all this science stuff is just too confusing and threatening to our theological beliefs.

      Yeah right.

      If you want to go back to the "enlightnement" of the Dark Ages be my guest. Just leave the rest of us here living happily without you.

  107. Frankly, that was different. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Psychology isn't exactly a science.

  108. Falsifiability by nuonguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I agree with you. To be pedantic though, I think scientific objection to ID is Falsifiability. The ID pushers make few claims that we can observe. Fortunately, they do say that the earth is only ~6000 years old, something we can measure objectively.

    The social problem with ID is that the people doing the pushing are religious bigots. Make no mistake about it. They're as open-minded as the taliban. They don't care whether it's scientific. They're not interested in a dialog or the truth. They have a message for you and their only interest in you depends on your acceptance of that message.

    1. Re:Falsifiability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a believer in ID, I can tell you that the idea that the earth is only 6000 years old is pure bunk. Nowhere in the bible is there ANY evidence to support that idea. Don't lump fundamentalists, who base all of their beliefs on an illogical conclusion derived on a failure to understand how ancient languages translate into modern languages, with clear thinking (and scientifically trained) christians such as myself. Otherwise, I might have to lump you in with athiest, amoral, anarchists (no offense meant in interests of making a point).

    2. Re:Falsifiability by nuonguy · · Score: 1

      Man, even giving you the benefit of the doubt, I cannot separate the fundamentalists from 'scientifically trained' christians. Seriously, there might be an ID argument that doesn't devolve down to "It's all really complicated and I don't understand it therefore it must have been intelligently designed and created; but don't ask me any questions about the creator^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hdesiger cuz I don't know and I don't understand" I haven't seen it. Every ID proponent I've met, when pushed, devolved down to this, and I can't separate that from the fundamentalists.

      As for lumping me with the atheists, anarchists et al, that might be good company. Go ahead! :-) Better company than I've met on the ID side.

    3. Re:Falsifiability by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      As someone who is "scientifically trained", you must surely understand that any assertion which offers no means of testing and lacks any explanatory power (via the fact that there is no observation that could ever falsify it) has no place in a science class.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:Falsifiability by Phroggy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      As a believer in ID, I can tell you that the idea that the earth is only 6000 years old is pure bunk. Nowhere in the bible is there ANY evidence to support that idea.

      No, the Bible doesn't say "God created the Heavens and the Earth in 4037 B.C. on the 27th of January at 3:00pm GMT." But it does give genealogies, "so-and-so begat so-and-so," which can give you a rough estimate if you add them up. If you believe the Bible to be accurate, then 6000 years is a close enough approximation.

      A lot of people scoff at the notion that the earth has only been here for 6,000 years, but that's only impossible if you assume life must have taken millions of years to evolve or that various geological formations took millions of years to form, or that radiometric dating is never wrong. Without those assumptions, there's really no reason why 6,000 years couldn't work.

      ID opponents claim ID isn't science, because it's not falsifiable. Well, they're right. You can't test it, you can't reproduce it, you can't observe it, you can't prove it. The problem is, you can't really test "evolution" (by which in this case I mean the theory that all life evolved from more primitive species over several million years) either - you can make observations about our current situation, and use conclusions from those observations to predict the results of future experiments, but you can't say that proves how something happened in the past, just because it could happen that way now.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    5. Re:Falsifiability by Saint+Stephen · · Score: 1

      I think your statement is in fact falsifiable. I've heard ID supporters who are otherwise scientists claim that that do not believe in a young earth. Therefore, you aren't really refuting what they believe in when they say "I believe ID."

    6. Re:Falsifiability by owlstead · · Score: 1

      You can view evolution take place over millions of years. The only argument against it is if you believe everyting just zapped into existence. The problem with the latter is that then *insert favourite diety* must have deliberately placed dinasaur bones everywhere, put mountains there that have clearly been eroded over a much longer time and to top it off put it in a galaxy that has been there for, er, slightly longer than 6000 years.

      In your reasoning you cannot prove anything about the past. I would not like to trade with you. Clearly, signatures (which are all over the place in science) are bunk. No, I never put it there, it just came into being. Yeah, well, right.

    7. Re:Falsifiability by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Informative

      The problem with the latter is that then *insert favourite diety* must have deliberately placed dinasaur bones everywhere, put mountains there that have clearly been eroded over a much longer time and to top it off put it in a galaxy that has been there for, er, slightly longer than 6000 years.

      I'm not suggesting that dinosaur bones were "placed" everywhere, nor that already-eroded mountains were created; rather that dinosaurs were still alive as recently as 2,000 B.C. and those mountains eroded a lot faster than you think. I don't expect you to agree, I just want to make sure you understand what we disagree on. ;-)

      Being able to see stars over 6,000 light years away is a much bigger problem for the Creation theory, and although I've heard several explanations, none of them are particularly satisfactory. The Bible does say that God created light before God created the stars, but that's still kinda weird.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  109. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by ShadowsHawk · · Score: 1

    Just because someone holds to a belief and will not compromise it does not mean that they are fanatical lunatic as you imply. It is possible for intelligent people to disagree. Perhaps you should follow the Islamic principals and actually learn about those around you before you challenge them.

  110. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by LtOcelot · · Score: 1

    So it is not any more irrational to believe in a God with no beginning and no end than it is for you to believe in an infinite universe that just happened.

    Look up "Occam's Razor", then reconsider these words.

  111. In mostly non-Christian nations... by LadyVirharper · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Is evolution the same hot topic in other nations, ones with predominantly (sp) non-Christian religions? Does anybody know what they have to say on the issue? For example, the Japanese...modern nation, but not Christian (AFAIK). Is there any ID-like theory among them?

    I'm just curious now how other religions interact with the idea of evolution. What about India's Hindu population? What do they think?

    Sort of off topic, I guess. But hey. Maybe someone here who's bilingual will know.

    1. Re:In mostly non-Christian nations... by imsabbel · · Score: 1

      Well, i can tell you from a european (i.e. secularized christian) Pov:
      There is just nothing but bewilderment about the crazy americans and the bullshit they believe.
      I am saying that in this harsh words because i havent met one religion teacher or one minister who believed in creationism (or is bastard spawns like ID). The general consens is that relgion is supposed to be an ethical/moral framework and NOT mess with science besides ethical guidance in touchy subjects.

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    2. Re:In mostly non-Christian nations... by lekhak · · Score: 1

      Hindus are split on the details of how life began on earth.
      But like any other religion, it is explained off using the theory of creationism.

      The most popular theory goes something like this:

      Brahma is the Creator, Vishnu is the Preserver and Shiva is the Destroyer.
      Brahmas' grandson, Kashyapa is the father of ALL life on earth - human and otherwise.

      Time is divided into a cycle of Yugas (eras) - Satya Yuga, Treta Yuga, Dwapara Yuga, Kali Yuga.
      The yugas see progressively worsening moral values in mankind, Satya Yuga having the best and Kali Yuga having the worst.
      The end of Kali Yuga will be marked by a great deluge which will destroy ALMOST all life on earth - and hence all evil.
      Satya Yuga marks the creation of life again.

      There is no account of how many cycles we are through yet.
      But from scriptures, we know that at the last deluge, Vishnu took the form of a fish and saved the Vedas from destruction.

      So now you know why we have a Creator, Preserver and a Destroyer.

      In the current cycle, we are in the Kali Yuga.
      There is no definite consensus on when this Yuga and hence this cycle would end.
      The somewhat accepted theory is that, an incarnation of God as Kaliki will mark the beginning of end.
      This character Kaliki loosely falls into place with the prophecy of Nostradamus of the blue turbaned conqueror.

    3. Re:In mostly non-Christian nations... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be silly. It's not even an issue in other Christian nations, except perhaps those under the sway of American evangelical missionaries. The USA pretty much on it's own in this "debate".

  112. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the planets should be renamed because they're named after fake gods.
    I'd never heard any such complaints before, that's just utterly stupid. Nobody looks at Venus in the sky and thinks of it as the goddess Venus, it's just a planet. It needs a name to make reference easier. What's wrong with the one it's got?

    This is still pretty indicative of the problem that sets Christians up for such a backlash though. Literalism. How about pushing a little of the brotherly love and generosity instead? Better than pedantic wailing at anything that doesn't precisely match what the bible says. It's an interprative work, not an encyclopedia.

  113. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

    Everything in this universe has a beginning and end.

    Says who? You aren't the ID are you? If you are, I apologize.

  114. Re:Evolution? Scientific Achievement of 2005? by EvanED · · Score: 1

    Not to mention that theories which have been flat-out DISPROVEN (*cough* Newton's laws *cough*) are still taught and used because they are more than good enough 99.99% of the time.

  115. How about Occam's Razor? by mangu · · Score: 1
    Believing that an intelligence got the ball rolling requires divine faith; and believing that chance got the ball rolling -- that it happened because it happened, requires secular faith (whether you like it or not).


    The second choice is simpler.If you postulate that an "intelligence" got the ball rolling, you have to explain how that intelligence came to exist. We do know that things exist, because, as Descartes said, we do exist. We have lots of evidence to show that things didn't always exist as they do know, and we have evidence that the whole universe as we know it started its existence in an event that is known as the "big bang".


    We do not have any evidence at all, beyond pure faith, that anything existed before the big bang. We do have evidence that many things in this universe are not governed by a benign, omnipotent entity (for instance, a child whose father I knew died at age 3 from a brain cancer).


    Looking at events in our world, random chance is more likely than any sort of intelligence. Why do some lovely people die young, and some mean bastards live to 100 years old? And why do some excellent people die very old and some ruthless drug dealers die in their 20s?


    No, belief in blind chance doesn't require any sort of faith. It requires only a careful and methodic observation of the events in our world, a.k.a. science.

  116. You Mean it needs to be Inteligently Designed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You Mean it needs to be Inteligently Designed!
    HAHAHAH!

  117. Giving science a bad name by kandresen · · Score: 1

    I also see this as part of a political choice rather than a choice based on merits - just look at the breakthroughs mentioned:

    sequencing of the chimpanzee genome
    - What has this to do with evolution in it self? as stated in the article it may some day give a breakthrough, but as for now I can't see how this is proving/dis-proving anything...

    recreation of the 1918 flu virus in a laboratory
    - And this has what relation to evolution??? It was a mere reproduction - I fail to see how this relate to evolution

    a study on European blackcap birds which demonstrated how two different populations can become two separate species
    - Finally something that seems related to evolution! But is this enought to make the nomination as achivement of the year??

    It seems political agendas moved in front of rationality, which unfortunately give science a bad name... Then again, Science may be just another pop-science magazine that don't represent scientific views but what might sell better; after all I believe this is what lots of scientists want to hear in light if ID even though most likely would be ashamed of the base of this award...

  118. Economist Survey: Human Evolution (pt. 1) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SURVEY: HUMAN EVOLUTION

    The proper study of mankind
    Dec 20th 2005
    From The Economist print edition

    New theories and techniques have revolutionised our understanding of humanity's past and present, says Geoffrey Carr (interviewed here)

    [Image]

    SEVEN hundred and forty centuries ago, give or take a few, the skies darkened and the Earth caught a cold. Toba, a volcano in Sumatra, had exploded with the sort of eruptive force that convulses the planet only once every few million years. The skies stayed dark for six years, so much dust did the eruption throw into the atmosphere. It was a dismal time to be alive and, if Stanley Ambrose of the University of Illinois is right, the chances were you would be dead soon. In particular, the population of one species, known to modern science as Homo sapiens, plummeted to perhaps 2,000 individuals.

    The proverbial Martian, looking at that darkened Earth, would probably have given long odds against these peculiar apes making much impact on the future. True, they had mastered the art of tool-making, but so had several of their contemporaries. True, too, their curious grunts allowed them to collaborate in surprisingly sophisticated ways. But those advantages came at a huge price, for their brains were voracious consumers of energy--a mere 2% of the body's tissue absorbing 20% of its food intake. An interesting evolutionary experiment, then, but surely a blind alley.

    This survey will attempt to explain why that mythical Martian would have been wrong. It will ask how these apes not only survived but prospered, until the time came when one of them could weave together strands of evidence from fields as disparate as geology and genetics, and conclude that his ancestors had gone through a genetic bottleneck caused by a geological catastrophe.

    Not all of his contemporaries agree with Dr Ambrose about Toba's effect on humanity. The eruption certainly happened, but there is less consensus about his suggestion that it helped form the basis for what are now known as humanity's racial divisions, by breaking Homo sapiens into small groups whose random physical quirks were preserved in different places. The idea is not, however, absurd. It is based on a piece of evolutionary theory called the founder effect, which shows how the isolation of small populations from larger ones can accelerate evolutionary change, because a small population's average characteristics are likely to differ from those of the larger group from which it is drawn. Like much evolutionary theory, this is just applied common sense. But only recently has such common sense been applied systematically to areas of anthropology that have traditionally ignored it and sometimes resisted it. The result, when combined with new techniques of genetic analysis, has been a revolution in the understanding of humanity's past.

    And anthropology is not the only human science to have been infused with evolutionary theory. Psychology, too, is undergoing a makeover and the result is a second revolution, this time in the understanding of humanity's present. Such understanding has been of two types, which often get confused. One is the realisation that many human activities, not all of them savoury, happen for exactly the same reasons as in other species. For example, altruistic behaviour towards relatives, infidelity, rape and murder are all widespread in the animal kingdom. All have their own evolutionary logic. No one argues that they are anything other than evolutionarily driven in species other than man. Yet it would be extraordinary if they were not so driven in man, because it would mean that natural selection had somehow contrived to wipe out their genetic underpinnings, only for them to re-emerge as culturally determined phenomena.

    Understanding this shared evolutionary history with other s

  119. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by DissidentHere · · Score: 1

    If ever there was a time I wish I had mod points, this is it.

    I could not have said it better.

    --
    "None of us are as dumb as all of us." - meeting mantra
  120. ya rly by Morlark · · Score: 1

    You forgot about GM crops, mutant rabbits, and evil grey goo that's trying to take over the world.

    --
    Santa's suicide mission go!
  121. Economist Survey: Human Evolution (pt. 2) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SURVEY: HUMAN EVOLUTION

    If this is a man
    Dec 20th 2005
    From The Economist print edition

    Why it pays to be brainy

    [Image]

    THANKS to Dr Cann and her successors, the story of how Homo sapiens spread throughout the world is getting clearer by the day. But why did it happen? What was it that gave the species its edge, and where did it come from? Here, the picture blurs.

    Until recently, it was common to speak of an Upper Palaeolithic revolution in human affairs--what Jared Diamond, of the University of California at Los Angeles, called the Great Leap Forward. Around 40,000 years ago, so the argument ran, humanity underwent a mental step-change. The main evidence for this was the luxuriant cave art that appeared in Europe shortly after this time. Palaeopsychologists see this art as evidence that the artists could manipulate abstract mental symbols--and so they surely could. But it is a false conclusion (though it was widely drawn before Dr Cann's work) that this mental power actually evolved in Europe. Since all humans can paint (some, admittedly, better than others), the mental ability to do so, if not the actual technique, must have emerged in Africa before the first emigrants left. Indeed, evidence of early artistic leanings in that continent has now turned up in the form of drilled beads made of shells and coral, and--more controversially--of stones that have abstract patterns scratched on to them and bear traces of pigment.

    That certainly pushes the revolution back a few tens of millennia. The oldest beads seem to date from 75,000 years ago, and an inspired piece of lateral thinking suggests that clothing appeared at about the same time. Mark Stoneking and his colleagues at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, applied the molecular-clock technique to human lice. They showed that head lice and body lice diverged 75,000 years ago. Since body lice live in clothing, and most other species of mammal support only one species of louse, the inference is that body lice evolved at the same time as clothes.

    That is an interesting coincidence, and some think it doubly interesting that it coincides with the eruption of Toba. It may be evidence of a shift of thought patterns of the sort that the Upper Palaeolithic revolutionaries propose. On the other hand, there are also signs of intellectual shifts predating this period. Sally McBrearty, of the University of Connecticut, and Alison Brooks, of George Washington University, have identified 14 traits, from making stone blades to painting images, which they think represent important conceptual advances. Ten of them, including fishing, mining, engaging in long-distance trade and making bone tools, as well as painting and making beads, seem to be unique to modern Homo sapiens. However, four, including grinding pigments (for what purpose remains unknown, but probably body painting), stretch back into the debatable past of Homo helmei.

    Given the fragmentary nature of the evidence from Africa, which has not been explored with the same sort of archaeological fine-tooth comb as Europe, the speed of the emergence of modern behaviour is still debatable. One thing, however, that clearly played no part in distinguishing Homo sapiens from his hominid contemporaries was a bigger brain.

    Modern people do, indeed, have exceedingly large brains, measuring about 1,300 cm. Other mammals that weigh roughly the same as human beings--sheep, for example--have brains with an average volume of 180cm. In general, there is a well-established relationship between body size and brain size that people very much do not fit. But as Dr Oppenheimer shows (see chart 2), most of this brain expansion happened early in human evolutionary history, in Homo habilis and Homo erectus. The brains of modern people are only about 6% larger than those of their immediate African

  122. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Syrrh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're falling in to the same trap the fundies always do.
    Evolution is not the 'big bang' theory. Evolution doesn't give two shits about cosmic expansion, collapse, black holes or matter/energy interactions. It doesn't care where Earth came from, how long it had been there, or what color the sky was when the Flying Spaghetti Monster first set the amino acids rolling.

    Evolution is about the trends of change among individual organisms. That's IT. There are other theories about all the other events, but they are off-topic.

  123. "whackos" by nuonguy · · Score: 1

    Actually, they are whacko. Believing so strongly in a myth that you are willing to lie and deceive to make your point makes you whacko. This has been my personal experience and the judge in the case made the point that the people with the deep religious convictions were liars. As a wise man once told me, jesus is just santa claus for grownups.

    If you want to be in the camp that seeks to push id, you're in for some very bad company.

    Speaking of whackos, you've got some whackiness showing of your own. (Thanks for the google suggestion, I'd never have thought of that :-) If by Behe you're referring to the 'irreducibly complex' crap, at least read this: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/behe.html

    As for your misappropriation of Crick, read http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/steve/. The Project Steve pages made me laugh a coupla times and the reference to Crick gets a Steve-o-meter rating of 9.

  124. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by EnsilZah · · Score: 1

    The the question of where god came from has a quick and easy answer, and it is "He's a heretic, burn him!".

  125. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by mrak+and+swepe · · Score: 1

    I think that calling one of the planets "The Son" is just asking for confusion.

    How about Pops, Junior, Spook (Rex, Mittens, Nibbles, etc...)

    Gives God a nice family-friendly image, I think.

  126. Ramblings... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The thing that I think a lot of people are missing when it comes to the debate of evolution vs creationsim is that niether one is a true science, though science is involved in both. There are just as many required assumptions in either theory. We must rember that even evolution is just that, a theory, just as intelligent design is a theory. There isn't enough evidence to PROVE either one. Under each theory faith is required, it is just a matter of where you wish to place your faith. I think it is also a mistake to assume that there is NO science whatsoever in creationism. If you actually look at creationism there are many scientists who use tried and true scientific method to prove and disprove common conseptions and misconceptions. Please refer to Dr. Robert Gentry and his research into Plutonium 218 halos. If you claim that creationism is not a science then you cannot claim that evolution is a science. Both are merely theories with each having as many holes as the other. If you attempted to apply the same scientific theory and logical requirments that were applied in fields such as Nuclear Physics, evolution would fail to meet them just as easily as creationism would. Much of what traditional evolutionists cite as evidence of evolution is nothing more than microevolution, which does not contradict the theory of creationsim. In turn, the theory of creationism never says that when God created earth, he didn't create it in an already fulled aged state. The arguments at this point seem to become rather fruitless.
    Instead, the danger I think is when the Government will only allow a single version of theory to be taught in school. When do they stop? Will they continue to legistlate what is "truth" and ignoring valid points of view. To me it feels like they are telling us what to think, or more importantly telling our children what NOT to think. Wasn't our entire country founded to escape just that? I don't think evolution should be minimized, or creationism emphasised, but I think the strengths and weaknesses of each theory should be discussed openly and without bias, allowing our children to come to thier own conclusions. As long as it can be discussed without endorsment on either side, it doesn't violate the issues of church and state. It only becomes an issue when one theory is encouraged more than the others. If you consider atheism a religion, than the teaching of only evolution in public schools becomes as much an issue of church and state as any other.

    1. Re:Ramblings... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It's pretty amusing that you want to lecture us on science, when you start off with the idiotic notion that science "proves" anything. Proof is for math and liquor, my friend. Science is about evidence. Science is about formulating models that are testable and have predictive power. ID is neith testable nor predictive, and in fact so lacks in explanatory power that even its advocates admit that it is compatible with evolution. Evolution, on the other hand, is based upon evidence, is testable (and falsifiable) and does make predictions. ID is not science, save that it, like half the friggin' ten dollar shampoos you'll buy, uses scientific-sounding words.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Ramblings... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      please look up the research of Dr. Robert Gentry as I mentioned in my post, I think you'll find it suprisingly scientific, and I wasn't trying to say that science proves anything but that niether branch of theory does.

    3. Re:Ramblings... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Gentry is a kook, and most Creationist organizations out there have distanced themselves from his nonsense. He has been thoroughly debunked. What's next? Chariots of the Gods and Dr. Dino?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:Ramblings... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please do not accuse creationsist of close mindedness with an attitude like that. Until you have spent the time to actually analyze research, and obtain enough data to come to a well informed decision, please refrain from making sweeping generalizations. I have examined his research thoroughly and as a nuclear physicist myself, have seen no evidence of malformed theories, of course it has been a while since I studied that particular research, but if you know of any new research "debunking" his please send me links on it, and I will examine it. I am also not advocating the inclusion of any information that does not have some sort well researched support, as many creationsists do. I just ask that the entire thing be approached from a logical and fair-minded perspective.

    5. Re:Ramblings... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      Then start here:
      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/po-halos/

      Sorry, but the guy is a well known kook who is so far off the beaten path that most of his fellow Creationists have basically abandoned him. And if you buy into his nonsense, then your claim that you're a nuclear physicist is something, that to be blunt, I think is a load of bullshit.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:Ramblings... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the input, I will look into it. Simply because he may have been wrong however doesn't affect my point, which is the fact that there is considerable doubt and scientific evidence or lack thereof on both sides. I was recently working on research project involving electron orbits and possible explinations for their strange behavior. We have postulated that electrons actually exist in a state of flux between dimentions, therefere explaining the only probability that they are in any one place at any one time. However, though we obtained small amounts of evidence to support this, there wasn't anything solid enough to support it as anything more than a remote possibility. I think both sides of this arguement need to realize that evidence and lack of evidence need to be weighed and measured. You cannot push something as absuolutely the only possibility when there is only a limited amount of evidence to support either side. All I am saying is that both sides should be examined at the risk of eliminating a possibilty without sufficient reason. Both sides are remote possibilities involving scientific research, and postulations. There simply is not enough evidence for either theory to completely eliminate the posibility that the other is correct. So for each person it comes down to the decision of where to put thier faith, and that should be decision made with information from both sides. In return to the assumptions that the halo's were made by another radioactive isotope, that is longer lasting (which is an entirely possible explination) I have to point out that just because we have similar genetic makeup to certain ape forms does that automatically mean that we evolved from them? Couldn't it instead mean that we are indeed, simply closely related in form and function, and the the gentics required to produce that form and function are remarkably similar? So each argument requires exactly the same leaps of logic, with exactly the same amount of supporting evidence. Whereas Dr. Gentry gets lambasted for his logical leap, and his suggestion of a possible explination, the other point of view is regarded as nearly scientific fact. All I am asking is that each side be measure with the same ruler.

    7. Re:Ramblings... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I hate to say this, but reading your last few posts, I think you are indeed lying about being a nuclear physicist. Take that as you will, but I call bullshit on your claim of competency.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    8. Re:Ramblings... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither your belief or my competency is integral to my initial discussion, however, just out of curiosity, what is your background?

  127. You Rre Wrong by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1
    1) life never comes from non-life ....
    Have sex, or observe animals engaged in sexual reproduction. Notice how life mysteriously appears where it was not before.

    Of course the typical IDer response is "It's the MIRACLE of life!!!". Sorry mac; it's just chemistry and physics. Get over it.

    Infact, DNA which was discovered after the evolution theory is a huge slap in the face to evolution and a dramatic proof of intelligent design.

    You are either ignorent, or simply outright lying. From the moment of its discovery, it was realised that DNA was instrumental in the process of evolution. To quote Watson and Crick's FIRST paper upon the discovery of the structure of DNA:
    "It has not escaped our attention that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material."

    Care to retort?

    These are just a few of the reasons why creationism is a more excellent science than the blind faith of an evoltuionary naturalist viewpoint.

    I am unable to begin to articulate how completely laughable this statement is. Please. Read a book... other than the Bible.
    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
    1. Re:You Rre Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Have sex, or observe animals engaged in sexual reproduction. Notice how life mysteriously appears where it was not before. Of course the typical IDer response is "It's the MIRACLE of life!!!". Sorry mac; it's just chemistry and physics. Get over it.
      The two things having sex are living. If not, then you can't make babies. I don't think this is too dificult a concept to grasp.
      You are either ignorent, or simply outright lying. From the moment of its discovery, it was realised that DNA was instrumental in the process of evolution. To quote Watson and Crick's FIRST paper upon the discovery of the structure of DNA: "It has not escaped our attention that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material." Care to retort?
      What does that quote have to do with evolution? They are discussing how dna is copied, not mutated.
      I am unable to begin to articulate how completely laughable this statement is. Please. Read a book... other than the Bible.
      This is called a "ad hominem". Look it up.
    2. Re:You Rre Wrong by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      The two things having sex are living. If not, then you can't make babies. I don't think this is too dificult a concept to grasp.

      That's a good point. But what about IVF treatments? There are no living things involved here. In fact sperm and ovas are often cyrogenically frozen beforehand and then thawed and there are still people walking arounf today who were born using this method.

      Would you care to explain in rigorous scientific detail what exactly this mysterious precursor to life actually is? Does it have mass, charge, volume, speed? Are your sure you're not just making it up without any evidence at all?

      What does that quote have to do with evolution? They are discussing how dna is copied, not mutated.

      Mutations are a result of "errors" in the copying process, as like any process, DNA facimilation is subject to certain tolerances for error. That quote has everything to do with evolution. In effect, it touches the very foundations of evolution and life on this planet.

      This is called a "ad hominem". Look it up.

      When someone comes out with statements as patently ridiculous as that, it falls upon those opposing them to question their competance. If someone refuses to engage in rational debate by coming out with absolutely preposterous and outrageous statements along the lines of what the great-grand-parent threw out, then I have every right to question the seriousness of their participation in that debate.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    3. Re:You Rre Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) life never comes from non-life ....
      Have sex, or observe animals engaged in sexual reproduction. Notice how life mysteriously appears where it was not before.


      Now you are being ignorant. That isn't ex nihilo. Last time I checked both partners having sex were alive! Your logic sucks.

    4. Re:You Rre Wrong by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Now you are being ignorant. That isn't ex nihilo. Last time I checked both partners having sex were alive! Your logic sucks.

      So you wouldn't mind explainig then how a plant changes water and air into a living organism? Ex nihilo as you say.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
  128. Some un-discussible consequences by Some+Pig! · · Score: 2, Informative

    Most of the Slashdot discussion on this story I've read is about Intelligent Design and religion. Indeed, if you say "hostility to the implications of evolution," most people will assume you're thinking of religious-based opposition.

    But some of the work acclaimed in the Science article is eventually going to horrify a large community of believers for a completely different reason.

    You can read a well-written summary of the situation here.

  129. Evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think Carl Sagan put it best: "Evolution is a fact, not a theory. It really happened."

  130. The inevitable conversation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    /. for evolution: It's a fact
    /. against evolution: No it's not

    repeat forever...

  131. Believe in Axioms by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    Believing that an intelligence got the ball rolling requires divine faith; and believing that chance got the ball rolling -- that it happened because it happened, requires secular faith (whether you like it or not).


    No it doesn't. It requires only the assumptions of the mathematical model that proves it can happen. Have you ever heard of genetic programming? Look it up. If you don't want to accept the axioms of mathematics, that's fine. But then please stop using your computer. Von Neumann's ghost would be very upset.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  132. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by VJ42 · · Score: 1

    I agree with the fact that you shouldn't seek to convert others, however what should I tell the white english woman whom freely chose to come and worship at my local temple? As A hindu I'm not particularly strict, for examplt I eat meat; she is far more observant of the religion, who am I to tell her she's not hindu? I certainly don't know of any scripture that prohibits anyone from becoming hindu.

    It would be more accurate to say that hindus don't believe that anyone needs to be converted to hindism as we all follow the same god[1].

    [1]Contrary to appearance, hindism is not polytheistic, we believe that there is only one god, however (s)he can manifest his\her self (or be viewed) in many ways. The usual way to explain this is to take the example of one man, to his sons he is a father, to his father he is a son, to his sister he is a brother, to his wife, he is a husband; if one man can be viewed in this many ways, then god can be viewed in infinatly more ways. You choose weather that be through Krishna, Jesus, Yahweh, Allah or none of the above.

    --
    If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
  133. The Mind by 615 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What does science have to say about awareness? Anything? I mean, isn't awareness kind of a big deal? If we start with the simplest creatures—self-replicating proteins—and procede to bacteria, then insects, then, finally, the most complex creatures that we know of: ourselves—well, at what point does awareness begin? Are there degrees of awareness? Is awareness a function of life, or vice versa?

    What I'm getting at is, you say God had to come from something else. I ask, is that consistant with our current understanding of awareness? I don't have any answers myself, but I wonder, how long can science continue to ignore consciousness before it finds its collective self against a brick wall?

    Food for thought.

    1. Re:The Mind by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      Science doesn't ignore awareness. There have been many studies on it. If you'd like to do some reading, you can find studies looking at how higher primates all seem to have self-awareness, however not that many other species of animals do. Don't think science ignores something just because you yourself haven't looked at the science done on a subject.

  134. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

    Actually they don't. One says the Christian god found in the bible, and the other said that some intelligent being. There is a VERY BIG distinction in that.

    But it isn't a relevant distinction. I couldn't care less if this "intelligent being" is your Christian God or an Anonymous Coward God. It is obvious to anyone familiar with this debate on either side that this "intelligent being" crap is a sly reference to the Christian God anyway, since that is the deity to whom the role of "intelligent designer" is always attributed outside the bounds of the theory. At least creationism was an honest hypothesis.

    If you aren't smart enough to see that distinction then he really shouldn't reply to your post.

    I'm not so foolish as to see any distinction that is relevant here. Neither theory is falsifiable, and neither one has any predictive power. The differences between them are only religious in nature, as you're angrily pointing out yourself! They are not scientific theories.

  135. Eat Monkeys for Christmas Dinner by mildgift · · Score: 1

    I'll give ID a second thought once Christians start roasting monkeys for Christmas dinner. After all, it's not like we're eating a close genetic relative or anything.

    1. Re:Eat Monkeys for Christmas Dinner by Gryle · · Score: 1

      Meat's too stringy. Besides turkey's cheaper. :)

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
  136. Re:Hmm...Can you say "String Theory"? by HiThere · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I believe that the same comment has been made about "String Theory", and while I would admit that it isn't falsifiable in general (though there are specific tests...such as mathematical correctness), I would still maintain that it's a scientific hypothesis.

    A more subtle definition appears to be needed. Falsifiability is needed for many purposes, but it doesn't seem (to me) to be the bedrock of what is scientific.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  137. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by DocKred · · Score: 1

    The same could be said about evolution, if not more so, because it's allowed to be taught in schools. Keep your biased theories to yourself. I wish my children in public school had a choice to learn it or not. What's worse is that evolution is being taught to my children as fact, not theory. If I'm not mistaken, theories have two viewpoints with neither one being forced upon us. With all this recent discussion on ID and evolution, I took the opportunity to review my 4th grade daughters science text book. It had an entire section devoted to evolution, and nowhere did it say that it was just a theory or offer a single opposing viewpoint. I also wonder why my child would get tested on evolution when it's only a theory. Just because a bunch of scientists (most of whom don't believe in ID) except the evidence doesn't make it any more than the theory it is.

  138. Re:Ateists Under Siege.... by anonymo · · Score: 1

    "Because some people have been murdered in the name of religion, religion should be abolished? "
    Well, it's rather interesting that when it's about high moral it's true Christian. But when it's about inkvisition, discrimination by Church that is just bad human behaviour.

    You state that there's a God, well, show me! Prove it! I can take it - but not you. If you state that you're an alien observator disguised to a human being most people will laugh at you and probably you too. Or you state that you're owning 100 billions i Switzerland but you want me to believe it just by saying so.
    Why do you expect me to accept that just the parts of Bible you want are valid, all the other parts talking about direct intervention by God are allegoric symbols?

    The problem is that most people even today have not the slightest understanding of the universe. No humanity do not develope.
    Stanislaw Lem a great SciFi writer wrote in Summae Technologiae that people think that humanity is just like a jung man in his 20-es he makes misstakes but will improve in time. Well humanity is just like an old alcholist who was saved to life again by doctors and he promises that tomorrow he will be sober and he will live a healthy life.
    But already in the evenenig he's drunk again.
    From shamanism to polytheism to monotheism was the way to defend from an overall existing concrete divine existens to a more subtle gallery of gods to an abstract, surrealistic god that by current definition could not be proven.

    I'm sick of relatives who start halleluja when their dearest has been rescued thanks to the hard effort of rescue workers or hospital personal but they praise God instead thanking those people who did the job in many cases risking their own health.
    They take medication but states that that was their fiath in God and prayers was resulted in God's intervention to save them. That is the most arrogant theism.

    Of course not at all religious people are such jerks but all too many :-(

    Being atheist is not just another belief as you state but the realisation that God is just Santa Clause - an imagination of the humans brain.

    The problem is today that Companies are ruling by lobbying and they never ever cared about humans and they use archievments in sciences to enrich the owners, nothing more.
    This way destroying this planet big time in a never before experienced global way and religion is just another way to deny the problem and set faith inot god hoping that God will save humanity or at least His own believers in the Heaven at least.

    About moral: I do not need an invisible supervisor with a carot in one hand and a whip in the other the be tolerant, listen to and try to help others. I have empaty by all myself alone.
    You want me to accept your untestable doctrines in the name of tolerance but it do not work in the other way?

  139. For 2005? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Achievement of 2005? What are these people smoking?

    Whats next, electricity?

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:For 2005? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me shed a bit of light on this. It is not evolution, as was proposed by Darwin many years ago, what has been awarded as one of the achievements of this year, but some new, recent, EXPERIMENTAL data that can be understood under Darwin's theory. I am waiting for something similar coming from the Intelligent Design comunity!!! Please, give me some experimental data contradicting Darwin's theory and in favour of ID!!! And, please, continue doing it for many years!!!

      If not, I'll start to think that you are trying to make up an old idea as it if were science... So sad, I don't want to... I'll also start to think that you smoke something even worse than Science magazine people do...

      Ceto45 (Spain)

  140. Center of the Universe? by erexx23 · · Score: 1

    If idea of ID had any merit what so ever,
    Christians have destroyed any chance at having it taken seriously.

    Western civilization isn't the center of the universe and neither is Christianity.

    Christianity is not the only religion.
    Christians cannot make people believe that their religion is the only truth.
    Christians cannot make people suffer while they die.
    Christians cannot make people have babies.
    Christians cannot make people believe that Dinosaurs hung out with Adam and Eve.

    We cannot afford to allow Christians to legislate their morality.

    We cannot afford to replace a theory with a belief.

    (We can hurl a satellite into space from our little rock through the gap in the rings of Saturn into perfect orbit around that planet. All based on a theory.)

    Science and Christianity are not fundamentally opposed.
    There are those who seek disparity where there is none only to help reaffirm their own personal beliefs.

    Thank GOD for the separation between Church and State.

    Some Christians need to understand that this very principal is the one thing that keeps their Tax Free Mega Churches, Christian Universities, and Christian law firms free from being subjugated to a lower state of societal acceptance not a higher one.

    Its time to take the high road and stop the whole liberal vs. conservitive, Christians Vs. Everyone Else, BullShite.

  141. Re:Hmm...Can you say "String Theory"? by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Insightful

    String theory is a working hypothesis. A good many of the physicists out there will shuffle their feet if not outright proclaim it not yet a scientific theory. It isn't yet testable, but it does offer at least some potential means, though it's going to take a few generations of particle accelerators before we get to that point. But that is key to even a hypothesis, it must at least hold out the possibility that it can be tested and falsified. ID cannot even provide some hypothetical means by which one could falsify, it is compatible with all observations, and thus has no explanatory power.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  142. The REAL issue is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Liberals and fundamentalists pay attention to the next two sentences. The real problem here is morality disappearing from this country. Right and wrong are being replaced with proven and disproven.

    Morality begins at home, but not enough parents are paying attention to their children for it to happen. Using TV/computers/console games as surrogate babysitters just creates kids that have no idea what reality is. This is what Fundies want to change, but they know that they can't.

    The fact is something definitely needs to be changed before the Columbine generation gives birth to something even more fearful. So, they go after the next big influence in a kid's life, school.

    We know that forcing the Genesis myth (it's a fairy tale, accept it) down the throats of school children will not work. Neither will changing the definition of science. Basically, they are doing the wrong things for the right reasons. They get mad at us because we shoot down their efforts without giving an alternative fix for the original problem.

    I have a solution though. I propose that we change the curriculum for high schools. We should require as many philosophy credits as science credits to graduate. That way, students have a forum to learn and discuss metaphysical concepts such as morality, virtue, and justice, while still being taught the discipline that science truly is.

    1. Re:The REAL issue is... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      I have a lot of opinions on why certain Fundementalist Christian sects are the way they are. At the root, I suppose, is that Fundementalism offers its members a rock-solid, black-and-white way of looking at the world. The world is separated into the Godful and Godless, which can easily be recognized by whether they believe as you do or not. Into that mix is a lot of odd literalistic notions, strange ideas about morality and what promotes or denies it.

      To be sure, the idea that we're descended from apes plays into the notion that if we're just animals, then we should behave like animals, and somehow that moral systems can only arise by Divine fiat is a pretty common one, but I think there's a deeper problem. It's that these people are in fact Biblioloters, worshippers of the book itself, whose belief isn't so much a matter of faith, but of the absolute requirement that the Bible be true in every sense, or it's a complete fraud and their lives are somehow rendered meaningless. Into that come notions that those who do not share their religious beliefs are essentially enemies at war with them. There is a very deep layer of paranoia, a persecution complex, that makes them believe that every time a judge or a politician doesn't give their religious beliefs some pre-eminent and special place, that they are being picked upon. The idea of a pluralistic society that accomodates a wide-range of beliefs is alien to them, and while most are willing to suffer the idea that there will be people of different beliefs in their community, they do want the ability to maintain social control.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  143. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by dbucowboy · · Score: 1

    Doesn't the popping up of matter and antimatter negate the first law of thermodynamics?

    --
    This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
  144. If God was really smart by MECC · · Score: 0, Troll

    He would've created evolution - that way he wouldn't be responsible for all the mistakes.

    --
    "We are all geniuses when we dream"
    - E.M. Cioran
  145. the details by tenorslowworm · · Score: 1

    life never comes from non-life
    explosions don't bring order
    Mutations occur but almost always bring harm

    Are these references to specific scientific theories or conclusions, or are you just reporting what you feel to be common sense? And how do some of these statements relate to the subject at hand? (e.g. what do explosions have to do with anything? and what precisely do you mean by "order"? exactly how often, statistically, is "almost never"?) Don't forget Stephen Jay Gould's twist on an old saying: "God is in the details." The sweeping arguments made by creationists using everyday language and analogies can often sound plausible enough at first hearing, but once you start drilling into the details, they begin to fall apart. Conversely, real scientific theories like those relating to evolution only get stronger the closer you look.

    Science itself was vastly vived [sic] by a creationist perspective

    It is absolutely true that many of the great scientists of the past were Christians whose faith in general, and beliefs about the Creation in particular, inspired their lives' work.

  146. So this must mean that Scientists have ... by SengirV · · Score: 1

    ... Explained and shown the spontaneous generation of eyes, and other sensory organs. Right?

    Oh, they haven't? So it's still just a throery then. OK, then what's all the fuss?

    --

    Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

    1. Re:So this must mean that Scientists have ... by RatBastard · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Eyes spontaneously generate? Where? When? Show me one claim that eyes just popped into existence in their current form. They didn't. They developed from simpler structures over periods of millions of years. From light-sensative spots on the skin to shallow pits to deeper pits to rounder pits to pits with lenses on them and the insides filled with fluid. It's not that hard of an engineering job. And you can find examples of these different eyes all throughout nature.

      And speaking of eyes, how come we got ripped off in the eye department? Octopi do not have the blind spot you and I have. There are species of shrimp who can see colors we can't even imagine as they have six different color sensors compaired to our three. Bees (and other insects) can see into the ultraviolet. We can't. An hawk can spot a mouse in the grass from half a mile. Can you even see a dog at half a mile?

      And the problem with a theory is? Or do you not know what at theory is? It's not just a collection of wild guesses and half-assed ideas.

      Evolution is not a thoery. It is a fact. It happens. It is happenning as we speak. The "theory of evolution" (of which there are several) is our attempt to explain how it is happenning, what makes it work. Not knowing how every part works no more invalidates that it doe shappen than not knowing how the insides of a pocket watch work means it can't keep time or that our incomplete understanding of how gravity works means things will not fall down.

      I have to ask, which group of anti-evolutiuonsists do you hail from?

      1. The "evolution means Genesis is wrong and invalidates my religion" group?
      2. The "evolution means we're all just animals and not God's favorite" group?
      3. The "evolution means the universe is billions of years old and that makes my life an insignificant eye-blink" group?
      4. The "I'm not a monkey, damn you!" group?
      5. The "if we all evolved from Africans, that makes us all black!" group?
      6. The "if I'm wrong there is no Heaven and death is final!" group?
      Yeah, I've heard all those as last-ditch reasons to not beleive in evolution. I don't buy into any of them.
      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    2. Re:So this must mean that Scientists have ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh..so if we can't explain it yet..we should give up and say "dangit..musta been gawd!

      and who says it was spontaneous? sensory organs are complex..but it's not impossible to conceive how they could have evolved.

      from a pbs documentary on the subject....

      Evolution of the Eye:

      When evolution skeptics want to attack Darwin's theory, they often point to the human eye. How could something so complex, they argue, have developed through random mutations and natural selection, even over millions of years?

      If evolution occurs through gradations, the critics say, how could it have created the separate parts of the eye -- the lens, the retina, the pupil, and so forth -- since none of these structures by themselves would make vision possible? In other words, what good is five percent of an eye?

      Darwin acknowledged from the start that the eye would be a difficult case for his new theory to explain. Difficult, but not impossible. Scientists have come up with scenarios through which the first eye-like structure, a light-sensitive pigmented spot on the skin, could have gone through changes and complexities to form the human eye, with its many parts and astounding abilities.

      Through natural selection, different types of eyes have emerged in evolutionary history -- and the human eye isn't even the best one, from some standpoints. Because blood vessels run across the surface of the retina instead of beneath it, it's easy for the vessels to proliferate or leak and impair vision. So, the evolution theorists say, the anti-evolution argument that life was created by an "intelligent designer" doesn't hold water: If God or some other omnipotent force was responsible for the human eye, it was something of a botched design.

      Bilogists use the range of less complex light sensitive structures that exist in living species today to hypothesize the various evolutionary stages eyes may have gone through.

      Here's how some scientists think some eyes may have evolved: The simple light-sensitive spot on the skin of some ancestral creature gave it some tiny survival advantage, perhaps allowing it to evade a predator. Random changes then created a depression in the light-sensitive patch, a deepening pit that made "vision" a little sharper. At the same time, the pit's opening gradually narrowed, so light entered through a small aperture, like a pinhole camera.

      Every change had to confer a survival advantage, no matter how slight. Eventually, the light-sensitive spot evolved into a retina, the layer of cells and pigment at the back of the human eye. Over time a lens formed at the front of the eye. It could have arisen as a double-layered transparent tissue containing increasing amounts of liquid that gave it the convex curvature of the human eye.

      In fact, eyes corresponding to every stage in this sequence have been found in existing living species. The existence of this range of less complex light-sensitive structures supports scientists' hypotheses about how complex eyes like ours could evolve. The first animals with anything resembling an eye lived about 550 million years ago. And, according to one scientist's calculations, only 364,000 years would have been needed for a camera-like eye to evolve from a light-sensitive patch.

    3. Re:So this must mean that Scientists have ... by SengirV · · Score: 1

      Sorry, you've pegged me as something I am not. THE #1 issue that non-evolutionists have with evolution is the fact that there is no fossile record, nor observed occurrence of a eye evolving(or other sensory organ) where there was not one.

      Your quoting of "some scientist" saying it would take 300,000 years does not make it so. Theories, hypotheses, speculation, etc... are all nice and good - But the proof is in the pudding. And right now, I'm not seeing any pudding.

      I'm not a religious nut or anything, I just like to see proof for THE Scientific Achievement of 2005. This honor is more politics in Science than anything else, and does itself a disservice to science.

      --

      Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

    4. Re:So this must mean that Scientists have ... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      THE #1 issue that non-evolutionists have with evolution is the fact that there is no fossile record,

      You mean that they refuse to acknowledge the well-established history of the fossil record.

      nor observed occurrence of a eye evolving(or other sensory organ) where there was not one.

      What are you expecting to see, and what kind of timeframe are you putting on it?

      Theories, hypotheses, speculation, etc.

      Theories are not speculation. If you don't understand how significant "theory" is in terms of certainty within science then you are not qualified to discuss the issue.

      But the proof is in the pudding. And right now, I'm not seeing any pudding.

      Nothing in science is ever proven. All explanations in science are subject to change.

    5. Re:So this must mean that Scientists have ... by SengirV · · Score: 1

      WOW!!!! You really like to avoid a subject rather than debate it. I know Theories are not speculation, I went to school too. Show an example of an eye forming where one did not exist(over MANY generations obviously, since I have to spell it out for you), and you will go a long way towards ending this ongoing debate.

      I won't be holding my breath waiting though.

      ----------------

      Here's a little clue for you - I do believe evolution is the best fit for life as we know it, but the arrogance being displayed against those asking for some evidence(other than micro evolution) has turned me into a cynic.

      --

      Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

    6. Re:So this must mean that Scientists have ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's a little clue for you - I do believe evolution is the best fit for life as we know it, but the arrogance being displayed against those asking for some evidence(other than micro evolution) has turned me into a cynic.

      People have been gathering evidence for over 150 years now. If that's not enough, there never will be enough.

      Oh, and computer simulations have shown that an eye can evolve in something like 40,000 generations, which is nothing in the grand scheme of things.

    7. Re:So this must mean that Scientists have ... by SengirV · · Score: 1

      computer simulations about something as complex as this is more voodoo than anything else. I'm obviously not going to make you think critically about something that is just assumed. But I will keep asking questions for which assumptions and simulations are the only bit of proof that is offered at this point.

      --

      Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

  147. Bah... by srussia · · Score: 0

    wake me up when they come up with a rigorous scientific definition of "species" or even "life"

    --
    Set your phasers on "funky"!
  148. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by dbucowboy · · Score: 0

    I think no reconsideration is needed.

    Is evolution simpler than creation? Is the gradual change and adaptation of species by chance really a simpler theory than one that says that what is was created?

    For example, say you have a painting of a beautiful landscape. You can exercise Occam's Razor if you wish and say that there are two equally predictive theories on how the painting came into being. One theory is there was a painter. Someone actually took paint and a paintbrush and created this work of art. The other theory is that there was no painter. The paint just happened to arrange itself on the canvas in a logical pattern to make a beautiful landscape. Which of the two is a simpler theory? I would choose the theory that someone painted it. The other would require millions of years, perfect conditions, chance, and the assumption that the pain and canvas were even near each other in order to interact. I venture to say that any rational mind would agree that a painting of a landscape, full of detail and harmony didn't just happen.

    Creation is so much more complex than a painting yet many choose to believe that there isn't a creator. It's really fascinating to me.

    --
    This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
  149. Why don't we just fork science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then everyone can do what they want to their own branch.

    1. Re:Why don't we just fork science? by godschmod · · Score: 1
      Then everyone can do what they want to their own branch.

      *Reality* has long been forked, and it's science that maintains the stable branch.

  150. This is so painful to read, Canadian Point of View by Strych9 · · Score: 1

    Just to let everyone know my bias upfront: I'm not a Bible thumper, so yes I do support science. It is amazing to read about this "debate" on the news. The fact that this ID nonsense has gone this long is really quite scary. There is a reason for putting the belief stuff in Sunday school and the secular stuff in public. Perhaps we should just stop wearing seat belts, as Angels will just protect us etc. Its mind-boggling.

    Two things come to my mind in partiulcar.
    If I.D. has to be taught, I say the Raelians point of view needs to be another sticker. Replace the phrase "desinger" with "Invisible Little green aliens from the Planet Mars" in all the I.D. literature. It would sound a little silly wouldn't it? The best part is that it is equally as "valid" a theory as ID itself. You can't actually disprove it now can you?

    Also, let us assume for one moment that ID is put in all the schools and we now have to teach creationism. What is the next step? You don't think they'll stop there will you? I mean there are other problems like carbon dating which are not perfectly accurate. I mean how will you prove that the Earth is only 5000 years old (thats sarcasm people) with nuisances like Carbon Dating. What is the ultimate end victory for the reglion thumpers.

    At the end of the day, if you want to believe in God or little green men, go for it. Just please let me choose my own beliefs thank you.

  151. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by VJ42 · · Score: 1

    well, as a member of a religion different to yours (I'm a hindu) I can say to you that your religion is 100% correct* when viewed through the lens of mine, as is Islam, Judaism, Sikhism, Buddism, Paganisim or none of the above. Afterall we all just believe in different manifestations of the same one god. Yes contrary to appearances hinuism is actually monotheistic we just believe that god can be mainifest or viewed in many ways. Is my religion 'invalid'?

    --
    If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
  152. Sticker... what if it was the Bible? by Animaether · · Score: 1

    Considering it would be okay to put a sticker reading "Evolution is a theory, not a fact" on books that inform about evolution ...

    How would people feel if one were to go around slapping stickers on Bibles, reading "Creationism is a theory, not a fact"?

  153. Cue puff of logic... by vain+gloria · · Score: 1

    There's no uncontrovertible evidence for the existence of any god at all.

    It's weird. I woke up this morning and I swear my boobs felt bigger. Do they look bigger to you?

  154. And they are the lucky ones by ttfkam · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Let me take a stab at your idea of ID if I may.

    Irreducible complexity: certain things like the human eye and bacterial flagellum are so complex, relying on so many independent pieces, that it could not have evolved from chance.

    For example, if evolution occurs through gradations, how could it have created the separate parts of the eye -- the lens, the retina, the pupil, and so forth -- since none of these structures by themselves would make vision possible? In other words, what good is five percent of an eye?

    Bullshit. Bullshit. Bullshit.

    Feel free to take four minutes and eight seconds to learn precisely how the human eye probably evolved.

    If you can handle the four minutes and eight seconds, perhaps you'd be willing to do some reading about how a bacterial flagellum could form without a designer.

    I'm also sure you've heard the name Behe before. Did you know that in 2001 Michael Behe admitted that his work had a "defect" and does not actually address "the task facing natural selection." Futhermore, irreducible complexity is rejected by the majority of the scientific community. The main concerns with the concept are that it utilises an argument from ignorance, that Behe fails to provide a testable hypothesis, and that there is a lack of evidence in support of the concept. As such, irreducible complexity is seen by the supporters of evolutionary theory as an example of creationist pseudoscience and amounts to a "God of the Gaps" argument.

    Can ID answer the following questions?

    • Why do we have vestigial fingers on our feet?
    • Why do our nasal passages drain into our lungs?
    • Why are our ankles so damn thin and weak compared to our weight and height?
    • Why are our ribs "designed" to carry weight horizontally?
    • Why are some whales born with legs?
    • Why do our eyes have blood vessels directly in front of our field of vision?

    If you can't answer the last one at the very least, stop reading now. Go back to the link above, click on it, and spend the four minutes and eight seconds educating yourself.

    The point to those questions is that NONE of them can be answered with ID. Can't be predicted with. Can't be tested with. None. Zero.

    But do you know what can? Evolution, every one of them.

    That said, while you accuse others of not understanding what ID actually is, I contend that you do not understand what evolution is.

    (1) the specifics of how life evolved from a scientific point of view, ie natural selection etc.
    (2) The "big picture" of how the planet is full of human beings now where it was once only a molten planet.

    First of all, the article this discussion is linked to references how scientists have learned new "specifics of how life evolved from a scientific point of view..."

    Second, evolution has NOTHING WHATSOEVER to do with how life was created on what was once only a molten planet. Nothing. At all. Evolution is the transition -- of a population -- from one form of life to others forms of life over (usually long periods of) time.

    Creation of life where there is no life is what is known as abiogenesis, not evolution. Now stop what you're doing! I can see you reaching for that reply button and Googling for references to the Miller-Urey experiments from the 1950s.

    Stop it! You didn't even read that abiogenesis link, did you? I didn't think so. Nothing I can say can convince you to if your mind is already made up (read: clouded by mindless dogma). However I will leave you with one thing so that you can look it up yourself and do the research.

    Abiogenesis experiments conducted by Dr. Sidney Fox. Don't even b

    --

    - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    1. Re:And they are the lucky ones by dan_sdot · · Score: 1

              * Why do we have vestigial fingers on our feet?
              * Why do our nasal passages drain into our lungs?
              * Why are our ankles so damn thin and weak compared to our weight and height?
              * Why are our ribs "designed" to carry weight horizontally?
              * Why are some whales born with legs?
              * Why do our eyes have blood vessels directly in front of our field of vision?
      The answer to all you questions is: "natural selection and genetic mutations" ie, evolution. As I said before, I do not dispute these scientific phenomena. My dispute is with those who claim that the long term development of life is easier attributed to randomness than it is to an inherit design.
      That said, while you accuse others of not understanding what ID actually is, I contend that you do not understand what evolution is.
      The reason I divided this discussion into two steps is precisely because I wanted to address what the scientific theory of evolution explains, and what it does not. It DOES explain #1. It does not explain #2.
      It would seem that you understand this, my previous comment was intended for those that do not.
    2. Re:And they are the lucky ones by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      My dispute is with those who claim that the long term development of life is easier attributed to randomness than it is to an inherit design.

      It's both, actually.

      Organisms inherit genes from their parents. However, the genes are susceptible to mutation-- a mostly random process. Sometimes this can result in appreciable changes in the organism's reproductive success. Those genes that result in greater reproductive success get passed on, those that result in less successful reproduction don't. It is random, in a way, but it's biased towards good mutations.

    3. Re:And they are the lucky ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can ID answer the following questions?

      Acutally, ID can answer all of those questions... God decided to make them that way :P

      Anyway, evolution does not really answer WHY to any of those questions. Evolution answer HOW these things came to be.

  155. God killed my dog? No - and ID is wrong too by dbIII · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The root problem with Intelligent Design is that it is compatible with all possible observations
    People who know about these things (ie. not me but some guys on the radio with reputations) argue that ID isn't even good theology. The "God of the gaps" argument implies that God is reponsible for everything - even the stupid or nasty stuff. ID is apparently built on this. If you want to worship an evil vengeful and capricious God that fits I suppose - but aren't these people pushing ID supposed to be Christians of some description?

    The weird suggestion that the human eye is a perfect design and so establishes the existance of God is rather stupid and irrelevent - there are better eyes out there and evolution is a better answer than something stupid like God stuffed up or hates blind people.

  156. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Col+Bat+Guano · · Score: 1

    The painting requires something quite complex - a painter. Evolution however relies on much simpler premises. Conway's game of life shows that you can have interesting behaviours from a very simple set of rules.
    SImilarly the world has a number of simple rules about how atoms can compose themselves. These are the rules of the game for evolution, and they are much simpler than assuming a creator who can do anything.

  157. Both Behe and Crick accept evolution by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    There are prominent examples of *non-theists* who are proponents of ID (like Michael Behe and Francis Crick, for example

    As far as I know, Crick never proposed that life was intelligently designed. He did suggest that a very primitive form of life might have originated elsewhere and arrived on earth from space, and subsequently evolved. And although Behe calls himself an advocate of intelligent design, his hypothesis is similar to Crick's, in that he imagines that a primitive form of life was intelligently designed, and subsequently evolved.

    The key point is that neither Crick nor Behe have attempted to offer an alternative to evolution, but rather an alternate explanation for the origin of life (which is not properly a part of the theory of evolution). Whereas evolution is very well established, the initial origin of life is very much an open question among scientists, with multiple competing hypotheses and no generally accepted theory.

  158. Complexity of God by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    Nope- because God is no more complex than the concept of a random and indeterministic universe. The two concepts are equally complex.

    This is true only if God acts completely randomly--in which case God is indistinguishable from a random universe. In a formal sense, complexity is defined by the number of bits of information required to describe how something behaves. Randomness requires the least amount of information to define--anything that is possible may happen. But if God preferentially takes some actions in preference to others, then some number of bits of information are needed to describe that preference. If God acts upon knowledge, the some number of bits of information are needed to define that knowledge. An omniscient God would require infinite number of bits of information, and hence would be considered infinitely complex.

  159. Althies is not a belief system. it's testable by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "If there is a god, please grant me a new car right now"

    waits. no car

    Let try the other way.
    "If there is no god, please don't grant me a new car right now"

    waits. still no new car.

    I've asked God for many things, still nothing.
    So exactly how many failed tests do we do until it's proof?

    Hypothesis:
    There is no god.

    Theory:
    tested to see if there is a god.
    predictions:
    If I ask god for things to appear, I won't get them.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  160. errr, the main point of ID is by geekoid · · Score: 1

    That you can't evolve into a new species.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:errr, the main point of ID is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How could that be the main point when it is just one of the unsupported claims ID-ers use to attempt to support the notion that something intelligent invented life on earth?

      ID's are patently dishonest in their methods. Notice they are so quick to say... "Oh, but it could have been aliens!" when attempting to explain how life started on Earth, to try hide their religeous agenda. Who invented the aliens then? Follow your way up that particular chain and you will find what the main point of ID is, and it is entirely theological in nature- devoid of any science.

  161. Re:First Post by ncurtain · · Score: 0

    First Post, yu fail

    Not just off topic but missing the link.

    Ah well, at least we can stop calling the theory a theory now. And it is all down to the rather insistant and hypnotic whisperings of a delusional old man based in their Bristol dept.

  162. ID is a cycle by lazy+genes · · Score: 0

    Everything in this universe moves in the direction of least resistance.EVERYTHING.Systems that look complex are mearly layers of past successes and falures put togeather in different combinations to produce the path of least resistance.The path of least resistance is always taken .Understanding how it all started is important in predicting the future.

  163. This is not an argument vs. religion. by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    Religions don't kill people; religious people kill people!

  164. It got the award before by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    This story is just another slashdot dupe, from 4 billion years ago.

  165. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish my children in public school had a choice to learn it or not.

    Do you also wish your children had a choice whether to learn the heliocentric theory or the geocentric theory of the solar system?

    What's worse is that evolution is being taught to my children as fact, not theory.

    "Evolution" is a fact. Species change over time. This is undeniable. "Evolution" is also a theory, or rather, serveral theories, that explain how those species change.

    It had an entire section devoted to evolution, and nowhere did it say that it was just a theory or offer a single opposing viewpoint.

    That's because currently, there aren't any.

    I also wonder why my child would get tested on evolution when it's only a theory.

    The same reason they get tested on the germ theory of disease.

  166. This is BS. ID is not science. by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    If this theory really has anything to show for itself scientifically, why is it that its chief proponents are afraid to even submit a proposal for legitimate research into this supposedly scientific theory?

  167. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    The same could be said about evolution, if not more so, because it's allowed to be taught in schools. Keep your biased theories to yourself.

    Evolution is not "biased". (note: if you disagree, then explain the bias, do not merely assert it)

    If I'm not mistaken, theories have two viewpoints with neither one being forced upon us.

    You are mistaken. Theories are single collective explanations for an observed phenomenon. They are not "two viewpoints". Perhaps you should consider that your problems with evolution are with your own understanding of both it and of science in general and not an actual fault with the theory itself.

    It had an entire section devoted to evolution, and nowhere did it say that it was just a theory or offer a single opposing viewpoint.

    Please cite the textbook in question. Also, would you expect a physics textbook to explain that the mechanism behind gravity is "just a theory" or offerin a single opposing viewpoint, or are you singling out evolution as being deserving of special skepticism for completely nonscientific reasons?

    I also wonder why my child would get tested on evolution when it's only a theory.

    You say "only a theory" as if it could be anything more. Theories are the end-points of scientific inquiry. An explanation can never reach a higher level of confidence than "theory". For some reason I think that you've been told this before, yet you never explained any objections to this. I wonder why you repeat the same claims that have been exposed as false previously.

    Then again, I've been told that creationists treat every discussion as tabula rasa; trotting out the same false claims and fundamental misunderstandings of both science itself and scientific terminology no matter how often they are corrected.

  168. Re:Hmm...Can you say "String Theory"? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Einstien himself thought his calculations were just a mathematical curiosity. At the moment string theory is also a mathematical curisoity. Spacetime, the expanding universe and black holes to mention just a few were all "found" in mathematics long before there was any evidence they were real.

    The reason people give string theory so much attention is that the Universe has been modeled extremely well through maths. There is a reasonable hope that the maths in string theory will lead to a better real world undrestanding. Nobody has come up with any physical evidence and it could be decades before we get an answer either way.

    A more subtle definition appears to be needed.

    No, all that is required is patience!

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  169. Wow, perhaps someone should mod the parent up? by n54 · · Score: 1

    Or perhaps not... could be a paradox.

    I think a lot of Slashdotters could benefit from reading the parent's link, unless they completely misunderstand it and go apeshit and join the KKK or something like that *shudder*.

    With all the ardent selfrighteous and monoconceptual elitism around here it might be just as well to let it all silently slip by... but if "we" do that then we're not much better than those we don't wish to be like.

    I guess it's a toss-up :S

    --
    this comment is provided "as is" and without any express or implied legibility or congruity [...]
  170. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by DocKred · · Score: 1

    Yeah right! Teach children theories that are assumed true with evidence that has only been gathered to support it. My kids aren't being taught that a butterfly has evolved due to toxic chemicals, deforestation or some other man-made end, they are being taught that they come from apes. Evolution is religion masquarading as science and being forced upon us.

  171. too bloody right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yes, and they did. ... *this* far, no further!

  172. Who is the Intelligent Designer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the great beauties of Evolution is that it does not need an Intelligent Designer to explain its workings. As a theory, it's purely descriptive and so cuts the religious world free from the burden of having to deal with the world as we experience it. Since Evolution needs no higher order being(s) to make it work, religious minds can devise any kind of theory about any sort of deity or deities they care to without having to shoehorn them into a world that often doesn't correspond to particular religious theories or mythologies. Evolution allows any kind of deity to lurk behind the scenes precisely because deity itself has no place within in it. Evolution allows for a Christian deity to float freely in the religious mind, or a Jewish deity, a Muslim deity, a Hindu deity or deities, or Buddhist shunyata, or whatever. Evolution liberates the religious mind from the shackles of having to square religious meaning with observation.

    Intelligent Design makes an Intelligent Designer necessary, while Evolution does not. Once an Intelligent Designer is seen to be necessary on the basis of ~observation alone~ the only honest thing left to do is infer the true nature of the Designer from Its handiwork. Here's where things get sticky. Promoters of Intelligent Design are often overtly or covertly Christian (less often Jewish/Muslim/Hindu), but nothing in the world we see necessitates anyone to adopt Christianity (or anything else) on the basis of observation alone. One has to make a leap of faith into a particular mythology, which is what the proponents of Intelligent Design (secretly?) hope.

    But take away the structures of established religious mythology and the grotesque nature of the Intelligent Designer becomes apparent. Consider parasitic wasps whose young feeds on the living flesh of paralyzed caterpillars. Consider flesh eating disease. Consider the entire cycle of life that can only exist because of death -- all things are food for something. Consider earthquakes, tsunamis, comet strikes, and novae. Consider the horrors of Year Zero in Pol Pot's Kampuchea. Consider the multiple extinction events over the past umpteen million years. Put it all together, and colour observation with the notion that there is an Intelligent Designer behind it all. The resulting image is of a obscene Horror that delights in death, cares nothing whatsoever for anyone's or anything's pain, and hears no cry for succour -- or if It does, laughs and turns Its back. On the basis of ~observation alone~ we know the Name of this Intelligent Designer: Cthulhu.

  173. it's worse than you think... by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1
    A big reason that this one is picked out, or picked on, has to do with the way it is being taught. As a parent (in Kansas, no less), I can tell you that evolution is usually not taught as theory, but as fact.
    That is a rampant problem in all fields of science. In medical schools the world over, students are being taught that germ theory is a fact, not a theory. They aren't being presented with any alternative theories as to what causes disease. Schoolkids are also taught that the heliocentric theory of the solar system is a fact, that the general and special theories of relativity are facts, and so on. I find it exceedingly odd that, despite all scientific theories being taught as facts, evolutionary theory is the only one that parents are so concerned about.
    For any other science that I know of, if you have data that doesn't fit your theory then you have to go back and rewrite your theory.
    What's interesting here is that evolutionary theory is under constant revision. The evolution of sex, for one, is a heavily studied field, and under constant debate. The evolution of altruistic behavior is also hotly debated--not all evolutionary theorists agree with Dawkins and his "selfish gene" ideas. They are rewriting the theory constantly.

    Unless I'm mistaken, you seem to be under the impression that evolution is a static, dogmatic orthodoxy. That's an easy conclusion to come to if you only read about evolution on creationist/ID websites, books, etc. You really should read a few books from the other side. All the seemingly probing, vital questions posed by creationists have been answered. The "deafening silence" on the "holes in evolution" creationists tell you about isn't there. There is constant research that further refines understanding of evolutionary processes. Even speaking as a layman, it is a very exciting field to read about.

    I would recommend that you read a little at talkorigins.org. Not the whole site (it's huge), but just enough to understand the scientific definition of "theory," which would make clear why scientific theories are treated as they are. Your kids are not being lied to by the teachers, rather creationists are playing on a misunderstanding of a few words to scare you.

    Of course, if you're already a creationist who thinks that agreeing with the theory of evolution would drag your children into the pit of hell, then there isn't much anyone can do for you. Good luck.

  174. ID is falsifiable by Boronx · · Score: 1

    ID is falsifiable, not a 100%, because there are always those who wiggle, and God can do anything, after all.

    1. If ID is true and evolution is false, There ought to be spontaneous generation of new species. Clearly, some species that existed in the past don't exist now, and some species that exist now don't exist in the past. It seems very unlikely that spontaneous generation of entire organisms would be undetectable.

    2. If ID is true and evolution is false, we should expect no correlation between unused mitochondrial DNA between species as relates to genetic similarity, unlike the correlation we see between related members of the same species.

    So yes, ID is falsifiable, but unfortunately it's been pretty much falsified.

  175. Not strictly true. by Irvu · · Score: 1

    The "Young earth hypothesis" is orthagonal to Intelligent Design. Not all proponents of one support the other. Most "Young earthers" are creationists but not all of them would back the exact tenents or even pseudologic of Intelligent Design. Many of them are more hard-core creationists who would see any attempt to gussy an act of "literal word" with any support however well intentioned as worthless or downright heretical. To some people the word is the word and it needs no support. Attempting to giove it an outside validation or a patina of science is as great a crime as disagreeing with it.

    Similar some Intelligent Design proponents are willing to grant a much longer age for the earth. They just refuse to believe that we humans (at least) came about in any way except by the intervention of some higher power (remember it could be an alien!) which in turn makes us "special".

    This is really the handle of both the old-earth creationists and the Intelligent Design people. They are perfectly willing to accept science until science brings up something they don't like then it must be stopped. It's kind of like being open to all religions until someone professes their faith, or accepting homosexuals so long as you never meet any.

  176. So when do racial studies get some press? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, everyone is finally convinced on evolution. So when do the details of how evolution has shaped the human races start coming out?

    Oh what's that, they're all equal? Stupid creationist.

  177. ITS ALL A SCAM!! by bunbuntheminilop · · Score: 0

    If I read one more bloody thread on this, someone is going to get unevolved/uncreated. Its all a scam. No one actually believes in ID, it was just made up by the scientific community to promote science. It must be. Who else would come up with such rubbish. Not that I have a problem with promoting science, but really, come on, this thing is so stupid now its not funny. What I'm trying to say is that because we need more physics majors, lets just say that an intelligent being is holding me to the ground, and holding the sun up there. It gets very hot for them.

  178. My Supreme Being Is Superior to Your by zenasprime · · Score: 1

    Well not really considering I don't really believe in gods, dieties or other supreme beings, but if I were to believe in one, one that was the omnipotent, omniscient, being that so many religions do believe that their diety exhibits such qualities, that this entire debate would be mute. You see, being a being of such absolute knowledge and power, he could create the universe, from the big bang to the big collapse (ie the alpha and the omega for those of you not in the know), in all it's wonderful and magnificant mathematically precise beauty. In the end, at no point would this "designer" need to interceed it the function of that universe simply because it's design negates the need to interfere. All that was, is, and will be, in this universe, is known by the designer as he is all knowing and in his great wisdom, his universe works as He intended it to, with all it's stars, quarks, quasars, protons, planets, singularies, lions, tigers, vulcans, klingons, and even humans.

    So you see, the problem isn't with gods, supreme beings, or intellegent designers, it's with unimaginative humans, who desperately want to belive that their own existance is of ultimate importance. It's rather selfish actually. They live within this wonderful universe, with it's near infinite wonders, yet they remain blinded to it, prefering fantasy to reality. It's unfortunate but true that most people would rather believe in magic then in the actual observable phenomenon. Those of us that know better are just going to have to learn to live with that observable fact and move on with out lives as best we can.

  179. Re:Evolution? Scientific Achievement of 2005? by Puff+Daddy · · Score: 1

    Thank you for pointing out the simple truth that no one seems to understand. Something being "proven" by science is impossible. We can prove that we have the most likely solution, given our current data and knowledge, but being proven is contrary to the scientific method.

  180. Here you go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You really need to get a hold of the full text of the judgement. It's quite an interesting read.


    http://coop.www.uscourts.gov/pamd/kitzmiller_342.p df
  181. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by dbucowboy · · Score: 1

    Maybe, but the chance that those simple rules would align everything in such a way as to form a perfectly balanced, inter operating universe with universal governing laws is so slim it would be considered impossible; statistically speaking. Thus the simple aligning to create the infinitely complex is much more complicated than the existence of a creator.

    Again, take all of the ingredients of a Rolex, a paper bag, and shake it for 200 million years. What are the chances that it will assemble itself into a working timepiece? Consider that the simplest bacterium has much more intricate and complex features than a Rolex.

    --
    This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
  182. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by dbucowboy · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the links... I'd probably have to have a degree in astrophyics to be able to make something out of all of that so I say we can just be thankful for the ability to reason and debate. :) Anybody else able to explain the Black Hole Thermodynamic Theory in summary form?

    --
    This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
  183. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by DocKred · · Score: 1

    Evolution is not "biased". (note: if you disagree, then explain the bias, do not merely assert it) Yes it is biased. It's a theory that is assumed true with evidence being gathered to support it. Scientists don't want anything but their own arrogance to be proven true. Do you actually think they would try to find any evidence that goes against it? You are mistaken. Theories are single collective explanations for an observed phenomenon. They are not "two viewpoints". Perhaps you should consider that your problems with evolution are with your own understanding of both it and of science in general and not an actual fault with the theory itself. Your right they are single collective explanations, but those explanations only go to prove the theory and do not attempt to disprove it. When someone is trying to prove something the sure as heck don't include something that doesn't fit, and the stuff that doesn't fit is molded until it does or simply thrown out as unrelated. Scientists have one arrogant goal. Prove that mankind is in control and has an answer for everything. I have a brother-in-law who worked for a major scientific research laboratory near Chicago. He told me that the ultimate goal of the company was to prove the big-bang theory. He said that any research that could be used as evidence was accepted and there was no attempt to disprove or test against the evidence. This is not science, this is molding evidence to prove a theory that is already assumed to be true.

  184. In other news .. by kahrytan · · Score: 1


    Forcing christian students to learn Evolution is a violation of United States Constitution under the First Amendment.

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

    Forcing christian students to learn evolution, which is a theory and not fact, prohibits the free exercise of their religion.

    Enough Said.

    --
    \
    1. Re:In other news .. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Forcing christian students to learn evolution, which is a theory and not fact, prohibits the free exercise of their religion.

      How? And why do you emphasize "theory and not fact" as though that is somehow significant? All explanations in science are "theory".

    2. Re:In other news .. by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 1

      Yes. Enough said. Now shut up.

      How does NOT teaching someone your beliefs prohibit the exercise of your beliefs? Are you saying that your belief tells you that those that dont believe as you are less than you?

      If you believe in imaginary gods, how does NOT teaching me about your imaginary gods prohibit you from exercising your religion? It doesnt, unless of course you are in some sort of world domination cult.

      Are You?

    3. Re:In other news .. by DeathPooky · · Score: 1

      We completely respect your right to raise ignorant children in correspondence with your beliefs. However, depending on the level of ignorance you desire, you're going to have to put more effort into their education. Parochial schools if you hate evolution, home schooling if you believe the earth is six thousand years young, or whatever level of blinders to the rest of the world you feel is appropriate.

      The first amendment right to free exercise of the religion isn't absolute. It's balanced by governmental interests and other private rights. In this instance, the majority's right to have their children be raised scientifically literate has trampled on your indoctrination of your children. It's unfortunate, but I'm sure you've got options.

      Oh, and you could sue about it. Though you'd probably get laughed at - by the courts, and by me.

    4. Re:In other news .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so put them in a religious school, just like god intended.

    5. Re:In other news .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution contradicts the bliefs of the religion. Forcing a student to learn evolution will thus prohibit free exercise.

    6. Re:In other news .. by kahrytan · · Score: 1

      I don't sue -- American Center for Law and Justice does that. FYI -- ACLC has won many cases. One such case is allowing a Bible classes to occur on school property.

      --
      \
    7. Re:In other news .. by erexx23 · · Score: 1

      Reverse your logic. Forcing non-Christians to be taught ID as a legitimate "science"? Christians already have their Tax Free Mega Churches, Religious Universities and Law Firms. Go to Church and Jesus College to teach your hatreds and ignorance's there. No one needs them rammed down their throats in Public Schools. What more do you want? To take over the Public Schools so that you can turn everyone into a "good" Christian? What a great example. If your people achieved thier goal you WILL LOOSE more than you know. "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;" Nor just "your" religion dumb @ss. I suppose you think you live at the center of the Universe as well? Live in the "Mystery" you fool before you and your people ruin it for everyone.

  185. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    Yes it is biased. It's a theory that is assumed true with evidence being gathered to support it.

    If there were no "evidence" to support it then it would not be called a "theory". You DO know what a "theory" is with respect to science, correct?

    Scientists don't want anything but their own arrogance to be proven true.

    Absolutely nothing in science is ever "proven true". You are exposing only your abysmal ignorance of how science operates.

    Do you actually think they would try to find any evidence that goes against it?

    A scientist who thorougly disproves the theory of evolution would be a serious contender -- likely a shoo-in -- for a Nobel prize, not to mention all sorts of assorted fame and fortune. If you honestly think that evolution is not regularly put to tests that could potentially falsify it then you are woefully ignorant of the field of biology.

    But then, you are a creationist, so I should expect as much.

    Your right they are single collective explanations, but those explanations only go to prove the theory and do not attempt to disprove it.

    THEORIES IN SCIENCE ARE NEVER PROVEN. Yes, the theory of evolution is made up of data points that support the theory. Why are there no data points included that disprove the theory? BECAUSE NO SUCH DATA POINTS EXIST. Despite the CONSTANT lies of creationists, the theory of evolution is actually one of the better supported and understood theories in all of science. It's far better supported and understood than the theory behind what makes gravity work, but I don't see religious fanatics clamouring to have warning labels slapped onto physics textbooks and have mention made of "intelligent falling" presented in physics calssrooms.

    When someone is trying to prove something the sure as heck don't include something that doesn't fit,

    So what "doesn't fit" with respect to evolution? Provide specific examples. Stop whining about information being excluded unless you can actually demonstrate the existence of such information. Complaining that the theory of evolution does not address data points that do not exist is idiotic.

    and the stuff that doesn't fit is molded until it does

    This is a lie. Theories are shaped to fit facts. Yes, there are some scientists who have altered data to fit predetermined conclusions. When they are caught out they are highly shamed and typically lose their jobs.

    There have been data points that did not fully fit the theory of evolution. The theory was modified to account for these data points. That's how ALL theories work, and evolution is no different.

    or simply thrown out as unrelated.

    Well what do you do with information that is completely irrelevant? The distance between Earth and Alpha Centuri has no bearing on alelle frequency change over time, natural selection or genetic drift. How should that data point be addressed by the theory of evolution?

    Scientists have one arrogant goal. Prove that mankind is in control and has an answer for everything.

    Bullshit. This is nothing more than a paranoid delusion. Scientists can have their own individual goals. Some work because they enjoy the job and like the money, others genuinely enjoy increasing the knowledge of the natural universe in the world. This "scientists want to prove that men are gods" is a common idiotic creationist strawman with absolutely no basis in reality. It might sound like a good talking point to use an excuse for dismissing all of science, but to someone who isn't as delusional as you are it sounds like a dishonest cop-out.

    I have a brother-in-law who worked for a major scientific research laboratory near Chicago. He told me that the ultimate goal of the company was to prove the big-bang theory.

    Theories in science are never proven. There is no way to "prove" the big bang theory.

    He said that any research that could be used as evidence was

  186. confidence, rather than faith by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1
    Most people I know who believe in evolution do so based on a lot of what could be defined as faith, without any real knowledge.
    I would it call it confidence, not faith. Even if I know squat about evolutionary theory, the special and general theories of relativity, quantum mechanics, etc, I can see that these are the best explanations science currently has. Science gave me air conditioning. Science, not religion, builds bridges, cars, airplanes, vaccines, and the internet. So I'm going to put my trust in the whole science thing, even though I know that, as do all human endeavors, it has limitations. This confidence, though you may choose to call it "faith," is not the same kind of faith people have when they pray to Jesus.

  187. what is macroevolution, if not speciation? by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1
    Thus, if both evolution and ID are taught, neutrality is maintained
    How do you teach a subject that has no content? As was pointed out in the Kitzmiller decision, ID makes no predictions or propositions of its own. The entire position of ID is "there are problems with evolution." There are certainly controversies within evolutionary theory (the evolution of sex, altruistic behavior, and group selection come to mind) but the problems pointed out by ID (Behe's "irreducible complexity") have already been addressed, and trounced to the point of making them look either ridiculous or dishonest. This was covered in great detail by the Kitzmiller decision.
    . . . I eagerly anticipate the day when macroevolution is finally put on trial for being unscientific in comparison and barred from classrooms. . .
    What is this macroevolution you speak of? Are you referring to speciation? I've re-read your post several times, and the only conclusion I can reach is that you have a definition of macroevolution that differs dramatically from my any I have come across. The only definition I'm familiar with equates macroevolution with speciation. Speciation is commonplace, both in the wild and in laboratory settings. What is so "unscientific" about speciation?
  188. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Darby · · Score: 1

    The noble prizes have started to loose the prestige they once held and this journal is heading down the same road.

    Really? When did that happen?

    I know many of you don't see this as a liberal vs conservative thing, but I truly believe it is.

    Well, those labels are pretty inadequate for any real discussion, but even so, this isn't really true. It's an extremist religious zealot versus anyone who believes in freedom or reason thing, certainly, but what that has to do with people who believe in fiscal responsibility is beyond me (see how inadequate those words are). And it is entirely driven by the extremist zealot side of the equation.

    Not to start this debate again, but nobody has explained to me where the big bang gases came from that created the universe. What gave the gases the properties to react to one another? Or the elements game from and their properties that evolved into the fist cell.

    Oh come on now. That one's transparantly obvious.
    I don't know, you don't know, and nobody else in the entire world knows.
    Anybody who says they do is lying. Anybody who tells you God did it has chosen to *believe* that's the case, but by claimint it *is* what happened, they are lying.

    I agree Creation is debatable, but Intelligent Design seems to be logical to me.

    Then you don't understand logic.
    You just entirely contradicted yourself. Creationism == ID.

    At some point in time an intelligent being had to be involved. Seriously, how can you deny that some intelligent being had a hand in the creation of the universe at some point in time?

    Yep, no understanding of logic whatsoever.
    "I don't know so it has to be magic".
    Plus, all you do is add a turtle. By your "logic" another entirely separate designer is required to design your designer and so on and so on.....

    The elements that created everything had to come from somewhere.

    If it had to be true, prove it.
    Are you beginning to realise why the whole ID thing is utter nonsense (in a scientific context)?

  189. Science = Journal of fake data by Al+Clocker · · Score: 1

    Rather than publishing BS political articles about the "scientific achievement of the year", perhaps Science should figure out how to avoid publishing so many fake papers. Unfortunately the prestige of journals like Science and Nature comes more from marketing efforts, than the quality of work published there. It is sad. But hey, they are good at the old backslapping, and awards game.

  190. MOD POSTER DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ID is nothing but Biblical Creationism.It has nothing to do with any alternative scientific/philosophical ideas.Pure religous superstition plain and simple it should be banned totally so no one misunderstands it as anything legitimate not just in science class in public school but in World Society. ID is the enemy of Science and Truth.

  191. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Darby · · Score: 1

    Thus the simple aligning to create the infinitely complex is much more complicated than the existence of a creator.

    Which is complete and utter nonsense.

    You are postulating that something *far* more complex than the universe had to have arisen in order to then create the far simpler universe.
    Of course any creator *has* to be far more complex than the universe since he had the entire blueprint as part of him.

    So, yes, your idea utterly fails Occam's razor. It also does nothing to address the infinite string of creators which are absolutely required for your idea to make any sense whatsoever.

    The only reason this isn't obvious to you is that you have arbitrarily decided to believe that what you think is absolute truth so you necessarilly have to bend all the rest of reality to fit your predefined model.

  192. let's talk about this a bit... by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1
    The other assumes an Unintelligent Designer instead- Random Chance
    So not having a designer means the same thing as having a designer? The argument you bring to the table isn't about evolution, but about semantics.

    Random chance is not an entity that designs. It may result in structures that initially appear designed, but it is hasty to infer a designer when our gut-level feeling of design-recognition is the only evidence. People have been spotting the face of Jesus, Elvis, the Virgin Mary, etc in everything from rust spots to tea leaves--that doesn't mean that the faces are there, just that a random arrangement can fool our eyes.

    Nope- because God is no more complex than the concept of a random and indeterministic universe. The two concepts are equally complex.
    So positing an invisible, magical, undetectable-by-physical-means elf who orbits Pluto, and who decides all coin tosses and imposes his will on those coin tosses through a mystical, yet completely undetectable force, is no more complex than saying that the result of the coin tosses is random? Both positions are of equivalent complexity, and thus deserving of equivalent attention? Um, no, obviously not. Even aside from proving your assertion, it doesn't hold up to even a little logic. Saying "it was random luck that I was dealt a royal flush that night in Vegas" is manifestly not making an assertion "just as complex" as positing that the Invisible Pink Unicorn willed it so. The two mental models are not even in the same ballpark.
    Incorrect- without that motivating layer, whether intelligent as in ID or random as in evolution, there's no way for natural selection to happen. Life in the universe as we know it would reach a steady state- and never again evolve.
    Positing a "motivating layer" necessitates an assumption of motivation, which is an anthropomorphism. Random variation PLUS natural selection is no longer just random. With an environment allowing those with some characteristics to reproduce in higher surviving numbers than those with other characteristics, the genetic makeup of the population is pushed or pulled in one direction or another (metaphorically speaking). That doesn't preclude an overarching consciousness in the universe, but it does make one unnecessary for the purposes of explanation of genetic diversity.
  193. Oh, these open-minded, non-judgement people... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How long before book burning begins?

    Ssh! Is that the sound of Panzers rolling?

    Arbeit Macht Frei!

    If you really want the left to pucker, suggest that one sits in judgement, that they defame. It's hilarious. Ironically, a crucifix works just as good on them, as it does on Dracula!

    Whoo-hoo!

  194. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by dbucowboy · · Score: 1

    Either theory requires a creator. There had to have been something somewhere at some point in history that started it all. There being a creator, to me at least, is not what is the complex action. The complexity comes in the development of the rest of the universe. It requires no less faith to say that matter and antimatter just popped up out of nowhere to create the initial clouds of matter than it does to say there was a creator that popped up out of nowhere and created everything. There is no rational difference as they are both unexplainable.

    --
    This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
  195. You entirely misunderstand evolution. by billstewart · · Score: 1
    Evolution does _not_ work the way you think it does - one of the big reasons that the anti-evolutionism is so popular is that real evolution is so depressingly mindless that even people who like their ideas of evolution keep coming up with bogus strawmen that they like *better* than the real thing, and many of those ideas get knocked down by anti-evolutionists.
    • Evolution isn't "progress" - species aren't becoming "better" or "fitter" or "evolving" in some higher-purpose direction. Genetic traits mutate at random, and the traits that let a population of individuals reproduce more successfully or get killed less often before reproducing end up with more individuals carrying those traits around; traits that lead to individuals getting killed more or being less successful reproductively become less common and usually die out.
    • "Evolution as progress to something better and cooler" is just as non-scientific as "intelligent design", and the fact that it's more popular with fuzzy-headed liberals than trying-to-challenged-salvage-belief-systems conservatives doesn't make it any less bogus. At least with intelligent design, God (or some rhetorical-sleight-of-hand that ID proponents are politically pretending might not be named Jehovah) _does_ have the option of playing dice with the universe without invalidating the fundamental models - they're trying to impose "progress" on evolution as an _exterior_ influence rather than some inherent behaviour which just doesn't exist no matter how hard the pro-progress folks wish it might.
    • Surviving or dieing out aren't "better" or "worse" - they're just things that happen. As humans, we're intelligent enough to have strong preferences about which of those things happen to _us_, and also to species we like, most of which are either cute fuzzy megafauna or tasty plants.
    • "Fitter" isn't "better" - it's just something that results in individuals with those traits being more common. It doesn't have a normative value, and the "Social Darwinists" who say that "We're _obviously_ fitter to survive than the poor, and Evolution means it's Scientifically Beneficial for us to beat up the poor (or the Jews, or natives of some desirable colony, or whoever.)" are as scientifically bankrupt as they are morally bankrupt. There's a lot of enthusiastic anti-evolution rhetoric that beats up on these people while thinking it's beating up on the actual scientific theories of evolution.
    • Improved short-to-medium-term reproductive success in some population doesn't necessarily mean that the traits that produce it lead to long-term survival - the "fitter" individuals may be using up some critical resources faster, leading to a more severe population crash in the future, and possibly to extinction, while a "less successful" population might have stuck around longer before going extinct. That still doesn't mean that extinction or survival are normative - everything dies eventually.
    • News media and politicians trying to scare the public often talk about evolution as if it were some more directed force - those nasty Bird Flu bacteria are just _itching_ to develop the ability to spread from human to human so they can repeat their 1918 Pandemic World Tour, so you'd better give The President $7Billion for a program to keep scaring\\\\\\\ protecting the public from evolving nasty bird flu, and his right-winger supporters are perfectly happy to ignore the fact that they're talking about evolution if it gives them more emotional control of the public. But from a scientific point of view, the main thing is that human behaviour and genetics does make pandemics possible, and viruses are simple enough that mutations can cause major changes in behaviour, and it would be good to do a lot of research.
    • Species are just a convenient abstraction for the behaviour of bunches of individuals with various collections of inheritable traits. We define two individuals as being part of the same s
    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  196. On the subject of 2+2=4 by n54 · · Score: 1

    2+2=4 is mathematics and solely dependant on the chosen axioms (which is why mathematics and similar have a special place within science -- that is; they're incessantly debated as to whether they are actually science).

    Let me give an example. If I change the axioms (and this is done for serious purposes for example in fussy logic) I can easily make the following true:
    2+2=1

    What axiom did I change? I'm no high-level matematician and as such I don't know the name but I can explain it: I changed whatever axiom that says the calculation has to happen linearily to saying that the calculation happens circularily with a circular division of 3.

    So imagine an analog clock with three hours in total, start a pointer at 3/0 and move it to 2 then add 2 more "hours" and you'll see that 2+2=1 under that particular axiom.

    All mathematics is built this way, all mathematics require/demand intelligence (you) to be perceived as they are logically selfcongruent tautologies (made by you or taught you by other intelligence like mathematicians). We are that intelligence that makes 2+2=4 (there might be others too (but we don't know that yet) and the debate as to whether mathematics would exist without us to think of it is a black hole of philosophy imho).

    This does absolutely not mean that mathematics are bogus or irrelevant, quite the opposite.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axiom#Mathematics

    --
    this comment is provided "as is" and without any express or implied legibility or congruity [...]
  197. Re:Evolution? Scientific Achievement of 2005? by Phil+Wilkins · · Score: 1

    Needs more 9s.

  198. In Venezuela by jprupp · · Score: 0

    Here in Venezuela such a debate is unthinkable. We're a Third World country, more than half our population is really poor. It's a mostly christian country. But still no one dares to question evolution. There seems to be a natural understading among Venezuelans that science is objective and religion is subjective. Perhaps there are not many religious zealots here, only political ones.

  199. Evidence by Dire+Bonobo · · Score: 1
    > Why would someone intelligent believe in an invisible and all-powerful being for whom no evidence exists

    Because believing that---since you haven't seen evidence for it, nobody has seen evidence for it---is just as irrational?

    Think of it in terms of Bayesian reasoning/probability theory. Suppose, for example, that a person had a cancer that is fatal most of the time, prayed hard for the cancer to go away, and the cancer indeed went away. Since, in the set of worlds where the prayed-to god exists as believed, remission of the cancer is more likely than in no-god worlds, the observation of the cancer going into remission is evidence in favour of the existence of the prayed-to god. Weak evidence, of course, but a rational agent should increase their estimated probability of said god existing based on that evidence.


    Now, since evidence in favour of a god can exist, the only question is how much evidence---for and against---other people have seen. If you can't understand why an intelligent person would believe something other than what you do, I humbly suggest you think hard about two things:

    1) Other people have lived different lives than you; hence, their experiences---and the beliefs they would rationally obtain from those experiences---will naturally be different from yours.

    2) Intelligent people's beliefs may not be entirely rational; in particular, what evidence do you have that nobody has experienced evidence in favour of religion?

    1. Re:Evidence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Intelligent people's beliefs may not be entirely rational; in particular, what evidence do you have that nobody has experienced evidence in favour of religion?

      Even in theory, how could you tell the difference between "evidence in favour of your religion," and the prompting of your own imagination?

    2. Re:Evidence by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      And there is also a pretty good possibility that only by thinking in religious ways can we influence certain body systems.

      The placebo effect is stronger than medicine sometimes. Faith/belief can do a lot without religion or god needing to be around.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    3. Re:Evidence by Dire+Bonobo · · Score: 1
      > Even in theory, how could you tell the difference between "evidence in
      > favour of your religion," and the prompting of your own imagination?

      Same way you tell the difference between your imagination and any other observation - balance of probability.

      If your car keeps breaking down every time you lend it to your cousin, you would take that as evidence he or she is mistreating it. Could be pure coincidence, but that's not the way probability points. Similarly, if your friends and relatives keep recovering unusually rapidly from serious illnesses every time you pray for them - unusually rapidly compared to other people with those illnesses, and unusually rapidly compared to before you prayed for people - then you would take that as evidence your prayers are having an effect. Could be pure coincidence, but that's not the way probability points.


      There's nothing preventing you from applying the scientific method to observations regarding religion, and it will potentially yield interesting results, just like it does for other observations. There's also nothing claiming the scientific method is sufficient for understanding religious experience, however; science deals with observables and repeatables. If there's something that is not fully observable and not repeatable, it may well be an error to rely on the scientific method to try to understand it.

  200. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well put, sir!

  201. Re:This is so painful to read, Canadian Point of V by kodaz · · Score: 0

    I appreciate your honest feelings in this debate.

    The point is that science as it is currently being taught has become religious to the exclusion of other very valid and powerful scientific tests and theories.

    For instance if a scientist makes note of the complexity of a certain organism, and examines the biology, the DNA, the mechanics and then postulates that it points to intelligent design not random chance. And this theory is based on examination of everything around us which over and over points to those same principles in life and science that infact all nature itself points to intelligence. His theory will be excluded from all public teaching, accepted scientific journals and the like simply because he is not agreeing with a Creator-less mindset. And thus he is ridiculed and excluded from the mainline scientific community.

    As atleast one poster stated here, "Evolution is not a thoery. It is a fact." actually reflects the mindset of many of the scientist/politicians that are seeking to lock all opposing views out of the public eye. Religiously.

    You can see why their is a growing uproar from the other side of this debate. This is not science but biased, and blind faith. Evolution is a theory! And if it is a good one, it should not fear opposing postulations but must allow debate and opposing valid views. It does not need to try and close the door on all other options, but should welcome other views without feeling threatened.

    There are only two scientific arguments for the origins of this world, and the origins of the species. One says that everything came from a Big Bang that started or enhanced natural processes which, over large amounts of time, has led to the world as we know it now. The other says all of creation and the scientific laws and observable organization points to a Creator (Intelligence) that designed this universe and did so in a much faster way than the other view states because this creator is still interacting with this creation. And there are mixed views which combine the two.

    Both look at the same evidence with different presuppositions, and the evidence is used to support their theories.

    I have been to creation verses naturalistic science debates and am always amazed how much more valid and "scientific" the creation perspective is. It seems to stick more to observable and repeatable science with out alot of the wild theories that later are proven incorrect. There are some things that just can't be theorized around or in the case of the "evolution of man" some of the so-called evidence was even falsified to support the theory. Did you know that? That virtually all of the "transitional" ape to man forms shown in evolutionary textbooks have been proven wrong, and the ones that are left are really just humans. Take away the misleading artwork and bad case of arthritis and put them in a business suit, and there you have ...Arnold Schwarzenegger... yes he is really a human. :)

    All we are saying, is lighten-up evolutionists. Don't be so close-minded as you claim the creationists are. You can allow opposing views to exist in the arena that matters most the public schools, journals, and halls of science, anything else really isn't science.

    I believe that most scientist would agree that they don't have all knowledge, nor do they have all understanding or tools ... the minute you add "but" to that statement, you cease to be scientific.

  202. 06/06/06 My Next Movie Idea Rippped Off ? by newpath4comVersion2 · · Score: 0
    Want to know how the World Ends? Well, if
    ARMAGEDDON fails there's something else got
    our name on it. Sudden Intensified Global Cooling >
    http://www.newpath4.com/skyisfallingendoftheworldp rocessexplainedindetail06062006.htm

    Bang, bang, bang; just that simple on a 12k webpage.
    The page is self-explanatory... Seeing as how it's
    covered under my newpath4 Copyright maybe they'll pay me a
    few bucks from something I've escaped making so far, called Royalties.

    Anyway, I've got the Space Engine to get
    off this rock b-4 that happens >
    http://www.newpath4.com/millenialdawnpowerandlight secure21.htm
    BTW, I'm not one of the "4400".

  203. There is a God but it doesn't love you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Why would someone intelligent believe in an invisible and all-powerful being for whom no evidence exists, and whose existence is so incredibly unlikely?

    The universe is big enough and old enough that it is not at all unlikely that there are sentient entities out there that are aware of humans and that by comparison to humans are all-powerful and all-knowing.

    What is unlikely is that such sentient entities posess human traits.

    There is for example, inconsistancy between the idea that there is one immortal God and the idea that God is male (or that God has a son). Being male or female makes sense when one is a member of a species where individual members of that species have a life cycle where they are born, reproduce with another member of the species and then die.

    Similarly, human emotions such as love are also tied to the human life cycle. This applies whether one is talking about sexual love or the love that that parents feel for their children. To the extent that a God entity experiences the emotion of love at all it is not the emotion of love that humans experience. After all, tens of thousands of people die of poverty every day. Do parents who love their children allow their children to die of poverty? Whatever God feels toward humans it isn't human love.

    A plausible explanation of how a God entity might feel toward humans is the way humans feel towards lions and zebra. Humans may create a wildlife preserve for the lions and zebra so they don't go extinct but they don't intervene when a lion chases down a zebra, kills it and eats it raw.

    It is entirely plausible that there is some kind of God entity that has created a galactic nature preserve for humans but don't expect this God entity to intervene if one human chases down another human, kills it with with its bare hands and eats it raw.

    In short, the only love (in a normal human sense) that humans are going to experience in this world is the love they show each other.

  204. Re:This is so painful to read, Canadian Point of V by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "As atleast one poster stated here, "Evolution is not a thoery. It is a fact." actually reflects the mindset of many of the scientist/politicians that are seeking to lock all opposing views out of the public eye. Religiously. You can see why their is a growing uproar from the other side of this debate. This is not science but biased, and blind faith. Evolution is a theory!"

    I'm sorry, but you seriously misunderstand.

    Evolution - defined as species changing over time - is a fact. Species do change over time. That is an undeniable fact. It has been observed and reliably documented many times. For example - populations of bacteria develop immunities they did not have some time ago (and hence previously effective drugs become useless).

    There is a different thing entirely called the "Theory of Evolution". This Theory of Evolution tries to explain how evolution (the observed fact) comes about. The theory involves inheritance of characteristics over generations of a species, random small variations in characteristics from one generaion to the next, and survival of the fittest. All of those last three elements are predictions of the Theory of Evolution, and all three have been verified by subsequent observations. For example - at the time the Theory of Evolution was first proposed, DNA was not yet discovered. DNA has since been discovered, and it provides the undisputed mechanism for inheritance of characteristics from generation to generation - which is the first part of the theory.

    Evolution IS a fact. The explanation of how this fact comes about (possibly as described by the Theory of Evolution) is the debated point.

  205. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    You ignore one little point.

    We assign logical meaning to our painting after it is finished.

    It only means something because we are here to say it means something.

    I compare creationism to saying that painting came into being completely finished.

    I compare evolutionary theory to saying the painting was built up in stages of increasing complexity- the input of each being the outputs of the previous.

    ---

    You know snowflakes and crystals are really complex. I suppose by your theory you must conclude that every single one is made by god.

    ---
    A final comment. You say the other would require millions of years. We have had -BILLIONS- of years. Four thousand million years and more.

    It only takes 10,000 years for a mouse to be bred into an elephant under the right pressures. I hope, that regarding what man has done to wolves (all breeds of dogs from great danes to chihuahua's), that you will concede we could do that.

    Now, what is going to happen under even stronger pressure where 99% fail to reproduce* if they lack a certain trait. How quickly they will adapt to the new environment.

    Please read the articles here... http://www.talkorigins.org/

    *It's interesting to consider that modern industrial society seems to currently cut the birthrate below replacement- so I assume humans will adapt in some way- currently my bet is on the catholic and similar religions growing dominant).

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  206. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    No.

    Having a creator pop out of nothing is a LOT more complex than having a simple energy gradient.

    It may have happened.

    It may also be true that a non-intelligent creator that shits universes created our universe. Lots of things MIGHT have happened. Occam's razor says which is the simplest which could have happened. I'd say a simple uphill/downhill energy gradient would do the rest.

    Evolution doesn't cover either ground. It covers what happened once life was moving- the first moment of life isn't covered. That is worked on in other fields.

    ---

    With regard to your rolex in the other post...
    Add one little constraint and it becomes pretty trivial.
    Whenever two pieces randomly land correctly, they will stick together.

    That's what atoms in the universe are more like.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  207. aaaaaannnnnndd .... no. by Onan · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Removing all vestiges of Christianity from the government actually establishes atheism, or humanism, as the state religion.
    Many of your arguments seem to be based upon the evaluation of atheism as a religion. Humanism is a philosophy which is orthogonal to atheism; neither are they the same thing, nor is either one of them a religion.

    As the man said, "If atheism is a religion, then not collecting stamps is a hobby."

    If you doubt me, just look at the background of those who fled to this country to avoid religious repression.
    Uh, and what exactly would looking at the pilgrims tell me about the structure of the united states? They lived in the same place a few hundred years earlier, and they were brutal religious zealots; what exactly is looking at them supposed to show me? Just a reminder of how glad I should be that such dogmatic savages had nothing to do with the forming of my nation?
  208. I am confused. by Alpha_Traveller · · Score: 1

    Are we really saying here that the fact that we somehow Evolved in 2005 was the achievement of the year? I'm all confused about what happened to our 2004 revolution...

    --
    "Love is like pi - natural, irrational, and very important." (Lisa Hoffman)
  209. You're lying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See http://www.mhsanctuary.com/gender/dsm.htm

    Gender Identity Disorder is not homosexuality. It has little if anything to do with homosexuality.

    So why do you feel the need to misrepresent GID? Have you got some beef with the APA, or are you just a bigot?

  210. There are two different ID crowds by billstewart · · Score: 1
    ID seems to really have two fairly different groups of people touting it.
    • Scientists who also believe in God and want to find some way to reconcile evolution, which obviously happens, with creation which they also believe in.
    • Creationists who dislike evolution and find ID a convenient scientific-sounding handle to rehash the same old attempts at getting evolution out of schools.
    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  211. If it's true that it causes people to feel despair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it's true that it causes people to feel despair, that's tough. It's still the truth. The universe doesn't owe us condolence or consolation; it doesn't owe us a nice warm feeling inside. If it's true, it's true, and you'd better live with it.

    Richard Dawkins

    http://beliefnet.com/story/178/story_17889.html

  212. Flat Earth by mano_k · · Score: 1

    I once read about some german historican who claimed the whole "medival people believed the earth to be flat" was a myth.
    I'm not an expert in that field, but considering, as other already stated, the curvature of earth's surface is quite obvious to a seafaring people, I think it's possible. He claims (IIRC) there was only one author who realy read the passages in the bible as stating the earth was flat and he was not even taken seriously in the church.

    1. Re:Flat Earth by SmallOak · · Score: 1

      that author may be

      "Cosmas Indicopleustes wrote a book called "Christian Topography" in which he claimed the earth is flat. Below are appended 1 translation, the (original?) Latin and another translation."

      see discussion below:
      http://www.sfu.ca/philosophy/swartz/flat_earth.htm

      "Medievals regularly cited with approval Aristotle's statement that the earth is round. An example is Adam de Wodeham: terra rotunda est"

      By the way contradicting Aristotle during the medieval period could be get you killed.

      If fact the myth that Medieval scholars thought the earth flat may be one created recently in order to add prestige to Columbus' discovery. Revisionist history in other words.

      The book "The Prism and the Pendulum" by Robert P Grease has a great chapter on the measuring of the earth circumference by Eratosthenes around 200 BC. His results very pretty dam close. Not only did they know the earth was round they had a good idea of the size.

      The Romans got their science from the Greeks. The medieval period go their science from the Romans. The renaissance added back the Greek into the mix.

  213. Rhetorical. Question. by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1

    'Nuff said.

  214. Re:Evolution? Scientific Achievement of 2005? by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1
    We can prove that we have the most likely solution, given our current data and knowledge, but being proven is contrary to the scientific method

    *Head explodes*

    A more accurate statement would be: We can demonstrate that we have developed a model which is accurate within the constraints and data provided. However, the scientific method does not provide for absolute proof.

    --
    I know, I know. I am a pedantic, nitpicking bastard.

  215. Good questions - so look for answers by Jamie+Lokier · · Score: 1

    You write:

    Why would someone intelligent believe in an invisible and all-powerful being for whom no evidence exists, and whose existence is so incredibly unlikely? How could someone intelligent, who would would presumably be well-read and therefore be aware of the incredible range of (blatantly silly) things people have professed belief in throughout history, not simply place modern religion in the same category?

    It's a very good question. Now, if you really believe in someone's intelligence, and you see that they are behaving in this way... that they are holding beliefs which you believe are irrational, and superstitious, and clearly wishful thinking in order to deny mortality... doesn't that make you, at least a little bit, wonder if your assumptions are really 100% valid? If your own reasoning, and the limited evidence you have about the world (because your beliefs are informed by what you have observed and been taught too), is really enough to validate your viewpoint about those people?

    You write:

    Religion... it is very hard to see how someone smart could fall for it.
    Yes, it is very hard to see. And yet, there are many smart people who hold such beliefs.
    That's what confuses us.

    Then you do not understand why smart people hold these beliefs. Good questions, these are. Well worth asking, in my opinion. Fruitful.

    -- Jamie

  216. YOU ALL MISS THE POINT! by Whiteox · · Score: 1

    I cannot believe that all those who have responded, evidently from multidisciplinary views have not seen the obvious.
    The fact that pisses me off is that this post is the 570th or thereabouts and will probably not be read by anyone, but I will continue.

    The theory of evolution has been challenged by another theory of Intelligent Design.
    Almost all of you have NOT understood what intelligent design theory is and what evidence their proponents have that Evolutionists cannot explain!

    That is the real question, and till it is answered, Intelligent Design still has life, gnawing at the roots of Evolutionary theory.

    Don't confuse creationism with ID (although it is easy to do).
    Don't bring God into it.
    Don't interpret Intelligent Design nomenclature as a description of the evidence, but rather as an attempt to explain the evidence.
    Try and answer the evidence as an evolutionist.

    If you can do all of that, then you have something worthwhile to say.

    Suck on that!

    --
    Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
    1. Re:YOU ALL MISS THE POINT! by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Dude... they did a global search and replace of "creationism" with "intelligent design" in one of the books submitted into the case as evidence.

      The judge was extremely pissed because the many of the ID folks clearly lied -under oath on a bible-.

      Evolution does not attack the central tenet of the christian faith- that jesus died and was reborn to take away your sins so you can get into heaven.

      Christians used to be such friendly, nice, appealing folks- their hatred of evolution is turning them into hypocrites, liers, and generally nasty obnoxious people who are not really witnessing the faith very well but instead are driving a lot of folks away.

      It's pretty clear that modern man has only existed about 100k years. It's pretty clear the earth has existed 4.5 billion yeras and that it started out barren (molten) and was uninhabitable for a long time after that (at least a billion years).

      These are facts.

      Evolution is conclusion about a set of facts. It proposes tests that are repeatable. It may be replaced with another theory tomorrow (unlikely but that's how science works). It says nothing about religion except most religions start with a creation story.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    2. Re:YOU ALL MISS THE POINT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you in some points: creationism isn't ID, god is also a distint matter, although it may inspire some people to prefer ID to Evolution, and ID is an ATTEMPT to explain the evidence.

      But I disagree in the central idea. You said that "The theory of evolution has been challenged by another theory of Intelligent Design". That's the point to me: why do you call Intelligent Design a THEORY??? It has nothing to do with a theory. A theory is an explanation of the world that lets EXPERIMENTATION to contrast its conclusions. Please, explain what kind of experiments Intelligent Design' believers are planning to do. Unless you propose experiments you cannot speak of any idea as if it were SCIENCE. And, if it is not a science, why has it to be teached in Science class? Why not in literature or religion or whatever non-scientific class? I don't like things confused and mixed up, it can get people even more confused than they are nowadays.

                        Ceto45 (Spain)

  217. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by dbucowboy · · Score: 1

    True, but if we compare the beauty of the painting to the beauty of the universe then it is obvious what the subject it. It's an axiom. Logical meaning brings about the conclusion that there was indeed a painter. Only illogical people would say that there wasn't. The same can be said for creation. In fact, Louis Pasteur said, "A little science estranges a man from God; a little more brings him back." I would think as a scientist, he would know this firsthand.

    Btw, he's not the only mainstream scientist to conclude from science that there must be a creator.

    Sir Isaac Newton - "This most beautiful system of the sun, planets, and comets could only proceed from the counsel and dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being."

    Albert Einstein - "Everyone who is seriously interested in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that a spirit is manifest in t he laws of the universe - a spirit vastly superior to man, and one in the face of which our modest powers must feel humble."

    Stephen Hawking - "It would be very difficult to explain why the universe should have begun in just this way, except as the act of a God who intended to create beings like us."

    Stephen Hawking - "Then we shall... be able to take part in the discussion of the question of why it is that we and the universe exist. If we find the answer to that, it would be the ultimate triumph of human reason - for then we would know the mind of God."

    Sir Fred Hoyle, professor of astronomy at Cambridge - "The chance that higher life forms might have emerged in the way (evolution) is comparable to the chance that a tornado sweeping through a junkyard might assemble a Boeing 747 from the materials therein. The likelihood of the formation of life from inanimate matter is one out of 10 to the 40,000 power... It is big enough to bury Darwin and the whole theory of evolution. There was no primeval soup, neither on this planet nor on any other, and if the beginnings of life were not random, they must therefore have been the product of purposeful intelligence."

    --
    This just in! 3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.
  218. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    I find nothing beautiful about the huge numbers of creatures eaten alive every day. Nothing wonderful about the huge number of people who starve, die of disease, or live short pointless lives ending in barbaric deaths-many of those due to religious reasons.

    Those folks you quote are very smart- I'll grant you that, but that doesn't make them any less afraid of the dark at the end of the road. Without hope for a light, many would find life pretty pointless. It doesn't stop them from having been brainwashed before they could think rationally. Personally, I'd say mr. hoyle was talking out of his ass and that it was his personal opinion and not any kind of scientific argument he was advancing.

    You may be engaging in a common misdirection used in these arguments. While each of them spoke of a creator, it is by no means clear they were talking about the christian god or the same god. Just as many of the american founding fathers were -deists- and not christians (some mocked it in their journals).

    Finally, these fine gentlemen are not proposing any test or procedure that I can come to the same conclusion independently so you are basically arguing from authority figures which is not a valid way to advance an argument. Just accept that you cannot prove that god exists and all revelation is personal. You'll be happier if you do.

    This universe is a terrible miserable place but it is great to be alive and among the the small percentage of people on this planet living comfortably.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  219. "Falsifiable" Oversold by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    ID is potentially trueifiable but not falsifiable. However, other ideas of science also share this characteristic. For example, some predict that there are/were other universes or other dimensions. We can never prove that other universes or dimensions don't exist. Not detecting them is not proof they don't exist. Thus, being "falsifiable" is oversold.

    Even evolution is not falsifiable. One may prove it didn't happen in a particular spot, but one cannot prove it never happened anywhere.

  220. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Where did the Intelligent being come from?

    He traveled back in time and inserted himself. Next!

  221. common sense by msbmsb · · Score: 1

    You can say "Back in my father's *day*" and mean it literally, using a figure of speech. You can say "In the *dawn* of time" and mean it literally, using a figure of speech, you can say "the *evening* of his life" and mean it literally using a figure of speech.

    You're trying too hard to prove a point. There are plenty of people who see Gen as listing the order and general heppenings of creation, and that it allows for millenia to happen. The Bible even says that to God, 'a day is as a thousand years', or an extended period.

    1. Re:common sense by pnewhook · · Score: 1
      You're trying too hard to prove a point.
      Naw, If I was trying too hard I would have tried to have my beliefs snuck into a schools curriculum.
      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  222. also... by msbmsb · · Score: 1

    Job 26:7 says of God: 'He is hanging the earth upon nothing'. A fairly scientific observation for a time when many thought other entities supported the Earth.

  223. Quote inaccurate by dhaines · · Score: 1
    From the ruling, p. 137, emphasis mine.
    As stated, our conclusion today is that it is unconstitutional to teach ID as an alternative to evolution in a public school science classroom.
    The parent post correctly quotes the Reuters article, which incorrectly quotes Judge Jones' opinion, leaving out the word "science."
  224. hidden assumptions and inferences by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article says "Where people have found a gene they think is involved in speciation, I can now go and look how it has evolved in 12 different species of fly, because we've got the genomes of all these species available on the web."

    Actually you cannot "look how it has evolved." You can only "look at how it is different" in 12 different species. The idea that "how it is different" equates to "how it has evolved" is a hidden assumption made by those who believe in the active process of evolution.

    The vast majority of historical data over the time span of the history of life on Earth is not available to us to examine any more. Today we see largely a static pattern of suggestive evidence. In that pattern, some people see a process (evolution without outside influence), others see a consistent static design that implies a designer. Some see both, a guided process.

    That is a normal perceptual difference among people. One person may view a photo and say "it's chopped off at the bottom" while someone else says "he's falling out of the frame." It's the same difference in view. Both views can be right.

    In the case of evolution, neither the static design view or the active process view can be proven to be true. The careful position would be to study the relationships across species and use those relationships in our science, but to leave as an open question whether evolution is a mindless process or one guided by a designer. Students should learn the difference between observed facts and inferences. We need to know when we are making inferences so we can respect the chance that those inferences are incorrect.

  225. Re:Quote inaccurate: MOD THIS UP! by macjim · · Score: 1

    For goodness sake, it's not so hard to get and read the judge's conclusion, even if you can't find time to read the fascinating bulk of the 139 pages. The quote in a bit more context:

    "With that said, we do not question that many of the leading advocates of ID have bona fide and deeply held beliefs which drive their scholarly endeavors. Nor do we controvert that ID should continue to be studied, debated, and discussed. As stated, our conclusion today is that it is unconstitutional to teach ID as an alternative to evolution in a public school science classroom."

    For pages 136 to 139 of the judgement, follow this link http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Kitzmiller_v._Dover_ Area_School_District_6:_curriculum%2C_conclusion#H ._Conclusion.

  226. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize: evidence? by macjim · · Score: 1

    The Kitzmiller v Dover trial has just given the ID crew an open forum to display all this "missing evidence". What was found is that four years after announcing their amazing "theory" and the need for evidence, they still have no research programme and are doing no work in the field. Why not, if this evidence is so easily obtainable and is only unknown because it's being suppressed by mythical morons like you brother in law?

  227. No it isn't. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    The judge made very clear that the intentions of people pushing for ID was to introduce creationism in the classroom by using another name.

    It is a vulgar rebranding exercise and the judge saw it for what it is.

    ID belong to religious indoctrination, not to ascience curriculum of any kind.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  228. As a biologist... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    ... you should know one can't prove a negative.

    But lets that one slip away.

    How life originated is indenpendent of our konlewdge of evolution by natural selection.

    We have a good theory that pretty much explains how life changes. Once we have life evolution works its wonders.

    The day we find how life originated (which most likely one day we will) your point will be moot.

    There are many processes that can't be duped in the lab, the appeareance of anything recognizable as alive could have taken hundreds of millions of years via porcesses we may not even have imagined yet. To expect that such a thing will be reproducible is meybe too much to ask.

    But we can may informed inferences, and so we will

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  229. Re:lol. political awards anyone? by tomhudson · · Score: 1

    Everything in this universe has a beginning and end.
    So all those round things we call "circles" don't really exist?

    Considering that ID requires circular logic ...

  230. Re:My fellow Christians: Strategize by lightningrod220 · · Score: 1

    "Like most others do"?! What are you talking about? Buddism, Islam, and Hinduism are other religions that are focused on evangelism... some even more than Christianity! Christianity is probably one of the more mild ones, especially when you look at how their god treats them in those other religions. Islam scares me the most, given its demands for complete obedience and dedication 24/7. I have quite a bit more freedoms than they do, and my God doesn't demand the crazy get-on-knees-and-pray-to-Mecca.

  231. 2nd Reply: Space Travel by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    No other approach is anywhere near achieving space travel, nor has made any significant steps towards it.

    An article on the front page demonstrates that we're both right in different ways: science is nearing faster-than-light drive in theory, if not in fact. Development of it will require a major rethink of the indeterministic nature of the universe and the linkage between the EM-spectrum and gravity; thus requiring a major philosophical rethink of science itself. But if the basic theory is sound- then you're correct that science will rethink itself and in so doing, invent the kind of space travel we'd need to escape a supernova (an engine that creates a VERY strong magnetic field, strong enough to warp space into a fake gravitational field. Up it several million times in strength, and you end up with a gravitational field that can't exist in our normal dimension of space time, that can only exist in the realm of tachyons- objects that cannot go slower than light. Headline? Mars in 3 hours....)

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  232. Re:2nd Reply: Space Travel by m50d · · Score: 1

    I think the indeterminism will still be there - the whole theory seems based in trying to get relativity to work within quantum mechanics, which has indeterminism coming out of its ears. But it will certainly mean a major restructuring of the basic assumptions, probably similar to the introduction of QM. I remain sceptical until I've seen the experimental results, but if the predictions for masses of fundamental particles are as good as they say, this is certainly very exciting. The best thing is they have a proposed experiment to test it, so we should be able to find out reasonably soon whether this is right.

    --
    I am trolling
  233. I've seen obtuse people before by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1
    But you are neck-and-neck with creationists for the record.
    So in other words, you've just flipped definitions on me, and are now claiming a deterministic universe given enough information. Welcome to ID.
    You'd have to be pretty ignorant (or a liar) to maintain that a probability distribution implies determinism. Heck, even classical mechanics can be shown to lead to unpredictability given inevitable errors of measurement (chaos). Then again, your username implies that you've swallowed some pretty ignorant crap and not blinked an eye, so maybe you aren't consciously lying. Maybe you just don't care about reality, or aren't smart enough to understand it.
    --
    Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
    1. Re:I've seen obtuse people before by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      You'd have to be pretty ignorant (or a liar) to maintain that a probability distribution implies determinism.

      Which is why I wrote what I did. Either the universe is indeterministic on all levels, or it is deterministic on all levels and we just don't have all the information. I believe the 2nd- but probability distribution does NOT actually get us there. Based on you not understanding the sarcasm, my guess is that English is not your first language.

      Heck, even classical mechanics can be shown to lead to unpredictability given inevitable errors of measurement (chaos).

      Which does not neccessarily show an indeterministic universe, only an inability of man to be accurate.

      Then again, your username implies that you've swallowed some pretty ignorant crap and not blinked an eye, so maybe you aren't consciously lying.

      And yet you're arrogance is such that you actually think your own mistake in measurement implies an indeteerministic universe- so I guess you're pretty arrogant as well.

      Maybe you just don't care about reality, or aren't smart enough to understand it.

      Well, at least I'm smart enough to know that my own measurement mistakes only say something about how well I can perform, not anything about reality itself....

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    2. Re:I've seen obtuse people before by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1
      Based on you not understanding the sarcasm, my guess is that English is not your first language.
      Based on you setting up a straw man of the argument made by the GGGparent comment, you don't understand English either. Add hypocrisy to your list of faults.
      Either the universe is indeterministic on all levels, or it is deterministic on all levels and we just don't have all the information.
      The concept of De Broglie wavelength indicates that it's indeterminate on all levels, but the indeterminacies can be far too small to measure. This is why classical mechanics works.

      You're making irrelevant and nonsensical quibbles about physics to try to score rhetorical points. This is about what I expect of someone who has bought into something as idiotic as the idea of the Marxist dialectic. If the only conceptual tool you have is a hammer....

      --
      Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.